And the trap is a gibberish machine. — Arne
And is that not a central claim of the original post? — Arne
Cartesian hangover. — Arne
That's interesting, I haven't come across him before. — unenlightened
But the exposition on wiki is a bit of a dog's breakfast. — unenlightened
It's fun though that you can come up with a psychology at the drop of a hat with a few posited psychic entities, and a couple of broad principles. And then start a school to implement them. — unenlightened
None of what I say here should be taken as a recommendation for you or anyone else to try psychoactives. each individual has to decide for themselves whether such experiences are for them. That is what is meant by "individualism"; the free determination (as much as is possible, obviously) by the individual of their own experiences. — Janus
Perhaps you would be happier if I was talking about 'possible worlds' and 'modal logic'. Possible worlds are unreal worlds. — unenlightened
That assumes that the natural state, or rather the ordinary state that humans predominantly exemplify, is normal. — Wayfarer
Certainly, experiences with psychoactive agents can call that sense of normality into question. — Wayfarer
But then so too can some forms of asceticism or martial and spiritual disciplines - in fact, that is their aim. — Wayfarer
And that aim is predicated on the state that the 'consensus reality' that many live in, is itself an illusory or sub-optimal state, which becomes self-reinforcing. — Wayfarer
I would agree that nothing good can ever come from crystal meth or crack cocaine- from what I can ascertain, they have nothing to do with realising visionary states and their use is wholly and solely pernicious and destructive. But not all psychoactive agents are the same - the point of a 'heightened state of awareness' is the realisation that what you have hitherto taken to be real, may not be so concrete after all. — Wayfarer
That realisation, to me, was worth all the risk, and I think it has permanently, and positively, altered my view of life. — Wayfarer
in the positive, so I sense there's no use in further discussing it, and besides, I don't want to act as an advocate. — Wayfarer
Has anyone found it yet? — apokrisis
I don't think that psychedelics are seen as "cure or panacea" so much as, just in some special contexts, therapeutic aids. — Janus
Some people might fantasize about psychedelics, to be sure, but not that many i would say. — Janus
A lot of young meatheads fantasize about getting pissed and "cracking on" to "chicks", or getting the chicks pissed and rooting them,for example, but that is no reason to condemn alcohol tout court. — Janus
Again to connect with this thread, it was constructing the conceptual framework within which that kind of perceptual state would make complete sense. — apokrisis
No different from going to church. Or an art gallery. In some general way, culture does want to frame our perceptual experience so that it has proper social meaning. — apokrisis
Even maths and philosophy are "drugs" in this sense. We are meant to be initiated into their mysteries by shaman guides and see the world through different eyes as a result. — apokrisis
You become wise or clear-minded by picking your influences carefully, not by altering your neurobiology or accessing a different plane of being. — apokrisis
You are indulging in gross generalizations! — Janus
He said that I have a loose enough grip (which is a plus in western pleasure horse back riding) on reality, that he just wouldn't do it if I could stay away from it. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
As a recovering meth addict with this Sunday marking my 10nth year anniversary of my first Full Day of an Opiate free life, I can only speak from my own withdrawal experiences, which proves there is always a down for every up. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
The first signs of life that my Dopamine receptors were needed to function again as they had been supplemented for 5 years was fucking amazing! I broke down crying knowing that I had walked through the worst of the storm and saw the tinyist light a bit further ahead and that kept me going. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
He openly said he didn't think my psyche would respoond if I were to.have another pregnancy. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
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
Perhaps the real visions of others, precisely because you cannot share them, appear to you as "idealized"! — Janus
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
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
But my perspective on them was, it wasn’t simply about cheap thrills and the desire for a rush, but about heightened awareness. — Wayfarer
Wat. — Ying
Or, and do consider it, we could say that we can manage to function without a car. The car has no fantasy, it merely functions or does not function, just as the desert has no fantasy and no needs of its own. — unenlightened
I need me to live, therefore I need me to have water. Do you see how this is a different sort of thing? — unenlightened
Externally, I don't need water, I can perfectly well die just as a car can run out of petrol and simply stop running. — unenlightened
There are necessary (needed) conditions for life but life is not necessary for anything things are necessary to life. — unenlightened
What is needed for anything is a matter of fact, of limiting conditions. — unenlightened
