Much of that was use was in ritual settings, meaning people used the drugs as part of a search for meaning. — Bitter Crank
We use drugs for all kinds of reasons, some therapeutic, some merely for the pleasure of the experience. The main problem I see with drugs (albeit not the only problem) is the laws we have against them, and the enforcement of those laws. They seem to me to cause so much more harm than the drugs do, to the individual or to society. — Pattern-chaser
I have MS, and use cannabis to moderate the rather unpleasant experiences that MS can deliver. No other substance that I know of can offer the benefit I get from cannabis. And I like the feeling of being stoned; I find it enjoyable. And it helps with the pain. Win-win. — Pattern-chaser
Where I mentioned drugs and meaning, I was speaking of drug use in a ritual context where there was more than mere drug-taking going on. The drugs were intended to enhance the ritual at a particular moment. — Bitter Crank
So, the process of taking drugs themselves has a attained or undergone ritualization, which is a sort of unrealistic idealization of their use? Hence, the false lure that they have attained? — Posty McPostface
Not, the same kind of morning ritual of making coffee, taking a shower, and pumping yourself up with positive feedback or thoughts?
So, I'm going to point out the elephant in the room and ask to you or anyone else, why has these ethnogenic rituals been outlawed by so many governments and societies instead of others given how profound and important they are to some? — Posty McPostface
I mean, highly addictive drugs like amphetamine, methylphenidate, and methamphetamine are available through prescription in the US; but, it's punishable by law to posses non-addictive (comparatively) Cannabis or MDMA or LSD. Why? — Posty McPostface
Yeah, why is cannabis illegal or psilocybin mushrooms or other Schedule I drugs in that category or status, at least here in the US? — Posty McPostface
But my perspective on them was, it wasn’t simply about cheap thrills and the desire for a rush, but about heightened awareness. — Wayfarer
Humans have been self-medicating since time immemorial... — VagabondSpectre
Since we're all so dependent on regulating our minds by constantly self-administering substances which affect how and what we think and do, I can only imagine that it is of net benefit rather than a net detriment. — VagabondSpectre
I'm forced to imagine that regular inebriation can somehow bring stability or fortitude to an individual mind: perhaps inebriation helps to destroy malformed or weak or detrimental beliefs and models/understandings which then makes minds subsequently more robust; perhaps it simply endows us the ability to manage arbitrarily large amounts of stress, allowing us to achieve more. — VagabondSpectre
There's too much stress and confusion in the universe to endure and reconcile it all, which is why the euphoria of inebriation seems to be requisite. — VagabondSpectre
I'm definitely not after enlightenment when I smoke tobacco or marijuana, but I am after some kind of psychoactive alteration that either makes thought easier, more interesting, or more enjoyable. — VagabondSpectre
To condense this down to a brief evolutionary perspective, individuals who regulate their minds with psychoactive stimulation (achieving relaxation and perhaps greater "awareness") can endure greater hardship and thus be more reproductively successful, which is why nearly all humans today do so. — VagabondSpectre
The beatniks became hippies, the hippies became yippies, and then the yippies became staunch neoliberals or yuppies. What does that say about 'heightened awareness'? — Posty McPostface
Nothing. — Wayfarer
It's true that addiction and hedonism are destructive behaviours, but there's also a sense in which society taboos such substance because it calls the consensus reality into question. — Wayfarer
Yes, being pragmatic, psychoactive substances have their use; but, the point is that it has to be directed of governed (medical professionals, etc.) by someone who has figured out what benefit it actually has — Posty McPostface
because most people realize that achievement is an illusory concept imposed by society to maintain it. So, you're faced with a dilemma, in some sense. — Posty McPostface
So, drugs are for the weak minded? I'm pretty sure psychoactive drugs are only for the strong minded. — Posty McPostface
So, hedonism? — Posty McPostface
I don't know if that's true. If it we're then why did the all hippies die out or recede into irrelevancy? — Posty McPostface
Medical professionals might not be intimately acquainted with our individual emotional ups and downs, and when to have a beer, a smoke, or a toke is probably better decided by ourselves so long as over-use isn't an issue. — VagabondSpectre
Most people aren't so cynical about it I reckon. — VagabondSpectre
Wanting a fancy car or romantic gratification might be partially illusion-infused drives, but we still enjoy achieving them profusely. — VagabondSpectre
Enduring greater stress to achieve these ends with the crutch of substance seems to be in our nature, else we might have been content in a more primitive state. — VagabondSpectre
I think that regular periods of chemically assisted relaxation or pleasure can make an otherwise stressed mind more robust by giving it reprieve. Certainly some substances in some dosages can damage minds, and predicting the effects of harder drugs on individuals can be difficult (there is some risk). When it comes to things like THC, nicotine, caffine and alcohol it's not so dangerous. People who do physically demanding labour seem to like how alcohol relaxes their body; people who do mentally demanding labour seem to enjoy how nicotine relaxes their mind; people who do work which requires consistent or extreme focus seem to enjoy caffeine, and people who smoke THC seem to enjoy it for it's own sake (or some combination of the aforementioned effects). — VagabondSpectre
I think that psychoactive substances when properly consumed can make individuals more robust, some more than others, weak and strong alike — VagabondSpectre
Hippies were less about drugs as they were about peace, free love, and like, cool ideas, man. — VagabondSpectre
It's about a broader underlying reliance on consuming substances and performing rituals which psychoactively impact and regulate our minds, and that we have naturally done so for thousands of years. — VagabondSpectre
Apparently our biology is such that we cannot stand to face the world straight and sober 100% of the time, and those who pretend to do so are usually those who derive the most emotion and happiness from non-substance psychoactive rituals (prayer, prostration, worship, exercise, competition, sex, poetry, prose, music, hippy drum circles, political rallies, etc...). — VagabondSpectre
Where we get our fixes, how, and how much, are matters which fluctuate with the times, that we inexorably get our fix, however, does not. — VagabondSpectre
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