
In his lecture series entitled "Science and the Modern World," Alfred North Whitehead tells us that, "It requires genius to create a subject as a distinct topic for thought." 1 That statement got me thinking. I had read it before while trying to wrap my mind around Whiteheadian philosophy, but today was different; today I read it as a challenge. For I realized that I myself know of a distinct topic for thought that is completely ignored today in academia and which therefore requires the creation of a field of its own in modern universities. I am talking about the subject of the beneficial uses of the psychoactive substances that we call -- or rather deride as -- drugs. The need for such a field is extant and can be seen by anyone who surfs the academic web for articles about the beneficial uses of drugs, and especially about those substances that politicians have been frightening us into calling "hard drugs." One will simply not find such articles online.
"In the presentation of a novel outlook with wide ramifications, a single line of communications from premises to conclusions is not sufficient for intelligibility. Your audience will construe whatever you say into conformity with their pre-existing outlook." --Alfred North Whitehead, The Concept of Nature10
The government makes psychoactive drug approval as slow as possible by insisting that drugs be studied in relation to one single board-certified "illness." But the main benefits of such drugs are holistic in nature. Science should butt out if it can't recognize that fact.
We deal with "drug" risks differently than any other risk. Aspirin kills thousands every year. The death rate from free climbing is huge. But it's only with "drug use" that we demand zero deaths (a policy which ironically causes far more deaths than necessary).
Many psychedelic fans are still drug warriors at heart. They just think that a nice big exception should be carved out for the drugs that they're suddenly finding useful.
It is actually illegal to be a Ben Franklin in 21st century America. To put this another way: we outlaw far more than drugs when we outlaw mind and mood medicine.
There would be little or no profiling of blacks if the Drug War did not exist.
Like when Laura Sanders tells us in Science News that depression is an intractable problem, she should rather tell us: "Depression is an intractable problem... that is, in a world wherein we refuse to consider the benefits of 'drugs,' let alone to fight for their beneficial use."
Drug prohibition has resulted in hundreds of thousands of completely unnecessary deaths thanks to totally preventable drug overdoses!
"Drugs" is imperialist terminology. In the smug self-righteousness of those who use it, I hear Columbus's disdain for the shroom use of the Taino people and the Spanish disdain for the coca use of the Peruvian Indians.
What bothers me about AI is that everyone's so excited to see what computers can do, while no one's excited to see what the human mind can do, since we refuse to improve it with mind-enhancing drugs.
The drug war is is a multi-billion-dollar campaign to enforce the attitude of the Francisco Pizarro's of the world when it comes to non-western medicine. It is the apotheosis of the colonialism that most Americans claim to hate.

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