02:45 min
CLEAR ALL
Natalie Ginsberg, MAPS Policy and Advocacy Manager will interview Rick Doblin, Ph.D.
1
Psychedelic drugs: a dangerous and illegal scourge; a harmless way to “turn on, tune in, drop out” – or a valuable treatment for mental illness? Research is showing that substances like MDMA and magic mushrooms, long banished to society’s fringes, are proving effective in treating...
This is a recording of Aldous Huxley on 100 ug of LSD, made on December 23 1962. The trip sitter is his wife, Laura Archera Huxley. He discusses the secret of life - to be oneself and at the same time 'identical with the divine'.
The UK is experiencing a psychedelic renaissance.
Ralph Metzner, circa 1966, discussing the use of yoga to integrate the LSD experience into normal life.
A small community of experimental psychotherapists—along with self-medicating users—have been using acid and mushrooms to treat mental health conditions for years, with promising results.
Drugs like LSD and MDMA are generating new interest among doctors for use in psychotherapy.
Mark Haden is the executive director of the Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies (MAPS) Canada as well as an adjunct professor at the University of British Columbia School of Public and Population Health.
A renaissance is underway in the scientific study of psychedelics, both as a mode of therapy for mental illness and as a tool for understanding the mind.
Interview with Rick Doblin, Ph.D. Founder of psychedelic research group MAPS, as he talks about his experience with Ibogaine and LSD, in order to confront his own shadows and be more effective as a political activist.