by Heineken » Fri 14 Jul 2006, 13:34:24
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('TommyJefferson', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('gg3', 'A')nd if these compounds, administered under controlled conditions by properly trained practitioners, can help normal people to achieve beneficial insights, that too is of great value.
That's my point. They can't. This research doesn't demonstrate that. It demonstrates the power of suggestion.
Experienced drug users know this. I've written down thoughts and observations while tripping. I've read other peoples'. Upon sober examination, it's all a buch of crap, as in, "Man, was I high when I wrote that or what!".
Once the people in that study realize their mystical insights and self-discovery were nothing more than altered brain chemistry, the beneficial effects will be lost.
True self-discovery and personal development come from years of study, learning, life-experience, education, overcoming challenges, and thoughful reflection.
I enjoy getting high as much as the next guy, but let's not make it into something it's not.
In the future, genetic engineering and nanotechnology will abolish suffering in all sentient life. The metabolic pathways of pain and malaise in our brains will be permanetly re-wired. We will
choose how much discomfort to experience just as today we choose how much food to eat.
For more information about that, read
The Hedonistic Imperative. I seem to recall it prints out to about 30 pages, but it's an excellent read.
http://www.hedweb.com/hedethic/hedonist.htmIn the meantime, pharmaceuticals can provide vacations at far cheaper cost than the expensive petroleum needed to fly one's body to tropical islands and use alcohol.
Aren't you willing to concede that your subjective experience with drugs may differ from that of "the next guy"?