[HN Gopher] 19th-century trippers who probed the mind
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19th-century trippers who probed the mind
 
Author : rbanffy
Score  : 42 points
Date   : 2023-05-11 12:27 UTC (10 hours ago)
 
web link (nautil.us)
w3m dump (nautil.us)
 
| optimalsolver wrote:
| 20th Century, but here's a great article on Benny Shanon, perhaps
| the foremost researcher on DMT:
| 
| https://www.waggish.org/2011/benny-shanon-the-antipodes-of-t...
| 
| One of the reports of his own experiences with the substance was
| as follows:
| 
| >Another pattern of interpreting-as is one I shall characterize
| as seeing the particular as generic, or rather, seeing the
| generic in the particular. I have experienced this on a number of
| occasions. The first, which for me was very striking, occurred
| during the daytime. It was in a village and I, intoxicated, was
| sitting on a small verandah overlooking the meadows. A farmer (a
| real one) was passing by, and I saw The Farmer, the universal
| prototype of all farmers. Again, as in the previous example, the
| standard perception and the non-ordinary one are related. After
| all, I saw The Farmer, not The Fisherman or The King. Yet, while
| normally I would have seen just a farmer, this time I saw The
| Farmer. While semantically linked, experientially these two
| perceptions are totally different. I have heard accounts of the
| very same phenomenon from my informants.
| 
| --
| 
| I've never taken DMT, but I'm curious if people who have can
| report similar experiences of effectively seeing Platonic forms
| (or at least, believing they have).
 
  | sammalloy wrote:
  | You don't need to take any DMT (or any other substance for that
  | matter) to explore and experience this subject. The interesting
  | thing about Shanon is how he collected data about Amazonian
  | archetypes unique to ayahuasca. Jeremy Narby and a few others
  | followed up on this, but it is considered the very definition
  | of fringe science and isn't well understood. Shanon, Narby, and
  | McKenna were convinced that there was informational content
  | within the drug that is passed on from the ingestion of the
  | substance to the user, akin to Neo uploading Kung Fu directly
  | into his brain. Sadly, however, nobody has ever been able to
  | substantiate this claim or support it with the most basic kind
  | of evidence.
  | 
  | But there is something to be said about culture and language
  | and the Platonic forms that are communicated through writing.
  | The domain of art, psychology, philosophy, mythology, religion,
  | comparative literature, and theatre is chock full of it, and
  | has enough material to keep you busy for five separate
  | lifetimes. Archetypes, metaphors, symbols, and images in these
  | disciplines are all different aspects of these so-called
  | Platonic forms. In the theatrical arts in particular, there is
  | a very strange body of literature surrounding the French
  | troubadours that you may want to start with. The lore suggests
  | that they were using poetry, music, and themes about love to
  | spread these kinds of archetypes.
 
  | n4r9 wrote:
  | This type of thing is relatively common in psychedelic trips, I
  | believe. I've read for example about someone making love to his
  | girlfriend while high, and it felt like he was making love to
  | the essence of womanhood. My guess is that psychedelics brings
  | to the surface abstractions that we normally take for granted.
 
    | sammalloy wrote:
    | That's correct, but each substance itself also has a similar,
    | corresponding description or form. The "essence of womanhood"
    | is often associated with the correct dosage of Salvia, for
    | example, with people actually hearing the voice of a woman
    | (or goddess as it is often described). Mushrooms are often
    | associated with the form of the teacher, while LSD seems to
    | have a highly technological or computing form associated with
    | it. Some people will disagree, with McKenna associating
    | mushrooms with aliens and science fiction, but that might
    | have more to do with his heroic dosages.
 
      | sebmellen wrote:
      | I've always felt LSD is highly "electric", whereas
      | psilocybin feels almost aggressively "analog".
 
        | sammalloy wrote:
        | Interesting. Ayahuasca has been described as the
        | archetype of the Amazon jungle, while DMT alone has the
        | archetype of the circus.
 
  | bryanrasmussen wrote:
  | I've had quite a lot of this an ur-type experiences on LSD at
  | high dosages.
 
  | dekhn wrote:
  | The worst part is when you come down and you still see the ur-
  | form for everything for extended periods of time. Kind of like
  | being Joseph Campbell, the hero with a thousand faces.
  | 
  | In fact Campbell even went to a Grateful Dead show and hung out
  | with the artists. He is exactly correct that a Dead show (now
  | Phish shows) are Dionysian. One has to wonder if he partook:
  | 
  | What he saw reminded him of the Dionysian festivals, palpable
  | proof of his theory that the ancient myths and rituals he
  | studied still echoed today. "This is more than music," he told
  | his audience. "It turns something on in here [the heart]. And
  | what it turns on is life energy. This is Dionysus talking
  | through these kids." Campbell's understanding of Dionysus was
  | far deeper and more nuanced than the popular caricature of the
  | happy, wine-soaked god, but his point was not to rehabilitate
  | that older understanding. "It doesn't matter what the name of
  | the god is, or whether it's a rock group or a clergy," he
  | concluded. "It's somehow hitting that chord of realization of
  | the unity of God in you all."
 
  | lonetripper wrote:
  | I have seen "The Warrior" while looking at myself through a
  | mirror on shrooms
  | 
  | I may have seen "The Garden of Eden" while sitting on a bench
  | in a park on shrooms
  | 
  | And for what it's worth, I have seen a Tetrahedron on DMT with
  | my eyes closed (and it was the calmest Tetrahedron I've ever
  | experienced)
 
  | droopyEyelids wrote:
  | Yes and this isnt just DMT but probably a feature of all
  | psychedelic drugs
 
| JKCalhoun wrote:
| My dentist got rid of Nitrous Oxide after I had only been going
| there a few years. Too bad. The few times I had it were great.
| 
| "Where did the Nitrous go?" I asked finally.
| 
| "We got rid of it. Everyone working here were getting too much
| exposure."
| 
| Maybe they know something now that they didn't back then with,
| (FTA):
| 
| > after absorbing as much gas as humanly possible by enclosing
| himself in an airtight box filled with it for an hour and a
| quarter
 
  | mturmon wrote:
  | I have been reading Michael Pollan's book, _How to Change Your
  | Mind_.
  | 
  | In the first couple chapters, Pollan is trying to link some of
  | the newer (1960s+) perceptions that we have about drug-induced
  | mystical experiences, to those of earlier investigators. He
  | goes back to the noted 1800s American philosopher William
  | James, who wrote _Varieties of Religious Experience_.
  | 
  | Turns out James was an experimenter with Nitrous. As I remember
  | Pollan's telling, James used a lot of nitrous, and preferred it
  | strongly to some other substances available at the time (that
  | maybe gave less well-controlled experiences?). According to
  | Pollan, it was not a harmful thing. Wiki has a little more (htt
  | ps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_James#Philosophy_of_re...).
  | 
  | The Pollan book is quite worthwhile, BTW.
 
| dr_dshiv wrote:
| Hooke tooke cannabis?
 
| tilne wrote:
| Very cool. I'd be very interested in other similar reading
| material if anyone has some recommendations. It reminds me of
| when I was a teenager and I stumbled upon Alexander Shulgin and
| PiKHAL (https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/PiHKAL).
 
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