This article (e-mail conversation actually) is fairly laughable. If it was just the private dialogue between two people on the subject, I would leave it alone... but seeing as Mr. Kent saw fit to publish this stuff and considers it valid in the debate about "Hyperpatial Reality," I will respond to some of what he has said.
His basic point is that:
Quote:Now don't get me wrong, DMT is stunning in its effect, no doubt. But, like anything, when you do it many times the magic tends to wear off and reveal itself for what it is; an exotic aberration of the brain's perceptual mechanics.
I am sure that many of us
here in the Nexus have used DMT hundreds of times more than Mr. Kent, and it is safe to say that the magic has
not worn off for the vast majority of us.
Calling the DMT experience exotic aberrations of the brain's perceptual mechanics is basically saying
nothing and is equally true of looking through a microscope or listening to space with a radio telescope.
Quote:DMT data comes from the brain's own pattern-matching systems trying to impose order on a chaotic patterns, thus "filling in the blanks" and trying to piece together what is going on. This is probably why "visuals" become more elaborate on the periphery (i.e. in the corner of the eye where there is more capacity to extrapolate missing data) and become less-so when examined front and center. For example, "elves" tend to hang out and bounce around in the periphery, and tend to disappear or "drift" with the visual field when you try to focus directly on them.
Maybe for you. SWIM can stare directly at the entities he encounters and they do
not disappear, drift or otherwise become fleeting in the least. In fact, they tend to envelop, engage and do their very best to not allow SWIM to ignore them. If SWIM turns his head away, they teleport to stay in front of him. They often will say his thoughts out loud a fraction of a second before he has even thought them. They seem to enjoy demonstrating how utterly beyond human conception, ability, and understanding they are.
Saying that visuals become more elaborate on the periphery makes me doubt the author's vaunted experience with spice.
Many of the hallucinations he describes in the article are far more like LSD than they are like DMT. He spends a lot of time talking about "creeping patterns" and trails as well.
Regardless of how well his DMT experiences match up with those of us who know and love Hyperspace rather well... much of what he says is pure conjecture and wishful thinking IMO, and demonstrates the paucity of his experience and a desperate attempt to write off the notion of an authentic Hyperspace.
In his own words:
Quote:I've done DMT a number of times, each time with the intent to find some deeper truth or insight about the experience. The only thing I can say for certain is that it is different every time. The aesthetic of the visual phenomena is consistent, unique, and wonderous, but the content that is generated within the experience conforms to no hard or simple rules like "entering a hyperspatial dimension" or "visitation from alien entities." Everybody experiences something slightly different, and yet they all want to apply it to some kind of "Alice in Wonderland" trip down the rabbit-hole and convince themselves that they've been exposed to a hidden world or something of vast spiritual significance.
To me, and in common parlance, "a number of times" means
not a great deal of experience. SWIM breaks through a
number of times each night he goes for it... and has been doing so for decades. I think it is safe to say that Mr. Kent is something of noob. He speaks often in the article of the idea that since he is unable to do something, than it must not be possible. Saying that a guitarist who took a few lessons can not play like John McLaughlin does not indicate that playing like John McLaughlin is impossible.
That
he has been unable to pull useful information out of the entities during his brief experiences could be a result of his seemingly respect-less attitude towards beings of vast intelligence. This
could say more about his skill level with social interactions and humility in the face of cosmic intelligence, than anything about their being subconscious projections.
The entities do not
need to prove themselves to you. They sometimes
deign to give you some solid proof if you show them the proper respect and seem like you can handle what they will show you. A mathematics professor would not attempt to prove differential equations to a child who can barely count to 100, either.
Also, the
only thing that ties the vast number of trippy things that Alice experiences (in the two seminal Lewis Carroll novels) together is that "The aesthetic of the visual phenomena is consistent, unique, and wonderous..."
One of the most interesting things about Mr. Kent's assertions is that he contradicts himself a number of times and often admits that his statements of fact are mere speculation on no more solid ground than those he thinks he is debunking.
Take this doozy of a quote:
Quote:However (and this is the good part), the really interesting thing about DMT experiences is not the elves (messengers) themselves, but what it is they are saying (the message). And when you get to the heart of what the typical DMT message is, it is usually something about the environment or living systems or the vast plant consciousness that penetrates our world. The "Gaia consciousness" that infuses the experience is undeniable, and what to make of that I don't know, other than to entertain the possibility that this ancient plant consciousness actually exists and is attempting to make itself known through the DMT-enlightened mammal brain. If so, then this is the real discovery of the DMT experience, and this is the topic that should be looked at more closely. In the context of DMT being a two-way radio for plant-human communication, the "elves" themselves are nothing more than a cartoon interface for the exchange of information.
Do I even need to point out the extreme level of irrational disconnect here?
Quote:The ornate palaces and temples are heavenly archetypes, this is obvious when you look at ancient architecture, especially in the Middle East and Asia. This does not mean they are "real" in the sense that they actually exist somewhere in hyperspace, merely that they are imaginal blueprints, pleasing patterns forged from the subconscious.
....
What I will concede is that humans across all cultures have alien and heavenly archetypes embedded in their subconscious, and psychedelic tryptamines can access the archetypes with a high level of success. Where these archetypes come from or what they mean is the subject of eternal debate. The best I can figure is that they are sub-phenomena of our own visual systems, a hidden feedback filter that crystallizes inward and outward vision, and necessarily reflects some of our own internal structure back at us.
And this is more logical than that archetypal worlds
exist, and that various humans throughout time have accessed them via various methods...
how?Quote:Now, given the amazing swirling kaleidoscopic imagery produced in the typical DMT trip, it is inevitable that anthropomorphic shapes will emerge and then express themselves in even greater detail as the mind latches onto them and "dreams" them into focus. With the imaginal workflow kicked into high gear, it is not surprising that these emergent anthropomorphic entities can then speak to us, revealing shocking details from our own subconscious in a conversational stream of visual theater. Given all of this, in a nutshell, the case for autonomous disincarnate DMT entities is closed. All that is needed to produce them is our own over-excited visual system and imagination, and thus Occam's razor wipes them right off the table and into the fairy-dust bin.
Please tell me this is not what passes for critical thinking among scientific materialists these days.
He claims to have done "many experiments with lucid dreaming..." again a phrase I would consider to indicate a very small amount of experience, seeing as I have been having a half dozen or more lucid dreams every night since I was a baby. In my many decades of life, I have had so many lucid dreams that the idea of calling them experiments is ludicrous and comical.
His lack of skill with lucid dreaming is borne out in this quote:
Quote: Like a dream, once you realize you are dreaming you are actually slipping into wakefulness and the dream fades. So it is with the elves as well. When you try to shine a light of reason on them they dissolve like shadows.
Ummm... I
guess he is not what I would consider a very good lucid dreamer, then. I realize I am dreaming, and then proceed to fly through interstellar space and congregate with ascended masters. Waking up upon becoming lucid is pretty low level stuff IMHO. A bit like falling down when your Dad points out that your training wheels are not actually touching the ground.
Also, hyperspace beings shine lights of reason on
you, and if they
dissolve it is because you need to smoalk moar.
One of the things he said that does resonate with me is...
Quote:
The answer to the mystery is you. You are the amazing thing producing all of this... All the time...
I just think in light of his own "Gaia consciousness" conjectures, he might need to expand his concept of who "you" is.
Mr. Kent indulges in quite a few mystical beliefs actually. He claims to believe in Samsara and the transmigration of souls. He even says this:
Quote:Time is an illusion of our senses. The soul may be timeless.
It is unclear to me how someone who can say something like that can turn around and assert that the DMT experience is
simply the result of an overworked CNS. But then again, his arguments are so porous and contradictory that it is not really surprising.
gibran2 wrote:
“Reality” is a definition. We define reality, and we define it in such a way that our ordinary wakeful state of consciousness is “real”. If any subjective experience conforms to the definition, we call it real. If a subjective experience does not satisfy the criteria of the definition, we call the experience a “dream” or a “hallucination”, etc. We can’t say if there is such a thing as “objective reality” – we can only determine if an experience satisfies criteria that people have decided to collectively call “reality”.
I would tend to phrase this in the inverse. We can not prove anything is real with deduction, and even induction doesn't really make a strong case. We can, however, come up with deductive proofs to show when we are
not experiencing reality. This is one of the main methods of entering a lucid dream. It is also why we don't freak out when we watch films.
Our experiences can be summed up into two categories. Those we
know are not real, and those we are unsure of. Any other stance is irrational.
This quote from the article sums this up rather nicely.
Quote:Well, the "real" world exists independently of the observer, what we perceive as reality is an abstract representation assembled in our brain from sense data. We just don't dwell on this fact very often. Why does a deeper understanding or vision of this world have to be classified as another world or a parallel world? Why not just assume it is a hidden (or hard to see) aspect of this one? Sensing quantum reality is not the same as entering another world. It is experiencing another layer of the same old world we already live in (like the infrared goggles metaphor). Giving this hidden layer of reality some kind of vague "mystical" properties only mucks up the analysis of what is really going on when we experience it.
Who is saying that hyperspace
isn't a hidden or hard to see aspect of this world? How is a hidden aspect of the so-called real world all that different from a parallel world anyway? Calling it "another layer of the same old world we already live in" in
no way addresses its fundamental reality or its connection to our everyday consensual reality.
And how can anyone claim to know that the "real" world exists independently of the observer? We can't even say that about subatomic particles.
I find that scientific materialists have no problem accepting extremely mystical concepts like quantum entanglement and the collapsing of probability states as long as it is explained in their scientific lingo and put forth by an acknowledged member of their science "club."
(interestingly the same holds true about evangelical Christians or any other faith based religion)
The simple fact is that scientific materialism has
no concept of reality that passes logical muster. It has no concept of
consciousness that even approaches a reasonable hypothesis. Even according to the theories it does have, all we know about consensual reality are the
illusions our brains create in response to sense stimuli that is purely waveform in nature. Curiously, the brain itself doesn't seem to distinguish between dream signals and supposedly external signals... otherwise how could wet dreams be possible?
Saying that the DMT experience is similar to dreaming
doesn't discount it. Like dreaming, the people who have actually developed some considerable skill with it have been able to prove
to themselves the veracity of their experiences. This is as it has been for untold millenia, and it is all that we can truly hope to do at this point.
The shaman who finds a cure for an illness in his ayahuasca journey and comes back able to heal someone doesn't care if you believe that this information was new to him or not.
There are many things that take a lot of practice and talent to do well. The fact that an unskilled scientist can not reproduce such things in their labs is not an indication of their unreality. An amateur guitar playing lab technician can not prove or disprove the soul that great musicians demonstrate in their music.
The fact that a researcher can not convince the entities
they encounter to give them irrefutable evidence of their independent existence is no different than the fact that a kitten can not convince the president of the USA to prove that he can cause nuclear explosions with his red phone.
People can and
should doubt things like precognitive dreaming, shared dreams, hyperspatial realities, autonomous entities etc. However, when one has had enough
experience with these things
oneself, it becomes untenable to doubt your own repeated experience.
I doubted that anyone could be stupid or skilled enough to surf the
huge waves at Jaws, Maui... but I have seen it with my own two eyes.
I suppose I could have been dreaming...
"Curiouser and curiouser..." ~ Alice
"Do not believe in anything simply because you have heard it. Do not believe in anything simply because it is spoken and rumored by many. Do not believe in anything simply because it is found written in your religious books. Do not believe in anything merely on the authority of your teachers and elders. Do not believe in traditions because they have been handed down for many generations. But after observation and analysis, when you find that anything agrees with reason and is conducive to the good and benefit of one and all, then accept it and live up to it." ~ Buddha