But learning it's language will mean leaving much behind – parochial notions of logic, causality and many more. I don't know if we NEED hallucinogens in order to transcend some of the most immediate boundaries. Quantum mechanics embodies so many blatant contradictions and that was developed, I assume, without a great deal of chemical assistance.
Things that would be seen as contradictions in the macroscopic world aren't really seen as such at the subatomic level. An electron being in every possible location in an orbital around a nucleus - simultaneously, though seen as being actually true an not just a sort of metaphor, doesn't really bother anyone since this is all provided for by the electron's wave function.
Oh right, electrons are waves. They're also particles. And they're always both – simultaneously. But again, this appears to cause no one any sleepless nights.
In fact, you really have to love the way we humans exploit phenomena about which we really are completely clueless. For example, according to an electron's wave function, it will occasionally appear at certain locations that the function says are strictly possible despite the fact that there is no physical path for the electron to get there.
IOW, there might be a circuit, then a small barrier made of some insulating material that the electron cannot penetrate. The circuit then continues on the other side. In a few instances, an electron in the first circuit will disappear from there and re-appear in the second circuit. It didn't pass through the insulator since we know that is impossible. No. It simply ceased to exist at point A and resumed its existence at point B without traversing the distance in between.
Completely bizarre.
Also the basis of many electronic circuits in use today.
But it is one thing to be a monkey pushing a lever and getting a treat and quite another to understand the process behind it. We are SO far being from able to actually grasp what is happening in situations like this that the universe will have to wait a bit longer for an intelligent audience.
The Egyptians believed that every day started out with the dung beetle god Khepri rolling an enormous ball of shit from West to East. That ball became the sun. The moral is that every bright, hopeful day starts out as a pile of shit.