| Obviously anything experiential can be dismissed as "meaningless woo", but as someone who's done a fair amount of LSD and is a lifelong skeptic, it's an unmistakable experience that the hallucinations are taking place in a higher ordered space. To add a little clarity to what the hallucinations look like, checkout what people describe here: https://psychonautwiki.org/wiki/Geometry The process of hallucinating on LSD feels like you're sliding a window through a higher dimensional structure projected onto a 2D plane. LSD hallucinations aren't "3D" in the same way that mushroom hallucinations are. LSD feels like infinite 2D planes stacked on top of each other, rather than a 3D, if that makes any sense. If you pause to meditate and quiet your mind, you can get the hallucinations to briefly stall or at least retain their current character. If you focus on one area and let your mind explore the hallucinating you're looking at and just sort of "let it happen", or perhaps change music/environments/stimulus, you can push the hallucinations in a new direction. The 2D nature of the hallucinations and the lens-like focusing mechanic does give the impression that you're viewing a projection of a higher dimensional space. I understand it sounds like woo, but the experience is remarkably similar to the feeling of playing with something like http://4dtoys.com/ and I can very much understand what mirimir is describing. I don't have any science-based understanding of how the brain works, but maybe I've added enough color that you can understand what the experience feels like. |
Of course they wouldn't suddenly "get it" entirely like in the movies, but I think it would have to be somewhat interesting to see their reaction to going from absolute confidence in their perceptions and knowledge, to.....well, whatever you call the state one is in after having had such experiences. I know for me, even being fairly experienced, returning to a psychedelic state is rather shocking....it seems like it is literally impossible to store even remotely proper memories of it in one's mind, at least mine. Ineffable doesn't seem like the right word for it.