Interesting perspective. Not completely in line with my own, but some valid things to contemplate within for sure!
My mood of late against meditation and post-1960s American spirituality: I'm sick and tired of it, I hate it, and I'm not going to take it anymore. This nonsense and claptrap has gone on for entirely too long. If spiritual people are offended by this pointing out that the emperor has no clothes, then too damn bad for them and their feelings. It is necessary to sacrifice false spirituality in order to gain a firm grip on the straight facts.
On the whole, to concede the legitimacy of someone's drug-free meaningful spirituality that gives meaning to their lives is, in practice, to condone lies and falsity and to encourage suppression of Truth together with suppression of entheogens. The fact is, entheogens are the source, fountainhead, wellspring and so on of all that is highest and most profound and most central in religion; *real* Christianity and *real* Buddhism and *real* esotericism are, *first and foremost*, entheogenic.
The legitimacy of drug-free spirituality is *nothing* in comparison to that of real spirituality, which is practically identical with entheogens. I grant a millionth of a percent legitimacy and efficacy to the upstart proposed alternative methods which, the bottom line is, *don't work*. Drug-free spirituality is a failure. Any exceptions are nothing, because they just prove the rule, offering only a travesty of religion, an insult to the genuine, actual, authentic *intense* religion. There is far more than enough support to back up my adamant hardline view.
Enough lies -- won't someone, for once, tell it like it is? I wash my hands of these lies; I want nothing to do with them. There is one true path: entheogens. The other proposed paths are cheap ripoffs that are nothing in comparison: to admit as I have done that meditation is a tenth of a percent as effective as entheogens is to tell evil lies. Here I state the truth, that meditation is a millionth of a millionth as effective as entheogens, which is to say, meditation is extremely ineffective, while entheogens are extremely effective.
Put side by side, the bottom line is, meditation/contemplation is a failure, while entheogens are a success. The received dominant framework is the assumption that direct religious experiencing is rare and not entheogenic -- we must yell in the streets that that is the very opposite of the truth; direct religious experiencing is potentially utterly common, and is entheogenic: the received framework is bunk, wrong, mistaken, false, and wholly and profoundly off-base.
There is no mystery about the mysteries, esotericism, and gnosis: to the extent that the mysteries, gnosis, and esotericism actually delivered on their promise of direct religious experiencing, to that exact extent, the mysteries, gnosis, and esotericism were entheogen-based. The one or two supposed exceptions only prove the rule: meditation/contemplation is entirely a mistake, a lie, futile, hopeless, a false replacement, a phony substitute that debases religious experiencing, and has to be discarded and rejected as a hypothesis about the nature of religious experiencing.
Neither I nor my audience has another minute to waste conceding legitimacy to the illegitimate, condoning confusion and error. It is a tiny slight mistake to wholly dismiss drug-free spirituality as I do, whereas it is a colossal error and lie of the first order to grant drug-free meditation/contemplation a significant amount of legitimacy.
Drug-free meditation/contemplation definitely does *not* have a significant amount of legitimacy; its legitimacy is vanishingly small next to the towering efficacy of entheogens. Drug-free meditation/contemplation has no more than an incidental, curiosity degree of efficacy or legitimacy.
The received view, which treats drug-free meditation/contemplation as favorably as possible, while diminishing entheogens as much as possible, is evil in that in practice, its main effect is to block and impede and prevent actual direct religious experience, substituting a placebo instead.
Let us compare today's drug-free spirituality scene with natural mysticism.
Every time anyone says "nature", "garden", or "natural", the first thing you should picture is an Amanita mushroom, surrounded then by cannabis, opium, morning glories, datura, nightshade, henbane, thornapple, and cowpie mushrooms. From the Garden of Eden to Paradise of the Kingdom of Heaven, what makes a sacred garden sacred is its central purpose, entheogenic plants -- psychoactive drugs.
In the modern period, artificial drug-free mysticism (meditation/contemplation) has enjoyed highly favorable conditions, and yet it has been proven to be almost completely ineffective and un-ergonomic at inducing any specific result, which is why everyone considers enlightenment to be so rare and difficult -- because they begin with the assumption that enlightenment must be a matter of drug-free mysticism, but drug-free mysticism basically doesn't work; it only mimics to some extent the full-on entheogen-triggered intense mystic altered state.
Meanwhile, the natural, entheogen method of triggering the mystic phenomena has been violently and systematically suppressed during the entire broad modern period, yet shows tremendous potential and normally brings about the full gamut of ego death and related experiences, and shows every potential of bringing about full enlightenment, of a specifically definable sort (as I have explicitly written about in postings and in my Intro webpage), to the normal, average person.
It is completely and extremely unfair to compare the achievements of artificial drug-free mysticism with natural entheogen-induced mysticism during the modern period that gives many benefits to the drug-free approach, and puts every impediment before the mystic garden approach. Grow a plant, go to jail, so how can we even begin to compare the achievements of the two attempted methods of enlightenment?
Drug-free mysticism fills the magazines with false and empty promises and claims that are never going to be realized in the normal, average person; to sustain these books of lies they have had to ever lower and lower their promises. No American Buddhism magazine now is so foolish as to claim that their methods produce an altered state of consciousness -- instead, they vaguely promise some undefinable and unaccountable spiritual uplift of daily life.
Drug-free mysticism is a recent fantastic construct that is parasitical upon entheogen-based actual religious experiencing. People report that entheogens commonly produce intense religious experiences, and people report that meditation usually does not produce intense religious experiences. These reports of the failure and poor prospects of meditation and the success and tremendous prospects of entheogens are clear and unambiguous even though drug-free meditation has been given every break while every obstacle has been placed in the way of entheogens.
Even though drug-free meditation has been given a big unfair head start, and though people sabotage and trip up the entheogen method, entheogens are *still* winning the race so much that the entheogen diminishers have been forced to deny that religious experiencing or spiritual enlightenment has anything to do with an intense altered state. These entheogen diminishers have had to redefine spirituality as a mere uplifting of normal daily life.
Few indeed are the spiritualists who claim that drug-free meditation is reliable and effective at producing an intense mystic altered state in the average, normal person -- it is a claim that not only lacks evidence, but rather, has all evidence clearly working against it. Like the phony drug war, the claim of the drug-free meditation/contemplation advocates cannot stand up to a genuine debate and critical investigation, but must retreat into vague claims and unaccountable conceptions of spirituality, recent trendy innovations which lack historical evidence and reproducible evidence.
When 99% of people 99% of the time fail to obtain any sort of religious state of consciousness from drug-free meditation, the excuse of the entheogen diminishers is "you're not doing it right". Entheogen-favoring spiritualists don't have to bother inventing such excuses, because the entheogen method actually delivers on its promises, producing if anything, an overwhelming excess of the religious state of consciousness.
There is no contest when comparing the degree of reliability and intensity of entheogen versus drug-free spirituality methods for the average, normal, ordinary, typical person: entheogens are vastly more reliable, effective, ergonomic, intense, and efficient.
People who claim that meditation is effective, reliable, and repeatable have a low, small conception of what religious experiencing and spirituality can be, or they have an abnormal brain constitution that's irrelevant to almost everyone, or they claim that their guru or some rumored remote sage has succeeded, even though no one else is having any luck with the "ideal" drug-free approach.
Drawing a distribution curve for the efficacy and reliability of drug-free versus entheogenic methods, and comparing the curves, the drug-free method can only be characterized as pathetic, a blip that just registers enough to prove that the best method of preventing and avoiding spiritual experiencing and mystic enlightenment is by drug-free meditation/contemplation.
Do you want to have nothing to do with religious experiencing and intense mystic enlightenment? Then I wholeheartedly recommend drug-free enlightenment, which has been firmly proven, after countless many attempts, to almost never produce religious experiencing and intense mystic enlightenment.
The good news is, there is a method that is highly reliable and ergonomic: combining visionary plants with intellectual study. The method of combining visionary plants with intellectual study doesn't magically improve daily life or the socio-political world; it brings what is first of all claimed: intense mystic experiencing and metaphysical enlightenment about the nature and relationship of self, time, space, control, and world.
Dick wrote:
>I have been studying mystical experiences (including gnosis and much other) for near on fifty years,
During the modern era, which is the most spiritually illiterate and dark era ever, fifty years of research is 50 years of inventorying faint and mediocre religious experiences.
Belief in the potency of drug-free religious experiencing often fits with belief in psychic phenomena. I definitely dismiss, in principle, psychic phenomena, because such phenomena would complicate my model of enlightenment.
I do acknowledge that there are many reports of drug-free, including spontaneous, mystical experiences. I have never denied this and will never flatly deny this. Rather, turning the tables against the entheogen-diminishers, I diminish and criticize drug-free and spontaneous mystical experiences as being incidental and mere curiosities, minor accidents and random quirks that are the mind's entheogen-ready circuits leaking a bit of noise.
Drug-free mystical experiences are rare and weak and not repeatable on demand; they are on the whole basically irrelevant, of relatively little import next to the towering efficicacy, intensity, reliability, and repeatability of entheogens as a trigger.
>>None of these documented experience were brought about by drugs; they were quite natural and spontaneous. How do I know? Easy, from hindsight of experience one can know that they are not shooting the sh*t.
Rather, the fact that one can have a drug-free mystic experience proves that the reports might or might not have involved drugs. I can relate to your sureness by recalling that I know for a fact that Rush is an acid-based Rock group, even though, on some people's interpretation, I have no certain proof.
>However, if people wish to take drugs then that is their business (and societies problem - for we all familiar with the effects of over-doing it).
That parenthetical assertion and its surrounding worldview with a raft of implicit meta-assertions is highly debatable.
>I am very opposed to messing with the mind
That characterization of psychoactive drug use is highly debatable. For example, the drugs work because they are like well-fitting chemical keys, in contrast to how alcohol works in nonspecific shotgun fashion as far as specific receptors are concerned. If I recall, this point is covered in Ott's book The Natural Paradises.
>The point being is that after forty years of communication with folk I have never yet read of a drug induced experience which comes anywhere near matching a spontaneous transcendent mystical experience, and that is a fact.
That judgement is unbelievable and incredible, because it contradicts (without putting forth justifying evidence) what many entheogen researchers have reported and concluded: that many drug-induced experiences closely match spontaneous mystical experiences. Who are we to believe, and on what basis: the researchers who judge that the drug and nondrug experiences are fully indistinguishable, or those who judge that the non-drug mystical experiences are nowhere near matched by drug-induced mystical experiences?
The content of mystic experiencing is the same type and character, whether triggered by drugs or not. There is plenty of evidence (reports and writings) to support this. I have little respect for these writings as they are usually gathered, however, because we are then usually merely comparing first-time entheogen users with one-time spontaneous mystics, or meditators highly invested in many years of meditation. We need broader distribution curves, culled in an environment less biased against psychoactive drugs.
Entheogens are more reliable and available on demand than drug-free methods, and are generally far more intense.
>If the research were to have found
>otherwise then I would state it as so; but it is not.
Other researchers have stated it as so. Who are we to believe, and on what basis? There are two opposed camps of researchers or people making claims. How do we choose between the two worldviews and sets of assertions and interpretations?
>True, from what one hears and reads, then it becomes clear that drugs can at times open the doors to the mind at various levels - but not very deep.
That's a completely debatable judgement that relies on a certain interpretive framework. Most published reports are by the dregs of society; if people weren't thrown in jail with careers deliberately wrecked by the prohibition-for-profit bandwagon, we would have more fine writers and thinkers opening the doors at fully deep levels. Today's system of prohibition produces a filtering effect that gives the impression of drugs being limited to ignorant high school kids.
>On the other hand however there is the negative side - and this is not found or documented with spontaneous experiences.
That's entirely debatable. The claimed negative effects of drugs, including degree and scope, is supported by a huge amount of evil, harmful, destructive, profit-driven propaganda: prohibition-for-profit. Psychoactive drugs should be decriminalized; prohibition of psychoactive drugs and suppression of those who use them should be illegal.
Drug-free mystical experiences are generally harmless because they are rare and feeble in effect. Efficacy and potential harm are correlated. Guns that merely squirt water are less harmful than real guns that shoot bullets. Drug-free spirituality is a harmless water gun and doesn't stand to threaten the egoic delusion of personal free will and separate self.
Psychotomimetic drugs are a real threat to the egoic psyche, a direct threat and detonator shaped precisely to threaten the heart and foundation of egoic delusion: the mental worldmodel that is founded on the assumption of freewill control power and separate-self.
>...I am a ... pragmatist ... why bother to try to induce experiences which come naturally anyway
Because drug-free mystical experiences don't come with much intensity or frequency; they are rare and generally feeble. Entheogens are the only ergonomic choice for pragmatics.
>when the individual is, for
>some reason, ready to cope with them
That cliched expression is an excuse for the rareness of mystic experiences and the inefficacy of drug-free meditation: "The method works, but you weren't ready yet."
>and integrate them within their own process of becoming the more that we are?
>... evidence suggests that anyone having a spontaneous 'wham bang' experience (which blows their mind) will come to handle it - it may take a few years however. But there are many documented reports of people who have induced an experience which they were not ready for and have later committed suicide by virtue of failure to integrate what they have found. And this of course is tragic.
Were there many? What proportion? What were the actual causes? The above stock assertions won't fly without essentially sound support, though they are always trotted out as unquestionable facts of the universe in what passes for "debate" about drug-induced mysticism. Somewhere there must be entire nations filled with these masses of acid casualities, upon whom the old familiar entheogen-diminishing song and dance so heavily relies, even though other research reports the lack of any statistical correlation between abnormal psychology and entheogen use.
The one thing we can be certain of at this point is that we have forbidden research before it even had a chance to begin.
>... I am in full agreement - the advent of Rome pushed Western civilisation back into the dark ages for two thousand years.
Lately I have speculated with Edwin Johnson's book "The Pauline Epistles Re-studied and Explained" that the years of the dark ages didn't exist; the Reformation (1517) happened only a few centuries after the fall of Rome (476), and that Christianity, particularly scripture-based official Christianity, is a recent invention and that Christianity is completely centered and based in the brief Middle Ages or so-called "Renaissance" (re-birth of antiquity culture after its absense) rather than coming from around the year 180 or 50 CE.
The advent of Roman Catholocism "pushed Western civilization back into the dark ages for two thousand years" in that the Catholic church was invented around 1525 and invented stories about its having begun 1,500 years ago, inserting many nonexistent centuries in between and then excusing the total lack of evidence for those centuries by condemning them as utterly dark centuries in which next to nothing happened, and dismissing the total lack of evidence for pre-476 Christianity with various flimsy excuses: "they worshipped in secret", "they were ashamed of the cross so never portrayed it".
>If it were not for Rome (and state Priestcraft) we would not only have been on the moon a thousand years sooner
I don't know how science was spurred or hindered by institutional religion -- books are available trying to determine this relationship.
>but people would have a proper understanding of the metaphysical aspects of their emanation of BEING.
That happened commonly until the Protestant/Modern/Scientific era, per Nasr's book Knowledge and the Sacred, and some other theorists of Tradition. I don't know why esoteric knowledge relatively withered at that time. I suppose that people got farther from nature's psychoactive plants, such as cowpie mushrooms, and therefore became literally exiled from the mystic garden of Eden.
>... he claims that 90% of the stuff called 'Gnosticism' is utter junk ... 99% of it is.
>KNOW THY SELF - both the transcendent and imminent bits.
>1. Given that consciousness exists then what exists for consciousness to become conscious of?
>2. What is the real Self when everything which is not the real essential Self is extracted from our system of dynamics?
>By the way, the process of things which are not YOU being stripped away from the system of our incarnate dynamics is called PURGATION - and this is a spontaneous process, NOT self induced.
It's definitionally arbitrary. In some sense purgation of egoic delusion is self-induced, a product of the personal will, an act of mystic suicide. In some sense, the psyche is lifted, is rescued, is acted upon and transformed from beyond the personal will.
>Eventually at the end of this process there is an annihilation of self existence (quite scary at the time).
Loss of control, loss of freewill, during the psychotomimetic loose-cog state -- the mind that is too logical to be afraid ought to be most afraid, being now ready to be crucified and to crucify one's lower self, in full defeat and full glory. Enlightenment is deadly bad news for egoic controllership, an apocalyptic destruction of the old, through full instability, to a new world which will stably stand forever.
>After a duration of non existence (the cessation of the flow of consciousness) there is a resurrection of our being. But that resurrection is back into the eternal mode of our cognitive being - the innate and essential primordial condition of cognitive being. And it IS SO. Ipso Facto. Keep in mind also the FACT that you cannot know the absolute nature of objectivity until such time that you first come to discover the absolute nature of your Self - the observer of the observed. Creation is ONE thing; but it is constructed in the mode of a duality - the observer and the observed. The phenomenon of consciousness works this way. Hence, the only way to find out what we really are is by going home to where we have our ground of being - in the cognitive aspect of the life force.
http://www.egodeath.com/...gNewAge.htm#_Toc64389634