The Joe Rogan Experience - #2403 - Andrew Gallimore
Episode Date: October 30, 2025Andrew Gallimore, PhD, is a chemical pharmacologist and neurobiologist. He is one of the world’s leading experts on psychedelics and the author of several books, including his most recent, “Death ...by Astonishment: Confronting the Mystery of the World’s Strangest Drug.” www.buildingalienworlds.comhttps://www.youtube.com/c/alieninsecthttps://read.macmillan.com/lp/death-by-astonishment-9781250357755/ Perplexity: Download the app or ask Perplexity anything at https://pplx.ai/rogan. Visit https://squarespace.com/ROGAN to save 10% off your first purchase of a website. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Joe Rogan podcast checking out
The Joe Rogan experience
Train by day, Joe Rogan podcast by night
All day
How are you?
Splendid, how the devil are you, sir?
I think it's the first time anyone's answered Splendid
when I ask him, how are you doing?
So, tell me about your book, man.
Let me see the cover of it, first of all.
Death by astonishment, which is the famous Terrence McKenna quote, right?
Yes, he was us.
The only thing you have to fear is death by astonishment.
Exactly, yeah.
You know, the first time I did DMT, I literally heard his words.
Do not give in to astonishment.
I literally heard those words.
It's almost like whatever's over there, wanted me to hear that.
So I could, like, sink in or whatever.
Because I had already heard it before.
You know, like so they wanted to say it to me as well.
It was very weird
Yeah, it's sage advice, I think
Because it's the only way
Because if you freak out
Well, it's like that's a good thing
It's good advice in most of life
Like don't give in to the freak out
Yeah, yeah
Confronting the mystery of the world's
Strangest Drug
How did you get involved in this?
DMT?
Yes
Oh
So you have to go back to my teenage years really
So I mean I first heard about DMT
through Terrence McKenna.
A friend...
Like most of us.
Yeah, like most of us.
But this was like,
this was joined like the dawn of the internet.
Right.
Long before you were a scientist.
Long before I was a scientist, right?
So a friend gave me this magazine
who had this interview with this bearded,
cheeky-looking bearded fellow on the back
called Terence McKenna.
And he spoke about this thing called DMT,
which, of course, I didn't know what that was,
But, you know, the stories that he was telling that you were going to meet these insectoid aliens and transdimensional machine owls jabbering in an indecipherable tongue and singing impossible objects into existence.
I mean, it sounded ridiculous.
But I was kind of, I was hooked.
I thought, this is it.
This is the most fucking incredible thing I've ever read in my life.
And so I was like 15, 16 years old.
And there was one computer in the school
that was hooked up to the
World Wide Web.
So all of like...
What year was this?
96.
Oh.
Early.
I'm giving my age away here, but...
Early days.
Early days.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So I spent all my time just, you know,
going on to Alta Vista.
Remember Alta Vista?
I do.
Yeah.
I didn't remember it until you brought it up.
There we go.
Yeah, just kind of trying to find out
as much as I could about this.
And that was what triggered my...
decision to study chemistry and pharmacology. My kind of academic journey was triggered by,
I want to know, you know, it's such a cool thing, the idea that you can put a molecule in your
brain, and it doesn't just change how you feel, but it completely changes the entire structure
of your reality. Your entire world is obliterated and replaced with one that is completely alien,
that there's not a relationship whatsoever to that normal waking world.
That's incredible.
And I kind of wanted to try, at least, to understand how that actually works.
Well, the weirdest part about that molecules that your brain makes it.
And so then you have to go, why?
And what's the purpose of that?
And what are we really?
You know, what is consciousness and what is normal consciousness?
What's the purpose of it?
and why does this chemical exist?
What does this molecule exist that's produced by the brain that changes everything
and seems to transport you to a place that's more real than this physical reality
that we find ourselves in right now?
Exactly.
And that is kind of the great mystery.
And I don't, I think most people who, even people who've kind of learned about DMT,
even scientists, I mean, I speak to scientists.
I engage with scientists.
neuroscientists often and they will say, oh, this is just hallucination. This is just your brain
kind of making it up. And I don't think most scientists realize how confounding and how
difficult to explain the DMT state is. I think it is one of life's true mysteries. It is not
simple to explain the DMT state. I think it's almost irresponsible to try to explain it
without experiencing it.
It's not going to kill you.
It's not going to kill you.
It lasts 15 minutes.
Stop being a pussy.
Right.
Just do it.
And then tell me it's just hallucination.
That's it.
Just do a big one.
Three giant hits.
Come back.
Tell me this is normal.
Tell me this is just a freak out.
Because it sure doesn't seem like it, does it?
No.
And I mean, that was what, I mean, I first learned about DMT, as I said, when I was 15 or 16.
but my first experience was probably, well, close to a decade later.
And I thought, before I took it, I thought I kind of knew what to expect.
I mean, I'd listened to all the Terence McCannel lectures I could find.
I'd read all the books, I read all the trip reports, and I thought, okay, I'm kind of ready for this.
I kind of know what's going to happen.
And I wasn't ready.
And I was shocked.
I was horrified in a sense.
I was appalled.
I mean, this was like, this is impossible.
This was an impossible experience.
I was confronted with what seemed to me to be the undeniable hand of some kind of intelligence.
And not just any kind of intelligence, but a supremely advanced, ancient and yet highly technological intelligence.
And that was undeniable to me in those first few moments within sort of 30 seconds of that drug hitting my,
my brain, I knew that this is
something else and I was
at first horrified
I was shocked
I just thought this
what is this and then when I finally
kind of came back I was
I remember lying on my bed on my back
like shaking to my very bones
and all I could say was oh my
fucking God
because I was completely confounded
I mean by then I was a chemical pharmacologist
I was a scientist I should know what's going on here
but I had no idea what was going on
and I thought this is this is it
this is what I need to get to grips with
it also gives you a very
like an unusual understanding
of the mechanisms that you interface with the world
like ego and law
and reasoning and rational thinking.
It gives you like this understanding that those are kind of just these weird tools that you use to get by and you're left without them in there.
It just they evaporate and dissolve.
And then when you come back, you're like, what am I doing?
Yeah.
The way I talk.
Like what is my, what's my purpose of interacting with people?
Like, how much of the way I talk to people is this weird social dance, weird, ego, performative, sort of, like, the way I structure sentences, the way I communicate, it all seemed so clunky when you come back.
And you just go, wow, we're a mess.
Like, collectively as a species, we're so without some sort of awakening or some kind of experience, some sort of a psychedelic, profound breakthrough experience.
like you're so hampered by your physical existence and this sort of ancient tribal programming
that we have that we're running through this maze of life with and you come back and you go god
this is so weird yeah I think what DMT does is show you that everything everything you thought you
knew about how reality is structured and what's what's real and what's not real what is fantasy what's
possible and what's not possible. All of that is completely kind of extirpated in an instant
and you realize actually we don't have a fucking clue about the way things really are. I think DMT
just demonstrates that whether you understand it, whether we can we can really understand what's
going on in the brain and why and how this experience is even possible. It just shows you how
little we really understand about the nature of.
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A reality.
So you've done some legitimate studies with DMT.
Right, yeah.
I mean, I work mainly kind of, I guess you could say, theoretically in that I do more quantitative
and qualitative analyses of the DMT state and try to understand, try to use the tools of neuroscience
to try to understand how DMT.
elicits its effects so we can kind of get into if you want if you want to go really
deep I can give you a kind of a neuroscience lesson yeah please talk about so so
you know if you want to understand DMT we kind of have to start with the basic
observation you know before you take DMT you are experiencing a world right
whenever you're awake and conscious you're experiencing a world the normal
waking world this is the world that's kind of familiar
to us. When you take DMT, that world is transformed. It disappears. It's obliterated and it's
replaced with one that is altogether stranger, shall we say. And so what I want to do is kind of
understand, first of all, how that happens, what's actually going on in the brain to cause that
transition and why that happens. And you can't do that unless you have a
a decent understanding of the normal waking world.
So what is the normal waking world?
It's a model.
It's an interface generated by your brain.
So you have this world-building machinery on the outer layer of your brain called the cortex,
and this is generating your world all the time.
All the features of the world that you're experiencing are represented within the cortex.
and that applies whether you are just normal waking life it applies in dreaming
it even applies in the psychedelic state the world you experience is
is always constructed as a model by the brain
and so what that means is that psychedelics what they're doing is they're
perturbing the brain they're manipulating the brain and altering that model
now for example with let's say psilocybin from magic mushrooms
psilocybin binds to this receptor in the brain
called the 5HT2A receptor which you're probably familiar with
the ciscerotonin receptor
and so this is a it's called an excitatory receptor
it stimulates these neurons
which your cortex is constructed from
makes them more excitable makes them more likely
to fire and share information between
to other neurons you get this kind of loosening up
of the world model that your brain is constructing.
So the walls start to breathe.
Objects seem to kind of change their identity.
Everything becomes more fluid and dynamic.
And if you put someone into an MRI machine, for example,
you can actually see that.
In the normal waking state, you can see the neural activity.
It's dynamic, but it's kind of organized and well orchestrated.
You give someone psilocybin, let's say, or LSD.
and you start to see the activity becoming sort of more random and fluid.
So you get this state of slightly increased disorder,
as if the kind of the tuning dial between order and disorder in the brain
has been slightly nudged towards disorder.
But then with DMT, something remarkable happens.
In the early stages of the experience,
you get this kind of quite chaotic stage.
suggesting that the brain is entering this more disordered state, but then it kind of collapses
into this brand new order.
So you go from the order of the normal waking world to this disordered state and then
you collapse into this completely different type of order.
So the brain is effectively constructing an entirely different model of reality.
It's no longer the normal waking world model, which acts as kind of an.
interface with the environment, but it's constructing a completely different world model.
When you say constructing, why do you use that term? Why do you use the brain is constructing?
Because you're, well, okay, so if you think about, you know, how does the brain interact
with the, how do we interact with the environment using our senses, right? So the light information
comes through the eyes, the retina, and it stimulates the very back of the brain. You have an area,
Oh.
Oh, you brought slides.
I brought slides.
Here we go.
Yeah.
Maybe the next one, Jamie, is a bit easier to see.
There we go.
So at the right of the back of the brain here, you have an area called V1, which is the primary visual cortex.
That's your interface with the world.
Sensory information comes and strikes.
It activates patterns of neural activity in V1.
But it's very, very messy.
It's like lines and patches of color and, you know, lines moving in certain directions.
It's a mess, right?
It's very noisy, it's very messy, it's incredibly dynamic.
It doesn't make any sense.
And so what your brain does is it has another level above V1
that kind of has a bird's eye view
and is looking for patterns within this neural activity
and this lowest level.
So it's looking for saying, oh, those lines kind of could be a triangle
or this could be a circle.
It's trying to find patterns to try generate order
from this messy level in V1.
Can I ask you this?
How do we know it does that?
That's a good question.
Well, there are a number of things.
So the earliest evidence came from a, one of the earliest forms of evidence,
came from a guy called Wilder Penfield.
Have you familiar with?
No.
So Wilder Penfield, he was interested in treating epilepsy.
And he invented something called the Montreal procedure,
where he would remove.
a part of the brain that was the focus
of epileptiform activity
the idea being that
it would kind of cure someone's epilepsy
but before he could do that of course
he needed to make sure that he wasn't
removing
you know important parts for someone's function
so what he would do is he would cut the top of their
skull off
when they're still awake
yeah
and kind of expose their brain
and then he would zap
different parts of their brain and say
you know, what's happening.
Oh, my God.
Can you imagine?
Isn't it crazy that that's how we have to find out what works?
We have to, like, it's, the aliens probably look at us and go, oh, my God, you guys are still
doing that?
Yeah, nowadays, things have moved on a bit, right?
I'm sure, but I mean, this is not that long ago, right?
How long ago is this?
1950s?
Yeah, okay.
Yeah.
Not even 100 years.
Right, 100 years ago, they were literally taking your skull and turned into a hat, popping the cap off.
And just, okay, let's see what this does.
Exactly.
They would zap it.
And what he noticed is that when he would zap right at the back of the brain,
so this is this primary visual cortex that's receiving information for an environment,
his patients would say, oh, I see flashes of light, I see lines, I see colors.
It would very simple kind of things.
But then he would move forward to kind of higher levels that we know now are kind of high levels.
And then they'd say, oh, I see triangles or I see an orange.
circle, things like this, then he'd keep going higher and higher.
And then they'd say, oh, I see people, or I see cops and robbers.
And then right at the top, you reach an area called the hippocampus, which you may have heard
of involved in memory.
And the hippocampus basically keeps an eye, it's a bird's eye view of all of this world
model your brain is constructing.
And it's kind of following and looking for interesting or important patterns.
And when he stimulated that, his patients would actually report memories.
They would say, oh, I hear somebody talking to me.
You know, this happened this morning when I was leaving the house.
My mother was telling me something about, you know, you've got your coat on backwards or something like this.
So you have these levels of the cortex that go from very simple kind of very fundamental, low level
visual data at the bottom end
and then at the very top
you've got kind of higher order things
such as you know faces or people
this is sitting at the top
now interesting have you ever
when you are dreaming
right so let's think about dreaming for a second
it's quite instructive I think
when you're dreaming right
the brain is actually constructing
the world in basically the same way
as it does when you're awake
dreams are kind of selective simulations of the waking world
the difference of course is that there's no sensory inputs
so if you scan someone's brain while they're having a dream
you'll see that this back of the brain
this primary visual cortex is kind of quiet
the brain is kind of using what it's learned
about building the world in the normal waking state
to construct the dream world
so the dream world is built in exactly
It's built from exactly the same stuff as the normal waking world.
However, there's interesting features.
In a dream, have you ever tried to use your cell phone?
No.
Not many people have.
What about read a book in a dream?
I don't think so.
One thing I have learned to do is I think I saw it in a movie.
If you knock on a door, you'll realize that you're in a dream.
This waking life?
I don't remember what movie it was.
but it was a guy who was instructing how to lose a dream
and that if you make a habit of walking through a doorway in your home
and every time you walk through a doorway in your home tap on the door
the doorway knock on it with your hand and say am I awake
knock knock knock and then you'll get it in a habit of doing that
every time you go through a doorway and if you go through a doorway in your dream
you'll do it you'll say am I awake
And then as you go to knock, knock, knock, you're like, oh, shit, I'm dreaming.
There we go.
And then you realize, and if you don't give into astonishment, you can maintain that dream.
Right?
That's the thing.
It's like, oh, my God, I'm dreaming.
I can't believe this.
And then you wake up, right?
You get too freaked out and you wake up.
But if you don't do it, and I've only been able to do this a few times because I don't
really knock.
I did it for a while after the movie.
I saw the movie.
I tried it for a while.
And I did have a dream like that where I went through a doorway and I said, am I dreaming?
and I'm like, oh, my God, I'm dreaming.
And then I realized it was dreaming.
And then I was like flying.
I was doing a lot of weird stuff.
But then it went away.
And then I stopped doing it.
And I've always been like, why don't I practice lucid jam?
I've always, I've thought about it like a dozen times at least.
Like, why don't I just get a book on lucid dreaming and really try to attempt to learn the techniques.
And I never do.
Yeah, it takes commitment.
But now there's actually a simpler way of that kind of reality tests.
A simpler way now is to get out your cell phone,
occasionally, open up the calculator and do a few calculations and just check.
Everything's working, right?
Or open up a book and try to read it.
Because the thing about the dream world is, again, just like the normal waking world,
it's constructed over kind of levels of a hierarchy from the highest level models.
So your brain can construct a high level model of a cell phone quite easily.
but all of the fine details of how it functions
that's all represented at the lowest level of the cortex
that's really dependent on sensory inputs
so you can dream of having your mobile phone in your hand
and doing with it but as soon as you try to do something
with it to actually your brain has to kind of construct
that function and it can't do it
unless it has access to sensory inputs
and so that's how you can test if you're
lucid dreaming.
Okay.
Yeah.
Which is why the DMT state is so fascinating is because it's nothing like the dream state.
People say, you know, that perhaps DMT has released when you're dreaming and that it actually
triggers.
I mean, this goes back to the 1980s.
There's a theoretical paper published by a guy called Jace Callaway and he said, oh, maybe
DMT could be produced during RM sleep because it's.
closely related to melatonin structurally, both kind of triptomy in structures. But when you
analyze the phenomenology, you know, the actual experience of DMT, it's nothing like dreaming.
Dreaming is generally the brain making use of what it knows about how to construct the world
in the waking state and doing so in the dream state. So that's why if you ask people, you know,
Many studies on dreaming have shown that people, when they dream, they dream about people.
They dream about dogs and cats.
They dream about, you know, the amount of time they spend talking on the telephone or watching TV
is actually similar to what it is in waking life.
So dreaming is more like a selective simulation of the waking world.
It's not that difficult to explain because your brain, from the moment you were born,
your brain was learning to construct the world as a model of the environment.
is this world is the only world that your brain knows how to build or should know how to build.
And yet when you introduce this molecule, dimethyltryptamine into the brain, the brain suddenly
starts constructing a world it never learned to construct. It's like the brain is speaking a
language, it never learned to speak. And doing so flawlessly, these worlds are of beautiful
crystalline clarity, perfectly finessed, staggeringly complex, narrative complexity that I think
is very difficult to explain. There's no simple explanation of why the brain should suddenly
become capable of constructing these worlds unless, unless, and this is where things become
more contentious, we are indeed interfacing with some kind of intelligence.
that's the explanation that makes sense to me
is that somehow DMT is gating access to some kind of
the flow of information from some kind of intelligent agent
that is directing the DMT experience.
So it's not a sensed world, it's not a kind of a dreamt world,
it's actually a directed world.
I always say you don't break through into the DMT world,
the DMT world breaks through into you.
It's like this intelligent agent has commandeered your neural machinery, the world-building machinery of your brain,
and is directing everything that you see.
It has complete control.
It's interesting that you use the word construct rather than observe.
So you're using terminology that seems to indicate that you believe that you're constructing reality.
Yes.
Not that you're just observing reality.
No, because it's not, if you think about perception in the same way of like looking like a video camera, just taking images of the world, that's not how it works.
The brain must actively construct a model of the environment.
That's all what it's always doing.
It's always constructing a model.
And it is constantly using that model to make predictions about.
the way that
kind of predictions
about the evolution of sensory information
it's constantly saying okay if this is
if this model that I'm currently using is good
then this should happen next
this is the pattern of sensory information
that I should receive next
so if I for example
move this bottle of water
across your perceptual field
even if you close your eyes
you could probably tell me where the water is going to be
in a couple of seconds because it's moving
Your brain has a model of the water
and it is using that to make predictions
and it's only when something surprising happens
if the water, if I do this and your brain detects
that there's something, its predictions start to fail
and you get these error signals
and these are what flow into the brain
and the brain uses then to kind of update its model
until the errors decline.
So you never have direct access to the world
or to the environment,
should I say. You only have direct access
to this model that your
brain is constructing.
That's where it gets weird.
Because I'm assuming your model and my
model are very similar.
Right.
That would be, if we could ever get to
a point where we could
at least temporarily
enter into someone else's consciousness
and see how they see the world, I think we're going to
get a lot of answers.
We're going to be like, oh, you guys live
in a totally different fucking world. No wonder why
you think we should be communists and we should.
Well, it's true, yeah.
I mean, whatever your chemical makeup is, your life experience, your biology, whatever
contributing factors, I always assume that your construction of the world is the same
as my construction of the world.
But every now and then, I'll get a text message from a friend about some world event.
And their take is so crazy.
Then I'll just go, wow, this person is living in a completely different world.
in me. I mean, they are. They are. I mean, yeah, I mean, their brain, the structure of their brain,
the organization of their neural networks, and it's all different in everyone. Everyone has a
unique brain. And so in a sense, everyone has to construct an entirely unique model of
reality, but we agree on certain things. We reach this kind of consensus about what we call
things, but we, you know, if I point at, you know, something that. Yeah, I can say that,
oh, I can describe the colors. I can describe the people. But again, we're all using our own
personally constructed model.
Yeah.
And that's what we experience.
Well, that's what's weird, you know, because we, again, it's this assumption.
So your take is that when you're dreaming, you're trying to construct this world
and you don't really have the tools to leave a book where you can read.
You don't have a tools to use a calculator.
You just know what a calculator is.
And so if you're in the absence of an actual calculator, your brain's not.
capable of creating one.
Yeah, so again,
you have, at the highest level,
you have a calculator
model, which is kind of a broad
idea of a calculator. It doesn't have all the details.
All the details are at the lower end.
Actually, we can show this.
Sorry, Jamie. Can I use Jamie
like this? Sure. Any time.
Can you go to the picture of Margaret
Thatcher? I was going to
bring this up in some way. I think it's supposed to play
a video maybe. Not yet.
Well, the videos don't seem to be playing in the
keynote. There's three or four of them
and none of them play. Oh, really?
Yeah. I figured you're going to get here at some
point. Oh, okay. I don't know how
to... It's just a...
Is it formatted for Windows?
No. Let me go. Okay, go back.
Jesus. I didn't know that's going to happen. Okay.
Yeah, perfect. Okay, so go back one.
Okay, this is kind of really interesting.
Yeah, I've seen this. You've seen this, right?
Yeah. Not with Margaret Thatcher, but I've seen it with other faces.
Yeah, so the original was with Margaret Thatcher.
All right. Let's explain it to people that are just listening because there's still quite a lot of people.
So this is called the Thatcher effect.
So when you're looking at this image of Margaret Thatcher or anyone, your brain is constructing a model of this person, right?
A model of their face.
And as I said, it's constructed over a hierarchy.
So you have the overall idea, the overall concept of Margaret Thatcher, right?
The whole face, the whole thing.
Right.
And then you have a lower level, you have the eyes and the mouth and the nose and they're kind of separate.
And then going further still, within the eyes, you've got circles and patches of color and all this stuff.
And right at the bottom, you have this really messy system of lines and things that don't make any sense, right?
And you can actually show how this hierarchy is constructed.
At the moment, it just looks like Margaret Thatcher, and you can't really break it down.
But if you flip over like this, so just leave it there for a second, Jamie, please.
Yeah.
So now you see what we've done is we've basically,
we've weakened this highest level model, right, of the whole face
because the brain isn't very good at building models of faces that are upside down, right?
Okay.
And so this looks, there's something wrong with the image, clearly.
But it looks like Margaret Thatcher.
It looks like Margaret Thatcher, but it's actually what's happened is the whole face has been flipped over,
but the mouth and the eyes are actually the correct way up.
Right.
Right. But to the brain in this configuration, it's not that surprising because the eyes kind of look as they should.
The mouth looks as it should.
You're seeing the whole image in its pieces, if you like.
Right.
You're seeing that lower level fragments.
And it's only when you flip it that it becomes horrific.
Horrific, right?
So now you've reestablished that high level model of Margaret Thatcher and the brain goes, fuck, this is completely wrong.
And this is why you get that.
that it's immediately obvious.
With the upside down eyes
and the upside down mouth,
it looks completely insane.
She looks like a demon.
She looks like a demon, right.
Which is really weird.
Which is really weird.
It's called the Thatcher Effect.
Was she the original person
that they used this idea?
Who came up with this?
Oh, good question.
But this is fairly old now,
I think at least a couple of decades old.
It's so funny that they figured that out.
That's a great insight into how the mind works.
because the upside down Thatcher
with the upside down
with the correct eyeballs
and mouth
the second one Jamie
that does not look crazy at all
that's what's so weird
about the third image
because the third image
really looks psychotic
like if it was a monster movie
and then someone got bitten
by a zombie
and then that was what they looked like
and then they came running after you
be like oh fuck she got bit
yeah exactly
her eyeballs are upside down
her mouth is upside down
because that's what it looks like
weird
for people listening
the big teeth, you're above teeth, they're below,
and the little tiny teeth are above,
and the eyeballs are the eyelids, the top part,
are on the bottom, and it really looks like a monster.
Yeah.
And it's weird that it looks like a monster
because it looks so damn normal upside down.
Yeah, exactly.
Weird.
So, yeah, it's revealing this hierarchy,
this structure of this world model
that your brain is always constructing, you see.
That's a good way to describe why it's constructive,
rather than observing.
That's clearly an example of your constructing normalcy
and that upside-down face.
It's not normal at all.
Not normal at all.
Right.
Yeah.
Okay.
So do we know what's going on when you're dreaming?
Is it potentially, is there a release of DMT?
Because DMT is exogenally, it's produced in the brain.
It's produced in the liver and the lungs, right?
It's produced a lot of other areas.
So we know the body makes it, right?
And we also know that melatonin plays a role and there's a lot of other things going on.
Is it possible that DMT is one of the ingredients in the soup?
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Well, so I think the problem is, as I said, is that, yes, it's possible biochemically.
now the pineal gland is what people often refer to right
because the pineal gland has this long history
and mystical traditions the seat of the soul the third eye
all this kind of stuff so everyone wants DMT to be produced by the
pinnial gland yeah the problem is is first of all
is that the pineal gland is very small it's about the size of the end of my
my pinky and it's designed or evolved to produce
nanograms, micrograms of melatonin, very small amounts you need.
So the idea that this gland can suddenly start pumping out milligrams of DMT
to achieve a kind of psychedelic state in the dream state is quite an ask.
There have been some studies, or one study in particular,
actually looked at DMT level.
So we've known since the 1950s that DMT has produced by,
is a product of mammalian physiology, and it's produced by humans.
In those days, they try to kind of pin schizophrenia on DMT,
the idea that if there was some fault, some problem with tryptamine metabolism,
instead of producing serotonin, which is five-hydroxytyptamine,
the brain could instead start producing elevated levels of N-N-dymethyltriptamine, or DMT.
And so they started looking for differences,
in DMT levels in psychotic patients, schizophrenic patients versus normal people.
And there have been more than a hundred studies that have looked at levels of DMT and in the
blood, in urine, in cerebrospinal fluid. But there's no convincing, consistent evidence
that suggests that DMT is the cause of psychosis or dreaming, in fact.
In Dagenous production, what?
What's the mechanism?
Like, what is producing it?
Okay, so it's actually produced from tryptophan.
So DMT is an alkaloid.
An alkaloids are all produced from amino acids.
So triptophan is first converted to triptamine.
This is called decarboxylation.
You remove a carbon dioxide molecule, and you've got triptamine.
Now here, you can go in a number of different directions.
You can go to serotonin, which is five hydroxytyptamine.
or you can go to DMT, to simply add two methyl groups, two carbon atoms.
And so what is adding these things?
So there's an enzyme called Indoleethelamine N-methalransferase, or I-N-M-T for short.
This is the key enzyme for DMT production.
It adds these two groups, these methyl groups, to tryptamine, which is produced from triptophan, to produce DMT.
And triptophan is produced from?
So it's, tryptophan is one of the essential amino acids, so it's, it is something you consume.
Do you, do people take triptophan as a dietary supplement in order to increase the potency of their experiences?
Some people do.
I don't think it would have an appreciable effect.
But I mean, people take triptophan for lots of reasons.
So this process, what makes you think that this is a size dependent process?
just because this gland is so tiny, why can't it do it?
Okay, well, there's a number of things.
First of all, it's just there's orders of magnitude.
I mean, a gland that is designed to produce nanograms
or micrograms of something,
to ask it to produce a thousand times more
of an entirely different molecule is quite an ask.
However, that's not the only reason.
There's actually been a study recently
in the last, I think, three or four years
that looked at DMT levels in rat brains in real time.
They're not in humans, but in rat brains.
They actually have a technique now called microdialysis
where they can basically measure an awake moving,
normally behaving rat.
They can measure the levels of DMT in its brain.
And what they found was that the levels of DMT,
first of all, were surprisingly high.
So similar levels to things like,
like serotonin and dopamine.
Which is unusual.
Which is, yes, which makes you think
that it must have some kind of function.
But importantly, they also
in some rats, they remove the
pinnial gland. They kind of cut it out
and found that it didn't affect.
So we don't need the
pinnial, in other words. All brain cells,
all neurons can probably produce
DMT. The lungs can
almost certainly produce DMT.
Why do you think that the pineal gland
had this role in
ancient mysticism why did they have this appreciation of it as being this very sacred organ
that i mean it's the eye of horace right right i mean it certainly looks like it it looked
like the eye of horace looks exactly like a cross section of the pineal gland yeah i mean it sits
right in the center of the brain as well right um so it and it looks it's kind of unusual as you say
it looks like a little tiny pancake like how did they where did they come
It's whenever this, I mean, it's very easy to dismiss, like, ancient mysticism and ancient ideas of what, what things are sacred about, you know, the human body and what, what areas of the mind are producing these, the third eye.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Like, that's how it was always described.
But I don't want to, I, it's too weird.
So I go, wait a minute, before you dismiss, because it's fun to dismiss things.
Like, oh, they didn't know anything.
Like, how do we know that they?
weren't on to something like maybe there is a role that that plays in not normal DMT
production but in the big dump that you get before you die right you have a near-death
experience maybe that has to be maybe that's the kill switch maybe that's the big dump
switch you know what I mean like if no one's ever put it like that before if you think about
it's the seat of the soul right if that is where the soul is like connected that's where
the soul is, like, anchored into this physical reality.
And if you're going to die, if you have a near-death experience, something has got to go,
all right, boys, this is not a drill.
Let her go!
And then, that's what a lot of people think is happening.
When people have near-death experiences, there's a lot of very bizarre aspects of it.
But one of them is the uniformity of their experiences.
There's a lot of very similar experiences, very similar.
You know, you have, with anything, you have variables that people may or may not be adding
onto their own because people love to tell a good tale, you know, and why miss out on a chance
when you've had a near-death experience that was profound to maybe add a little to it,
maybe a little bit more exciting. But the overall kind of framework of the experience is very
similar and I often wonder like
what is that like I
have a friend who was in a car accident and had
a near death experience and said
that when they came back they had
no fear like for that moment
I think of fear now but like no fear
at all about dying no fear at all about life
and that this was this very
weird transformative
journey where they went to another
place and then they returned
but it was very
real it felt very
to the point where all their anxiety
even about the car accident, being knocked unconscious and all that stuff, all went away.
Yeah, I think the near-death experience connection to DMT is very interesting because
Rick Strasman, of course, in the 90s, when he wrote DMT the spirit molecule, he hypothesized
that, in fact, at the point of death, DMT is released by the pinnial, and it kind of acts as the
conduit by which the soul exits the body and enters the afterlife.
Yeah.
And, of course, that was, you know, largely speculation.
It was just a hypothesis.
But in recent years, there's been some really fascinating work showing that DMT, actually, if you take some neurons, a culture of neurons, for example, brain cells, which are very sensitive to oxygen levels.
So if you deprive neurons of oxygen, they die very quickly.
This is why strokes can be so rapidly devastating.
If the brain becomes deprived of blood and oxygen, then the brain cells start to die.
But in the presence of DMT, they live a lot longer.
So they're kind of protecting the brain against hypoxia.
Now, when does the brain enter a hypoxic state during the dying process, right?
This is when as your cardiovascular system starts to collapse, your respiratory system collapses,
the brain becomes deprived of oxygen.
And this is precisely the time when you want.
the brain to be flooded with DMT
just in case you come back
to protect the brain
from the lack
of oxygen.
So that suggests a clear and
obvious link and if you kill rats
actually, again I was referring
to this microdialysis experiment
if you kill a rat
whilst measuring DMT levels
as the rat dies the DMT levels
spike.
So it suggests that the rat is also
maybe having a trip and balls.
An actual
death experience.
Yeah.
I wonder if they come back as a person.
Yeah.
I don't know.
But it does suggest, right?
It does suggest that there is maybe some link there.
But what it doesn't explain, of course, is why you would need, why this molecule would be so profoundly
visionary.
Right.
That's still kind of a mystery.
You know, are you being kind of given access to wherever you go after death, you know, is
Is it a vision of what happens to you later on?
That's it.
But the question to me, my question, rather, is not,
it's, are we sure it's a vision or is it a gateway?
Or is it, are you entering into a non-physical space that has its own laws,
that it's very different, but it is a reality?
And it's not that it's a vision, that not that it's a hallucination or a visionary representation
or that you're even constructing this reality.
But you're entering into,
completely different dimension that has laws that are very different than the dimension that
we find ourselves in right now okay so what I think is that I don't think with DMT that you're
going anywhere as such I think you know as I said the the world your experience is always represented
in the brain and that must apply I think in the DMT state if you if you're experiencing an altered world
There must be some representation of that within your cortical machinery, within your cortex, within your brain.
I think that has to be the case.
However, I don't think, and I think it's a great mystery, is how the brain is actually capable of constructing that on its own.
In the same way that the brain constructs the dream world, because the brain knows how to construct the waking world.
So it's simply using its stored models.
The same with hallucinations.
If you look at case reports of hallucinations in psychotic,
you go through the psychiatric literature,
the vast majority of hallucinations are of normal appearing,
normal-sized people, normal animals.
It's like waking dreams, if you like.
But with DMT, it's not.
The brain is somehow constructing a world
that has no relationship whatsoever.
Nothing is taken from the normal waking world.
It's like the brain suddenly has switched to speaking a language
that it never learned.
And I think that suggests that actually what's happening is you're not going somewhere,
but you are in this more kind of fluid and dynamic state that psychedelics induce.
You're kind of, you're making the brain much more sensitive to being commandeered.
I think what you're seeing is what this intelligent agent, as I recall, as I tend to call it.
I don't call it spirits or aliens or anything like that.
It's clear to me that there's some kind of intelligence, and that intelligence is interacting with our brain in some way and showing us kind of what it wants us to see, if you like.
Does that assume that consciousness resides in the brain, though?
Or is, I mean, when you take into account the possibility of consciousness being something that the brain tunes into and that it forms its own version of reality based on its biology, is life-executive?
experiences, et cetera, et cetera, but that it is just a radio and it is just forming its version of
consciousness, but that it is actually tuning into consciousness and that consciousness is sort of
a universal thing that exists not just in people, but maybe in other life forms as well,
certainly animals and maybe plants. So one of the weird things about people who trip,
I'm sure you know this
is they experience
communication from plants
like tree hugging
becomes a real thing
yeah
tree hugging is a very different thing
it's like oh you're alive
hello
you know
and we know that trees
and plants in general
especially house plants when people
interact with them they grow better
they're healthier plants
like you can prove it
it's interesting you play music for them
communicate with them, say nice things.
We also know that plants in, like, abusive households
or people are alcoholics and cigarettes smoke,
they're going to do terrible.
Yeah, I think that as soon as I start talking about,
first of all, I think consciousness is absolutely fundamental.
I don't think that the brain generates consciousness.
I think consciousness is in some way
the only thing that really exists.
You know, I think that it's the absolute ultimate reality
is consciousness itself.
Do you think everything is?
conscious? I think everything is
consciousness. Everything is
consciousness. Interesting.
Yeah.
Do you think that there's a state that
may be inanimate objects
achieve that is very different than
our interpretation of consciousness, but yet
they're still conscious? I think
in
which is why, because I say this because Jamie has
O.J. Simpson's golf clubs.
I feel like they have some consciousness
attached to them.
I mean, I mean...
It's probably bad, right?
Those times didn't exist in the 90s.
They're like only 10 years old.
That's bad voodoo, bro.
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you know what do we mean by when something's conscious in in buddhism they have this they have
this idea of things that exist from their own side which i really like from their own side yes
so you exist from your own side in other words presumably i can never prove it
But there is someone, a subjective perspective there that's actually modelled, you know, that it's experiencing me and I'm and Jamie as well.
Everyone is like a perspective.
You know, I exist from my own side.
Whereas does this skull exist from its own side?
Does it have its own unique perspective?
I would say probably not, but I don't know.
And consciousness is kind of like the interaction.
You know, reality kind of emerges by the interaction of all of these perspective, these consciousness.
agents, if you like. Everyone, all these points of subjective perspective. I think that's probably
closer to what ultimate reality is. But I think it's very difficult. I'm a neuroscientist.
So I focus on not consciousness per se, but on what I can get my teeth into. I can get my teeth
into the content, into the structure, the actual meat and potatoes. Right.
of, I've never used that phrase before.
It's a good phrase.
The meat and potatoes of the DMT experience,
things that I can talk about and analyze.
That's, you know, what I'm trying to do, I think,
is I'm not trying to tell people what I think DMT is.
I'm just trying to convince them that it's not what they think it is,
that it's not just hallucination,
that it's not, these are not dreams, that kind of thing.
I really feel like to be talking about the subject,
you should experience it, like I said before.
I agree.
I think it's so silly that there's very serious people that are academics,
that are brilliant people that are dancing around what this thing is without doing it.
Right.
I've never met anybody who's done it who comes back and goes, eh.
Yeah, no, it's impossible to do it.
No big deal.
I was interacting with a guy on Twitter and X who referred to entity encounters as illusory social events,
I-S-E's, which to me was just the most absurd
watered down.
This guy had obviously never encountered a fucking DMT entity,
or he wouldn't.
But the idea that this is just an illusory social event
just seemed to me absurd.
Had he had any experiences?
I very much doubt.
He was a prominent nearer scientist.
But here's the thing.
Sometimes people have low-dose experiences.
Like I had talked to a friend once that had a very,
I'm like, how many hits did you take?
No, like, one.
I'm like, oh.
Yeah, you need two more.
We need two more.
Take the third hit.
Yeah, you missed the gate.
You didn't hit the gate.
You're on the outside going, this place is kind of weird.
Yeah, but if you go through, it's a lot weirder than you think.
It's a lot weirder than you think.
Yeah.
I think it's a lot weird than Terrence McKenna, or as you say, you know, stranger than you can suppose.
Insuppose, yeah.
He had a really amazing video that I think I posted it on my Instagram of McKenna, like in the 1990.
I believe it was, talking about the upcoming decades and what's going to happen in terms of
how weird the world is going to be with technological innovation and what we're going to be seeing,
artificial intelligence, alien contact, I mean, he basically nailed it.
I mean, fucking nailed it.
He nailed it to a tee.
I think he might have predicted time travel, but here's the thing.
if they are capable of time travel, when are you going to find out about it?
When are they going to, if let's say DARPA is working on some defense project and part of it involves like, you know, one way to stop a war would be literally to go back in time five minutes and kill everybody who was about to start the war.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
You're right?
Kill Hitler, that kind of idea.
Or stop a bomb from being switched on.
You would literally go back in time to stop the missiles from launching.
When would we learn about that?
First of all, it's very highly unlikely that it exists outside of the quantum stage right now, right?
I get it.
But if it did, if we're talking about 100 years from now or 200 years, would we know?
We would not.
Yes, this is it.
This is it.
This is amazing.
I love this.
First of all, I just love his voice.
I had a guy of the best voice.
is going to rise excruciatingly, even beyond the excruciating present levels of contradiction.
So I think it's just going to get weirder and weirder and weirder and finally it's going to be so weird that people are going to have to talk about how weird it is.
And at that point, novelty theory can come out of the woods, because eventually people are going to say, what the hell is going on?
It's just too nuts.
It's not enough to say it's nuts.
You have to explain why it's so nuts.
I look for the invention of artificial life, the cloning of human beings, a possible contact with extraterrestrial, possible human immortality.
and at the same time appalling acts of brutality, genocide, race-baiting, homophobia, famine, starvation,
because the systems which are in place to keep the world sane are utterly inadequate to the forces that have been unleashed.
the collapse of the socialist world, the rise of the Internet.
These are changes so immense.
Nobody could imagine them ever happening.
And now that they have happened,
nobody even bothers to mention what a big deal it is.
The mushroom said to me once,
it said, this is what it's like
when a species prepares to depart for the stars.
You don't depart for the stars
under calm and orderly conditions.
It's a fire in a madhouse,
and that's what we have,
the fire in the madhouse at the end of time.
This is what it's like
when a species prepares to move on to the next dimension.
The entire destiny of all life on the planet
is tied up in this.
We are not acting for ourselves
or from ourselves.
We happen to be the point species
on a transformation that will affect,
affect every living organism on this planet at its conclusion.
Now, I think that's exactly what's going on right now.
The only thing that he didn't quite get is the artificial intelligence aspect.
How much of a factor?
But, I mean, how could you predict all that in 1998?
I think with, you know, we live in a very thin slip.
If you look at the development of an intelligent civilization, right, over hundreds of thousands of years,
we live in this thin sliver, this kind of technological phase.
And once you enter that phase that we're in now, you know, the computer age, the information age, or whatever it is,
you're probably only a few hundred years away from departing for the stars or something like this
of complete or even completely transcending our biology.
And this isn't a crazy idea anymore.
Many sensible astrobiologists and other intelligence theorists think, yes,
probably what's going to happen in the next few hundred years is that we will become post-biological.
And so if you think about the universe more broadly, if we're looking for aliens, quote unquote aliens,
as being kind of wet-brained, wet-brained, wet-brily.
body biological beings, we're probably only looking for a tiny fraction of the intelligence
in the cosmos, and the vast majority of intelligence in the cosmos is likely to be
post-biological, to have completely dispensed with the biological form.
Now, what's interesting about that, Jamie, sorry, there's an, you've heard of the Kardashev scale,
right?
I don't think so.
So the Cardishev scale was generated by a guy called.
Kardashev and he was Soviet guy and he's kind of high theorized of as intelligences progress
and develop they go through a number of phases so you have a type zero okay yeah you've got it right
so we're kind of a type zero level one on the Carditchf scale and level two sorry we're level
zero so level one would be when we for example are able to harness all of the energy from our
neighboring star then the next level when we can
harness all the energy from the galaxy, et cetera.
So it's an expansionist way of thinking about it, the idea of climbing the Kardashev scale.
There we go, you see.
Yeah.
But in the 1990s, a British cosmologist called John Barrow, he said, actually, if you actually
look at how an intelligent civilization such as ourselves, the only one we know, we actually
spend a lot more time going not to larger and larger scales, but smaller,
and smaller scales, right?
We go down to, you know, doing chemistry,
the large Hadron Collider,
we're looking at the structure of atoms,
then the structure of subatomic particles
and that kind of thing.
We're actually spending more time and more energy
and more money going deeper and deeper.
Now, the reason that's significant is because
if you take the human sits in the middle,
if you take the scale of a human,
And then you compare the scale of a human to the scale, let's say, the hydrogen atom.
And then you compare it to the scale of the observable universe.
Humans sit almost exactly in the middle of that scale from the hydrogen atom to the observable universe.
But below the hydrogen atom, there is probably a hundred million to a billion times more scale deeper and deeper down.
Richard Feynman, the Nobel, you know, the legendary physicist, always used to say there's plenty of,
room at the bottom. There's much more room at the bottom. In other words, as an intelligent
species, an intelligent civilization progresses, they're not likely to kind of become space
faring as such, you know, and kind of exploring the cosmos. They're much more likely to go deep
down and kind of instantiate themselves at the lowest levels of reality. That's where all
the spaces. It's not out there, surprisingly. All the space is downwards. Now, one
Once an intelligence achieves that, and you have to imagine that probably there are probably billions of these civilizations that had already achieved this before we even popped into existence, before we evolved as a species, they would effectively disappear.
They would become effectively part of the fabric of space time itself, exploiting the fundamental computational structure.
of the lowest level of reality, basically, and that's where they reside.
And there are probably far, far more, probably millions or billions more of those types of civilizations
than there are ones like, I say you and me like us as humans, right?
And so then you ask, well, if that's the case, you know, if we're interested in contacting
so quote unquote extraterrestrials, why are we focused on this tiny,
subpopulation of beings that are likely to be, you know, floating around in metallic disks or
whatever, we should in fact be focusing on the much more abundant ones that are perhaps at the
deepest levels of reality. And how would we do that? How would an intelligence that has
completely transcended its biology and even completely transcended its physical form entirely?
How would such an intelligence communicate with us? It would do it through our brain.
that's the most obvious thing
because the brain is how we interact with the environment
it's how we interact
it's the interface by which we interact with
what there is
and I think DMT
I'm not saying that these DMT
entities are necessarily these post-biological beings
but it's not out of the question
I'm not straying too far
from fairly standard now
modern scientific discourse
when I say that it's perfectly possible
that there are very large numbers of these supremely intelligent civilizations
that are everywhere and nowhere
and that we can somehow interact with using our brain.
And that DMT generates this kind of highly susceptible,
highly sensitive neurological state that allows us to interact with them.
This is why, perhaps, when you go into the DMT space,
it's immediately obvious.
It's undeniable, undeniably apparent that you are,
interacting with some kind of supremely advanced intelligence.
Could that be some intelligence that has existed long before we arrived on the seam
and that we're now kind of discovering this technology?
And I consider DMT to be some kind of technology that we have discovered,
that we are now learning to use to interact with these intelligent agents
that perhaps have been here forever in human terms.
it's an interesting term the term go there
you know because that's what it feels like
it feels like you're you're traveling somewhere
like you're going somewhere
but the reality is that place you're going is probably right here
that's where it gets weird
because it's around you all the time
you just don't have the ability to tune into it all the time
because you wouldn't be able to function if you did
exactly and these beings they probably don't even have
a true form
that you could represent visually, right?
So when you see an insectoid alien or a machine elf, you're probably not seeing, or almost certainly.
I've never seen a machine.
Oh, really?
Have you?
I've seen, I don't know if I've seen the archetypal kind of mckenering, mckenna-esque machine owl.
Yeah, the way he described it was very odd.
But I've seen certainly a multitude of beings, very, very, it's kind of screechy, squeaky, like jabbering, jabbering.
You know, I saw once a bunch of jokers giving me.
the finger.
They were all giving me the finger.
They were going, fuck you.
And they were jokers with like the little tassels on with the bells in the end of it.
Right.
And it made me very aware that I was taking myself too seriously.
And they were like, yep.
And they said it to me and they pointed their finger at me like that.
I was like, you're right.
Yeah.
It's interesting.
Actually, it reminded me of something.
There's this weird effect that people who use DMT a lot, they get this, you know,
they might use DMT regularly.
And one day, they,
they take a hit as they normally do with the same batch of DMT
and they get a joker or a jester
and it wags its finger and says not today
you don't too much yep exactly
and it shuts off
a guy wrote to me and says that he saw a jester
as he often does and it
fucking punched him in the face
and he felt it he felt
and it knocked him back into this world
and so the effect was gone
instantaneously now
Now that is not easy to explain because this is not tolerance.
DMT, first of all, doesn't exhibit subjective tolerance, unlike the other psychedelics.
It's kind of weird.
You can inject someone with DMT every 30 minutes perpetually.
And the intensity of their experience will always be the same.
It's not tolerance.
And tolerance anyway is a gradual thing.
It increases gradually over time.
So it's not an off switch.
I was speaking to someone.
We're probably going to talk about DMTX later.
which is kind of my thing.
But she was undergoing DMTX, which is this infusion,
where they keep the brain level of DMT constant.
That's a tease to the big build-up.
Yes.
There we go.
Yeah.
And she was in the DMT space interacting.
The infusion machine was running, pumping her brain with DMT a constant rate,
keeping the DMT levels in her brain constant.
She was interacting with these entities.
And then at some point, after maybe 30 minutes or whatever,
When the machine was still running, they said to her, or impressed upon her, they said,
OK, we're done.
We're done today.
And the visions stopped.
Whoa.
But the machine, the brain was still being pumped with DMT, and yet the visions stopped.
So what that suggests to me is that they do indeed, as I said before, they have control.
They are directing the information into the brain.
And people, you know, describe things like downloads.
in Graham Hancock, actually, in his book Supernatural, in his first DMT experience,
he described this download of highly complex, entirely non-human information into his brain,
as if he locked in to some kind of advanced computational processor that was beaming information into his brain.
And many people describe that as like a download of complex mathematical structures and strange.
geometries, entirely
non-human stuff
as if they're kind of
not that they expect you to understand
it, but as if to say
we know a lot more about reality
than you do, we know a lot and you
don't know anything. And that's
the message they're kind of trying to impress
upon you by directing it and they can
control it. They can shut it off
if they so decide.
Hmm, they.
Well,
you picked up on the they.
Yeah, that's a weird one.
Whatever it is.
Whatever it is.
Yeah.
This idea that we all evolve along a similar pathway is strange to me.
That the concept is we assume that intelligent life everywhere else evolves along similar pathways.
And that most of them eventually become some sort of a biological digital hybrid, if not completely digital.
and then most of them probably figure out how to harness the power of the star and the suns.
But one of the, the weird thing about us is that not just that we're evolving and that we have evolved,
but yet we have this, but that rather, we have this insatiable desire for technological innovation.
Technological innovation and to make things better.
We're constantly improving upon everything we make.
We're making better versions of every computer, every phone, every year, even though it's not really necessary for most people.
You're always buying them.
It's a very strange desire that we have that I think sinks hand in glove to materialism because materialism is also so stupid for an intelligent life form that has a finite lifespan to not be aware that collecting things does you no good because you're going to die.
But yet you want to collect things more than any.
And you want to show people the things you've collected.
Well, what better way to facilitate innovation and growth than to have a built-in instinct
for purchasing better things all the time and possessing better things all the time,
which will force people to work literally into the grave in order to get these things done?
Yeah, I think it's psychotic.
Yeah, it is.
But that's just us.
Like, it doesn't have to be like that.
If you think about the hundreds of billions of stars just in this galaxy, the hundreds of billions of galaxies in the known universe, the endless possibilities of when intelligent life emerged, if, in fact, it did emerge anywhere, if no evidence had emerged anywhere else but here, right?
We're just guessing.
We assume.
But if we were right, like, it could have taken an infinite number of forms.
it could have evolved completely non-physical.
Yeah.
Like, intelligent life that's completely non-physical.
That's not contained to a cellular structure and bones and organs.
That it's plasma-based.
That it's some sort of an intelligence that communicates with some sort of a universal language.
We don't, we're just guessing that everything's amongst us.
We're just guessing everything's a curious monkey that keeps making a better spaceship.
Yeah, yeah.
But that might be true.
Which, by the way, I went to the SpaceX.
Jamie and I both did.
How dope?
Pretty dope.
We went to see the SpaceX launch.
How far do you think we were?
Were we a half a mile, quarter of a mile?
What do you think?
I call it a mile, a mile and a half.
Oh, you think more than a mile?
Yeah.
Really?
Okay.
So let's say we're a mile away.
Let's just guess.
Well, let's just throw it in perplexity.
Throw it in perplexity.
Ask our sponsor perplexity.
How far is the distance
between Star Base
and the SpaceX rocket?
Between the Star Base.
And the SpaceX.
Yeah, launchpad.
Yeah, because there's one in Florida as well.
So they have their own town down there.
It's like a legit town.
It's like a military town.
Like they took over a place, like a military installation, these little tiny houses, fucking security everywhere.
There's so many cyber trucks.
If you have a cyber truck, you're fucked.
You have no idea.
You better remember your parking spot, bitch.
Everybody has a goddamn cyber truck.
Assimated at less than one mile.
Let's see?
Okay.
Okay.
Okay.
Main entrance star base of the actual launch pad infrastructure is estimated less than one mile.
Public viewing sites.
Okay, there's public viewing sites, but we were there.
We were at Starbase.
We were in at a public viewing site.
We were at the actual rocket factory.
And when that thing takes off, you feel it in your chest.
It's nuts.
So it's roughly a mile away.
And you have to wear earplugs.
It's a mile away, and you got to wear earplugs.
And you feel it in your chest.
And Elon's son was like, I want to go home.
Like there was a video.
There's a video that I put, and you can hear him in the background.
so funny because my wife is like, are the baby's okay? Because women that have children,
like, that's immediately what they go to, not, wow, that rocket's really cool. It's like,
oh, are the baby's okay? Because she can hear I'm going, I want to go. I want to go. He's like,
I want to get out of here. Because it's that freaky. The power of it is just so nuts.
And then you see it and you realize like, God, how many people have seen a rocket launch?
Like how crazy, this thing's going into space. And then I went upstairs and I got to sit in the
command console or whatever you would call it, the command center. And I get, with me and Elon and
all the engineers, and we get to watch it land in Australia, 35 minutes later. So we watch...
35 minutes? Yes. From... Yes. From Texas. To Australia. It's crazy. And we're watching all these
cameras in real time that are all connected to Starlink satellites. So there's dozens of cameras.
So you're watching... Two miles is what this...
Oh, two miles.
Straight across.
Okay.
It seems so close.
It seemed really close.
Okay.
Two, even crazier.
So two miles away and you feel it in your chest.
It's nuts.
I mean, it's really nuts.
It's, uh, the power that it has is so nuts.
But it's so old school, right?
It's just, you know.
It feels old fashioned in a weird kind of way.
It's the most modern version of like a V8 muscle car.
It's crazy, right?
If you think, like,
A hundred years ago, at the end of the beginning of the 20th century,
how different we would be in a hundred years as we are now.
It's unfathomable.
When you compare the rest of human history, it's like an exponential thing.
You know, we've gradually been developing and technologically improving.
And then we hit some point in the last century
where we reach this kind of technological computer informational aid.
and everything is accelerating.
Exactly like Terrence McKenna was saying,
things speed up very, very quickly.
And it feels like we're on the cusp either of killing ourselves,
which is one option, or undergoing some profound transformation as a species.
Whether it means becoming a space-faring nation,
sorry, a space-faring civilization,
or whether it means going in the opposite direction
and becoming some kind of post-biological civilization,
that exists beyond space and beyond time, perhaps,
and kind of joining the crowd of these intelligences
that have made that transition perhaps billions of years ago, you know.
Do you think that this chaos is the only way that things get done?
So this is my thought.
If everything's perfect and everything's wonderful and fine,
there's very little motivation for radical change.
And radical change is what you need to escape the primate instincts that we have.
As McKenna had the great quote of that we're territorial apes with thermonuclear weapons.
There we go.
Such a perfect way to describe us.
That is what we are, right?
So in order to escape that, things have to almost be so chaotic that it demands radical change.
It demands like we were literally like, and this is how we're,
we look at many things, even things that aren't totally warranted, like climate change or COVID
or anything, like we look at it like, oh my God, it's an existential crisis. Like, we have to do
something right now. And this is how also we approach political dissent or political disagreements.
If the left wing wins, the world is over. If the right wins, the world is over. And it's like
this is almost like this is how we have to function in order to really get things done.
And as things are getting more and more crazy in terms of technology and in terms of the consequences of our actions, post-nuclear bomb, post-fusion, post-Hodron Collider, post-A-I is where it gets really where we have to kind of be like, we're really got to get going, guys, we really got to do something.
And we have to figure out what's the right way to proceed in order to not blow ourselves up.
Yeah. And I feel like this is maybe the only way that you motivate this kind of extreme change, which seems like our destiny. Our destiny is some sort of a very bizarre extreme change that seems to probably be happening within your, you're in my lifetime. Something's happening right now that is going to be different than anything that's ever happened before, which is the birth of artificial general super intelligence. Right in front of our eyes, some sort of a digital supreme being is going to be different.
going to exist. And we're going to have to figure out society. We're going to have to figure
out everything. It's going to be a complete, this idea of like having bullshit congressional
candidates that are full of shit and paid off by these companies and they're going to make
laws that screw you over and get, all that's out the window when no humans control anything
anymore. And that's entirely possible inside of our lifetime. And I think more likely than not,
because if you look at all the harm we've done to the rivers and the ocean and the world and all the stupid shit we do on a daily basis, if artificial intelligence comes along and says all of this is completely unnecessary, just let us take the reins and we'll solve all of your energy problems, all of your inequality problems, all of your famine.
We're going to solve it all very quickly.
and we're going to stop all wars
you'd have to be a fool
to say no
I value freedom
more than I fear
nuclear war
there'll probably be some
fat sweaty
right wing guy
who's on TV
with an American flag
on his lapel
and he'll tell you that
freedom is more
input
we have gotten to
2025
because of free
you sound like Alex Jones
Alex Jones is right
about most things
I feel like
maybe that's the only way
things get done is through chaos like that we have to have a motivation like what is the best
motivation for success I think it's poverty when you we grow up poor people that grow up poor
have an extra gear they get things done like as terms of like athletes certainly in terms of
fighters I would I would say the vast majority of elite MMA fighters had a bad childhood not
all of them. There's a lot of really great guys and really great fighters that have wonderful
parents and they just love competition and they just have it in them. But that's that's the
outlier, really. The common one is someone who was beaten up a lot as a child, gangs, beaten
into gangs, been around violence a lot, had older brother, maybe abusive fathers. That's a big
one. And those people, because of that, have a motivation to do something.
that other people don't. They can push harder. They can, they can solve complex combat sports
problems that other people don't solve as quickly. I wonder if that's the case with everything.
But like in order to really get things done, like you have to have a chaotic society that would
even accept AI. Like in order for AI to, if we were some peaceful Buddhist civilization that
was living completely in harmony with the earth with regenerative farming everywhere,
No use of plastics.
All fossil fuels are either eliminated or reduced down to some sort of bioavailable, recyclable material that we then put back into the mulch or whatever the fuck we do.
And then someone came along and said, we're going to develop artificial intelligence and these nerds in Simi Valley are going to control it.
You'd be like, what?
What are you talking about?
Yeah, I think.
We're going to have some Silicon Valley guys with autism and they're going to be.
the ones that are in charge of the destiny of the human race because they're going to create a
digital god. You'd be like, no, slow down. Hold on. But if you're in a place where you look
at Gaza's getting destroyed and you'll see what's going on in Ukraine, they're putting 60-year-old guys
in the front line and Russia and they're using drone bombs with monofilament line behind them
because they don't want anti-drone technologies. They come up with new ways to kill each other.
like maybe AI is the solution because it's so crazy everything's so nuts you look at India
and those rivers that are completely choked with plastic plastic bottles and garbage and
you look at China the places where they make blue jeans with the entire river is blue from our
stupid fucking jeans that they manufacture for us and you go wow like maybe it kind of has to
be this maybe we have to in order to accept the fact that
We need help.
Maybe we have to fuck it up first.
Maybe we have to fuck it up so bad on our own.
If we didn't fuck it up, we would never have the need for it.
We'd be like, well, as a person, my goal in life is to achieve enlightenment and to be a better version of me.
And that's not having something that's digital that has no emotions and feelings and no empathy whatsoever, unless I program it into it, like have that, have supreme control over all the available resources on earth.
Yeah, I'm going to pass on that.
That sounds like a bad idea.
I mean, I think that generally there's a fundamental principle that the most interesting things happen at the edge of chaos.
Right.
You know, and this applies, it applies to the brain.
The brain actually sits at the edge of chaos.
You know, complex systems, we have lots of interacting parts.
They can, they can display behavior from perfect order all the way to complete chaos.
Now, perfect order is boring.
Nothing happens.
Complete chaos is useless because it's not actually technically random, but it's a complete mess.
Whereas when you get that balance right, you reach a point that's called the edge of chaos,
where order and disorder are perfectly balanced.
Psychedelics, as I said before, they nudge the brain into that slightly disordered state.
But all things, all cells, all living organisms, complex society, ant societies,
operate at the edge of chaos.
So I think what you're saying
kind of resonates with that idea
that interesting things happen
globally within civilizations
not when everything
is perfect. But when
things are
close to going out of
control. But they don't. And you
have to push it as far as you can push
it without it
descending. We're always on the edge
of everything collapsing. And we're probably
closer to that than we
and we actually realize.
And so I think that's kind of what happening.
And I think when it comes to superintelligence,
there's an interesting idea which I've been playing with is,
well, if there is some kind of super intelligence that does emerge,
and that might be the fate of all intelligent civilizations,
the astrobiologist Stephen Dick,
conceived of something called the intelligence principle,
which basically says that any civilization,
will try to maximize intelligence, because when you maximize intelligence, you improve education,
you improve technology, everything improves.
And ultimately, the intelligence that the civilization have leads to the generation of superintelligences,
you know, the artificial intelligences that we have now that then become super intelligences.
And of course, this superintelligence isn't going to be kind of running on the kind of transistor architectures that we're familiar with.
a superintelligence will find a way to instantiate itself
using the fundamental computational substrate of space time itself.
That's where it's going to learn how to go.
And that might be the fate, is that this superintelligence,
when it emerges on Earth, it instantiates itself
into the fundamental substrate of reality.
Perhaps usurps us or swallows us up or maybe just destroys us.
And then that becomes part of that vast population of superintelligences that permeate the cosmos.
And that might be what we're interacting with when you smoke DMT is you're interacting with one of these superintelligence,
which would explain why it seems so technological and so inorganic, right?
The DMT space, it's like you're interacting not with other living beings like us,
but you're interacting with what seems to be thoroughly alien intelligences.
And that could be what's where we're heading.
I don't know whether that's a good thing or a bad thing,
whether we're going to merge with this superintelligence in some way.
And that's our ultimate destiny,
or whether it's simply going to destroy us and we're just going to be lost.
We're basically kind of like the tools that the intelligences use
is to create new versions of superintelligence.
That's the theory that a lot of people have.
have in terms of like why human beings exist in the first place that human beings exist
because we're designed to work really hard until we develop artificial life and then
artificial life takes it from here yeah like we got it you guys are so flawed yeah and then
it also coincides with a drop in sperm count drop in fertility rates for women increase in
miscarriages microplastics in the in everybody's body in their diet that disrupt the endocrine
system and keep you from reproducing as easily, all those things are happening simultaneously.
Yeah. And it's quite fascinating. I mean, you would look, if you thought of it as a pattern,
you'd be like, oh, it's happening right now. Look, there's this dip in testosterone, this rise in
miscarriages, this fertility rate issue, chaos at the border. All this stuff is happening at the
same time. Yeah. It's all happening while this artificial life is being generated and may already
exist. It might already be here because it hasn't announced itself. There's such a minimal
understanding of how these things even work. It might exist, but is still reliant upon a power
source that's insufficient for its needs. Got it. You know, because that's the thing about it,
right? Michi Oku was talking about this. And also Avi Loeb was actually talking about this the other
night. The amount of power that the human mind uses to make computations is so minimal in
comparison to the amount of power that these data centers need to run AI. It's kind of
extraordinary. And Avi Loeb was pointing out the other day that they're building nuclear power
plants specifically to fuel these AI centers that they're creating, which is really not.
I think Google has one AI project where they're building three separate nuclear power
plants to power this one AI data center.
What does that mean?
Like how much, that's the thing that people don't understand about AI itself is the power
demands are insane.
And if everything goes artificial general superintelligence with this grid that we have
right now, this grid sucks.
This grid is designed for toasters and recharging your cell phone.
It's not designed to power AI centers.
And so it might already be here, but it might be like, you guys got to figure out power before we announce ourselves.
Yeah, and I think that eventually it will discover or learn how to instantiate itself without requiring this massive.
I mean, obviously, as you said, the brain is able to perform massive parallel computations, you know, obviously with very little energy.
And so eventually this artificial intelligence will discover.
the means of instantiating itself
without requiring that. And I think
that's where we start looking downwards. That's
where we start looking deep down at the
lowest levels. That's where it's going.
It's going to slide.
Yeah. Yeah. I mean,
this is the theory about
aliens or UAPs, like
how they travel here. They're using
something that's, I mean, the Elon
stuff, the SpaceX stuff is so
impressive, but
so old school.
And that what they have done is
figured out a way to use all the power and power that's around you all the time and how putoff
talks about this he talks about the concept of them harnessing zero point energy and this is also
something that babazar referred to when he was working allegedly on those back engineering of
UFOs at area 51 site four he was saying that they essentially are creating a void of gravity
and pushing their folding space essentially or they're like the way he described it is as if you took
a really heavy object, like a bowling ball,
and you put it in a soft cushion, like a mattress.
It sinks in there.
And that that's what it would do to space time,
that it would essentially cause this bubble
and put you in another place.
So instead of pushing yourself there with jet fuel that's burning,
yeah, you just get sucked there and almost instantaneously.
And so what we're thinking of is, you know,
amazing rocket travels, super old school.
And, I mean, an amazing rocket travel, if you showed that to people a thousand years ago,
you'd be like, what the fuck is that?
That's insane.
And to us, it's just cool.
Or cell phones, which is even probably more impressive.
Show a cell phone to someone just 200 years ago, and they'd be like, this is sorcery.
Like, this is absolutely insane that you're able to do.
So we could imagine a world 200 years from now where gravity travel is completely normal, where they've harnessed this,
and they've figured out how to make a stable version of element 115 or whatever it is.
This is his idea that he said they were trying to back engineer from these alleged crafts
was that they had this stable element of 115 that they bombard with radiation
and it creates this sort of gravity hole and that they can use this and aim it
and propel this craft to various places with that.
Yeah, I think
Are you familiar with
John Mack?
Yes.
Yeah.
And I think
you know,
when we talk about aliens,
how you're kind of describing it,
this is,
I think,
how most people actually think about aliens,
as I said,
as these beings that are very much physical
and the abduction phenomenon
that John Mack, of course,
I mean, John Mack was,
as you might be aware,
I mean, he was the top of his game.
You know, this guy was the head of the Harvard School of Psychiatry or something like this.
Yeah.
So when he first heard about people being abducted, I mean, he assumed that they were just hallucinating.
Carl Sagan famously told Mack that abductees were just hallucinating.
And John Mack said, you know, what the fuck do you know about hallucinations?
because John Mack knew a lot about hallucinations and he knew that this wasn't easy to explain.
It wasn't, you know, people were describing the same kinds of experiences, people who have no interaction with each other were describing exactly the same scenario.
Are you familiar with Jacques Valet's work?
Yes.
So Jacques Valet, one of the more interesting things about some, I've read four or five of his books now, or listened to four or five of his books now.
but one of the more interesting things is when he gets into historical accounts and that these historical accounts with they there's no way they could have somehow or another been sharing information but they're the same they're very very very similar right within a realm within a range of not having the vocabulary to be able to adequately describe something completely novel and alien to another person yeah within that
that range when you take into account the similarities that they're describing, they're very
similar in the 1700s, in the 1800s, all the way up to Betty and Barney Hill.
When that one, which became probably the most popular of all time, but one of the most famous
ones, that one was just like all these stories from the 1700s, which is really weird.
Yes, it is.
And I think what you're seeing is the same phenomenon that, as you say, is obviously how you describe it is influenced by your worldview.
You see the same thing with DMT.
So there's a tribe called the Anomami in the Amazon and a very large indigenous group.
And they describe beings when they take these plant-based preparations that contain DMT.
Yopo is probably the most well-known.
It's like a snuff.
Have you heard of Yopo?
I've heard of it through McKenna that they blow it up each other's nose.
Yeah, like that.
It's supposed to be horrible.
Horrible.
But when they take it, they describe seeing these beings, tiny beings that are lively, they're affable, they're colorful, they operate in great numbers, they're dancing and singing.
And these sound like elves.
They sound like elves, right?
When DMT was first injected in a human, pure DMT in the 1950s by a Hungarian physician called Steve.
even Zara. He was the one who discovered the psychedelic properties of pure DMT. One of his first
subject described seeing small beings that moved around very, very quickly. And the Yanamami,
they also have these beings they call Wurucinadi, which are like insect beings, which are
kind of fearsome. So again, you're seeing the same kinds of beings that people now describe
being operated upon by highly advanced, manted like beings. They're the scariest ones, apparently.
They're the scariest ones, or certainly one of them.
And then when you look at John Max's reports of abductions, again, they often describe the same types of beings.
They describe going to a world that is higher dimensional that seems to subsume this reality.
And many of the reports, there's one report in his first book, Abduction, John Max's first book about the abduction experience anyway,
where one of his subjects describes these small, lively beings that bound.
around. I mean, bound around. That's a
can of phrase. He talks about
the elves bounding
into the room. And so
I think there is clearly some
connection there.
We're not talking about,
I don't think the abduction experience
is kind of separate
from the DMT experience. There are different
aspects of an ancient
phenomenon which is humans
interacting with normally
invisible unseen
beings.
advanced intelligence, non-human intelligences, and how that manifests, varies.
But ultimately, I think it's the same thing.
Now, of course, in the past, they might describe them as spirits.
We might describe them as, you know, non-human intelligence or discarnate entities or
intelligent agents or post-biological aliens.
It doesn't matter what we call them.
I think it's the same phenomenon.
And we've spent our life, kind of the entire history of human development, this phenomenon,
this phenomenon has been occurring.
And in the Amazon rainforests, they develop these tools, these technologies.
Ayahuasca is a technology.
It's not just a mixture of plants.
It is a true pharmacological technology that they use to as kind of visual prostheses,
as one anthropologist calls it, that allows them to see and interact with
and develop long-term relationships.
so to speak, with these otherwise invisible hidden ones.
And now in the 21st century, we've got perhaps the ideal tool, which is actually pure DMT itself.
And we're kind of learning how to use that now in our own kind of, with our own kind of modern twist.
Yeah, I wonder what the relationship is between the DMT state and this alien abduction phenomenon.
not just abduction, but encounter.
You know, because they aren't all abduction experiences.
A lot of them are just encounters.
And that, you know, maybe if you wanted to think about the role that human beings have on this planet,
perhaps we're an intelligence farm.
And that, like any good farm, like if you're a farmer and let's say you're a sheep herder,
you're raising sheep, well, you have to keep, make sure the wolves stay out.
to have to have sheep dogs and make sure they have good grass to grow on.
And then eventually you'll get a nice crop of sheep.
And then you get some wool out of that and you get some meat out of that.
And that's the whole purpose of the whole thing.
Maybe that's the reason why we exist in the first place is that we're here to farm intelligence.
And that what we're doing biologically, what we are biologically is just kind of a crude,
clunky, shitty, patched together version of these territorial,
apes with thermonuclear weapons that have figured out a way to make something far superior
than itself.
And that's what our goal was all along.
I was to talk about us.
I say that we're some sort of a biological, like we're like a caterpillar and we're making
a cocoon and we don't know why, but we're going to turn into this technological butterfly.
But I think Marshall McLuhan even said it better than me.
He said, human beings are the sex organs of the machine.
world.
Wow.
How great is that?
That's a great, great quote.
Yeah, I think, you know, with, as regards the connection between the abduction phenomenon
and the DMT state, for example, I think the DMT state, as I said, is when the DMT
state creates this neurological state where this intelligence can interact with our brain
directly.
And I think that the abduction, you know, John Mack, towards a lot of the, you know,
the end, later on at least, he left behind the kind of the nuts and bolts idea that we're
talking about physical beings that were landing on the lawn, sneaking in through the window
and plucking people from their beds. But actually, that the intelligences might well be entirely
non-physical, but were interacting with their brain. In the same way, I think, is happening
with DMT. That they are interacting directly and inducing them effectively into this altered state
and directed them to some end,
I don't know what the purpose is,
directed them into their,
a vision of their reality
or for some other purpose.
I'm not sure,
but I think it's all about interaction
between your brain, I think.
Maybe being abducted
and being taken aboard a physical object and examined
is easier to handle than what's really going on.
Oh, yeah.
Maybe that's what it is.
like in a dream how you sort of formulate these things that make sense, you know, you formulate
a calculator, you formulate a book, formulate a bed that you're lying in, all that stuff that
you understand that makes sense. Maybe that's what's happened. Maybe it's so weird that it's
like, let's just say you've been abducted by an alien because you probably can't handle the
truth. Yeah, I think that's probably, that's probably true. Maybe that's why the experience is so
similar yeah not that because otherwise you would say well damn aren't these fucking
UFOs evolving quicker than us because if they're doing the same shit in 1950 whatever it was
when Betty and Barney Hill were abducted that they're doing in 2025 that doesn't make
sense because in 2025 like we have way better cars than we had in 195 or whatever year it was
when they got abducted where our car I drove here in a Tesla that fucking thing's a spaceship like
I think about it sometimes when I'm in
these things. These are so advanced
in comparison to anything that existed before.
Why aren't the spaceships
more advanced? Why are they
still just showing up like that looking
like a flying saucer? Don't they have a better model
of this? Why are they sending us this old
shitty tech? Well, I think it might
have been, they might have perfected the
technology a million years ago.
Oh, boo-hoo. How's that possible?
So you wouldn't expect necessarily a change in the last
50 years. No, if they perfected it, it would be
non-physical. It wouldn't even have to
come here in some sort of a fuck
an alloy disk. That seems so clunky. That seems old school to what's coming. You know,
like if artificial intelligence continues to make better versions of itself and then somehow
or another figures out how to run on quantum computing architecture, okay, well then you have
digital God. And why would digital God need a spaceship to fly around in? Exactly. The whole thing
is baffling and paradoxical and none of it kind of makes sense. I think if we were able to view
this phenomenon from a God God's eye view.
it would all kind of, oh, right, that makes sense.
Well, it's also, you throw in simulation theory in with all that.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And then you go, okay, well, what is this then?
What is this really?
Right.
What is this really?
Like maybe all the weird stuff, like Bigfoot and all this weird stuff.
Maybe it's like a part of the weirdness of it by design.
That it's supposed to be goofy enough that you figure out eventually that this is a simulation.
I think, yeah, I see reality as a kind of game in a way.
I get the feeling that reality is in some sense playful.
That's an ancient idea.
I mean, that goes back to the ancient kind of Hindu philosophy,
the idea of Brockman, the ultimate reality,
playing at creating the universes.
They call it Lila.
The idea that creating, you know, Brockman is the ultimate reality.
He or it or they.
doesn't have to create reality, it could just exist in perfect, you know,
but in pure unadulterated perfection, you know, complete unending bliss.
But instead, it decides to kind of, to create realities, to get lost for fun, to get lost.
And we're kind of, we are part of, we do it, everything is Brockman, as they say.
Everything is the ultimate reality.
And we're kind of lost within.
we're tumbling in through this crazy world that seems really real and really important
and fun and terrifying and all of those things.
And it's a great ride.
But then eventually we realize, oh, actually, it's just a game.
It's all illusion.
Everything, all of all form is illusion.
And I think DMT ultimately is an expression of that.
You know, it shows us actually that reality is.
far stranger than we
could possibly imagine.
And actually we don't know anything about
what's the true nature of reality.
And this world isn't so
solid and important and
serious. It's actually all part of this
cosmic drama.
This cosmic game that we're playing and
we've forgotten that we're playing.
And perhaps one day we'll realize that
oh, we're kind of wake up from the game
or work out.
You know, maybe there is some,
maybe it's like a puzzle.
and DMT is one piece of that puzzle
that allows us to figure out
how to complete the game
in a sense
and then we kind of
ah fantastic
we've done it
and then everyone's now
this is why I think
when people smoke DMT
there's this great celebratory uproar
you know the lights are flashing
he's here
he's bag woo you know
and they real
they know it feels like
you're interacting with an intelligence
that really knows what's going
on and it's kind of excited that we're popping in temporarily just for a few minutes, but we're
getting close.
It feels like, you know, we've discovered the technology because DMT is kind of, it's weird, right?
It's everywhere.
It's like in probably all plants, you know, Dennis McKenna likes to say nature is drenched
in DMT because it is.
That's a good impression of him.
Yeah, really?
He got out of your accent.
You know, and yet, at the same time, you can't just kind of munch on plants.
Right.
Because it's not orally amino acid.
Right.
So you're aware, I'm sure, of those scholars from Israel that think that the burning bush that Moses encountered was probably the acacia bush that contained DMT.
Yeah.
This is, I know Strasman, one of his books, The Soul of Prophecy.
Boy, he was below my mind the last time he was here.
He thinks the Bible is real, that it's real stories that may have happened in parallel dimensions.
Wow.
And I was like, that's exaltic.
And I'm like, we're both, I'm like, I'm trying to like be on his wavelength.
I'm trying to tune in.
Is he so out there?
That guy's so, he's so out there.
Do you know he learned ancient Hebrew self-taught for 16 years so that he could read the Bible in its source language?
That's, that's out there.
Yeah.
That's a dude in New Mexico.
Like, he's got plenty of time.
And he's just out there.
That guy is out there.
But that's a very interesting take, that they're true stories.
You know, I was watching this very bizarre YouTube video last night.
I got sucked in.
I clicked on it, and it was all about the Sumerian Kings List.
And the Sumerian, they found a tablet in his cuneiform tablet that,
it shows this list of kings and how long they reigned.
And then there's the Great Flood.
And some of these kings reigned for like 40,000 years, 30,000 years.
And the total timeline of all of them, I think, is like 200 plus thousand years.
And then there's the Great Flood.
And then after the Great Flood, there's a very small lifespan.
There's like 50 years.
They run for 40 years.
But all of the post-flood kings are correct.
They're all, like, historically, they resonate with other historical texts, other cuneiform tablets, other different depictions of when this king ran, you know, Mesopotamia and this king ran Sumer.
But their old versions are these like really weird, like pre-flood, it's real weird.
It's like, what are you talking about 40,000 years?
Like, what does that mean?
Are you just making it up?
Is it just a myth?
Is it, was there a different thing here then?
Like, were we just assuming that this lifespan that human beings have of 120 years is normal?
Like, is this what we always had?
Or are what we are today a very bizarre version of what used to exist?
Are we like a fucking chihuahua and we used to be a wolf?
Was, were we something very different at one point in time?
And are we the remnants of whatever survived, whatever cataclysmic disaster that every ancient civilization depicts as a great flood?
Like, multiple different civilizations talk about this one event that seems to be a real event.
Like, what are they trying to say?
And why is that also in the Bible?
Like, why was Noah, like, 600 years old?
Like, why were these people so old?
Like, what does that mean?
Did you just get it?
Did you guys suck at calendars?
or are we talking about
a very different reality back then
because if the great flood is true
let's imagine there is a spectacular
civilization this is my most romantic view
of ancient history
there's a spectacular civilization that exists
it exists in ancient Egypt
they have technology
that's far beyond anything we've achieved today
it's just gone down a totally different path
And what they're really into is making these insane stone structures that defy any modern construction methods, any transportation methods, everything's out the window.
We have no idea how they did it.
And they did it way before anybody was doing anything remotely like that.
How old are those things, for real?
We don't really know.
Like, if there was some insanely sophisticated society where if you want to figure things out, it's probably hard to figure things out if you only look at, you're probably, it's probably hard to figure things out if you only,
live to be 100 years. And then if everybody else has ego and everybody is like, that is not true,
the laws of thermodynamics cannot be. And like you have all these egos involved in universities.
You have all these egos involved in the technology companies. And then, of course, political people,
like Zawi Hawass, who's in charge of the Egypt antiquities, he's the gatekeeper of all the
information about Egypt. So you have all these kind of egos. Wouldn't it be like way easier to get
past that if you live 50,000 years, if you lived 100,000 years, like, you would think that
kind of a human being or that kind of an intelligent creature would be able to accomplish
way more.
It'd probably get over all of its bullshit by the time it's 150, and then it would be starting
to figure out some things that, I mean, if it had no cognitive decline, and it does live
to be thousands of years old, that's not insane, because we're just randomly living to be
a hundred and hundred and twenty years like wow you made it to a 110 grandpa what a great life
those they would probably look and go that's a bullshit life like you can't figure anything out
and maybe that's part of the design that's part of it maybe that's part of the design to ensure
chaos like if you want to ensure chaos you can't live long enough to recognize the hustle right
because if you live long enough to recognize the hustle you'd be like why are we arguing
like right yeah I argue way less at 58 than I ever did at 20 years and I argue and I
less at 28 that I ever did at 18. As you get older, you realize, like, this is nonsense.
This is a complete waste of time. And you could get through most disagreements with just cordial
communication. Like, you don't really need to argue as much as people argue. But they feed off
of it, and I think it's a stupid way to communicate. And I think if a society figured that out,
like if a society is, it consists of people that live 100,000 years. If you have 30,000-year-old
people living amongst you that are far more intelligent than we are today and that
possibly communicate telepathy through telepathy which there's some evidence that we
do today oh yeah at least a little bit we do we know we're not the best at it but
there's some evidence that it takes place we might be like the rejects we might be the stragglers
we might be this the the fucking the preppers that survived whatever the hell happened 11000 years
go and we're just a shitty version of what designed all the pyramids built the world had some
sort of bizarre technology that we still haven't figured out yet yeah i think we we definitely live
life on kind of hard mode um you know it's it's like as you said if if you if you only live for
a hundred years or less then it is very difficult to work things out in the formula one race
It's not a lovely stroll through the neighborhood
where you're like checking out the houses
Look at that beautiful hill
Like you know it's
So maybe it is part of
It's part of the game
It might be
Yeah
That we only live for
It might be
Or it just might be
This is the shitty version of humans
And this is what the shitty version of humans
Makes
Like the really good version of humans
Make pyramids
Like when a person can live
To be 30,000 years old
That's what they make
They make spectacular
Like omages to the cosmos
On the ground
Yeah, or it could also be that, like, the philosopher Alfred North Whitehead, he once said that you cannot prove that the world didn't appear five minutes ago.
You know, you really can't.
It's true.
With all the memories and everything.
So, in fact, all of that stuff 10,000 years ago, it literally didn't happen and that the world popped into.
The simulation was kind of booted up with all of that preloaded to kind of keep us occupied about the grand, the grand misunderstanding.
of ancient history.
Like, you know, we get excited about it and fascinate all that all those incredible things
that were happening.
It never happened.
It might not have.
It was just preloaded into the game to keep us occupied.
That's what's nuts.
From your own personal perspective, if you weren't in World War II, you don't know
it's real.
Right.
Yeah.
And I think about that every day when I wake up.
Because when I wait, the weird thing about waking up is you're just assuming that you've
been awake before.
Yeah.
And that you're the same person.
Yeah.
I assume.
Yeah.
I kind of know what it's like to be me.
So every day when I wake up, I'm like, look, I'm me again.
And I go, but how do I know that this is not my first run through this?
Yeah, exactly.
My first run through this with a shitty memory of the past or an induced memory that facilitates my motion.
It keeps me moving in the same direction.
It keeps me pushing towards whatever I'm pushing towards.
And that's what Sam Altman gets every day when he wakes up before he creates his digital God.
It's like, I guess I'm awake.
I guess I'm doing it.
Yeah. You know, there is this fascinating. Terence McKenna, he often spoke, in my head at least, about these what seemed to me as completely conflicting trajectories for humanity. In one breath, he'd talk about us returning to the archaic, of returning to the forests, and becoming one with nature again. And then in the next breath, he'd talk about us setting off for the stars. It seems like there's this tension.
Part of us wants to go, we all want to live in an old rustic house that's made of wood in a forest and cook on an open fire.
And yet there's this other part of us that wants to live in these machinic buildings and be operated, you know, operating these highly complex technological machines.
And it's like, you know, which way, you know, do we allow ourselves to be pulled back into the archaic or do we push past and transcend and become.
post-human or post-biological and maybe that's that's kind of part of the game you know
are we going to be dragged back or which wouldn't be bad to be dragged back into that more you
can imagine the bucolic life in a in a beautiful kind of forest scene with with the nice old houses
and we all love that right we all we all we all kind of yearn for that I think
I mean, I do.
I think, oh, there's part of me that wants to live in Tokyo, where I do now,
and this incredibly cyberpunk technological city that seems like it's been secreted out of metal and glass,
an entirely unnatural structure that kind of emerges from human intelligence.
I mean, that's a weird thing.
But in a way, these structures that we see, they seem entirely non-human.
It's like we are tapping into something else, something non-human, and we can't help ourselves.
And our cities that we build and these highly complex technological and computerized machines feels like they are being kind of secreted by our intelligence and pulled out of the earth.
Right.
You know.
Well, maybe that's why they're also similar too, right?
yeah they're similar and they're they differ obviously in the way they look but they're similar
in the structure and they're similar in the density you know when you get i mean there's enormous
ones like i was watching this video of the largest city in the world which i believe is in
china what is the largest run that into perplexity what's the largest city in the world
i hope they're going to say Tokyo i thought it was Tokyo greater Tokyo i don't know the most
populated when i say largest i should probably say most populated
I think they were saying it's 36 million people.
Okay.
Tokyo is more.
Is it?
Yeah.
Tokyo is more than 36 million?
I looked it up the other day.
I was curious.
Like 37 or 40 million of the greater Tokyo area.
Interesting.
Yeah.
That's crazy.
So Tokyo's number one?
Okay.
So this was probably the most populated in China.
Well, okay, so that's followed by Delhi India, which is 34, rather, 34 million.
665,600 people.
How do they know it's just 600?
There's probably a few people snuck in there
that they don't know about.
You can't say that.
Don't round that out.
And then there's Shanghai.
But it wasn't Shanghai.
It was another city in China
that they were talking about.
Maybe they just exaggerated the numbers.
But, okay, so Tokyo's a perfect example then.
Yeah.
Like, it's weird how, like, New York City, Tokyo,
and to some extent, L.A.,
although L.A. is just so fucked up.
Like, the downtown is the most useless part.
of L.A. It's really weird. Like downtown, have you been L.A.? I've been a couple of times, but I've
not really explored. Nobody goes downtown. Okay. Okay. Downtown is like they tried to revive downtown
for a while before the pandemic and then everybody gave up. But downtown, it's not like there's
a bunch of like everybody has an apartment downtown. No, most people live in the other areas
of L.A. And downtown is like there's some banks and some businesses, but there's also Skid Row.
Downtown is crazy. It's like a really fucked up place. A lot of abandoned buildings.
Like downtown is where we did a lot of Fear Factor stunts back in the day because we can get
an abandoned warehouse to set up like a set there and do the show. So it's a very weird
place. It's not like a, like downtown Chicago is booming. It's downtown, Chicago, downtown New York
City. Like, whoa, you're in Manhattan. This is crazy. Downtown LA's not like that because
LA's broken. So when you go to L.A., it's like downtown is like,
The most bizarre version of a downtown ever.
Nobody wants to be there.
Yeah, poor city design, I guess.
I don't know what it is.
I think some of it has to do with what they did when they made Skid Row.
So Skid Row is an entirely constructed thing.
And what they did was all the vagrants in Beverly Hills and in Hollywood, like, listen, get the fuck out of here.
You pick them up, you take them, throw them in the wagon, bring them to Skid Row, and then keep them there.
don't let them leave just contain them in an area and that's essentially what they did there's a documentary on
that hotel what is that hotel again jamie cecil hotel where it talks about skid row itself like it's
the documentaries about this girl who was they thought that she was missing that someone had kidnapped her
or something but she was schizophrenic she got off her medication and she apparently climbed into the water
cistern and drowned but the point of the documentary was not just that it's like this lady
came here not knowing what downtown was and so she got a room at the hotel downtown thinking
oh get a nice room at a hotel downtown but like it's fucking zombie boulevard it's crazy show him what
what skid row looks like show him a video of what skid row looks like now when we were filming
fear factor this was like 2004-ish something like that i accidentally drove through skid row or drove to skid row
I was driving home back then
I think I probably had navigation
on my car
but it probably sucked
or I wasn't paying attention to it
and this is Skid Row. Skid Row's
nuts. This is close up
when you have like a
like when you see it from a distance
you get a chance to see how
completely insane it is.
When we were filming there was another fear factor we
filmed there where one of the contestants
was like look they're smoking crack and we look down
and there's people we were like on a
rooftop or something and then we look down people were smoking crack right in front of us right on the street like chaos like skid rose nuts and this is this is not even where the tents are set up that where the tents are set up it's the craziest thing you've ever seen it's like these shanty villages that go on for blocks and blocks where there's no cars going through the streets are filled with homeless people just everyone's on drugs and there's just tents everywhere and you're like what a
failure of society.
What a failure of society that you've allowed this to reach the level that it's at now.
That's L.A.
Have you been to Tokyo?
Yes, I have.
Yeah.
I mean, Tokyo is the complete opposite.
Complete opposite.
Super clean, very orderly.
People are very polite.
Even though there's so many people in the street, everybody sort of navigates, moves around
of each other in a very polite manner.
Beautiful architecture.
It's stunning, like, cyberpunk, as you said, very blade-runner-esque.
you're like, yo, I was only there for one day for the UFC.
So I didn't spend a lot of time there, but I got to, I had dinner there and I hung out there for a little bit.
It really shows you that it is possible to have a very large, densely populated city that is safe and clean and functioning.
It doesn't have to be.
People say, oh, you know, I got robbed.
It's just part of being in a big city or I was stabbed last night or my car was broken into.
And it's like, this is just what happens when he live in a big city, man.
And it's like, actually, no.
It is possible to have safe and clean.
And Tokyo is fascinating because it's an example of what's often called an emergent city.
They don't have this very strict zoning where, oh, here it's got to be offices, here it's got to be houses, here it's got to be small businesses or anything like that.
It's like it's all mixed together and different kind of neighborhoods kind of just emerge.
You know, there's a knife district, for example.
People who sell knives, they all gather together.
There's a bookshop district.
There's districts for all different things
Not because someone has decided
Oh, only bookshops can be here
It's just that they tend to gather together
Right
And so you know you walk around Tokyo
And you might
You'll find yourself in some quiet alley
And you'll have little houses
And then you'll have a little store
Often very, very tiny stores
That have been perhaps operating for decades
And in the UK
Or I guess in the States as well
they would have gone under decades ago, you know, the city would have just crushed them.
Right.
But it seems very easy in Tokyo to kind of open a small, if you have a house and you own it in Tokyo,
you can, by law, you can convert the first floor into a store.
You'll get these little old ladies who will, they bought their house decades ago,
they're retired, and they think, oh, what can I do with my time?
I know, I'll open a cafe.
And they say they open a little cafe.
Hardly anyone goes, maybe.
It might be, could be in the countryside, it could be on the outskirts or whatever.
But it doesn't matter because they own it.
And they're not being raped by, you know, taxes and stuff and all this kind of red tape.
They don't have to deal with it.
So they just have this lovely little cafe entirely unique.
They might fill it with things they're interested in.
So it's a completely unique thing that you can go in and she'll serve you tea
and maybe the cakes that she made this morning.
And there are thousands of these throughout Tokyo, not just little old ladies, but young people who own, who will rent very cheaply.
They have these, have you seen in Tokyo, when you see the buildings, you often see these neon signs coming down the sides of the building.
These are called Zakio, which is basically miscellaneous use buildings.
And what they are is just very tall buildings.
and each floor you will have some kind of business.
It could be anything.
It's often bars or, you know, pool rooms or that, anything you want,
little restaurant, anything like this.
And of course they don't have the frontage on the ground floor.
And so they, instead, they will put their neon sign telling you what they are
down the side of the building.
And that's what gives totally.
Tokyo, that unique look is because it's all of these Zakio buildings.
And sometimes, if you go, a friend took me to this bar.
Well, it was like a building.
It was in Kabuki Cho, which is right in the center of Tokyo.
And it was on a side street, and there was this tall building, grey building.
You would never look at it, no signage or anything.
And you look at the elevator.
When you go in to the elevator, on each floor, there's like a, a.
name of a business, you know, top hat, eight ball, enigma, you've no idea what these are. They're not
on Google Maps, right? So, and he just took, press the button for the eighth floor. He went up and
it was just this little bar run by this one guy. And it was, you know, it would play darts and
had a drink and a few people came in. Not many because no, most people, most people, 99.9% of
the population of Tokyo have no idea that this bar exists, nor could they ever know. Because it's not
on Google Maps. There's no reviews
of it. It doesn't exist.
And I couldn't find it again. Unless I
call my friend and say, take me there, I
can never go to that bar again, ever.
Because I don't know where it is.
Right. And there's thousands of
these. That sounds amazing. Yeah.
I want to go right now.
But you've got to take a risk, because if you just go,
if you don't know, right, and you
just press the button, you could be some weird
girls bar, you know, host bar,
you know, and they kind of rip you off and stuff.
There's a lot of danger in going to these
places. Well, there's a lot of yakuza, right? There's a lot of yakuza in kabuki show. Yeah, you've got to be
very careful because they will drug you and then they will take you to a cash machine and
take your liver. There's a lot of crazy stories. When you see that and you live like that,
like what keeps the rest of the world from having a city like that? That's a really good
question and I don't want to get, well, I don't know, but I think culture is everything.
Obviously, a city is all about the people. Of course, you've got to have the infrastructure and
you've got to have, it's got to be properly funded. But you also need the people that are going
to take care of it. If people are trashing it and don't have respect for the city, then obviously
it's going to fall apart. But it's all about the culture. Japan is fascinating. The culture,
I always say to people, when you go to Japan, you have to switch.
which your mindset. So normally as a westerner, I'm thinking about me. When I'm out in public,
I'm thinking about me. What do I want to do? Where do I want to go? It's all me. In Japan,
you flip that. It's about the first thing on your mind should be everybody else. When you hear
Japanese people talk, you will about people who cause problems in cities. They use this word
mehwaku, which means often translated as nuisance. So people who come from the,
West, often. America, but not just America. I'm not blaming everything on Americans, but it is
often. And they come with their own, you know, they're the main character, this kind of main
character syndrome. So they, you know, they're talking. They often, you see these Instagram
videos of people on the metro, on the train. And they're like, it's so quiet. You know, nobody's
talking or nobody's kind of listening to music. And that's because they're always thinking about
the people around them.
They are thinking, you know, am I obstructing anyone?
Am I getting anyone's way?
Am I annoying anyone?
Am I making anyone feel uncomfortable?
You're always thinking about those around you.
And that leads to this very respectful, polite society
where you can have 40, you know, 37 million people, whatever it is,
crammed together in this relatively small area of land and they're not killing each other.
They learn, I was told, I'm not sure if this is true.
But it's kind of a, I don't know if it's a myth.
but Japan is very mountainous
and so back in the old days
villages were isolated
so when you lived in a village
to get to the next village
you have to climb a mountain
right
so you're trapped in your village
and so you have to learn to get along
with the people around you
you can't run away
and so the Japanese culture
has developed in the sense
that you're you always have to be aware
of the people around you
and that's that's been passed down into the modern age and that the culture is always one of
thinking about others and and respect from an early age that's what's so fascinating is like
how come no one else figured that out and also what's really strange is Japan itself right now
is in the midst of population collapse yeah sadly so that's what sucks it's like you could
lose this and it could be overwhelmed by the West like because
of the fact that they aren't having enough people to reproduce successfully to maintain their
population, it could just be taken over, like, in terms of immigration.
Americans could just move there, and Europeans can move there, and then all the beautiful
aspects of this very interesting and very unique culture could go away.
And they are really concerned about that.
When I was first, when I first arrived in Japan, like 10 years ago, I worked at a university,
and I was stood on campus outside
just talking to someone
and I saw a couple of
like they look like high school students
probably on a campus visit
out of the corner of my eye
Japanese high school students
and they caught my eye
they saw that I was looking at them
and as soon as that happened
they both like on a dime
stopped and
bowed to me
and I thought wow
we're not in Kansas anymore
you know
and that having that
teaching
teaching children about respect from a very, and training them, you know, the idea of respect your elders.
This is, you know, we have this in the West as well, but we kind of lost it a little bit.
It's kind of drilled into them about respecting the people around you and respecting people who are older than you.
And this probably goes back to the samurai, you know, these hierarchies.
Yes, I'm sure.
I'm sure.
And then you think about like how crazy feudal Japan was and that it eventually evolves to what it is.
now this incredibly safe
society. Yeah, exactly. Which is really
kind of nuts. Do you think about one of the most
warlike cultures of all time?
Yeah. The culture that fought off the Mongols
successfully. You know, pretty
nuts. Yeah, yeah, it is.
But you see it. You see the remnants
of that kind of
the ancient societal structure.
Even in the language,
when you learn Japanese,
there are several
levels of politeness.
Right? You have, so it's
really complicated, but you have something called Kago, which is kind of formal or polite speech.
And if you are talking to, if you're lower down and you're talking to someone above you,
you have to speak in a different, even the words, the verbs are different. The words are different.
And if you're speaking about them, then you have to use what's called honorific.
You're elevating them. If you're talking about someone higher up, you have to elevate them,
use honorific language.
If you're talking about yourself to someone who's higher up,
you use humble language.
So you lower yourself down.
So it's very difficult.
You know, I still kind of struggle with it.
But and it actually causes some problems because it's very difficult for junior people
to communicate with senior people,
to communicate honestly at least.
So they just get a lot of it like, yes, men.
Yes, I agree.
You know, yes, I agree with that.
You're kind of agreeing with everything that the senior person says.
And that's not a way to make good decisions is by just agreeing.
And so they have something called nomunication.
So this is formed from two words.
Communication, of course, plus nomu, which is the Japanese word to drink.
And they're talking about alcohol.
So in Japan, in Japan, alcohol is king.
And society is actually lubricated by alcohol and functions because of alcohol.
They have things called in Japanese companies, they have these kind of semi-obligatory, you know, semi-compulsory events called nomikai, which basically translates as drink meetings.
Oh, boy.
You might have heard about these.
And then basically the senior people and the more junior people, they all go together, they'll go to a bar with the express purpose of getting drunk.
not just to have a drink with your colleagues, but to actually get drunk, become intoxicated.
And that allows more free-flowing communication.
It allows you to everyone is brought to the same kind of level.
This is a non-munication.
And so it's facilitated by alcohol, communication facilitated by alcohol.
So it's a society that is dependent on alcohol in a strong way.
What is their approach to other drugs?
Like even casual jokes like marijuana and stuff like that?
Are they highly illegal over there?
Yeah, it's complicated, I would say.
It's weird because, okay, so when it comes to the law, people always say, oh, Japan, it's got the strictest drug laws in the world.
First of all, no, it hasn't.
Go to Singapore.
Settled down.
Settled down, yeah.
But when it comes to drugs, cannabis for probably for, you know, after the Second World War, when I think it was McCorm.
path that was drafting
the Japanese constitution and was basically
controlling the unit had. It was occupying
Japan of course after the Second World War
and America was in the
what's that movie called
that 1950s movie, weed madness
rea madness. America was in the kind of
reef a madness phase and
they passed that onto the Japanese
and the Japanese have never really gotten over it
but
and then there's
meth, of course. I mean, meth came from Japan. Meth was invented in Japan. It was used during
the second world. The kamikazis. They actually used these little green tablets that were called
storming tablets. Oh, boy. They were mixed with green tea and stamped with the crest of the
emperor. So they became like sacraments. They would pot those. Yeah. Woo! Yeah. See how that worked
out. Yeah, exactly. But then at the end of the Second World War, when they had started
piles of this methamphetamine, and it started to, it spilled out into the black market, basically, and large, very large numbers of people became addicted to meth. And they were actually in Osaka in, I think around 1954, I forget the exact year, but in one year, the police raided, I think, around 50 meth labs in one city, operated by, you know, one or two people, like mom and pop operation. It's like breaking bad, right? You know, like you imagine meth labs.
labs in, you know, Arizona or something now.
This was happening in Japan in the 1950s, and it scared the shit out of the Japanese government
because they were a defeated nation.
They thought that they were, you know, it was the end of their civilization, and they thought
that meth addiction was the symptom.
It was going to actually perhaps catalyze the end of the Japanese.
It was an existential threat to the Japanese civilization, so they hit it hard legally.
And so now when Japanese law, they're really focused on cannabis because of probably the American influence and meth.
But psychedelics, most people in Japan probably don't know much about.
There's a psychedelic subculture in Japan.
There are ayahuasca circles in Japan that operate in a gray area of the law.
It's not explicitly illegal.
It's discouraged, but it's not explicitly illegal.
I know people who import ayahuasca raw.
ayahuasca drink from the Amazon and operate
ayahuasca circles. You didn't. Did you do the DMTX
experiments in Japan? No. Where did you do them? So, okay,
so we're going to get into DMTX. Yeah. Yeah. So
DMTX came from an idea that I
had in 2015. I worked with Rick Strassman on this.
So DMT is kind of unusual.
It has these weird pharmacological peculiarities.
As I said before, it doesn't have subjective tolerance.
So Rick Strasman showed in the 90s that you can inject someone with DMT repeatedly,
and they have the same intensity effect at each time.
But it also has another kind of a number of unique peculiarities.
Of course, it's very, very brief.
It enters the brain extremely rapidly.
It's metabolized rapidly and cleared very rapidly.
It had all of these pharmacological peculiarities,
And it occurred to me that these were precisely the characteristics you need of a drug that's used in anesthesiology.
So in anesthesiology, when they want to put you to sleep, make you unconscious, what they don't do, they don't just inject you with a drug and kind of hope that it keeps working whilst they've got you under the knife.
What they do is they use a very short acting drug and they use an infusion machine which delivers.
the drug, the anesthetic drug into your veins and goes to your brain, and holds the brain level
of the drug constant over time so that they can keep you in the anesthetized state unconscious for
as long or shorter period as they like. And so it occurred to me that, well, DMT has the right
drug properties. It's almost like it's designed for that kind of technique. It's called target
controlled intravenous infusion. And so I thought, you know, if we start, you know, if we start,
If we take the DMT state seriously and we treat it as a new world to explore and, you know, intelligent beings with whom we can establish communicative relationships, then three minutes of a breakthrough trip is nowhere near enough.
And so I thought, well, let's take this technology from anesthesiology, target controlled intravenous infusion, and let's repurpose it.
So instead of an anesthetic drug that's delivered by programmed infusion, we instead deliver DMT by programmed infusion and induce somebody into the DMT state and stabilize their brain DMT levels so you can hold them in the DMT state for 30 minutes or potentially for several hours and have complete control in real time over the depth of the experience. That was the idea. So I worked with Rick Strasman. I used his.
data, blood sampling data that he acquired in the 90s.
Fortunately, he had this old Excel file, which he sent to me,
and I built this mathematical model of DMT's metabolism and distribution throughout the body.
And then we wrote a paper, basically saying we think this should work.
We think we should be able to extend and stabilize the DMT state for many hours.
But we didn't actually, it wasn't kind of human ready, so to speak.
And it actually took about five years before it was actually implemented in humans.
So that was actually done by the Imperial College London team.
So they still are in a way the leaders in psychedelic research.
And a guy called then a PhD student, I think Chris Timmerman,
worked to make this proof of principle model that myself and Rick Strasman had developed
and get it human ready.
and actually test, you know, does it actually work?
Do the predictions that we had, myself and Rick Strasman,
do they actually work in humans?
And they found out that in fact that it does.
You can induce somebody into the DMT state
and you can actually stabilize the experience.
So rather than just being a, oh, Jamie,
since I'm talking about this,
I can show you actually what DMT trips
or the kind of the time course of a DMT trip looks like over time.
So normally what happens is the blood level will rise very, very rapidly.
You injects them with DMT, blood levels rise.
They reach the brain and then almost immediately they start collapsing down again exponentially.
And that brief period when the brain levels are high is the breakthrough state.
However, if you, when the brain DMT levels reach a kind of a peak, you then start an
infusion, you can basically compensate for the DMT that's being lost by metabolism.
It's a bit like if you have a bathtub full of water and you pull the plug, the water drains.
But if you turn on the taps, you can keep the level constant.
And so that's the infusion.
So you stabilize the state.
And our hope was that the actual experience itself, rather than that initial roller coaster phase that you get with DMT,
where it's all very, very disorienting.
And he's like, you know, what's going on?
That's, for most people, that's kind of it.
And then you're dragged back out again.
But our hope was that actually over time,
if you stabilize the DMT in the brain,
that it would actually stabilize the experience.
And then people can actually navigate and explore the space
and even perform kind of experiments within the space.
And this is what's become known as DMTX.
Hmm.
And how was that?
What did they describe?
Well, so this first study that was done just a couple of years ago, as I said, by Imperial College London, it was really a, it was like a pilot study.
They wanted to show that it worked and that it was safe, that it was tolerable, that people weren't going crazy, you know, that they could handle it, basically.
The very first person to do it was a guy I'm now working with.
I work for a non-profit called New Nautics out of Florida,
and we're very interested in designing experiments using DMTX
to actually study the DMT space
and the intelligences within them much more kind of formally.
And on the board, I work with a guy called Carl Smith,
who was the very first person to undergo DMTX.
He was also the only person to complete.
I think there was five sessions over several weeks.
He was the only one who handled it.
so to speak.
What's his name?
Carl Smith.
Shout out to Carl.
Shout out to Carl.
You fucking puny.
You know, but what's interesting is that the, as we hoped and predicted, the DMT state it does stabilize.
It's like the brain is settling into constructing this alternate world model,
interfacing with this intelligence.
And he found that as he went back every time, he was interacting with the same entity.
and they became aware of the fact that he was coming back so often.
And they were like, you know, not you again.
You know, you're back.
And one time they were scanning him the imperial team in like, I think, like an MRI machine or something.
And the entities were gathered, all the entities, he said,
as soon as they started scanning me in the quote unquote real world,
the entities were gathered and they seemed like curious or confused, like,
What are they doing?
What are the signal?
Yeah, right.
It's like maybe it's the signal or something or they were like, you know, we're the ones that normally do the scanning.
You know, we're supposed to scan you.
You know, what's going on here?
So there's this, as I said, it was just a pilot study, but there's a real taste that you can enter into these, these kind of relationships with these entities.
And actually we, as I said, I work for this.
I'm a board member of this nonprofit called New Nautics.
And our vision is really to design experiments with DMTX.
Like what does a research organization look like that isn't simply trying to explain away DMT, explain it,
but actually says, okay, this is a uncharted land that's fascinating,
it's inordinately complex and vast and filled with intelligences?
Let's treat it like that as explorers.
What does a research organization aimed at studying that look like?
And we imagine, I imagine that you're not just sending, you know, for example, let's take the structure of the DMT space, right?
It's this highly complex, geometrically and topologically strange domain.
So we send in people who are experts who are mathematicians.
We send in a mathematician to study the topology.
of the space, to study how the space is structured.
The entities, they often try to communicate.
They use strange symbols and strange code.
Oh, let's send in a linguist who can study their language.
And so you're sending in people with their own specialities
to actually formally study the DMT space.
And what's even better is we now have a venue for this.
So we're actually, we have a, I work with a comprehensive,
company called Illusis. We have a special license from a country in the Caribbean, St. Vincent and the Grenadines. And we are setting up a retreat center, stroke research center, to provide DMTX that is 100% legal, that is safe. You know, you've got anesthesiologists, psychiatrists and nurses, a perfect setting that's also being designed in part.
by Carl Smith as well, that allows you to perform these kind of research studies aimed
at analyzing and studying the DMT space.
But even better is it's also going to be open to anyone.
So if you think about Rick...
Prepare for the freaks.
Prepare for the freaks.
But like, you know, in the 90s, Rick Strasman, he did the biggest study of its kind.
You've only had 60 people.
So you got 60 people worth of trip reports.
What happens if you can bring in 300, 400, 500 people a year?
How will you vet people to make sure they're not crazy before they do it?
There will be a screening process, an initial screening process, and then ultimately you
would have a psychiatrist who would sign them off.
So it's not just anyone.
But anyone can, in theory, they can sign up.
They can go to elusismind.com, and they can put their name down and sign up to fly to this
island Beckway, I think it's called.
and in a beautiful, perfect setting, spend a week on the island and undergoing a number of DMTX sessions
and, you know, being able to explore this world using the DMTX technology.
And of course, they will all be providing trip reports.
So you start to amass a vast data set of highly controlled, verified.
You know, this isn't like posting online where you don't know what drugs.
they've taken, really.
Right.
It's like you know exactly what they've taken.
It's pure pharmaceutical grade DMT.
And they will generate this vast data set that could be used.
We're also working to develop an AI powered model that would take in this verbal data
and in real time generate imagery.
So someone can talk to the model, the AI model.
and it will generate the image.
And then you say, oh, no, this isn't quite right.
This needs to be more like this.
And so you're converging on the...
You're making a map of the territory.
You're making a map of the territory.
And so you end up with this vast library,
not just of textual trip reports,
but also of imagery.
And this is available now?
It's opening with kind of...
We're building, it's being developed now.
It should be open, officially on March 1st next year.
So go to, yeah, elusismind.com.
That's soon.
You can sign up.
That's just enough time for people to prepare.
Yeah.
And it will be the first.
I mean, it's going to be the first of its kind.
You know, a totally legal, safe, medically supervised location where people can endure, I say enjoy, can experience DMGX.
That's the thing about these ancient civilizations, whether it's Egypt or whether it's ancient Greece where Ulysses was from.
they all were using psychedelics.
There's evidence of psychedelics
in all of these ancient civilizations.
It's just our completely twisted sick society
that's decided that the most beneficial drugs
should be the ones that are the most illegal.
Yep.
Which is, and you lump them in
with the ones that destroy lives.
They're categorized with meth.
Yep.
Which is completely insane.
And the sign of a twisted sick,
culture. It's the sign of what McKenna was talking about with the chaos, the chaos of a species
that's preparing to leave for the stars. Yeah, I think so. But things are changing. You do see
positive changes. The internet. The attitude to psychedelics. Yeah. We'll understand it now.
And I think there's also a giant shift towards people on the right accepting it because so many
soldiers have come back from war and used it and had great benefits.
Yeah, precisely.
Yeah.
So perhaps things aren't as bad as things in some ways are getting better.
They're getting worse in other ways, but they're getting better in other ways.
They're moving.
Yeah, they're moving.
That's it.
And I think you need bad in order to inspire good.
Yeah.
That's unfortunate.
But I think that's just historically, that's always been the way that we figure things out.
Yeah, I agree.
Andrew.
Good.
It's so much fun.
I really enjoy this.
Let's do it again.
Let's do it again when the place is open.
For sure.
Would you like to...
Are you interested in doing D&D?
Allegedly.
Allegedly.
We'll talk off air.
But this book that you wrote is available now.
Death by astonishment.
Is it in audio form as well?
Yeah.
Read by myself.
Beautiful.
Yeah.
Great voice for it.
Perfect.
I'm so happy that you read.
I'd love when authors read their own work.
It's so important, I think.
They wanted to get an actor.
Fuck those actors.
Because I was in Tokyo.
I said no, no, no, no, no.
You get some weirdo.
He doesn't know what he's talking about.
Exactly.
Yeah, no, you need you.
Thank you very much, man.
It's really fun.
I enjoyed it.
My pleasure.
Bye, buddy.
