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The word “psychedelic” was
coined in 1956 by psychiatric researcher Dr. Humphry Osmond, who combined the
Greek word psyche (mind) with delein (to make manifest) to create a new word
meaning “mind manifesting.” Dr. Osmond created the word “psychedelic” to
describe a class of substances that catalyze the emergence into conscious
awareness of previously unconscious, subconscious, repressed or filtered
cognitions, perceptions and emotions, in a manner somewhat similar to dream
states. Dr. Stanislav Grof, the world’s foremost psychedelic researcher,
described LSD as a non-specific amplifier of the unconscious. The effects of
psychedelic drugs are distinct pharmacologically and psychologically from
stimulants, sedatives, analgesics, inebriants (alcohol), anti-depressants and
anti-anxiety drugs. Other terms that have been used to describe this class of
drugs include hallucinogens, delirients, fantasticants, psychotomimetics, and
entheogens.
Psychedelic drugs include LSD
(d-lysergic acid diethylamide), a synthetic drug modified from compounds present
in ergot, psilocybin (extracted from certain mushrooms), mescaline (extracted
from the peyote cactus), ibogaine (extracted from the iboga root), MDMA (methylenedioxymethamphetamine,
a synthetic drug modified from compounds present in nutmeg and sassafras),
ketamine (a synthetic drug), DMT (dimethyltryptamine, extracted from plants,
present in certain toad excretions and the only psychedelic substance that is
endogenous to the human brain), and other related substances. Extended back into
pre-history, psychedelics have been used by humankind primarily as part of
religious/healing rituals in which the participants sought and frequently
reported obtaining a direct experience of a mystical/spiritual nature, with
associated healing benefits both physical and psychological. Modern scientific
research has primarily focused on the use of psychedelics within either a
psychotherapeutic context or as tools better to understand the contents and
processes of the mind.
Special thanks to Rick
Doblin, Ph.D. for granting the Drug Policy Alliance permission to reprint
excerpts from his Harvard dissertation titled “Regulation of the Medical Use of
Psychedelics and Marijuana.”
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