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Those older men and women exercising structural and
moral authority (Paterson, 1966), often called collectively the Establishment,
have been alarmed by psychedelics for rather less than five years. Their
attitude might be described in the terms Aneurin Bevan used for an old
man approaching a young bride: ". . . fascinated, sluggish, and apprehensive."
The impetuous young, however, always at the heart of any anti-establishment
movement, rush in with all the rash ardor of Romeo and Juliet. Medical
men, though less worried about morals or legality, are properly concerned
with the health of the young lovers, and have been debating, not without
acrimony, whether the entrancing psychedelic bride is a delicious and sexy
houri or a poxy doxy.
This fascination of older folk with psychedelics
and the climate attached to them becomes evident in the propaganda devoted
to them by many government agencies, professional associations, and other
interested people. While this has been aimed ostensibly at discouraging
the young from taking or continuing to take these substances, the means
employed seem unlikely to achieve such an end. The cause of pornography
has frequently been well served by those whose strident warnings abjured
others from seeking what, until then, they had hardly noticed. Public men
have, quite unwittingly, by their ignorance, evasion, and downright lies,
egged on their children and grandchildren to explore these experiences.
It appears sometimes as if they were trying to discredit themselves in
the eyes of the young. It may not be their intention, but it seems to be
their achievement.
Our connection with this intergenerational controversy
began about sixteen years ago, when one of us, after a troubled night,
was standing at a table stirring a glass of water in which silvery white
crystals were dissolving with an oily slick. Would it be enough or too
much? He was uneasy: he would be disappointed if nothing happened, but
what if the mescaline worked too well? Suppose he poured half of the full
glass into an adjacent flower vase? He did not relish the possibility,
however remote, of finding a small, but discreditable niche in literary
history as the man who drove Aldous Huxley mad. His fears proved groundless.
Although the bitter chemical did not work as quickly as he had expected,
in due course it etched away the patina of conceptual thinking.
Much has happened since that smogless May morning
in Hollywood. Neither Aldous Huxley nor he would have predicted that The
Doors of Perception (1954) was going to have such an immense impact on
an ever-increasing number of people. Those substances, then known as hallucinogens
or psychotomimetics, and which he later called psychedelics (Osmond, 1957b),
have, for good or evil, become far more widely known and no longer the
concern merely of the specialist and scholar. They are part of our vocabulary,
a source of both vexation and inspiration.
Less than ten years after the senior author's spring
visit to Hollywood, Pandora's box was unexpectedly opened. Since then,
members of the Establishment have been sitting on the lid of the empty
box, unaware that this posture is both undignified and futile. It is the
fate of establishments to be taken by surprise in spite of ample and repeated
warnings. Once they have become aware that something is amiss, they often
act precipitately, with little forethought or caution, and transform a
minor inconvenience or even possible benefits into catastrophe. There was
plenty of warning that psychedelics were apt to be of interest to people
and also to become more available so that this long-standing human taste
could be indulged more easily. It required no gift of prophecy to recognize
this, for history shows that man has been an inveterate experimenter with
chemicals, usually derived from plants, that make him happier or livelier,
or alter his perceptions and awareness. In his sumptuous and magnificent
book Soma: Divine Mushroom of Immortality (1969), for example, R. Gordon
Wasson, the mycologist-scholar, has shown convincingly that the Rig Veda,
one of the oldest and greatest of man's religious works, devoted about
one tenth of its collection of over one thousand psalms to celebrating
the plant god Soma. Wasson, with wonderful persistence, caution, and intuition,
makes a good case for soma being the mushroom Amanita muscaria, or fly
agaric, the classic toadstool of the birch forests of the world. Psychedelics
are a very ancient and influential human interest.
What has the Establishment been doing about them?
If one had listened only to its members from a recent president on down,
one might have been convinced that psychedelics had no future at all because
of the development of ever-growing and increasingly specialized law- enforcement
agencies to remove the nuisance permanently. In the past year or two, the
tone has changed somewhat, along with other overoptimistic estimates. On
the other hand, if one listened only to supporters of the psychedelic movement,
one might be led to suppose that an age was borning in which from earliest
childhood, and possibly the prenatal state, we would all be exposed to
the delights and virtues of wholly beneficial substances. The facts do
not support either of these extreme positions, but extreme positions rarely
depend on facts. Long before the official Establishment had asked itself
what sort of problem it might be facing, legislation was being prepared,
bills hurriedly passed, statements of an alarming kind made, and vigorous
legal and police action taken. This was not admirable, but it was no more
admirable of the psychedelic movement to imply that there were scarcely
any dangers attendant on these remarkable substances and that we should
all hasten along the road to the "joyous cosmology," taking anything anyone
offered, and trusting it would be enough, and not too much.
The Establishment's posture is not difficult to
understand, for it is that of all establishments everywhere when faced
with innovation. It consists in saying, "No, you don't. Father (or Grandfather)
knows best. Be good and do as you are told, for if you don't, it will be
the worse for you." Before planning and passing legislation or developing
new policing procedures, it might seem prudent to assess the effectiveness
of such actions, and consider whether police activities might not have
unintended consequences as bad as or worse than the evils to be remedied.
This is especially true in the United States, where prohibition, with all
its admirable intentions, merely provided a golden opportunity for gangsters
to become multimillionaires and spread the habit the legislation was intended
to curb. The most likely outcome of prohibition in the early twenties was
that, since many people did not feel that drinking alcohol was immoral,
even though it might have become illegal, the law would be widely subverted.
Criminals would then have an opportunity to provide these disaffected citizens
with their needs. The police would be liable to be corrupted, the law itself
brought into disrepute, and because most people would come to feel that
prohibition itself is a farce, they would tend to consider that the law
is a racket, too. This is a high price to pay for an unattainable social
benefit.
Other legislation aimed at preventing people from
taking substances, such as psychedelics, that they want to take should
surely be examined in this context. As we have noted, this is an interest
that men have pursued for millennia with great persistence and in a variety
of ways, ranging from self-inflicted tortures and austerities to taking
dangerous substances. Drugs are only one of many possible ways of achieving
these experiences, and are by no means the most objectionable from a medical
viewpoint. From earliest times, psychedelics have been regarded as strange
and sacred and have been part of many great religious ceremonies. They
are certainly as enduring and interesting for mankind as alcohol, although,
since the rise of modern agriculture, alcohol has been probably easier
to obtain. On the other hand, cannabis has been used for many centuries.
It may not be a simple matter to head off people's interest in psychedelics;
it has not been easy to head off interest in alcohol. Had it been possible
to prevent people from making alcoholic drinks, prohibition would have
been feasible. As it was, everyone could make his own fermented drink in
the bathtub, and before long, the well-meant laws to curb drinking had
become meaningless and socially harmful.
In 1966, the government did not seem to have considered
these early experiences much, and appeared to believe that by preventing
Sandoz from manufacturing and distributing LSD to research workers, the
problem would soon be resolved. Indeed, one of us was told by an aide of
the late Senator Robert F. Kennedy that the ex-Attorney General of the
United States was surprised to learn "that preventing Sandoz from selling
LSD (which, of course, they were not doing, but giving it away only to
accredited researchers) would not resolve the problem. "Even though Senator
Kennedy was a young, active, and unusually well-informed man, he was ignorant
of this, although he quickly acquired the necessary information. The elderly
men who govern most countries apparently failed to ask or have impressed
upon them the questions facing those who wish to control the use of psychedelics.
During World War II, British and American intelligence
services briefed their generals by first giving an opinion as to what was
most likely to happen, followed by a statement of what they considered
the best possible outcome in the circumstances, and finally, the worst
possible construction. The general officer, knowing the conclusion of his
intelligence service, could then make his own decision, basing it on optimism,
pessimism, or a middle way, as he saw fit. Suppose it had been our task
to advise statesmen on the future of psychedelic substances, what would
we have told them, assuming that we knew that they were already more or
less limited to a policy of control? From this point of view, the best
possible thing that could happen would be for people to lose interest in
psychedelics once and for all, and for the sources of supply to dry up
forever. The worst that could happen for the Establishment would be for
supplies of psychedelics to become greater and easier to make in a climate
of sustained or increasing interest, thus producing a situation resembling
prohibition at its worst.
How would these two extreme estimates relate to
the most likely outcomes It would be surprising if an interest so long
sustained ever disappears completely. Indeed, our age is one in which interest
in these matters seems more likely to increase. Today, at least in North
America and Europe, there are larger numbers of highly mobile young people,
many of them fairly well-to-do, than ever before in history. Most have
been reared with less severity than previous generations and have largely
escaped the terrible blows that death, illness, starvation, and poverty
frequently inflict on the young. They are sufficiently uncowed by the world
to be highly critical of how it is run, and have the energy, time, and
opportunity to express dissatisfaction and explore new ways of improving
matters. Their education has taught them how to use libraries and other
modern information-retrieval systems. Many of them became interested in
psychedelics in the early sixties, and while this preoccupation may fluctuate,
it seems unlikely that it will disappear completely. The interest of the
Indians in drugs survived the full force of the Spanish Inquisition, and
it is unlikely that even the severest legislators intend to emulate that
mighty institution in policing their children and grandchildren.
In addition, with regard to the control of the substances
themselves, more have been discovered and rediscovered during the past
decade and a half than in any similar period in history. It seems likely
that more will be found during the next ten years. Some of these will be
discovered in plants and others synthesized. Every discovery makes it easier
to suggest not only new places in which to look for active substances,
but also new ways of making them. We predict that within the next twenty-five
years, and perhaps sooner, simple processes will be discovered by which
reasonably safe psychedelics can be made in any kitchen or basement with
materials available in stores, pharmacies, and fields or gardens. Some
believe the best way to avoid these dangers would be to stop all research
on psychedelics. In our opinion, this would be objectionable, since these
substances have great interest for psychology and psychiatry and since
there is, as we have shown here, growing evidence of their therapeutic
usefulness. It would also not succeed in stopping the clandestine experiments
in the synthesis or use of these substances, for forbidden fruits not only
taste sweeter, but develop an esoteric interest. Presumably this "occult"
science, because it would be "illegal," would not be published in official
scientific journals. A sort of underground science would develop, which
at least would be deplorable, and might be very dangerous.
In our imaginary briefings, the statesmen would
be told that the most likely outcome during the next decade would be that
the interest in these substances would be maintained, though it is likely
to fluctuate from year to year. Although a number of new psychedelics will
be discovered, there is no convincing evidence that the era of "bathtub"
psychedelics has yet arrived, allowing them to be made in ease and safety
at home. Should this occur, the resulting situation will resemble that
of prohibition.
Statesmen must surely ask themselves whether it
is wise to invent new crimes or inflate misdemeanors into matters of great
importance. The roster of criminal law is large; by adding new laws that
are difficult to enforce, respect for the law may be decreased. Certain
kinds of new laws may be expensive luxuries that societies in the course
of change simply cannot afford. We believe that the interest in psychedelics
will be maintained in the foreseeable future. If police and similar agencies
devote much of their energy to controlling the substances, the overt interest
may become less conspicuous. Prosecuting people does not necessarily change
their opinions, but may invest forbidden activity with glamour and make
those undertaking it discreet. It is said that crime has been increasing
greatly in recent years, and one wonders whether this is a propitious time
to add a whole new series of crimes to the burden of an already overladen
police and magistracy.
Already there are laws of such severity on the statute
books that judges, juries, and police often shy away from using them, although,
from time to time, unlucky people receive very harsh punishment, which
seems unfair both to them and to their contemporaries. It seems unlikely
that occasional severities will do much to change the general picture.
However, in politics as elsewhere, men have rarely shown a sense of history
or adequate foresight, and the same legislators who promise a tough line
against psychedelics talk blithely about reducing the voting age to eighteen.
If these statements are sincere, and they plan to continue their opposition
to psychedelics when they have reduced the voting age, one wonders whether
we are not becoming tired of politics.
In our opinion, the Establishment has behaved as
establishments usually do, bolstered with the authority they possess by
virtue of their social and political position. They have not been any less
admirable than members of the psychedelic movement who claim that as a
result of their experiences they have a deeper knowledge of the human heart
and a greater understanding of the meaning of things. By their claims,
their actions must be judged by a higher standard than the actions of the
Establishment, which does not make such claims. If one asks whether mind-expanding
experiences have increased the ability of members of the psychedelic movement
to understand the views and fears of their elders more compassionately
than they feel they themselves have been judged, we believe the verdict
must be "not proven." Aldous Huxley once urged a leading figure in the
psychedelic movement to remember that it is "important to do good stealthily."
His excellent advice has not always been heeded. If indeed insights have
been acquired as a result of psychedelic experience, they should be used
for the general good rather than for personal ends.
In this controversy, medical men have tended to
be ranged on the side of the Establishment. This is understandable enough,
for they are frequently closely associated with it, and often among its
members. Unfortunately, they sometimes use their enormous medical authority
to justify prejudices deriving not from medical knowledge, but from the
social and moral climate in which they happen to live. This has occurred
repeatedly throughout history, and the same error has been made by some
of the most distinguished medical men.
An excellent example of this is provided by the
case of Henry Maudsley, one of the most enlightened psychiatrists of his
day, and for whom a leading mental hospital in London is presently named.
In his fine paper "Masturbational Insanity," E. H. Hare (1962) notes that
Maudsley wrote, "In the life of the chronic masturbator, nothing could
be so reasonably desired as the end of it, and the sooner he sinks to his
degraded rest the better for himself, and the better for the world, which
is well rid of him." Hare comments on this, ". . . the besetting sin of
the psychiatrist [is] a tendency to confuse the rules of mental health
with morality." Maudsley's views were part of the conventional wisdom of
his age. Even as late as 1892, the Dictionary of Psychological Medicine
described the effects of masturbation as "moral and mental shipwreck, the
whole nature is deteriorated.... mental faculties become blunted.... The
miserable wretch would commit suicide if he dared, but rarely has the courage
. . . and sinks into melancholic dementia." Writing in 1911 on the treatment
and prevention of this grievous condition, Ivan Bloch stated, "In the treatment
of masturbation, the methods of the older physicians who appeared before
the child armed with great knives and scissors and threatened a painful
operation or even to cut off the genital organs may often be used and often
effect a radical cure." Psychoanalysts, too, were involved in this nonsense.
Ernest Jones, the biographer of Freud, for instance, wrote in 1918 that
neurasthenia derived from excessive onanism and seminal emission (Comfort,
1967).
Masturbation was of no interest to medicine until
about 1720, following the publication in 1710 of a book called Onania,
or the Heinous Sin of Self-Abuse, to tout a patent medicine. Indeed, in
1644, masturbation was recommended as a remedy against "the dangerous allurements
of women." After the publication of Onania, the negative view taken up
by medical men and educators became the source of some of the most harmful
iatrogenic miseries, exceeded only by the great nineteenth-century pandemic
of bleeding. Right up to the 1930S, in both England and the United States,
extraordinary garments, a combination of straitjacket and chastity belt,
were sold by makers of surgical and medical instruments to curb "the deadly
vice of onanism."
What relevance has this to psychedelics? Medicine,
in its views, is in tune with the morality of the age in which it is practiced,
and indeed, has been more or less identified with morality for millennia.
Medical men have to choose a middle course to avoid overidentifcation with
the establishments of their day. Medical men who went along with the Nazi
race theories are one dismal example of how current social values can destroy
medical ethics. In the case of masturbation, physical and psychological
injury was inflicted on at least six generations of children and adults.
Panic and terror spread among parents who were urged to be ever alert to
spot young masturbators. Children became morbidly preoccupied with this
attractive but deadly vice which excited the grownups to such frenzy.
Perhaps we are about to indulge in yet another of
these medicomoral autos-da-fé. The sequence of events is easy to
spot. First, a few medical men associate themselves with a particular moral
viewpoint that they consider has some medical importance. They soon find
evidence, sometimes dubious, to confirm their convictions. Using this evidence,
they begin to suggest solving the moral problem by medical means. In the
psychedelic context, users have been infringing on the contention of the
medical establishment that any pharmacological substances used on human
beings lie within its bailiwick. The psychological changes resulting from
drug use are those older folk frown upon and sometimes find repugnant and
frightening, in contrast with such acceptable social tranquilizers as alcohol
or barbiturates. There is also the possibility that those who use psychedelics
might be injuring themselves or their offspring. The recent impassioned
discussions of the possible effects of LSD on chromosomes is paralleled
by similar discussions over masturbation. It was stated with the utmost
confidence that not only would the secret vice result in the collapse and
insanity of those who practiced it, but should they be unfortunate enough
to survive to adulthood, their children would suffer for their sins. There
was no evidence for this, but it did not prevent men of the highest integrity
from stating that it was undoubtedly so.
There are real dangers associated with the psychedelic
substances known today. These dangers are of many kinds and call for concern
from medicine and its allied sciences. However, before discussing these
dangers and how they might be alleviated, it may be well to remind those
who urge medical men to make public pronouncements to frighten and dismay
the young that, given the morality of medicine, its place in society, and
the age of the experienced medical man, the doctor is rarely the best person
for the task. He is liable to exaggerate such dangers as exist and is apt
to aid and abet extreme measures, in keeping with the morality of the day,
that may not alleviate the sufferings of the victims of the immoral condition
and may even make it worse.
Psychedelics are liable to arouse moral indignation,
because emotions are always likely to be deeply stimulated when someone
else is indulging in new pleasures that may alter social values, especially
when the users are young and rash and often brash as well. Medicine has
a duty not to make this confusion and uncertainty any worse. Physicians
are not police. Their duty is to inform the public as truthfully as they
can, without excessive bias, resounding moral statements, or validation
of punitive actions carried out as treatment. Medicine must avoid becoming
a precipitate partisan in complex moral and social issues such as those
posed by the modern advent of psychedelics.
After such perplexities, it is tempting to leave
the solution to the reader's ingenuity. Yet authors customarily give their
opinion and venture at least a few steps beyond the threshold of their
ivory tower. The uses and dangers attending these substances must be discussed
accurately and dispassionately. Men like Dr. Stanley Yolles, Director of
the National Institute of Mental Health, do not seem convinced that "drug
abuse," which includes the unauthorized use of a variety of psychedelics,
will be eliminated in the foreseeable future. (1) If this is indeed so,
strenuous efforts must be made to reduce those dangers attendant on clandestine
use. We require a variety of social strategies rather than freezing in
a catatonic posture and boasting that this immobility is firm resolution.
The very brief banning of LSD-25 research in 1966 was a classic example
of precipitate, unintelligent action springing from high government levels.
Since then, some research has been restored to a limited degree, but expansion
has not been greatly encouraged, nor is an atmosphere of panic and politicking
conducive to clear thinking, planning, and diligent, long-continued inquiry.
Legitimate, rather than amateur and bootleg, research is necessary; yet
one of the most gifted and distinguished researchers in the country was
not able to obtain permission to do this sort of work. Others, too, have
been discouraged by the sluggishness of the various bureaucracies that
must be consulted.
The muddled and ambiguous situation regarding the
effect of LSD-25 on chromosomes (2) might call for restriction of research
with this particular drug to those people for whom such changes, if they
do indeed occur, would be of comparatively little importance. Other psychedelics,
which have never been implicated in this way, could be used more widely.
Subjects for LSD might include some of the several million afflicted by
severe and chronic alcoholism, patients suffering from intractable pain
in fatal illnesses (Kast, 1964a), and older people still curious for new
experience to enlarge their understanding of themselves, others, and existence.
While not everyone might choose to die with his mind stimulated by LSD,
as did Aldous Huxley (Huxley, L. A., 1968), rather than dulled by morphine,
such matters call for careful consideration, for each of us owes God a
death. It is folly to restrict and hamper research in all directions because
it may be dangerous in some. If damage to chromosomes should be proved,
and this has not yet been done, some substances may be less harmful than
others, and it may be possible to discover protective measures. As a number
of medicines in regular use are also suspect, and since some virus diseases
and certain radiations produce similar changes, inquiries here would serve
a wider purpose. Indeed, because of the possibility of chromosome-damaging
substances in various medicines and foods, it would be prudent to inquire
at once into such protective substances. For instance, it has been shown
(in animals) that the teratogenic effect of thalidomide (Frank et al.,
1963) can be prevented by greatly increasing the intake of niacin (vitamin
B3). It is not known if this protective effect extends to humans, but if
it does, the thalidomide tragedy, in which so many babies were deformed,
might have been simply and cheaply avoided.
Many years ago, Carl Jung (3) told one of us that
by the middle years of life, childhood experience had usually done its
worst and became of lessened importance as a source of intrapsychic distress.
Queen Elizabeth I put it to her godson, Sir John Harrington, who invented
the water closet, "When thou dost feel creeping time at the gate, these
fooleries will please thee less." She also reflected, "The days of man's
life are plumed with the feathers of death." As the years pass by, many
men and women become more concerned with the purpose and meaning of life,
rather than with the drive to succeed in it. This is an important area
of inquiry for psychedelic research.
Just as important, and at present receiving just
as little attention, is our need to explore ways to help people prepare
themselves for the rapid, all-pervasive, social and technological changes
characteristic of our times. In terms of science and technology, as compared
with previous ages, many of us have lived through the equivalent of centuries
of change. This torrent of change is itself anxiety provoking, for there
are no structures to handle the kinds of change that change the structures
themselves. Few moralists seem to have noticed yet that the progress of
medicine has made it harder for us to reflect upon death and so savor life
to the full. To come to terms with both life and death, each must be measured
with the cold eye of the reflective mind; change must be faced.
Until about half a century ago, everyone everywhere
was raised in the ever-present shadow of death. The autobiographies, biographies,
and histories of forty years ago show that those plumed feathers were never
far away. Life and death were inseparables, the subject of gossip and conversation.
Many people were preparing themselves for their own deaths all their lives,
for, unhampered by insurance statistics, they saw death as ever present.
Death seems to have become taboo today and has taken that place of secrecy
from which sex has just been freed. This exchange of prisoners seems hardly
worth while. It is usually possible to abstain from sex, should one want
to; death allows no abstentions. As a Ghanaian truck driver put it, "Death
takes no bribes."
A generation has grown up in whose life death is
an unfamiliar and unnatural event, almost an affront. Their experience
does not countenance illness for which nothing can be done. But death has
only been postponed, not defeated, and has dominion over people who have
scarcely dared speak his name in polite company. Our forebears linked holy
living and holy dying, and considered the two an art. In a society such
as ours, which has become almost idolatrous about living indefinitely,
it is becoming bad taste to discuss death. Our position is not unlike that
in Victorian love stories, in which the authors managed to write about
love and passion with few open references to sex7 although its absence
made its presence all the clearer.
Those concerned with the religious aspects of psychedelics
should make special efforts in this direction. Many members of the Establishment
are in their middle and later years, and there is little doubt that they
recognize that they "owe God a death," in spite of the efforts of their
physicians and surgeons. Research into these matters should be pursued
with ardor, for while the risks are small, the rewards are likely to be
great. This still leaves the question of whether these substances have
ill effects on the young and whether such ill effects can be much reduced,
easily corrected, or completely avoided. Since controlling the manufacture,
distribution, and use of psychedelics is still uncertain, although their
containment seems to be possible, at least for the moment, even this might
break down during the next few years, as we noted earlier.
If Victor Gioscia (1969) is correct, and there is
an LSD subculture, the dangers, particularly to those under thirty, require
very careful consideration. Leaving out chromosome damage, perhaps the
most dramatic misfortune is the development of a schizophreniform illness.
There is no doubt that this can happen, though it is not clear how often
it does. Certain myths current among some young drug takers increase the
danger. One of the most unfortunate is that the appropriate remedy for
a bad trip is another one, frequently with a larger dose than that which
produced the first one. This notion is on a par with the alcoholic slogan
of having a hair, or even the tail, of "the dog that bit you." The sensible
response to a bad trip is not to have another, but to seek competent advice
and guidance without delay. Some people, who are clearly developing schizophrenia
and have disturbances of perception (Hoffer and Osmond, 1966a) combined
with usually depressed mood changes, with anxiety and sometimes thinking
difficulties, take psychedelics because they have heard, or hope, that
they will help. The most probable outcome is a severe and prolonged bad
trip, or sometimes the precipitation of a more-severe and acute illness.
If these dangers were more widely known and understood, many young people
would avoid trying to treat themselves by these desperate means and avoid
much unhappiness and distress.
A number of simple and effective ways of exploring
and measuring perceptual anomalies, including the HOD (Hoffer and Osmond,
1961; Kelm, Hoffer, and Osmond, 1967) and EWI (El-Meligi, l968a, 1968b;
El-Meligi and Osmond, in press) tests already exist. By means of these
and similar instruments, and by improving public knowledge about schizophrenia,
it should be possible to diagnose and treat it far earlier and more successfully
than usually happens today. Delaying treatment or aggravating the condition
with mixtures of impure and often unknown chemicals in inept attempts at
self-treatment only makes things worse. However, by no means all, or even
most, who sample the bewildering array of often dubious substances said
to be psychedelic become gravely ill or likely to be so. Official propaganda
paints a uniformly gloomy picture, which paradoxically increases rashness
by its exaggeration. This same kind of overstatement was used to discourage
masturbation, sex, drinking, dancing, smoking, using make-up, primping,
and other disapproved activities. The results have been unimpressive. However,
even if it were shown that there were few physiological objections to young
people taking pure and reliable psychedelics except for those with a tendency
to schizophrenia, it does not follow that all controls should be removed.
Each one of us must learn his own culture before
he can either align himself with its values or object to them in a manner
likely to produce constructive change. In most cultures, the attainment
of this is symbolized by the accordance of certain rights, such as the
right to marry, hold property, vote, go to war, receive the death penalty,
and other positive and negative awards withheld from children and those
not sufficiently acculturated. In some cultures, ceremonies take place
to mark entry into adult status, and ritual markings may also be applied
in order to indicate the status of the new adult. Psychedelics taken before
the stabilization of knowledge about cultural norms, because of their capacity
to alter perceptual constancy, might result in a reduced capacity or wish
to internalize the already fluctuating and fragmenting values of our industrial
society. The Establishment, by its hasty and apparently not fully enforceable
ban on these substances, seems to have worsened matters by making them
symbolic of intergenerational differences.
Since the mistake has already been made, what can
be done? Societies that have sought and used psychedelic experience, however
achieved, have nearly always had some kind of initiation ceremony, often
of a religious kind, aimed at focusing expanded experience in a way that
will enhance the participant's identification with and appreciation of
his own society. In the United States at present, only indigenous Indians
are permitted a religion employing psychedelics, and they have achieved
this only by much stubborn courage. Surely bona fide religious groups interested
in these matters who are prepared to conduct themselves in a manner in
keeping with safety and public decency, should be encouraged and supported.
They are likely to serve a valuable social function in the future. Even
the cynical who are not wholly myopic can understand that banned and persecuted
religions frequently spread more quickly and become more attractive in
times of change. Persecution, even with the good intention of preserving
health, is liable to have unintended consequences. In his morality Island,
Aldous Huxley (1962) discussed these matters and illustrated them with
the learning, perceptiveness, wit, and delicacy in which he had few rivals.
Mankind's interest in the psychedelic experience
is unlikely to lessen with increase in leisure. This gives us a greater
opportunity to be concerned not only with survival, but with the quality
of those human relationships that are the stuff of life. Wasson (1969)
shows in his great book that this is one of mankind's oldest interests.
In the years that lie ahead, new drugs, although there will probably be
many more of them, will not, we think, be the focus of greatest interest.
Already various forms of hypnosis, learning-theory applications, and electronics
that evoke and reproduce these experiences are being explored. Those young
people who are alert to them and interested will learn how to use them,
and some may be doing so even now. If this happens, the Establishment will
have to decide whether it disapproves of the chemicals producing the experience
or the experience itself. Very few of those dealing with these matters
legally, scientifically, or politically seem to have concerned themselves
with this critical issue. Medically, the non-drug methods eliminate many
of the current objections to the psychedelic experience as a hazard to
health. The social problems, however, especially those of acculturation,
would not necessarily be greatly changed .
If such capacities, however induced, become widespread,
their impact is likely to resemble some massive mutation. Perhaps this
is necessary if we are to adapt to that new world that we are building
with such a strange mishmash of cunning, inspiration, apprehension, and
folly. The sociological, psychological, political, and other consequences
of psychedelic experience, however induced, occurring in the majority or
even a substantial minority of a postindustrial population, is likely to
affect most of us far more than a few space jaunts for carefully selected
heroes and heroines. The record is merciless: practical men of sound sense
are nearly always wrong about the future, though never lacking in certainty.
While the winds of change strum to gale force around us, they perform their
ostrich acts and proclaim that they have everything under control. But
the gale does not blow itself out because of their rhetoric, and to survive,
we need to set a course that carries us into the future. Some years ago
one of us wrote (Osmond, 1957a):
. . . these agents have a part to play in our survival as a species, for that survival depends as much On our opinion of our fellows and ourselves as on any other single thing. The psychedelics help us to explore and fathom our own nature.
We can perceive ourselves as the stampings of an automatic socioeconomic process, as highly plastic and conditionable animals, as congeries of instinctive strivings ending in loss of sexual drive and death, as cybernetic gadgets, or even as semantic conundrums. All of these concepts have their supporters and they all have some degree of truth m them. We may also be something more, "a part of the main," a striving sliver of a creative process, a manifestation of Brahma in Atman, an aspect of an infinite God immanent and transcendent within and without us. These very different valuings of the self and of other people's selves have all been held sincerely by men and women. I expect that even what seem the most extreme notions are held by some contributors to these pages. Can one doubt that the views of the world derived from such differing concepts are likely to differ greatly, and that the courses of action determined by those views will differ . . . ?
. . . I believe that the psychedelics provide a chance, perhaps only a slender one, for homo faber, the cunning, ruthless, foolhardy, pleasure-greedy toolmaker, to merge into that other creature whose presence we have so rashly presumed, homo sapiens, the wise, the understanding, the compassionate, in whose fourfold vision art, politics, science, and religion are one. Surely we must seize that chance....
And so it stands today. [1970]. We predict, to use
the Iron Duke's phrase to Creevey, that it will be "a nice-run thing: the
nicest-run thing you ever saw...."
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(1) Yolles, Stanley F. Speech quoted in Hospital
Tribune, Monday, June 16, 1969. (Back)
(2) Today (July 1969) reports of chromosome changes
are bewildering to those not experts in this field. The various conflicting
statements suggest that the science of studying chromosomes requires an
art as great as that needed to interpret Rorschach inkblots. In that famous
and often valuable test, the non-expert must rely on his own estimate of
the reliability of the particular person who administered and reported
on the test. Great difficulties arise when men of good repute publish findings
that seem, at least to the naive, to be diametrically opposed and irreconcilable.
There is a danger that, because of reports in the press based on earlier
studies that suggested unequivocal damage to chromosomes, some people who
were frightened away by this information will now decide that there is
no danger whatever. It may even be thought that this was another trick
like that deplorable episode in Pennsylvania, where it was reported with
considerable circumstantial detail that a number of young men had gazed
at the sun under the influence of LSD-25 and were permanently blinded,
suffering grave retinal damage. This proved to be false. Thus are credibility
crevasses created. (Back)
(3) Jung, C. Personal communication to H. Osmond.
November 1955.