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wilsonbooks

(972 posts)
Thu Aug 9, 2012, 06:25 PM Aug 2012

Miicro tripping on LSD

[link:http://www.themorningnews.org/article/the-heretic|
http://www.themorningnews.org/article/the-heretic

The Heretic
by Tim Doody
For decades, the U.S. government banned medical studies of the effects of LSD. But for one longtime, elite researcher, the promise of mind-blowing revelations was just too tempting.


Credit: Jonathan Castro
At 9:30 in the morning, an architect and three senior scientists—two from Stanford, the other from Hewlett-Packard—donned eyeshades and earphones, sank into comfy couches, and waited for their government-approved dose of LSD to kick in. From across the suite and with no small amount of anticipation, Dr. James Fadiman spun the knobs of an impeccable sound system and unleashed Beethoven’s “Symphony No. 6 in F Major, Op. 68.” Then he stood by, ready to ease any concerns or discomfort.

For this particular experiment, the couched volunteers had each brought along three highly technical problems from their respective fields that they’d been unable to solve for at least several months. In approximately two hours, when the LSD became fully active, they were going to remove the eyeshades and earphones, and attempt to find some solutions. Fadiman and his team would monitor their efforts, insights, and output to determine if a relatively low dose of acid—100 micrograms to be exact—enhanced their creativity.

It was the summer of ’66. And the morning was beginning like many others at the International Foundation for Advanced Study, an inconspicuously named, privately funded facility dedicated to psychedelic drug research, which was located, even less conspicuously, on the second floor of a shopping plaza in Menlo Park, Calif. However, this particular morning wasn’t going to go like so many others had during the preceding five years, when researchers at IFAS (pronounced “if-as”) had legally dispensed LSD. Though Fadiman can’t recall the exact date, this was the day, for him at least, that the music died. Or, perhaps more accurately for all parties involved in his creativity study, it was the day before.

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Miicro tripping on LSD (Original Post) wilsonbooks Aug 2012 OP
K&R drokhole Aug 2012 #1
Marking to read later. nt awoke_in_2003 Aug 2012 #2
Very interesting. stevedeshazer Aug 2012 #3
a bit more wilsonbooks Aug 2012 #4
Acid Leads to Enlightenment--Bad! Shagman Aug 2012 #5
"Enlightenment is always a crime" n2doc Aug 2012 #6
The PTB do not like creativity and unconventional thinking. Odin2005 Aug 2012 #7

wilsonbooks

(972 posts)
4. a bit more
Fri Aug 10, 2012, 11:14 AM
Aug 2012

Still, intriguing hints suggest that, despite stigma and risk of incarceration, some of our better innovators continued to feed their heads—and society as a whole reaped the benefits. Francis Crick confessed that he was tripping the first time he envisioned the double helix. Steve Jobs called LSD “one of the two or three most important things” he’d experienced. And Bill Wilson claimed it helped to facilitate breakthroughs of a more soulful variety: Decades after co-founding Alcoholics Anonymous, he tried LSD, said it tuned him in to the same spiritual awareness that made sobriety possible, and pitched its therapeutic use—unsuccessfully—to the AA board. So perhaps the music never really died. Perhaps it’s more accurate to say instead that the music got much softer. And the ones who were still listening had to pretend they couldn’t hear anything at all.

Shagman

(135 posts)
5. Acid Leads to Enlightenment--Bad!
Fri Aug 10, 2012, 02:30 PM
Aug 2012

Once you learn to question everything, you might question what your leaders are doing. We can't have that.

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