The Tim Ferriss Show - #605: Hamilton Morris and Dr. Mark Plotkin — Exploring the History of Psychoactive Substances, Synthetic vs. Natural Options, Microdosing, 5-MeO-DMT, The “Drunken Monkey” Hypothesis, Timothy Leary’s Legacy, and More
Episode Date: July 1, 2022Hamilton Morris and Dr. Mark Plotkin — Exploring the History of Psychoactive Substances, Synthetic vs. Natural Options, Microdosing, 5-MeO-DMT, The “Drunken Monkey” Hypothesis, Timothy ...Leary’s Legacy, and More | Brought to you by Athletic Greens all-in-one nutritional supplement and 5-Bullet Friday, my very own email newsletter. More on both below.Welcome to The Tim Ferriss Show, where it is usually my job to deconstruct world-class performers, to tease out their routines, habits, et cetera that you can apply to your own life. This time around, we have a very special edition featuring two of your favorite guests: Dr. Mark Plotkin and Hamilton Morris. Mark takes over my duties as host and interviews Hamilton for an episode of the Plants of the Gods podcast. You, my dear listeners, are hearing the audio before anyone else, so this is a Tim Ferriss Show exclusive. I’ve previously featured some of my favorite episodes from that show at tim.blog/plantsofthegods. These episodes cover a lot of fascinating ground.Who is Mark? Mark (@DocMarkPlotkin) is an ethnobotanist who serves as president of the Amazon Conservation Team, which has partnered with ~80 tribes to map and improve management and protection of ~100 million acres of ancestral rainforests. He is best known to the general public as the author of the book Tales of a Shaman’s Apprentice, one of the most popular books ever written about the rainforest. His most recent book is The Amazon: What Everyone Needs to Know. You can find my interview with Mark at tim.blog/markplotkin. And the guest today is Hamilton Morris. Hamilton (@HamiltonMorris) is a chemist, filmmaker, and science journalist. A graduate of The New School, he conducts chemistry research at Saint Joseph’s University. Hamilton is the writer and director of the documentary series Hamilton’s Pharmacopeia, in which he explores the chemistry and traditions surrounding psychoactive drugs. You can find my most recent interview with him at tim.blog/hamilton. This is a tightly packed 60-minute interview. Mark and Hamilton cover the history of different psychoactive substances, Timothy Leary’s legacy, the “drunken monkey” hypothesis, conservation, microdosing, the differences between 5-MeO-DMT and DMT, a disease that afflicts people who smoke enormous quantities of cannabis, causing them to vomit continuously and only find relief from their nausea by taking a hot shower (yes, really), the impact of the placebo effect, a synthetic vs. a natural product, the role of ritual, and much, much more. Please enjoy!*This episode is brought to you by Athletic Greens. I get asked all the time, “If you could use only one supplement, what would it be?” My answer is usually AG1 by Athletic Greens, my all-in-one nutritional insurance. I recommended it in The 4-Hour Body in 2010 and did not get paid to do so. I do my best with nutrient-dense meals, of course, but AG further covers my bases with vitamins, minerals, and whole-food-sourced micronutrients that support gut health and the immune system. Right now, Athletic Greens is offering you their Vitamin D Liquid Formula free with your first subscription purchase—a vital nutrient for a strong immune system and strong bones. Visit AthleticGreens.com/Tim to claim this special offer today and receive the free Vitamin D Liquid Formula (and five free travel packs) with your first subscription purchase! That’s up to a one-year supply of Vitamin D as added value when you try their delicious and comprehensive all-in-one daily greens product.*This episode is also brought to you by 5-Bullet Friday, my very own email newsletter that every Friday features five bullet points highlighting cool things I’ve found that week, including apps, books, documentaries, gadgets, albums, articles, TV shows, new hacks or tricks, and—of course—all sorts of weird stuff I’ve dug up from around the world.It’s free, it’s always going to be free, and you can subscribe now at tim.blog/friday.*[06:22] The Sonoran desert toad's celebrity star is rising[08:18] The role of the chemist in preserving plants, animals, and fungi from which compounds are traditionally derived[11:18] Who is Howard Lotsof?[14:02] Microdosing[16:39] Ken Nelson and the celebrated Bufo Alvarius: The Psychedelic Toad of the Sonoran Desert pamphlet[20:11] God molecule vs. just plain old DMT[22:25] There are potential downsides to these compounds (even cannabis)[27:58] Undiscovered compounds[30:15] Lessons learned and questions pondered from Alexander Shulgin's thumb surgery[34:05] Synthetic vs. natural[37:21] The role of ritual[39:49] Combining traditions[42:27] Mark's account of Huautla in the early 2000s.[42:58] Downsides of psychedelic tourism[47:46] Effectiveness of fungi vs. frogs[49:52] Where do we go in search of new substances?[53:11] How far back do shamanic traditions go?[54:40] Poisons as medicines and vice versa[56:34] Salvia, and stoned vs. drunk apes[1:04:20] Nicolas Langlitz and the primatology of primatologists[1:06:03] Timothy Leary's legacy*For show notes and past guests on The Tim Ferriss Show, please visit tim.blog/podcast.For deals from sponsors of The Tim Ferriss Show, please visit tim.blog/podcast-sponsorsSign up for Tim’s email newsletter (5-Bullet Friday) at tim.blog/friday.For transcripts of episodes, go to tim.blog/transcripts.Discover Tim’s books: tim.blog/books.Follow Tim:Twitter: twitter.com/tferriss Instagram: instagram.com/timferrissYouTube: youtube.com/timferrissFacebook: facebook.com/timferriss LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/timferrissPast guests on The Tim Ferriss Show include Jerry Seinfeld, Hugh Jackman, Dr. Jane Goodall, LeBron James, Kevin Hart, Doris Kearns Goodwin, Jamie Foxx, Matthew McConaughey, Esther Perel, Elizabeth Gilbert, Terry Crews, Sia, Yuval Noah Harari, Malcolm Gladwell, Madeleine Albright, Cheryl Strayed, Jim Collins, Mary Karr, Maria Popova, Sam Harris, Michael Phelps, Bob Iger, Edward Norton, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Neil Strauss, Ken Burns, Maria Sharapova, Marc Andreessen, Neil Gaiman, Neil de Grasse Tyson, Jocko Willink, Daniel Ek, Kelly Slater, Dr. Peter Attia, Seth Godin, Howard Marks, Dr. Brené Brown, Eric Schmidt, Michael Lewis, Joe Gebbia, Michael Pollan, Dr. Jordan Peterson, Vince Vaughn, Brian Koppelman, Ramit Sethi, Dax Shepard, Tony Robbins, Jim Dethmer, Dan Harris, Ray Dalio, Naval Ravikant, Vitalik Buterin, Elizabeth Lesser, Amanda Palmer, Katie Haun, Sir Richard Branson, Chuck Palahniuk, Arianna Huffington, Reid Hoffman, Bill Burr, Whitney Cummings, Rick Rubin, Dr. Vivek Murthy, Darren Aronofsky, and many more.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Transcript
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Optimal minimum. At this altitude, boys and girls, ladies and germs. This is Tim Ferriss. Welcome to The Tim Ferriss
Show, where it is usually my job to deconstruct world-class performers to tease out their routines,
habits, etc. that you can apply to your own life. This time around, we have a very special edition
of this podcast featuring two of your favorite guests
from the past, Dr. Mark Plotkin and Hamilton Morris. Mark takes over my duties as host and
interviews Hamilton for an episode of the Plants of the Gods podcast. You, my dear listeners,
are hearing this audio before anyone else, so it's a Tim Ferriss Show exclusive. I've previously
featured some of my favorite episodes from the
Plants of the Gods podcast here on this podcast, and you can find all of those at tim.blog.com
slash plantsofthegods. These episodes cover a lot of fascinating ground. So let's get to the bios.
Who is Mark? If you don't know, Mark on Twitter at Doc, D-O-C, Mark Plotkin is an ethnobotanist
who serves as president of the Amazon Conservation Team, which has partnered with roughly 80 tribes to map and improve management and protection
of roughly 100 million acres of ancestral rainforests. He is best known to the general
public as the author of the book Tales of a Shaman's Apprentice, one of the most popular
books ever written about the rainforest. His most recent book is the Amazon What Everyone Needs to Know. You can find my interview with Mark at Tim.blog slash Mark Plotkin. That's M-A-R-K-P-L-O-T-K-I-N.
And the guest, his guest today is Hamilton Morris. Love Hamilton. Hamilton on Twitter
at Hamilton Morris, M-O-R-R-I-S, is a chemist, filmmaker, and science journalist. A graduate
of the New School,
he conducts chemistry research at St. Joseph's University. Hamilton is the writer and director
of the documentary series Hamilton's Pharmacopoeia, or Pharmacopoeia depending on how you like to say
it, in which he explores the chemistry and traditions surrounding psychoactive drugs,
very often subjecting himself to personal intake. You can find my most recent interview with him at tim.blog.com. And what you're about to hear is a tightly packed 60-minute interview.
Mark and Hamilton cover the history of different psychoactive substances,
Timothy Leary's legacy, the drunken monkey hypothesis, conservation, microdosing,
the differences between 5-MeO-DMT, that's 5-methoxydimethyltryptamine, and DMT,
a disease that afflicts people who
smoke enormous quantities of cannabis. Yes, really. The impact of the placebo effect,
synthetic versus natural options in this psychoactive spectrum of things,
the role of ritual, and much, much more. Please enjoy.
Well, Hamilton, I want to thank you for agreeing to do the interview.
And I would like to start by talking about the Sonoran Desert Toad,
which, as you know, is an object of fascination,
not only regionally, but certainly nationally and perhaps internationally.
So perhaps you give us some thoughts on this recent fascination with this intriguing creature.
Yes, it really does seem to be gaining popularity. Every time I think that it's peaked,
it gets more and more popular. And in the last month, there were two major articles that came
out one day after another in the New York Times and the New Yorker. The New York Times one actually was largely focused on conservation issues.
I thought that it was pretty responsible in its orientation.
The New Yorker one was more a profile of Octavio Redig,
but I think that even though it wasn't focused on conservation,
implicitly a lot of those issues were evident,
if only in terms of the magnitude of his work, how many people. I think he claimed to have personally turned on 10,000 people.
And so if you want to use a rough estimate that each mature Bufo alvarius toad, when milked, if all of the glands are milked, could produce
enough venom to supply five people. That's, you know, the milking of 2,000 toads from one man.
And you add to that his partner, Jerry Sandoval, or his former partner, makes that 4,000 toads.
And then everybody else was inspired by them. You can just easily knock that up to 10,000 toads. And then everybody else was inspired by them.
You can just easily knock that up to 10,000 toads.
And I think it becomes clear that even if it wasn't a problem for a few people to do this,
if it continues to gain popularity at the current rate,
it's going to become a problem very quickly.
There's an excellent ethnobotanist by the name of Gary Nabhan, very prolific, but his best book, my favorite,
is called The Desert Smells Like Rain. It came out about 40 years ago, and it talks about how the Hohokam people have expanded agriculture in the desert. This apparently has expanded the
habitat for this toad. I think as you're pointing out, that there'd be a lot more habitat needed to
support this toad. I know you've been one of the leaders in terms of natural
product chemistry and recreating some of these chemicals in the lab. So I wonder if you could
share with us your thoughts on the role of the chemist in terms of taking the heat, taking the
pressure off natural populations of plants, animals, and fungi. Yeah, I mean, it's an interesting time
because a lot of these things can be synthesized somewhat trivially in an industrial lab with the appropriate resources. So something like Ibogaine to produce it fully synthetically would be totally impossible for a normal person to do on a, you know, mult-gram scale to supply a clinic for something like that.
But if it were, you know, a large industrial manufacturing operation, it would then
be possible. And that was what Howard Lossoff was trying to do with Ibogaine. The same is not true
of something like 5-MeO-DMT. It's synthetically more approachable, which is really nice. This
is one of the advantages is that it could be produced
industrially for a pharmaceutical company. There's actually quite a few different pharmaceutical
companies right now that are pursuing 5-MeO DMT as a therapeutic product, and all of them are using
synthetic material, which I think is really a good thing, actually a necessary thing, because there's no way that the toads could supply a pharmaceutical demand. But what's nice about this
is that there's a sort of intermediate that exists. It doesn't need to be pharmaceutical,
and it doesn't need to be extracted from a toad. It's possible for somebody, if it is done legally
in a region where they won't potentially lose their freedom for doing this, it's possible for somebody, if it is done legally in a region where they won't
potentially lose their freedom for doing this, it's possible to produce it synthetically in a
one-step reaction starting from 5-methoxytryptamine. And this is very approachable, somewhat safe
chemistry. I don't want to say that it's completely safe because it isn't. But I would say in the grand scheme of synthesis,
this is certainly on the easier side of the balance. And that means that, you know, if
somebody were operating a clinic in Mexico, they conceivably could hire a chemist to make enough
to supply their clinic for years very easily at a low cost. And that was what I was trying to show
people because this idea that, okay, chemistry, there's no way that's not accessible to an average person.
Well, maybe not to everybody, but it is accessible to people with a little bit of training.
And so people should be aware that that exists as a viable option.
Well, you mentioned Howard's name, and I heard you talk a bit about him in an interview that
you gave with our friend Tim Ferriss. And I'll link to that interview in the show notes.
But I wonder if you could tell a little bit of background about Howard's story and how he discovered that this was, in some cases, an effective treatment for addiction.
Yeah, it's a fascinating story because if you look at the history of Iboga and even the early pharmaceutical history of Ibogaine, in Central West Africa, it's a religious sacrament and part of a religion called Bwiti.
And it's used for medicinal purposes there, but it is not traditionally used as a treatment for addiction.
There was not opioid addiction in Central West Africa until the 21st century.
So at least on a large scale, I'm sure there were a couple people.
But so this idea that Ibogaine or Iboga could serve as a treatment for substance abuse disorders was not something that was circulating at all.
And there was a guy in New York named Howard Lotsoff
who was friends with a chemist. And the chemist gave him Ibogaine because it was a psychedelic
that was available. I believe that he had either synthesized it or ordered it from a chemical
supply catalog. And Howard Lotsoff was dependent on heroin at that time.
And he took the Ibogaine not because he wanted to stop using heroin necessarily.
He just wanted to use a psychedelic.
And what he found in the wake of that experience was that he lost his craving for heroin.
And not only did he lose the craving for it, the very way that he conceptualized the heroin had
changed. He didn't think of it as something that was desirable or good. He started to think of
heroin as essentially a symbol of death, something that was, not only did he not need it, he didn't
want it either. And this was something that emerged accidentally. This was a serendipitous discovery.
He wasn't looking for this, but he found it.
And what he experienced was not unique.
Other people tried ibogaine and iboga for the same purpose as a treatment for addiction.
And it was found to be the case that actually quite a large number of people responded similarly.
And this has even been demonstrated in animal models of addiction.
So this is a demonstrated effect.
It doesn't work for everyone all the time,
but it seems that maybe a solid third to a quarter of people
that undergo this therapy
are able to stop using heroin or other opioids.
Well, there's many fascinating nuggets of information
tucked in that answer,
but one that stands out to me
is that this is a powerful and effective use
for something that the indigenous peoples
weren't using it for.
And so the point of this,
and I think the relevance for this podcast,
is that not only are these mind-altering substances
important and useful for things
they've always been used for,
but there's new things that come to the fore. I'm reminded of Charles Nichols at LSU,
who's using tiny doses of hallucinogens to treat asthma, and they're not causing hallucinations.
And I'm wondering if you think that this kind of explains this whole microdosing
movement, that people aren't really sure how it works or what it's for,
but people seem to like it and find it effective for a variety of purposes.
Well, yes.
Microdosing is difficult to talk about because it doesn't really have a precise definition.
So what I might call a microdose could be completely different,
especially when you factor in the issue that psilocybin-containing mushrooms and LSD
are the two psychedelics that people typically have access to. And both of these are psychedelics where people do not know the precise dose of
chemical they're consuming due to variation in mushrooms and due to uncertainty about the
concentration on blotter. So you might say a microdose is half of one tab of a blotter,
but you don't know how much LSD is on that tab. So
it could be completely different. For some people, a microdose is a low dose of a psychedelic. For
some people, they define microdose as sub-perceptual. And in the research that has been
done thus far, it seems like it's a placebo effect, but that's not to say that low doses
of psychedelics couldn't have some kind
of therapeutic property under the appropriate circumstances. And like you said, the work of
Chuck Nichols is great evidence of that. So maybe the other thing is that, you know, what the
therapeutic endpoints aren't well defined in a lot of these micro dosing, you know, what is it
exactly that people are looking for enhanced Enhanced creativity, enhanced focus, enhanced energy,
mood lift. I mean, people seem to be pursuing microdosing for an almost unlimited number of
different applications. And so maybe it works for one thing, for one person, maybe somebody with,
you know, suffering from chronic inflammation with a certain psychedelic could have some benefit.
And maybe for someone else else there would be no
benefit at all. So I think the real issue with talking about microdosing is a lack of precision
in the definition of what a microdose is, what psychedelic is being used, and what the application
of that microdose of a psychedelic would be. Excellent. Thank you. Which ties back into
something else you were alluding to. The famous pamphlet by Albert Most
that you've helped bring back to the fore was actually written by Ken Nelson. And he's a
fascinating figure in his own right. So I wonder if you could give us a little bit of detail and
background on this incredible fellow. Yeah. And it was nice to see his name in these articles.
It's nice to really see him integrated into this history because I think what he did is so fascinating. And, you know, I think that because our culture has done such a terrible job dealing with psychedelics and psychoactive drugs in general, it's just about as bad as it could possibly be. Locking people in cages for using them really has not been an effective strategy.
And for that reason, I think we tend to look to indigenous cultures for guidance because they've
done a far better job at learning how to use these things constructively and medicinally.
And so we're almost uncomfortable with our own contributions. I think there's a tendency to try to exclusively look. Some people go too far. And in the case of Bufo Alvarez, I think that they have done that. They have essentially fabricated an indigenous history of use because if it's ancient, if it's traditional, if it's indigenous, that means that it's good. That means that it's okay. That justifies it. Well, all known evidence points to there not being a tradition of
using Bufal various. This is something that emerged in the United States with a white man in Texas
named Ken Nelson, who was, he was actually inspired by a misunderstanding by an anthropologist named
Jeanette Runquist, who had hypothesized that there was ancient use of psychoactive toads.
So he read about this in Omni magazine and thought, well, that's cool. I'd like to,
you know, I'd like to try that myself. Not realizing that in his imitation
of what he thought was an indigenous practice, he was actually inventing a new practice himself.
Very interesting twist in all of this. And so he was, by all known accounts, the first person
to find this toad, milk it, and smoke the venom. And at the beginning,
it was obscure. There were psychedelic cognoscenti like Andrew Weil or Wade Davis who pursued this
and were very interested in it, but this was not a phenomenon. Celebrities weren't talking about
toad venom in the 1980s. And if it was popular, it was probably equivalent in popularity to synthetic
5-MeO-DMT at that time, which had been available from chemical supply companies since at least the
1960s. So the synthetic 5-MeO-DMT history actually predates the use of Bufol various venom. It just
was never talked about as much. And there's something,
I suppose, something cool about the idea of smoking toad venom. People like to talk about
it. We're talking about it right now. There's something weird about it. It's a good story.
And it wasn't until celebrities really started doing this in the 21st century and until Octavio
Rettig and Jerry Sandoval started going on a crusade as Toad Venom
evangelists that this really became the phenomenon that we're currently talking about. Well, that's
a new phrase for me, Toad Venom evangelist. I'm going to have to be lifting that one.
So why are people calling this the God molecule versus just plain old DMT?
Well, the experiences are very different. This is one of the unfortunate things about 5-MeO-DMT
is its name. People think that because the name contains DMT, that it is a form of DMT or that it
is, you know, very, very closely related to DMT. But psilocin, you know, the active metabolite of
psilocybin and a component of psilocybin containing mushrooms is closer to DMT than 5-MeO-DMT is structurally.
You could call psilocin 4-hydroxy-DMT.
So it's really the name, more than anything, that I think causes people to have this association.
It was actually a big problem when I was planning a large-scale synthesis of 5-MeO-DMT in Mexico,
because the lawyers looked at this and they said,
well, this is DMT.
And I said, no, it's not.
It's 5-MeO-DMT.
It's 5-methoxy-DMT.
And they said, well, it contains DMT in the name.
And I said, okay, well, what if I call it NNO trimethylserotonin?
Then can I synthesize it?
And they thought that was okay.
Of course, it's the same chemical.
But the difference experientially between 5-MeO-DMT and DMT is enormous.
I would say that DMT is very much a prototypical, classical psychedelic.
It's highly, highly visual.
You have profound visual distortions.
You often see your environment in a different way you think about yourself your relationships it's a personal experience whereas 5meo DMT is often non-visual
it's often sort of impersonal I think it tends toward universal where it's not about your life
but life in general. And it doesn't
have a lot of the qualities that people think of when they talk about psychedelic drugs. I mean,
for many people, myself included, the experience is losing consciousness entirely for a brief
period, and then having something that could be termed a near-death experience. Physiologically
speaking, it isn't, but experientially, it does feel that way.
Well, I want to make the point here that we're not doing commercials for any of these substances.
And in all the episodes, I point out that these things can be lethal, and you've mentioned that on your show and in some of your writings and interviews.
But even cannabis, which people sort of think of as this harmless thing that can't hurt anybody.
And I was reading something of yours recently that talked about problematic relationships with cannabis. So I wonder if you could give an
example of that so that people understand that all of these plants are the gods and fungi are the
gods and frogs are the gods may have a downside. Yeah, I think it's very important to have a
balanced perspective on these things, because there's been something
really polarizing about the way they've been publicly discussed from the very beginning.
They're either a panacea that's going to cure all of society's ills, they're going to prevent us
from being mean to each other, they're going to end all wars, or they're poisonous agents that
will destroy your mind and leave you intellectually crippled. And of course,
the truth is somewhere in the middle, where for some people, under some circumstances,
they can have a tremendous benefit and they can be truly life-changing. And under other
circumstances, they can have a damaging effect. And cannabis, I think, is an interesting example
because it also includes the political dimensions of all this. Because the people that have been they can have a damaging effect. And with, you know, cannabis, I think is an interesting example,
because it also includes the political dimensions of all this, because the people,
the people that have been using these substances for decades have been persecuted.
And that creates a sort of insecurity complex. Understandably, justifiably, if the government says that this is dangerous and
they're willing to lock you in a cage for it, if your employer can terminate your employment,
if they find traces of this substance in your hair or your urine, which is an insane invasion
of privacy that nobody should tolerate, then it makes sense that you'd want to really stand up
for this stuff and say, hey, wait a second. It's never killed anybody.
It's safer than alcohol, safer than tobacco. This stuff is innocuous. In fact, you can smoke it every single day and you'll be totally fine. And in many instances, that might be true,
but that doesn't necessarily mean that you should. And it doesn't mean that we, I think this is the
tendency as we go too far in one direction or another. And a lot of it has to do with this, yeah, this insecurity from people demonizing these
substances for so long.
Agreed.
But can you give perhaps an example of a problematic relationship with cannabis?
Because your point is well taken, but that is even cannabis can have a downside.
Oh, certainly.
Yeah.
I mean, I think one of the most interesting examples
is there's a disorder called cannabis hyperemesis disorder.
Are you familiar with this?
It wasn't described in the medical literature until somewhat recently.
It's a very odd phenomenon
where people who smoke enormous quantities of cannabis
will start vomiting continuously. And the only thing
that relieves their nausea is taking a hot shower. And people started showing up in emergency rooms
when they ran out of hot water because they couldn't control their vomiting. And this seemed
really bizarre because, wait a second, people have been using cannabis for
thousands of years. What are the chances that now, all of a sudden, a new cannabis-related
disorder would emerge? It couldn't be the cannabis itself. It must be a pesticide. It must be
some contaminant in the cannabis. Otherwise, how could this possibly be explained?
And the explanation is that, yes, it is the cannabis itself. This is a product
of chronic hyperstimulation of CB1 receptors. And the reality is that people are smoking
more cannabis now than any other time in human history. So new use disorders are actually
emerging. And although this is described as a somewhat obscure phenomenon, it's not as obscure
as people think. I've known two people that had this disorder, both of whom didn't know they had it. And it's
especially insidious because cannabis has an anti-emetic effect. So you're nauseous. You think,
oh man, I'm so sick. I need to smoke some cannabis because I'm really nauseous. But the
cannabis is actually making it worse. It's the cause, it's the source of the nausea. And this, uh, during the pandemic, I had a friend
who this, uh, happened to cause he was just getting really, really stoned all the time.
And, uh, and I had noticed that he was constantly soaking wet. And I thought like, why is this guy,
is he like taking showers five times a day? Why is he always so wet? And,
and he then told me, you know, I don't know what's going on. I've just been,
you know, vomiting all the time. And a hot shower is really the only thing that, that helps.
And I thought, wow, all right. Yeah, I know what you have. This is a, so that's, you know,
I don't want to bring that up as an example of something that everyone should be really terrified
of, because this is something that only afflicts people who are extremely stoned all the time.
But it's just an example of how this plant that's considered totally innocuous,
under some circumstances, can have a negative effect.
Also, I think there's something to be said for maybe just not being stoned all the time. And I say this as
somebody that likes cannabis personally. I'm not trying to hate on cannabis. It's just there's,
like I said, a tendency to go to these extremes of either cannabis is terrible or you should be
stoned all the time because cannabis is a medicine. Well, my mentor Richard Schultes would often
describe mind-altering plants as scalpels in the hand of a shaman. It can heal, but it can also harm if it's not used correctly.
And so, once again, all of these plants, all of these fungi, all of these substances
need to be used with caution and approached with reverence and carefully.
And that's why I often tell people you shouldn't be experimenting on your own
with very powerful substances.
I also wanted to ask you, Hamilton, about other frogs before we move into a few other topics.
And that is when I was working on a book called Medicine Quest about 30 years ago, I interviewed John Daly.
And at that point, 30 years ago, Daly had isolated 40 novel chemicals just from frogs from 50 different species.
So I'm wondering what's your perspective on frogs and other plants, animals, and fungi as to what's still out there?
I love frogs, and they are amazing chemists.
I mean, I imagine you're familiar with epibatidine.
It's such a beautiful molecule.
And for a terrestrial species to even produce a chlorinated natural product like that is already sort of unusual. Then you have the 7-azanorbornane ring, which is just bizarre. I
mean, the chemistry of it is really, really fascinating. And these frogs and toads are
capable of biosynthetic feats that would be very difficult for human chemists.
It's remarkable.
And I don't doubt that there are amazing things left to be discovered.
Well, I have read recent reports of two venomous frogs found in eastern Brazil,
genus Corythromantis and Aperasphenidon,
where they have toxins more poisonous than the bushmaster.
And these are recent finds.
So the idea that we've kind of got everything from the natural world or even just from the frogs is obviously not the case.
Of course, the flip side of that is with chytrid fungi and climate change, these animals which are probably the most sensitive of any group.
So the race is on is to find, utilize, and protect these creatures at the same time that we seem to be destroying them faster than ever. There's
about a thousand species of frogs that are known in the Amazon, and we're finding more
all the time. But I wanted to turn to one of your idols or mentors or heroes, I don't
know how you'd best describe them, Alexander Shulgin, better known as Sasha.
And since we're talking about mental states, I wonder if you'd share with us the story about Sasha and the surgery on his thumb. Oh, yeah. Yeah, of course. And this is a sort of foundational
story in psychedelic history because Alexander Shulgin was in the Navy, and when he was in the Navy, he was injured.
He injured his thumb, and he was having, I believe, a small surgical procedure.
Maybe it was just stitches on his thumb.
And the nurse gave him a glass of orange juice that had crystals that he could see present in the juice.
And he thought, okay, well, they're giving me
morphine in my orange juice. Makes sense. This is going to be, you know, it's a painful procedure.
He drank it and the morphine had this, you know, miraculous analgesic effect. And he thought that
was great. That was exactly what I needed. And later he asked the nurse, you know, how much
morphine was that in the juice? And she said, oh, no, that was sugar. Those are sugar crystals. So he came to realize that his own mind was capable
of producing these sorts of experiences. I mean, this is the placebo effect, and it's very,
very powerful. And as somebody who spent his career evaluating completely unknown substances,
substances that did not exist in the known universe until they were synthesized in his lab,
and he would be the first human being to try those substances,
you have to be ultra aware of not just the placebo effect, but also the nocebo effect,
the belief that something that is pharmacologically inactive that you have consumed
is a poison because it could go either way. You could take something and suddenly think,
oh no, what did I just do? Oh no, this could be some kind of cardiac toxin. I could be dying.
Both are totally possible and both are established phenomena in the medical literature. This is not
some kind of speculative thing. This is why placebo-controlled trials are done, because the placebo effect is a real effect.
This is one of the complicated things about it.
Understood. But we've got two pieces of the puzzle that don't fit together well. Here you
have a man who invented more wild mind-altering chemicals than anybody ever had or ever will,
and is a big fan of the placebo effect. So what's the lesson we draw from his life and work in terms of the future and healing if we get this right?
Well, I think the first thing is to not always believe your own senses immediately,
to scrutinize your own experiences and to try your best to be skeptical
and to conduct your work in an evidence-based manner.
Because yes, there is nobody who is not vulnerable to the placebo effect.
You might think, oh, that's just for the people out there
that don't really, they're not really knowledgeable like me.
But someone like me, so knowledgeable,
I could obviously tell the difference between a placebo and an active
substance. Well, the whole issue with placebo is that you can't tell. That's the whole purpose of
this effect. And so I think this actually comes back to the conservation issue because people
will say, well, of course, toad venom is different than a synthetic material. And of course, iboga total alkaloid extract is
different from isolated ibogaine. And of course, one variety of psilocybin-containing mushroom is
going to be different than another. Well, not so fast. If you're going to make that claim,
especially if that claim could have serious ecological consequences, you need to be sure
that it's real.
Well, everybody in our field is repeatedly asked or told,
I would never take a synthetic, I will only take the natural product.
So what's the difference between synthetic mescaline and mescaline?
I love that question because there's a really beautiful study that was done
between two groups of researchers, one in France and the other in Germany.
And it was a group of natural product chemists in France who were studying a traditional medicine in Cameroon called Nauclea latifolia.
And they knew that this plant had been used to treat pain for generations. So they brought
it to the lab, they extracted it, what's in this stuff, and they find that it contains tramadol,
which is a completely synthetic pharmaceutical opioid that was thought to have been discovered
in Germany in the 1960s. So wait a second, there's now two parallel histories of tramadol,
one that is pharmaceutical, starting in Germany, and the other that is a multi-generational traditional medicine history in Central West
Africa. And this was kind of a remarkable claim. It was very exciting to me. But then a group of
chemists in Germany decided that they were going to try to replicate these findings. They went back
to the same region, they started collecting samples, and they found that tramadol was
actually distributed throughout the environment. And then the question emerged, okay, so one group
is saying this is being biosynthesized by a plant. The other group is saying this is a product of
anthropogenic contamination of the environment. And if you're comparing these
two samples, what is the difference? How would you ever know? And what it came down to was
radiocarbon, because if something is a natural product, it will contain traces of radiocarbon.
If something is synthesized from petrochemicals, it will contain no radiocarbon. So in the strictest
sense, if you were going to say, what is the difference between synthetic mescaline and mescaline biosynthesized by
a plant, hypothetically, the biosynthesized mescaline would be slightly more radioactive.
But this is not something that would have any health consequence. We're talking about
amounts of radioactivity that are barely detectable with the most sensitive known analytical instruments. But effectively, you know, the short answer is nothing. There's nothing
different. But again, back to the placebo effect, just because there's nothing different about it
doesn't mean that you won't have a different experience. This is why it's so complicated,
because this is dependent on your values. So if you're somebody that really likes plants,
and you have a sort of animist relationship with plants where you see them as having a vital essence of one kind or another and that is important to you,
then you are going to probably have a better experience with plant-derived mescaline because of the associations and the psychological priming associated with that.
If you also think that synthetic artificial substances are bad and dangerous and undesirable,
you will be inclined to have a negative experience.
So, again, this is not to say that people don't have different experiences,
but that the experience is psychologically mediated as opposed to being mediated by the psychopharmacology of these effectively identical substances.
Which links to another issue that I want to discuss, and that is that of ritual,
and the role of ritual, and the importance of ritual. The best description I was able to find,
it was, ritual is the performance of ceremonial acts prescribed by tradition or sacred decrees.
So, many of these traditional uses involve a lot of ritual. So, what, in your view,
is the importance of this ritual in terms, in your view, is the importance
of this ritual in terms of the placebo effect, setting the stage, or convincing you of something
that might not happen without it? I mean, there's so many different purposes that a ritual can have
depending on the ritual and the plant and what is being done and where it's being done in the
culture. But I think that ritual can be very important for emphasizing and accentuating certain dimensions of an experience. So
traditionally, iboga was not used to treat substance abuse disorders in Gabon, but in
recent years, it is being used that way. And what really struck me was that even without the ceremony
being explicitly oriented toward that purpose, I felt
that something of that nature was being implicitly communicated, which was a sort of endurance feat
where you dance and you fast and you give yourself entirely to this experience. And because you abandon comfort, because you abandon all of your associations in
everyday life, it causes you to rely on yourself in a different way. And I think that that could
have a sort of anti-addictive effect because it's, you know, what we refer to as addiction
in the substance abuse sense, I think, is a
ramification of a far more common human tendency, which is a sense of being dependent on anything.
It could be your phone. It could be someone that you're in a romantic relationship with.
It could be sweet foods. It could be a specific comfortable bed. And you feel that if you don't
have that thing, you're just,
that's necessary for your life. You're not whole without it. You need it. You're dependent on this external force. And I think that that ritual emphasizes a certain core independence and a
endurance and a feeling that you have so much within you that you can withstand the deprivation of sleep or water
because the reserves exist inside you. Well, again, to drill down a little deeper on this,
when I was in Oaxaca 20 years ago, I had the honor and privilege of working with Doña Julieta,
who certainly didn't get the press that Maria Sabina did, but the local peoples considered her
every bit as powerful. And at one point she told me, she said, you know, but the local peoples considered her by every bit as powerful.
And at one point,
she told me,
she said,
you know,
before the gringos started showing up here,
before people like Wasson
showed up here,
we used the Nino Santos,
the little sainted ones,
the mushrooms,
to heal
and to search
for lost objects.
That was the two purposes.
Very different
than what people
are going there for now.
And so,
when I hear about people
starting to combine cannabis with ayahuasca and thing like this and saying it's it's traditional
uh what are your thoughts on this sort of combination of these different traditions
and these new uses it's oh yeah it's it's really actually remarkable i'm repeatedly surprised by
how common that has become and this is something that's actually not talked about. I'm glad you brought this up. Because I'll talk to people and they'll say, you know, I just did a
combo ceremony with Phila Medusa bicolor. And I'll say, where was it? And they'll say, oh,
you know, it was in Brooklyn. And I'll say, okay, what was it like? And they say, you know,
they gave me five burns. And then as soon as I'd recovered from the vomiting,
they gave me Bufo Alvarez venom. I'll say, oh, huh. So they're throwing that in the mix as well.
And I'll say, and then when I came down from the Bufo Alvarez venom, they gave me Sananga eye
drops. And I'll think, wow, all right, they're just really giving you the Whitman sampler.
And that is not uncommon. I actually, when I talk to people that are, you know, not a part of an indigenous group,
but they've created a sort of, let's say, it sounds mean, but, you know, sort of pseudo-traditional,
pseudo-indigenous practice where they use pieces of those ceremonies,
but they're not actually from those groups themselves.
And the way, I know that that sounds kind unsavory, the way I just described it,
but I think some of these people have good intentions and they're not necessarily
harming anyone, but they do tend to mix and match these traditions in a way that is
surprising to me. I don't even want to go so far as to say it's necessarily bad,
but it's something that I would be very cautious about. And it is a, I think, cause for concern because they'll do these multi-day, multi-substance
retreats where, you know, day one, you do ayahuasca. Day two, you do psilocybin-containing
mushrooms. Then you do Ibogaine. Then you end the whole thing with bufoalvarious venom. And
I don't know. I think your guess is as good as mine when it comes to whether or not
that's a constructive practice.
I also wanted to ask you one thing really quickly.
So you were in Wautla in the early 2000s.
I'm curious.
And Maria Sabina was dead by then
and I'm curious what it was like then.
It was sort of just becoming discovered
and I remember being in the plaza and there would be people walking through the plaza with Plants of the Gods, the Schultes and Huffman book going like, I think I'll try that one.
Sort of like a Chinese menu.
So it was changing at the time.
Tourists were doing this.
Tourists.
Yeah.
Gringos.
Yeah.
But I was working with a Mexican physician who had lived with the Weecholds for eight years and was actually dating the
daughter of the most powerful shaman.
So I kind of sidled into a very traditional healing tradition rather than being all these
guys who showed up in the plaza looking for people saying, mushrooms, mushrooms, hongos,
hongos.
So it was just at that cusp where things were becoming more commercial and more open to
the outside world.
And as you know, this type of psychedelic tourism has positive and negative aspects.
And that's one of the things I want to ask you about because you talked about good intentions.
And Michael Pollan in his book talks about the fact that a lot of people who are seeking
out the psychedelic healing tend to be people with emotional problems who may not be all that together and are the ones most likely to come apart if they're not under the care of really a skilled practitioner who's not in it for the money or just for the money.
So I'd like to get your thoughts on this type of psychedelic tourism and the potential downsides and the real downsides that, you know, we see.
Yeah. And this is one of the fundamental changes that occurs in a medical model.
If you talk to somebody like William Leonard Picard, who is a very prominent LSD chemist and is considered to have been responsible for producing more LSD than any
person in history. And his philosophy when it came to the distribution of LSD was you give it to
healthy people. This is not a substance that you give to somebody who just broke up with their
boyfriend or girlfriend. This is not something you give to somebody who's mentally unstable.
This is something that is used for the betterment of healthy people. And in a medical model, that is the complete opposite.
And instead, these by necessity must be used for treatment of disease because this is the way our
current medical system works. There is no provision for the use of medicines by healthy people. That's not how health insurance works.
That's not how the FDA works, for better or worse.
And so in these trials and at these retreats, so this occurs on both the gray market, black
market, and the medicalized market, there is a tendency for people who are pursuing
these things for treatment of disease.
And you run the full gamut of problems that can come with that. I think on one end,
you have a lot of the sorts of things that happen in the realm of unregulated cancer treatments,
where you have desperate people, because a lot of diseases will put somebody in a state of
serious desperation. You have a terminal neurodegenerative disease. You want something
that will halt that degeneration and you'll try anything. And if somebody says, hey,
you know, Ibogaine is a treatment for Parkinson's disease, which is a claim that is made quite often
and the evidence for it is not
very strong. I've actually talked about this in the past. And is it possible that it could treat
Parkinson's? Yeah, I think it's possible. But there certainly isn't sufficient evidence that
people who have Parkinson's disease should take Ibogaine thinking that this is going to
cure all of their problems. I mean, it really has not been adequately studied.
So you have that sort of thing happening.
And then you have the problems with aftercare,
with integration, where if somebody has some kind of trauma and they have this experience at, let's say, a toad venom retreat,
then what?
Is there a follow-up?
No.
Then they're on their own.
And we don't live in a society that has provisions for caring for people after an experience like that,
which can be really disruptive to their functioning.
I think this integration issue is much overlooked in our field.
My organization, the Amazon Conservation Team, does a lot of work with the original Ayahuasqueros
in the Northwest Amazon that Schultes work with in the 40s and many times you'll finish a ceremony and three days later
you're walking down the street and you'll get some realization or you have some weird sort of
semi-vision and you're able to go back to the shaman and say what does that mean and they'll
be able to explain to you usually but in our culture where you go to the doctor and then
you're done what what happens afterwards?
It's your issue, your problem.
And these powerful substances in our heads, our minds, and our souls, if you don't have somebody there guiding you through the aftermath, I think you're kind of asking for trouble. And I think, again, this is one of the reasons why their medicine is effective in some cases when ours is not.
Yeah.
But I'm just wondering if you think that fungi are as promising as frogs
in terms of new substances, new mind-altering substances,
new stuff for microdosing.
What's your perspective?
Well, from a sustainability perspective,
mushrooms are about as good as anything anyone could ask for.
And a lot of that has to do with the natural abundance of proliferation of different species and different
genera that produce psilocybin. And that is a product of people being obsessed with mushrooms
and searching for them everywhere, because this wasn't always the case. You know, there was a time
when people thought this was exclusively something that was found in Oaxaca.
And if you wanted to try psilocybin-containing mushrooms, you had to go to Huautla.
And it wasn't until people started finding them in the United States, and more importantly, until Dennis McKenna adapted laboratory techniques for the cultivation of psilocybin-containing mushrooms and published it in an underground non-scientific guide intended
for lay readers that not only did people recognize that these things grew naturally
in the United States, but that they could cultivate them themselves. And that really
sparked a revolution that dramatically increased the availability of psilocybin-containing
mushrooms. They went from something so obscure that essentially nobody could try them to the
most common psychedelic.
And that was exclusively a product of innovation, really scientific innovation and cultivation
techniques. And I think that that is why it's so important to think about these things. If
people hadn't done that, it could have been very different. It could have been even more
overcrowding and tourism to Mexico. People thought that by necessity they had to
make this voyage. And instead, it had a fact where people were empowered to pursue these
things independently, which I think can be a very positive thing. And the issue is that we just
haven't developed equivalent techniques for a lot of these other things. That was sort of what I was
trying to do with 5-MeO-DMT. It's a little more complicated. But if there were a way to empower people to use these things sustainably, then a lot of these problems would go away.
Excellent point.
I mean, we send ethnobotanists to the jungle searching for magic frogs, and it turns out here they are in Arizona.
Richard Schultes left Massachusetts to the wilds of Oaxaca in 1936 in search of magic mushrooms.
But according to Juliana Furchy, who was on Tim Ferriss' show recently, there's probably
12 or 15 magic mushroom species growing in Massachusetts.
So on one hand, it's a bit like the Wizard of Oz.
There's no place like home.
But I think that what it brings home is that all species everywhere are valuable and need
to be investigated.
So where do we look next for these new and wild substances?
Is it the coral reef?
Is it the boreal forest?
You're the natural product chemist.
What do you think?
Well, I don't actually do all that much work with natural products.
Almost everything that I do is synthesis of novel compounds, although I've done a little bit.
I've synthesized 5-bromo-DMT, for example, which is the only psychedelic that has ever been isolated from a marine organism. And it's really
the only known psychedelic from the ocean and only the ocean. I think it is possible that there will
be other marine psychedelics discovered. But again, the same problems emerge. I mean, thankfully,
people don't really like 5-bromodmtMT that much, and also, thankfully, it's easy enough to synthesize
that nobody has considered attempting to poach the sponge source,
Menospongia aurea.
But what if that were not the case?
What if it were like 5-meo-DMT,
and it produced a really remarkable, life-changing type experience,
and that would rapidly become a conservation issue,
and you'd probably run into the same phenomenon
where some shaman or zealot would say,
well, you know, look, I found an ancient engraving of a sponge.
And this shows that, in fact, people have been using sponges for thousands of years,
and it is our ancestral responsibility to remove these sponges from the ocean and figure out a way to smoke their alkaloids. I think it's going to present a more
challenging case for these neo-shamans to claim that it was always used as a hallucinogenic
by the indigenous peoples who lived on the coral reef, but time will tell.
Now, I'm wondering if you have any thoughts to share on the preponderance of hallucinogenic
substances in the New World and New World tropics versus the Old World. A lot of people have paid a lot
of lip service to this, and I haven't heard a convincing case as to why we have so much from
Central and South America and relatively so little from Africa or Asia.
I think one answer seems to be that people have not looked as hard.
I mean, people are finding new species of psilocybin-containing mushrooms.
There was a species found in Congo not so long ago that, you know, just it seems very possible to me that nobody had looked until somewhat recently.
There's even evidence of traditional use of psilocybin-containing mushrooms in Uganda, which would be really interesting because that would suggest that
there was maybe a parallel evolution of psilocybin-containing mushroom traditions in
both Africa and in Mexico. The evidence for the use in Uganda is relatively slim, but there is one paper on it that suggests that this could be the case.
Yeah.
Well, if you get me that reference, put it in the show notes because I'm sure that'll be of great interest to a lot of people.
Now, Weston Labar, who was on Schulte's early expeditions to Oklahoma in search of peyote, wrote a classic paper on the
shamanic origins of religion and medicine. And I'm wondering if you have a personal opinion or
insight as to whether these disciplines were essentially the same or how much overlap there
was thousands, tens of thousands, or maybe a hundred thousand years ago.
Oh, well, certainly, traditionally, there would have been an enormous amount of
overlap, depending on what culture you're talking about as well. And I think that this is one of the
things about modern medicine that has been lost is these sort of ceremonial or ritual or
psychological dimensions to the administration of a medicine, which will necessarily change the outcome. I mean, they've even done
experiments with a treatment for hair loss called finasteride. And they gave one group of people
information where they said, you know, this drug, it's going to cause sexual dysfunction.
It's going to cause depression. It's going to have some negative side effects. And the other group,
they didn't say any of this. And the people had been told that there was risk of these adverse effects experienced them more prominently. So there's
no question that the way a medicine is administered changes the outcome. And that's something that
is not really integrated into our current medical practices.
You have talked about the importance of strychnose and strychnine in medicine. In Suriname, where I've done a lot of my work, they have long sold a male aphrodisiac tea made from a species of strychnose.
Now, I don't know whether there's strychnose in it, and I'm not advocating the use of strychnose,
but I wonder if you could elaborate on this use of poisons as medicines and vice versa.
Have you ever tried it?
I have not tried it. Yes. I mean, but yeah,
strychnine was used as a medicine. It was actually used as a performance enhancing drug by athletes.
Whether or not that is really effective for that purpose is unclear to me. Obviously,
it's potentially very unsafe. But I think strychnine is a really good example of this foundational
concept in toxicology, which is the dose makes the poison. There is nothing that is inherently
therapeutic or inherently toxic. These are all a function of dose. So there is a dose of strychnine
that is not dangerous to consume. It's a very low dose. The therapeutic index of strychnine is quite
a bit lower than other substances, but that doesn't mean that it is intrinsically a poison.
Almost everything that we call a poison under some circumstances,
at least conceivably, could have a therapeutic effect, including radiation.
So, yeah.
So in terms of strychnine use, you know, I've always been curious about it
because one thing that I've learned over the years
is almost any time somebody classifies a substance as really, really bad or extremely dangerous,
it tends to be the case that it's at least partially misunderstood. And it wouldn't
surprise me all that much if maybe a very, very low dose of strychnine did elicit some kind of
desirable effect. But obviously obviously I am not suggesting anyone
listening to this go out and try to evaluate that on their own. Agreed. We're not advocating for the
use of poisons to see what the therapeutic dosage. I'm interested in the case of salvia. You know,
we talked about medicinal plants before we knew much about medicinal fungi, And then Wasson comes back from Oaxaca with a medicinal mint.
This was stunning to the chemical world,
the ethnobotanical world.
And I wonder what you think that tells us
about what's still out there waiting to be discovered.
Yeah, I love the story of salvia
because it was studied by no shortage
of brilliant researchers.
I mean, this was Albert Hoffman
who had little trouble isolating and then synthesizing psilocin and psilocybin. by no shortage of brilliant researchers. I mean, this was Albert Hoffman,
who had little trouble isolating and then synthesizing psilocin and psilocybin.
He obviously synthesized LSD.
He did very complicated work with ergolines.
And yet, when he was given a sample of salvia divinorum,
he couldn't figure it out.
And that was the case for many people for many years.
They would make extracts of it.
They would inject that extract into a cat. There's a Mexican psychiatrist named Jose Luis Diaz who did that work, and it the way that it was administered, usually as an aqueous infusion. So, you know, Wasson tried it, Hoffman tried it. They said that there was some
effect that it was sort of mushroom-like, but they couldn't quite put their finger on it.
And people were trying to figure out what is this stuff? What does it do? If you extract it,
inject it into a cat, it does something, has a subtle effect in humans. What chemical is
responsible for this? There's no nitrogenous alkaloid in it that's responsible. So what's going on here? And I was actually talking
to Dennis McKenna on my podcast recently, and he told me a really funny anecdote where he was
working for Shaman Pharmaceuticals, and he was studying extracts of salvia and looking at their
affinity for the kappa opioid receptor. And it was off the charts.
And he thought, okay, this doesn't make any sense.
There's no way that this plant contains something this potent.
I must have made a mistake.
So he actually discovered this, but then discounted his own finding
because it seemed too extraordinary to be real.
And it wasn't until Brian Roth actually started working with another citizen scientist named Daniel Siebert
that they were able to definitively demonstrate that the active principle of salvia divinorum
was salvinorin A and that salvinorin A was an extraordinarily potent and selective agonist for
the kappa opioid receptor and that it was the most potent naturally occurring
psychedelic. So that is quite a curveball coming from a plant that there was some ambiguity whether
it was active at all. Well, when I was in Oaxaca and asked the shaman about it, she said, I'm not
going to give it to you. It's too strong and you don't need it. And eventually she changed her mind, but it was really very unpleasant. And I didn't feel a healing result from it.
But now that it's obtained such wide popularity, I have to say I remain very surprised.
But it clearly is not similar to many of the other mind-altering substances that I've had experiences with.
Did you chew the leaves or use an aqueous infusion?
No, it was the leaves.
Yeah.
So that's how she administered.
She said she didn't use it much because it was so powerful,
and it was like sort of a last ditch or very serious cases.
Whereas, as you point out, that these shamans often give you medicines
when you're not sick, what we'd probably call adaptogens or immunostimulants,
which 20 years ago weren't
words that were in common parlance.
But I was just struck by how different it was and how unpleasant it was, frankly.
And what was it that you didn't like?
I felt that I was underwater in the dark for nine hours.
I didn't feel a sort of healing therapeutic effect.
It just was almost like a punishment.
So, but I mean, you know, shamans will tell you, if you want a light show, go to Disneyland,
okay?
If you take ayahuasca and you don't see anything, it doesn't mean it's not working, that the
behuco, the remedio is giving you what you need.
And sometimes you see the ninth dimension and sometimes you just fall asleep, but you're getting out of it what you need. The plant knows. That you what you need. And sometimes you see the ninth dimension, and sometimes you just fall asleep.
But you're getting out of it what you need.
The plant knows.
That's what they say.
So, again, I can't say that I was disappointed because I didn't see fireworks.
I mean, I'm not a person who is seeking thrills this way.
It's just that, you know, many times we've all had experiences with these substances where we felt better for it or felt relief or stressed or whatever.
Sometimes you don't.
Sometimes maybe you feel a little worse off.
Kind of how I felt.
Anyway, I want to wind up here.
But since you brought up our friend Dennis McKenna, Dennis McKenna is organizing a conference which will discuss, among other things, the drunken, the stoned ape theory,
first promulgated by his late brother Terence.
And at the same time, we have people who are putting forward the drunken monkey theory.
And I wonder what you think of these ideas that these mind-altering substance may have
played a fundamental role in not only human culture but human evolution.
The stoned ape theory, which was put forward by Terence McKenna,
is, of course, stating that once we discovered mushrooms
or whatever mind-altering substances, it created consciousness,
and we began to wonder.
It wasn't just about what's to eat or what plant do I use when I get sick.
The drunken monkey theory is that our ancestors lived in the trees
and the ripest fruit would fall to the ground, which is the sweetest fruit,
which in some cases is fermented fruit.
So they were catching a buzz from alcohol.
And so these are sort of presented as different cases,
but they kind of point in the same direction.
And so we can just talk about the
stoned ape theory as to whether mind-altering substances really played a fundamental role,
or may have played a fundamental role, or may have played no role in the evolution of consciousness,
culture, history, and evolution. Well, evolutionarily, I think the evidence for that is pretty slim to non-existent.
And I think that Terence McKenna is sometimes taken too literally. You know, I think of him as
a poet. I love everything that he says. And I think that a lot of the things that he said were
intended to provoke people, to cause them to really think about these things and to value them. And I
think that in that capacity, he was extraordinarily effective.
But from an evolutionary biological perspective, that would not be my first explanation
for how consciousness emerged in humans.
That said, I think that if today in our culture,
with all of the distractions
and all of the things that exist,
we can still look to this experience
and see it as one of the most momentous
and amazing in an entire life.
You think, well, what would that have been like
if you didn't have all these distractions?
If it's this valuable to us now,
what would it have been like in the past?
And if it allows people to have religious epiphanies
and even start religions now,
then what would it have been like in the
past? And I think that it's reasonable to assume that it might have been similar. That said,
I think that people get into trouble when they, you know, try to explain everything with psychedelics,
which is the extreme that people tend to go to. They either want to, again, back to these
polarizing dichotomies, either psychedelics are purposeless and have no historical value or they're the origin of consciousness, religion, and everything else.
And I don't doubt that they did play a role in some ancient religions, but the question is how significant that role was.
And, yeah.
So I want to thank you for your kindness and your insights.
It's a pleasure to listen to somebody so well-spoken.
But I want to conclude by asking you about your mentor, Nicholas Langlitz, and the primatology of primatologists.
Yeah.
I mean, Nicholas Langlitz is a really brilliant medical doctor who then became an anthropologist. And he wrote a book called Neuropsychedelia, which I really admire, which is a anthropological analysis of neuroscientific research on
psychedelics. And he's really great at taking a different perspective on these issues and really
asking questions about what are the motivations for these people? Why are they doing it? What
biases are integrated into the work they do? And he then
switched to doing a sort of meta-primatology analysis where you'd look at the primatology
of primatologists, which I thought was also really interesting. But I think he might get back into
psychedelics right now because when he wrote Neuropsychedelia, this was somewhat of a fringe
issue. He was spending time with the, you know, dozen or so
researchers that were doing this work, like Franz Wollenweider. But now it's hard for somebody to
keep track of it, even if it's their full-time job. I mean, by some estimates, there are hundreds of
pharmaceutical startups that are pursuing these things therapeutically. I am repeatedly amazed
by the proliferation of new scientific papers and patents coming out on psychedelically. I am repeatedly amazed by the proliferation of new
scientific papers and patents coming out on psychedelics. I mean, this is really expanding
at a pace that has never before been seen. I mean, only rivaled by the 1960s. And so it's good that
there are people carefully monitoring what's happening because it's an important time in
history. Last question. Timothy Leary's legacy
from your perspective. Well, like McKenna, I think that Leary is somebody who's often
misunderstood and possibly taken too literally. I see Leary as a comedian and a very good one at
that. I mean, when I read his books, when I listen to him speak, I am repeatedly struck by how hilarious he is.
And I think that he was blamed for a lot of the problems
that emerged in relation to psychedelic drug use
because people would say, okay, everything was going right,
this was all going to be a medicine,
and then Timothy Leary came along,
and this zealot wanted to go on some kind of ego crusade
to create a counterculture that would delegitimize psychedelics.
And I think that's a really uncharitable interpretation of what was going on.
I mean, I think that the history of psychedelics had been
profoundly elitist. And Timothy Leary was somebody who wanted to break with that tradition of
elitism. And he wanted to say, this experience was good for me. And I think it's going to be
good for you as well. I have no reason to say that this isn't going to be good for you. So in fact,
go for it. You know, is that the most responsible thing to have done? Probably not. But I think that
there was something honest about it and something democratic about it and something that actually
put faith in the intelligence of the broader community, whether or not that was a good or bad
idea. And if it hadn't been him, it would have been somebody else. I think that's the other
thing to keep in mind with all of this. You can't, hiding is a great short-term strategy
and it's a terrible long-term strategy.
And if people think that these problems
are going to be solved by hiding or being silent,
it's just not the case.
Maybe for one person, for one generation, you can hide.
But if you want to see progress in the long run,
you have to be open, you have to be honest.
And ultimately, what Timothy Leary did in the long term is the right thing.
Because he was honest about what he felt about these things.
He thought they were amazing.
He wasn't going to hide that and say, oh, no, this is only for medical use.
Because he didn't believe that.
And I think that the same is true for these conservation issues.
I remember somebody criticizing me and saying, well, don't you realize that by even talking about toad conservation, you're simply informing more
people about toads. So what you really should do is just not talk about it. And again, that might
be true if I were the only person talking about it, but people are going to talk about it, whether
I like it or not. And so the question is, are you going to talk about it responsibly?
Agreed. Thank you very much. This is great.
Hey guys, this is Tim again.
Just one more thing before you take off.
And that is Five Bullet Friday.
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