It's all good HB. I get where you are coming from.
For the record, though. Your perspective is not really novel. There have been a few threads where people have taken your stance. In fact, unlike most entheogen forums, the Nexus is home to a
great many non-spiritual,
full on reductionist materialists. I think you will find a lot of like minds in your straight neuroscience materialism stances here.
It is more your undue certainty that what your studies show is actual
physical addiction. Dopamine release alone does not make something physically addictive... even in the "reward centers." This is present in psychological addiction and other lesser addictions as well, as I pointed out.
I, though, am more interested in what you said fascinates you about being convinced of a divine encounter and attributing it to a mere drug effect.
I tend to see it the other way around:
What fascinates me is that people who are 100% convinced of something, can convince themselves that it was all in their mind when they come down.This has something to do with most people's sieve-like memory for all things hyperspatial. DMT is capable of giving you vast eternities of experience in the space of a heartbeat... but most people remember next to nothing when their minds return to their former size.
I have even seen this effect with people when everyone was
dead sober. One time, for instance, a group of us (maybe 20 people) all stood, mouths agape as a number of UFOs flew directly over our heads, did some weird stuff in the sky, some of them blinked in and out... and then the largest took off so fast it left a streak of light going up to the atmosphere where it visibly left the atmosphere and the trail followed to this point and disappeared. I don't say this to start a debate about UFOs, but rather to illustrate the immense human capacity for amnesia and denial. Because... as the event happened we all looked each other in the eyes and confirmed what we saw. We were giddy and people were losing their sh*t. Then, within 5 minutes a few people began denying parts of what we all saw. By 15 minutes, half the group were unsure of at least some parts of the events. To cut to the chase, by hour 3, only a few of us were still agreeing on the totality of the event, and were blown away to see that a majority of the group now denied ever having seen anything at all. Even those of us who remembered the event in "full" had the feeling that we might have some gaps in our recollection. This was dead sober and early in the morning.
If anything, DMT experiences can be even more slippery than this. I frequently have had to remind people as to what they were saying while tripping later... often to blank stares of total unrecognition.
The mind tends to reject anything that doesn't fit into its current worldview or structure. This... and the fact that hyperspatial memories are a bit like dream memories... in that they can fade into thin air in a moment if you are not skilled in holding on to them.
So... it is not
surprising to me that people can meet gods, or feel they have communed with the BMOC creator/ all-one infinite and then later rationalize it away as aberrant neurons or whatever. How people can have these "OMG, I will never forget this as long as I live" moments, these "no denial possible" proofs of non-material things... and then forget them utterly. I just find it fascinating.
Sometimes the memories come back to people when they get back in that expanded state again... and they slap their foreheads and say "My god... how could I have ever forgotten this!?" only to forget again, and again.
Forgetting may be the thing humans are best at TBH.
;-)
HSF
"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