I'm on board with the notion that there are correlations and similarities between mystical experiences and DMT experiences. For me, the questions arise around the modelling of DMT experiences using any of these individual mystical systems in particular.
strassman wrote:I like models because they help make sense of data, which is inherently satisfying for many of us. If the model accuratelys reflect the phenomena, they may also have predictive value--the model will let us know what would happen if we did x, y, and z in a, b, and c set of conditions.
I think there are many ways to model data; e.g., mathematical, verbal, musical, visual. Stapledon in his book, Star Maker, describes a species of human that experiences the world primarily through taste and smell; thus, the psychedelic state on that planet might be modeled using taste and smell.
I like models, but I donât believe that models inherently grant predictive value to things outside of the model, even when they are compelling constructs. A model can do a great job of predicting some things within the confines of the model (and even the real world) while being significantly less than successful when dealing with certain other real world phenomena itâs attempting to model.
Of course, models can also be biased depending on the inputs used to create them. When it comes to mapping hyperspace, some people may find significantly higher reports of entities âprobingâ subjects and engaging in apparent âmedical proceduresâ when the setting for their DMT experiences is relatively clinical or sterile. Dosing the same people in a sunny meadow may yield drastically different experiences. Modelling âthe DMT experienceâ according to either range of experiences would present a model based on a severely limited set of inputs. Of course, this also presumes there is a somewhat singular experiential input/output that can be modeled.
Or consider the fact that many people find that breakthroughs are not necessarily dose-dependent. More than a few experienced psychonauts have reported mindblowing breakthroughs with what they expected to be a threshold dose. These experiences donât seem to correlate to the technique used or amount taken, but seem to be chance occurrences to which no one has been able to attribute a causality beyond it being âone of those thingsâ that DMT does. For people who have had this experience, it tends to significantly revise their personal dose/response model and introduces a non-conforming potentiality that could ârandomlyâ occur whether they are taking 15mg or 40mg.
Part of what Iâm suggesting is that, in many ways, my experiences with DMT have presented a certain capacity for rapidly obliterating and/or revising models, concepts, and expectations (potentially from one experience to the next).
A metaphor that comes to mind are Escher's
penrose triangles...you can see that they appear to present triangles (or at least the gestalt of them) but when you actually go in to measure the three angles and confirm that it is, indeed, a triangle, you realize that none of the triangles you are seeing have three corresponding angles, they were merely crafted in such a manner so as to leave you with that impression. In fact, the only triangles to be found exist within the negative space, against which the penroses are drawn.
strassman wrote:To the extent that verbal models apply to the psychedelic drug state, in particular the DMT one, the theoneurological model I have been working on is "verbal." That is, I'm using words, ideas. concepts. This model takes into account the data from my study, where the DMT experience is highly interactive and relational. It is also felt to be as real or more real than real. In these ways, it shares many features with the "data" of prophetic experience as laid out in the Hebrew Bible. Prophetic experience is highly verbal, and posits a higher-order level of reality to what is apprehended in that state.
Sure, and I think youâd be hard-pressed to find an experienced DMT psychonaut who couldnât identify the components you have selected/identified as being part of at least some of their experienced DMT phenomena. However, for me, the jump from DMT phenomenology to prophetic experiences as laid out in the Hebrew Bible is too much for me to make with you. This is not to discount the similarity, but to question the use of saying âA is like B (thus B models A)â when in fact A may be like B, but A may also be like C-Z.
Iâm not a doctor, so forgive me if this analogy falls flat, but I think youâll be able to see where Iâm going. When I run I sweat, my heart rate increases, and I feel fatigued. When I get a fever I sweat , my heart rate increases, and I feel fatigued. When I have a nightmare, I sweat, my heart rate increases, and after I wake up, I may feel fatigued. Personally, I would not choose to use any of these particular experiences to model any of the other experiences. I might point to various similarities in an attempt to convey to others a sense of what I experience in these situations, but I think thatâs categorically different. For example, if someone has never experienced fever delirium, relating my experience with a nightmare might help convey a sense of the experience, but I would be hesitant to map one experience onto the other as there are qualitative (and physiological) differences.
strassman wrote:I believe that with the proper cognitive preparation--afforded by learning the vocabulary and concepts of the HB--more verbal information might be extractable and transmittable from the DMT experience.
There's a dictum of the rabbis, "The Bible is written in the language of humankind." This means that it is intended to be understood by as many people as possible. If it were written in the language of mathematics--which I'm sure could be done by someone with the skill and patience--it would be less accessible, would benefit less people.
I would suggest that your claims about the accessibility of the Hebrew Bible are not quite as straightforward as I understand you to be presenting them. As I read it, you find the Hebrew Bible particularly relatable/accessible/meaningful. You actually use a rabbinical dictum to secure that claim, which feels a bit like employing circular logic.
By stating that the Hebrew Bible is written in the language of humanity, you simultaneously present the religious claims of the Rabbis about the Hebrew Bible's accessibility as âtruthâ while glossing over the fact that traditional rabbinical study takes a lifetime+ (thereby implicitly demonstrating that there is a level of biblical expertise expected of those tasked with providing the accepted interpretations). To me, this presents a rather contradictory vein running through the âlanguage of humanityâ claim. From my perspective, a language of humanity that requires intermediary entities to arbitrate and declare true meanings canât really claim to be a language of humanity as it ultimately subjugates definitions that fall outside of orthodoxy.
As a kid, when I was in synagogue, I found the rabbinical commentary to be the most interesting part of our congregationâs Sifrei Torah. The fact that people actually formed schools of rabbinical thought to debate Biblical and Talmudic minutiae was fascinating in a litigious sense...especially when they were debating things like exactly how unclean a man was after experiencing a nocturnal emission and removing himself for however many days. But, I think we could all agree that the legal profession requires a certain expertise to participate in. So the fact that we find similarly constructed debates between rabbinical schools and authorities gives us a major hint that this framework is not as open/egalitarian as the âlanguage of humanityâ label implies.
To say just a bit more the accessibility of the Hebrew Bible:
First, I feel that the premise that the Hebrew Bible is less specialized than the language of mathematics (or any other conceptual system) is a rather tenuous one at best. How many Jews are there who are âwell-versedâ in the Hebrew bible? How many mathematicians are there well versed in higher-level mathematics? I would be willing to wager that the mathematically fluent outnumber those fluent in the Hebrew Bible.
So, it appears that no matter what, a model of DMT experiences is going to require some specialized understandings, and I think that makes sense. We are dealing with experiences that literally challenge the ontological and epistemological frameworks many of us have been utilizing since birth. The experiences themselves require a willingness to ask questions to which there are no clear and obvious answers. Does it not follow from this that any model of these experiences--which is by default a translation into a lower âplaneâ (i.e. experience is more immediate than a story of an experience which is more immediate than a freeform model of DMT experiences in the abstract)âwould require some degree of specialized understanding(s)? The best chance at "understanding" (and it is an experiential understanding, rather than an intellectual understanding) comes from the most specialized education possible in this realm: taking DMT.
This brings me to my second point. If the Hebrew Bible was selected for its relatability to the broadest number of people, why not the Qur'an or Upanishads? I believe that from a statistical perspective, both of those texts have a significantly larger readership and are likely already familiar to a greater number of people than the Hebrew Bible. Based on reports that we have gotten here (as well as the work of people like Wahid Azal), it seems like there are quite a few similarities between DMT phenomena and Islamic and Hindu mysticism. This also points back to my suggestion that while A is like B, it may also be like the rest of the alphabet as well (hey, theyâre all letters, right?).
Based on my understanding of the Hebrew Bible and prophetic states from a childhood of Hebrew school, Bar-Mitzvahs, and synagogue, and an adulthood of psychedelic experiences (the majority of which have involved DMT in one form or another) Iâm left with my earlier sentiment that existing similarities donât make a compelling enough case for me to adopt the Hebrew Bible/Jewish prophetic states as a model for these experiences in light of the phenomena I have experienced personally and encountered through others, as well as âuniversalâ religious experiences DMT seems to facilitate on occasion, which appear to cross sociocultural/religious boundaries.
Ultimately, to underscore the question I initially raised back at Breaking convention and have attempted to flesh out in this post, Iâm left wondering if the baggage of the Hebrew Bible isnât also problematic. Given the number of people whose experiences donât map onto the prophetic experience, as well as the various cultural artifacts of mystical Judaism, Iâm still left pondering the merit of using a system with readily identifiable flaws, rather than working to build our own system. After all, if the prophetic state has XYZ characteristics that make it similar to the DMT experience, surely we can construct a model that has XYZ characteristics but lacks the problematic components that exist within the Hebrew Bible, no? Wouldn't this potentially provide us all with more benefits than utilizing a model (whether mystical Judaism or otherwise) that may start from a position that already has flaws and limitations vis a vis DMT experiences?
For me, the question is still why the Hebrew Bible, above all else? How does your model account for the problematic aspects of the Hebrew Bible (which are intimately intertwined with the prophetic experiences that helped construct Judaism)? Why is the Hebrew bible more compelling than other religious systems that present similar experiences/phenomena? Why is the Hebrew Bible (or any set of religious experiences/doctrines) more compelling than a "psychonautic and phenomenological" model of DMT experiences? And if it's not, then why the emphasis on the Hebrew Bible?
And fwiw, I just wanted to reiterate my appreciation that you found this thread and decided to join the conversation. I look forward to your reply and thank you in advance for your willingness to engage my verbosity.
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