jamie wrote:yes it has been observed that certain area of the brain were less active..but that does not mean that other area are not more active then before..I am not saying the data that people have compiled is not valid-it is..but there is much we do not understand at this point about psychedelics and how they effect the nervous system.
Jamie, Prof Nutt said that Psilocybin actually shut down a part of the brain that is overstimulated in depressed people. I don't think he noticed that it actively engaged other parts of their brain. However that was just Psilocybin. Maybe more studies into the functioning of the brain will reveal more plausible explanations for elf visions to those that have participated in the spirit molecule.
Eliyahu wrote:What I am suggesting is that the universe transforms itself according to the actions of each individual observer.
The spirit reveals itself and proves itself to a person in such a way that leaves no doubt of it's realness. By the same token it does it in just such a way that the person could never prove the realness to another. This way everyone has to experience the spirit world first hand and no one can ever just know that it exists without experiencing it themselves..
I dig this explanation, Eliyahu!
I think you have summed up the need for what Terence McKenna described as the "felt prescence of experience", or something. It's no good reading other peoples trip reports, yes they are interesting, but we are all on different paths and need to create our own experiences and not live off those of others!
Questioning visions of elves and jaguars might interest some, but might irritate others. What is interesting is how Ayahuasca can for example generate visions of such things in people in all parts of the world where there are no such creatures. Images of Anacondas in France or England..Why don't they see local creatures???... There's definately some plant intelligence going on there. Tarantulas, Boas, Anacondas, Jaguars, are animals from the Jungle. Seeing is believing as they say. Most of us believe in what we see, and some question, and some doubt. Such is human nature.
Each person must seek their own path in life, and hopefully they will recieve the knowledge that is for them. What they choose to do with that knowledge is for them to decide, and should not be left for others to interpret. I guess people need to have more trust in their mindsets.
"Eat your vegetables and do as you're told, or you won't be going to the funfair!"