blue lunar night wrote:^ How so ?
DMT, and the experience it provides, absolutely has a basis in 'reality' - though what people speculate about it may not.
If there is one thing to be learned from the DMT experience, it's that reality is subjective. And it can be argued that the DMT experience has no basis in reality (which I think is BS), yet people bring back useful information. Same with dreaming.
Quote:Or do you think Psychedelics provide a free pass for 'magical (i.e. wishful) thinking'?
Not at all.
Quote:Don't take any of this personally, Spartan; Castaneda DOES have gems buried in his shamanic fan-fiction, but to co-opt an entire culture as he did is fundamentally disrespectful to that culture and whatever knowledge they actually had.
I don't take it personally.
Quote:As always, the proof is in the pudding: Castaneda's utter lack of transparency, his delusional paranoia and inflated Guru posturing indicate a profound disconnect between what he practiced and what he preached.
What pudding are you eating?
I consider the wisdom gained from CC's books the pudding. I don't really care how the message was delivered, only that I am able to utilize it.
I think the point that some people miss (not saying you do), is that even though the Castaneda books may be fiction, that doesn't mean wisdom can't be found there, in one of it's many forms, massages, and paths.
Thanks for your input, but as I said, this isn't a debate thread, it's an experience thread.