- Dec 23, 2012
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I suppose this could go in the Ethics subforum, but I'll be drawing on a fairly high-level philosophical stance in this thread so...
Oftentimes users of certain drugs, i.e. psychedelics, claim that they achieve vast mystical insight into the nature of reality while under the influence. For example, Terence McKenna claims that DMT use proved to him that materialism (of some kind) is false, that his visions of "hyperspace" showed him a world that cannot be explained, much less defined, in terms of ordinary matter. I've browsed dozens and dozens of reports on Erowid.org in which people on mushrooms or LSD or w/e allege perceiving celestial unity and power and love while in extreme psychedelic states, allegations accompanied by a high degree of certainty.
Now I will admit to having done my fair share of drugs over the years, and I often feel as if this has led me not necessarily to special insights, but at least to those insights that I would already have attained otherwise if only more slowly. But from a purely philosophical point of view, I think "drugs led me to enlightenment" is pretty much dead wrong, and here's my argument.
The difference between a priori and empirical knowledge turns on the difference between the mind's active vs. passive roles in the acquisition of knowledge. Since apriority is the sphere of transcendental knowledge, enlightenment can and must be given to us a priori. But a drug is something that "happens to us," if you will--it's something external to our mind that gets attached to it. So even if DMT (for instance) gave us "experience" of another realm, this experience, as something that we passively were subjected to, would not be a priori and therefore by definition could not be of transcendental truth. Whereas my mind is eternally disposed to "2 + 2 = 4"--since this fact is hovering before my mind all the time, everywhere I go--I know it to be a fact for all time and all space--psychedelic states are finite in duration and dependent on finitely-located substances (chemicals that degrade pretty quickly in the blood).
Again, perhaps DMT among others is like a ReadyBoost USB drive for the computer of our minds: something that flash-overdrives our thoughts into an enlightened arena. But since this capacity for enlightenment is given inherently within us, in the end, drugs are maybe like Wittgenstein's Tractatian ladder, to be thrown away once we've ascended to their apex.
Oftentimes users of certain drugs, i.e. psychedelics, claim that they achieve vast mystical insight into the nature of reality while under the influence. For example, Terence McKenna claims that DMT use proved to him that materialism (of some kind) is false, that his visions of "hyperspace" showed him a world that cannot be explained, much less defined, in terms of ordinary matter. I've browsed dozens and dozens of reports on Erowid.org in which people on mushrooms or LSD or w/e allege perceiving celestial unity and power and love while in extreme psychedelic states, allegations accompanied by a high degree of certainty.
Now I will admit to having done my fair share of drugs over the years, and I often feel as if this has led me not necessarily to special insights, but at least to those insights that I would already have attained otherwise if only more slowly. But from a purely philosophical point of view, I think "drugs led me to enlightenment" is pretty much dead wrong, and here's my argument.
The difference between a priori and empirical knowledge turns on the difference between the mind's active vs. passive roles in the acquisition of knowledge. Since apriority is the sphere of transcendental knowledge, enlightenment can and must be given to us a priori. But a drug is something that "happens to us," if you will--it's something external to our mind that gets attached to it. So even if DMT (for instance) gave us "experience" of another realm, this experience, as something that we passively were subjected to, would not be a priori and therefore by definition could not be of transcendental truth. Whereas my mind is eternally disposed to "2 + 2 = 4"--since this fact is hovering before my mind all the time, everywhere I go--I know it to be a fact for all time and all space--psychedelic states are finite in duration and dependent on finitely-located substances (chemicals that degrade pretty quickly in the blood).
Again, perhaps DMT among others is like a ReadyBoost USB drive for the computer of our minds: something that flash-overdrives our thoughts into an enlightened arena. But since this capacity for enlightenment is given inherently within us, in the end, drugs are maybe like Wittgenstein's Tractatian ladder, to be thrown away once we've ascended to their apex.