OPEN Foundation

Day: 1 January 2020

[Neuroscientific and psychological explanations for the therapeutic effects of psychedelics]

Abstract

Psychedelics have a strong therapeutic potential for the treatment of biomedical disorders, but the working mechanisms underlying psychedelics are only poorly understood.<br/> AIM: To discuss different mechanisms underlying the therapeutic effects of classic psychedelics.<br/> METHOD: To make a distinction between different levels of explanation: the pharmacological, the neurocognitive and the psychological level.<br/> RESULTS: At the pharmacological level, classic psychedelics affect via the serotonin-receptor, the production of glutamate and brain-derived neurotrophic factor (bdnf), which stimulate neurogenesis. Psychedelics also have anti-flammatory properties and thereby have a protective effect on the brain. At the neurocognitive level, psychedelics have been associated with a reduced activation of the default mode network, which has been implicated in self-referential processing and rumination. At the same time, the brain’s entropy increases, reflected in an increased connectivity between different brain areas. At the psychological level, the therapeutic efficacy of psychedelics has been attributed to the mystical experience, as well as to its awe-inducing potential, the feelings of connectedness and an enhanced awareness of emotions.<br/> CONCLUSION: Psycholytic and psychedelic therapy act at different levels, but ultimately the combination of different mechanisms will help us to understand how psychedelics – in the right set and setting – can be used successfully in therapeutic practice.
van Elk, M. (2020). Neuroscientific and psychological explanations for the therapeutic effects of psychedelics. Tijdschrift Voor Psychiatrie62(8), 677-683., https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32816296/
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Psychedelics in Western culture: unnecessary psychiatrisation of visionary experiences

Abstract

Historical research about the use of psychedelics in specific religious contexts can provide rational explanations for visionary experiences that could otherwise be cause to question the mental health of religious actors. Reversely, if historians ignore or overlook empirical evidence for the use of psychedelics, the result can be that normal and even predictable reactions of healthy subjects to the effects of psychedelic substances are arbitrarily interpreted as ‘irrational’.

AIM: To describe the meaning of the psychedelic factor in historical visionary experiences.

METHOD: Discussion based on three examples of selective use of historical sources on psychedelics.

RESULTS: This theme is of broader relevance to cultural history and scientific theory because we are typically dealing with religious practices that have traditionally been categorized as ‘magic’ and thereby classified in advance as irrational and potentially pathological. The article discusses three historical examples: the so-called Mithras Liturgy from Roman Egypt, early modern witches’ ointments, and spiritual use of hashish in the nineteenth century.

CONCLUSION: Established academics often deny the significance of psychedelics in visionary experiences. Discussion of pre-Enlightenment source material appears to be of considerable importance for the correct interpretation of important religious and cultural traditions. Critical empirical source research without prejudices or implicit agendas is the appropriate method.

Hanegraaff, W. J. (2020). Psychedelics in Western culture: unnecessary psychiatrisation of visionary experiences. Tijdschrift Voor Psychiatrie62(8), 713-720.
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30 April - Q&A with Rick Strassman

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