| Albert0 2006-07-16, 9:24 pm |
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August Pamplona
>
> Wouldn't self reporting be the most significant determinant of
> what is life changing for that person? Asking the question "have you had=
a mystical/life >changing experience?" is pretty close to being on the sa=
me level as asking "are
> you happy?"=B7
An example: you take lsd, then realize you are the son of God. This
change your life
and you are very very happy.
Can i call this a delusion? I admit this is a mystical/life changing
experience, too,
but what i am saying you are delusional and you have understood nothing
at all.
Or look at the experience of xy , he really changed his life ( and,
sure, it was not the only one in western world...)
But the same goal could be achieved with mj, with a trip to Rocky
Mountains or what you want. With lsd you go too far, I think that
usually you get just a psicotic experience,
with no relationship with real world.
Also with mj usually i go too far, but with mj sometimes i had got some
rough insight,
good to elaborate when sober
>
> The study looked at a follow-up of two months, not "a few days"
After an experience with mushrooms i thought to have understood the
meaning of universe..but then realize it was just psicadelic bullshit.
I realize this in less then 2 months,but i do not think this change
something.
> This experiment is a "new and improved" (better overall experimental
> design plus better verified measurement instruments) version of the Good
> Friday experiment from decades ago which showed effects and perceptions
> to be changed for many years.
The problem is if the effect are like for xy, or mistic bubbling.
hi
Alberto
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