Wanted: Hindu priest
to test magic mushroom
Kevin Loria | Business
Insider | Jan 15, 2017
A priest, a rabbi, and a Zen Buddhist roshi walk
into a bar and order a beer prestigious university lab to trip on
psilocybin, the active ingredient in magic mushrooms. Wait,
what?
In recent weeks we've heard more and more about
the resurgence in psychedelic research, with scientists from Johns
Hopkins and New York University talking about how hallucinogenic
psilocybin could work "like a surgical intervention for mental
illness."
But the big question of why psychedelic
substances seems to have a profound and lasting impact -the ability
to lift fear about the end of life, depression, and anxiety - is
hard to answer. Among their most consistent effects is the
hard-to-understand ability to reliably provide what researchers
term "mystical," "spiritual," or "deeply profound" experiences
(along with certain changes in brain activity that resemble those
seen in people who meditate). But understanding what these
experiences are and why they have such a significant effect isn't
easy.
So the same institutions that are working on
showing that these drugs work in the first place are trying to
figure out why they work by turning to what might be considered
some of the other experts in "mystical" or "spiritual" experiences,
religious leaders from a variety of faith traditions. Shelby
Hartman recently reported in Quartz that so far "they have enrolled
thirteen religious leaders including an Orthodox Jewish rabbi, a
Zen Buddhist roshi, an Episcopalian, a Greek Orthodox priest, and a
Reform Christian for their FDA-approved clinical trial. (They're
also seeking Catholic priests, Imams, and Hindu priests to join the
study.)" They hope that these volunteers can use their own
spiritual experiences and vocabulary to try to better describe
these psychedelic-induced experiences and to help figure out why
they're so beneficial.
Roland Griffiths a professor of psychiatry and
behavioral sciences at JHU School of Medicine explained that after
taking psilocybin, people say they feel more "interconnected" with
the world. "I think people after having had this experience are
more accepting and more willing about engaging [with] life as it
is," he explained. And perhaps drawing on the expertise of people
who focus on spirituality might help.