Well There‘s Your Problem - Bonus Episode 40 PREVIEW: A Thing That Will Make the Algorithm Mad at Us
Episode Date: May 14, 2024man i love bicycles watch the full episode on PATREON: https://www.patreon.com/posts/lsd-104241175 ...
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That's the guy.
That is the face of a maniac.
The PowerPoint messed this one up too.
Oh well, I mean.
Hold on.
Oh no.
He died at 102.
Good lord.
We'll get to his life.
But the text in the background says I can only show that molecule so many times, Law.
So the 25th of his experiments was a combination between ergotamine and diethylamine.
It was labeled LSD25 for lab tests.
It didn't really work as anybody hoped.
The animal testing only resulted in the test subjects becoming restless.
Normally, what would happen when tests went nowhere like this is the formula would be
thrown out and forgotten. Nobody would ever give a shit ever again.
But Hoffman quote, liked the chemical structure unquote and held on to the formula because
he thought there was more potential than they first saw.
So, like he did that thing with like Donkey did at the start of Shrek and he's like, I
like that molecule, that's a nice molecule. That's a good molecule.
That's fucking funny.
Um, Hoffman had always been kind of eccentric.
He had initially thought about studying the humanities and becoming an artist,
but he ended up going into chemistry, not because he was going to take some
hardline rational view of the world, but because he wanted to explain the
mystical experiences he had as a kid.
Quote, mystical experiences in childhood
in which nature was altered in magical ways
had provoked questions concerning
the essence of the external material world.
And chemistry was a scientific field
which might afford insights into this, unquote.
I bring that up because, next slide.
Hey, bicycle day.
Oh, yeah.
You love bicycles.
Oh, yes.
Bicycles are Oh, yeah. You love bicycles. Oh, yes.
Bicycles are good, period.
About five years later, in April 1943, Hoffman out of nowhere had, quote, a peculiar pre-sentiment,
unquote, that he should recreate LSD25 and continue studying it.
His lab safety, though, evidently wasn't great because he accidentally absorbed an unknown
amount of the substance which hadn't been tested on humans before. He only found this
out when he was quote, interrupted in my work by unusual sensations, unquote.
Oh, I love to be interrupted in my work by unusual sensations.
Yeah. In the chemistry lab on LSD.
Oh boy, oh yeah, oh boy. What am I doing with my hands?
Well, so like remember this is in the West before anybody had ever, you know, really understood psychedelics. So he felt kind of dizzy, restless, and sensitive to light. He went straight home.
He lay down on his couch in, quote,
in a dreamlike state with eyes closed.
I perceived an uninterrupted stream of fantastic pictures,
extraordinary shapes with intense kaleidoscopic play
of colors, unquote.
Next slide.
Obviously, being a scientist, his first reaction to this is,
I need to do it again for science or whatever the technical term is.
Yes. Do we get to go for science on April 19th, 1943?
I think maybe I was supposed to stay on the last slide there, but that's fine.
Yeah. Anyway, same day as the Warsaw uprising, April 19th, 1943,
he dosed himself with a quarter of a milligram of LSD.
That's 200 and-
Oh, boy.
No, don't react yet.
Sorry.
No, you're good.
Audience, that is 250 micrograms.
And let's put that into perspective.
You can get energy drinks these days that have 300 milligrams of caffeine.
Your strong ibuprofens are going to have 100 milligrams of caffeine. Your strong ibuprofen are going to have 100
milligrams, maybe 200. Those are in the range of a thousand times the active ingredient
that Hoffman took. This is a very conservative dose in theory.
What we later found out though is that LSD is ludicrously powerful and in some
circumstances can be felt in doses of less than 25 micrograms. Hoffman had already made
history with the world's first acid trip and he was going to make history again with the
world's first bad acid trip.
As it comes on, he gets uneasy and eventually descends into what he thinks is irreversible
madness.
He thinks he's poisoned himself and thoughts on acid come ups tend to be kind of self-fulfilling
prophecies.
If you think, oh, I'm having a bad time, yes, you are.
He gets some help from his lab assistant getting home on a bike, which is why April 19th is
now Bicycle Day.
You imagine being that lav assistant!
Yeah, yeah, that would be interesting.
I mean, it's like wartime Switzerland, like, they didn't have gas, which is why they rode
the bike.
It's being rationed.
Yeah, and I mean, the incredible potency is why, hey kids, you wanna pull a fun prank,
synthesize a gallon of LSD and throw it in a reservoir.
Oh, Jesus.
Roz!
Please no, do not do this.
To quote Joe Kasabian, hold that thought.
Okay, not literally, but not far off there.
So he said, quote, familiar objects and pieces of furniture assumed grotesque threatening
forms.
They were in continuous motion, animated as if driven by an inner restlessness, unquote.
He underwent ego death and said, quote, a demon had invaded me, had taken possession
of my body, mind and soul.
I jumped up and screamed trying to free myself from him but then sank
down again and lay helpless on the sofa." Finally, the doctor arrived and checked his
vitals. They were all completely normal and the only obvious symptom was dilated pupils.
As soon as Hoffman heard this, it completely changed the character of the trip because
of how suggestible you are on psychedelics. Like if somebody tells you you're okay, you're
gonna feel better. He eventually came down into what he called and has been since called
an afterglow. Quote, everything glistened and sparkled in a fresh light. The world was
as if newly created. All my senses vibrated in a condition of the highest sensitivity
which persisted for the entire day." So this would have been after many hours because LSD
lasts a long time, depending on the dose, 8 to 18 hours, sometimes more on the extreme
end and it interferes with your sleep. According to a study published in Cell Press
in 2017, because I'm getting this citation right, this is because LSD makes a serotonin
receptor or the 5-HT2AOC as we know it, fold in on itself like a lid. The receptor and
LSD are eventually kind of pulled into the cell to be broken
down which I guess is kind of why you feel weird afterward because the receptor isn't
there.
Something that I want to add is you can get some really, really good replications of psychedelic
visuals from a YouTube channel called Symmetric Vision.
It's the most realistic depiction I've ever seen.
It's still not quite, you know quite as good as the real thing,
but if you wanna see what being on asset really looks like,
go check out that YouTube channel.
I would assume you prefer to also have the other effects
as well as the visuals.
Yes, but the visuals are neat.
They are better in combination with the others.
Next slide.
Big sip. Hoffman came to believe that LSD had found him and that these events are now held in reverence within
the psychedelic community just because like they're so weird. He also believed that drug
could be useful for studying schizophrenia and psychosis.
In the early days, LSD was marketed by Sandoz as a drug called Delicid, like you see on
the screen.
They called it a psychotomimetic because they thought it could simulate psychosis.
This became a big field of study in the 1950s.
It was used in psychiatry, psychoanalysis, and experimentation with the
arts.
There were hundreds of papers written, dozens of books, international conferences, acid
and other psychedelics were considered a new frontier psychiatric study.
This I believe was the decade that Time Magazine did its article on these mushrooms that make you have visions from Mexico, which ultimately
kind of fucking ruined Mexican Village.
But one of the major customers for LSD in 1953 was, next slide, a group called the Central
Intelligence Agency.
I've heard of these guys.
Yeah. I've heard of these guys. Yeah. Yeah, I know these guys.
I've heard bad things.
And we're about to hear more bad things
because they were doing something called Project MKUltra.
The CIA bought the world's entire supply of LSD at this time.
They wanted to know if it could be used for mind control or interrogation.
How, how much was the world's entire supply?
I did not...
Either I didn't write that down or it wasn't documented, it's more likely that I didn't
write it down.
But like, probably enough to dose millions upon millions of people.
I'm just thinking like, this is like a water bottle full.
Oh, like the world's supply of antimatter?