I was thinking about the neuroscience of psychedelics in the show a few minutes ago, and had (what feels like) a pretty massive insight into what serotonin (the neurotransmitter that our favorite entheogens acts on) may actually be for.
I humbly posit that serotonin may be the neurotransmitter that modulates information processing and encoding in the brain.
On one end of the spectrum are people with OCD, who compulsively repeat an action or ritual. If you give them an SSRI (increase the amount of serotonin floating in the brain), the severity of their symptoms will decrease. This may mean that a dearth of serotonin means that the brain is unable to register the connection between two actions which 'finishes' the process.
On the other hand, people tripping on serotonergic psychedelics (which cause the brain to believe it is being flooded with masses of serotonin) report feelings of massive insight and see connections that belie the fundamental nature of God and the universe.
A person who's brain produces a normal amount of serotonin is, of course, totally functional.
On a related note, paranoid schizophrenics display behavior and thought patterns indicative of a pattern recognition system that has gone crazy, seeing ominous clues and patterns in unrelated things. If you give them an atypical antipsychotic (which antagonizes serotonin receptors, essentially decreasing the potency of the neurotransmitter), the paranoia lessens.
This makes me think that serotonin, in addition to regulating gut movements and existential well-being probably has some effect on how the brain stores information and forms connections between related concepts. This means that an understanding of the actions of serotonin (especially the 5-HT2A receptor, where most insight-producing psychedelics act) may be essential for understanding the brain as an information processing machine.
Any thoughts?
Blessings
~ND
"There are many paths up the same mountain."