sure
but i wasn't talking about diethylamide for lsd purposes. I was just asking generally if diethylamide occured in nature at all.
I guess it kind of spun off on the whole lsd in nature theory. What I was trying to establish, is why lsd works in the brain if there's no diethy amines or amides in nature.
I thought your brain would need a receptor for a diethyl amide. Apparently not, i'm suprised that diethylamide has never had a need to be synthesized in nature.
which is almost certainly the reason why lsd isn't found in nature. although it would probably grow in a plant that hid from the sun, and i don't know how it would deal with the oxygen. but apparently diethylamines have no use in nature. this makes sense, since lysergic acids readily produce into lysergic acid amide, and even hydroxyethylamide. but no diethylamides
i wish there was some explanation for the reasoning of the lack of diethylamine or triethylamine to be produced in nature. good question, huh?
that one piece makes all the difference, otherwise, lysergic acid hydroxyethylamide would work like lsd.
as it it almost the exact same size in length, but it's an extended amide instead of a diethylamide.
well....?????