| So this kind of article is excellent and I really am excited about how entheogen can potentially heal productivity to depression. I have been very interested in this concept and approach as I know several people who could benefit from this - myself included. Psychedelics are tools and are not to be taken lightly. As much as an advocate as I am for them I also agree that they're not for everyone. Finally being able to have access to testing and experimentation we may discover even more capabilities. However, what drives me crazy is how are we supposed to get the medicine? Especially in the case of LSD I am concerned of purity and risk of finding it. It's a lot different now than it was in the 80's - at least here in the midwest. We no longer have the Grateful Dead and/or "family" providing clean sources. To make matters worse it's most likely the > 40 year olds crowd who would be interested in this but who is going to sell a 'mom or dad looking person' a hit of acid? Hanging out in the concert lot isn't what it used to be ;-). Perhaps in places like Marin County there still is some availability. I hope so and I hope it once agains paints it's way across the country/world. |
It might be too soon to call this "medicine," a word with certain emotional associations. The article includes many interesting and intriguing anecdotes, but to date the described effects haven't been examined in a properly designed double-blind study (a study with two or more groups and no practical way for the subjects or experimenters to know which group is which[1]).
We must all remember that the placebo effect is particularly persuasive -- some would say confounding -- in the evaluation of mental states.
On the other hand, the so-called "war on drugs" has made it difficult to study these substances without legal entanglements, a factor that by itself may have held back legitimate research for decades.
1. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blinded_experiment#Double-blin...