The Coming of Age of LSD

It seems amazing that something so totally personal as ones level of consciousness could be considered an illegal act. But there is a turning of the tide both in policy and in scientific research, which has begun to recognise the value of these substances.
|

The Beckley/Imperial Research Programme has just had the results of the first ever brain imaging study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. The findings are being launched at the Royal Society on Wednesday 13 April. Below is an extract from Amanda Feilding's talk for the event.

I think Albert Hofman would have been delighted to have his "Problem child" celebrated at the Royal Society, as in his long lifetime the academic establishment never recognised his great contribution. But for the taboo surrounding this field, he would surely have won the Nobel Prize. That was the beginning of the modern psychedelic age, which has fundamentally changed society.

Open Image Modal

From left, David Nutt, Amanda Feilding & Robin Carhart-Harris

After the discovery of the effects of LSD, there was a burst of excitement in the medical and therapeutic worlds - over 1000 experimental and clinical studies were undertaken. Then, in the early 60s, LSD escaped from the labs and began to spread into the world at large. Fuelled by its transformational insights, a cultural evolution took place, whose effects are still felt today. It sparked a wave of interest in Eastern mysticism, healthy living, nurturing the environment, individual freedoms and new music and art among many other changes. Then the establishment panicked and turned to prohibition, partly motivated by American youth becoming disenchanted with fighting a war in far-off Vietnam.

Aghast at the global devastation caused by the war on drugs, I set up the Beckley Foundation in 1998. With the advent of brain imaging technology, I realised that one could correlate the subjective experience of altered states of consciousness, brought about by psychedelic substances, with empirical findings. I realised that only through the very best science investigating how psychedelics work in the brain could one overcome the misplaced taboo which had transformed them from the food of the gods to the work of the devil.

My aim was, and is, to re-integrate these valuable substances into the fabric of society, and make their benefits available where appropriate. Over the years I have started many programmes of collaboration around the world. My partnership with Dave Nutt has been particularly rewarding. It began in 2005 with a brain imaging study into the effects of cannabis. In 2009, when Dave moved to Imperial College we started the Beckley/Imperial Research Programme, with a study using psilocybin. We got the approval because unlike LSD, few recognise the name.

In 2014, we finally got approval for an LSD study, something I had been aiming to do for many decades. The results of the study are very revealing. Importantly, we found increased communication between different regions of the brain that don't normally communicate. The findings of our research have prompted the so called entropic brain theory - where entropy refers to chaotic or erratic activity. We have shown that psychedelics increase the entropy of the brain to generate a more disordered fluid state of consciousness. As this state is more flexible and less rigid, it makes people more open to new concepts and ideas. This may lead to the breaking of rigid thought patterns such as those found in depression, addiction, and obsessive-compulsive disorder.

Our results have implications for the neurobiology of consciousness and for potential applications of psychedelics in psychological research as well as the treatment of mental health problems. Our pilot psilocybin for depression study is already providing remarkable results, where after only 2 treatment sessions patients with severe, treatment-resistant depression, experience rapid and enduring reductions in their symptoms. We hypothesise that change in network connectivity brought about by psychedelics has a causal role in their beneficial effects.

Hopefully, as our and other research groups' investigations progress, the world will slowly begin to understand that these incredible substances which interact so intimately with the neurochemistry of the human system, can be used as tools to heal our ailments, enhance our enlightenment, expand our vision, increase our compassion and wise management of society and the environment.

We need to recognise that the changing of conscious states can be an enhancement and that just as the freedom of conscience, religion and the right to develop the personality is a recognised human right, so too should be the freedom of consciousness, so long as the individual does not harm others.

It seems amazing that something so totally personal as ones level of consciousness could be considered an illegal act. But there is a turning of the tide both in policy and in scientific research, which has begun to recognise the value of these substances.

Our studies have begun to lay bare the workings underlying the changing states of consciousness. With a better understanding of the mechanisms underlying these states we can learn to use them better, to manipulate our consciousness, to our own and societies advantage. William James explains it like seeing through the veils of perception. Huxley describes the ego as a reducing valve of the brain. How right they were. Now, for the first time we have seen the empirical basis of these realisations.

The best science of 2015
1. Space Water(01 of07)
Open Image Modal
After an epic social media campaign teasing a big announcement, NASA had the world wondering whether they'd found aliens.Or the afterlife. Or the final, intergalactic resting place of Elvis Presley.They'd found salty water on Mars, which, according to some experts, is just as significant and exciting. As Flinders University Archaeology senior lecturer Dr Alice Gorman said: "The discovery of these salty, seasonal flows on a planet we thought of as nearly dead dramatically increases the chances that it might support life," Gorman said. "But to get close enough to the flows to sample them, we also risk introducing terrestrial micro-organisms."
2. Genetic 'scissors'(02 of07)
Open Image Modal
Human genetic modification is here -- but it's a little dicey.Chinese scientists used a technique called 'CRISPR' where they can effectively jump into a piece of genetic code and snip off a bit. The research was pioneered on 'discarded' human embryos with a fatal genetic disease. Later in the year, the same technique saved the life of British baby Layla Richards from leukemia in November.
3. Killer ham(03 of07)
Open Image Modal
Processed meats can increase your likelihood of cancer.In fact, the link between processed meat and cancer is so strong, in November, the World Health Organization put it in the same category as cigarettes, alcohol and plutonium.Yes, that includes ham, bacon and prosciutto.Cancer Council Australia scientific adviser Bernard Stewart said you shouldn't cry into your bacon yet."No-one’s proposing that we ban bacon, put warnings on hot dogs or take beef off the barbie."But this WHO review provides compelling evidence that the long-term consumption of red meat and processed meat increases your risk of cancer."
4. Hey, brother(04 of07)
Open Image Modal
Kids, meet your ancestors.This is a recreation of a new human ancestor found in South Africa.Named Homo naledi, a group of 15 'people' were found, with a compelling mix of human and ape features, leading scientists to suggest the ancestor is a missing link of sorts.There's still come contention about whether Homo naledi is different enough to Homo erectus to be considered its own group but one thing is certain, there's a lot of human in that face.
5. Pluto love(05 of07)
Open Image Modal
New photos of Pluto this year reminded everyone how much we love the non-planet-now-a-planet.Australia was the first to receive the photos arrived first at CSIRO’s Canberra Deep Space Communication Complex before being relayed around the world.
6. $135 Million Can't Buy You Aliens(06 of07)
Open Image Modal
Well, not yet, at least.Russian billionaire Yuri Milner is putting $135m towards the search for aliens. He and cosmologist Stephen Hawking call it the Breakthrough Initiatives project and it will use CSIRO's Parkes Radio Telescope in New South Wales for the search.
7. Hands Off My Genes(07 of07)
Open Image Modal
This Brisbane grandmother Yvonne D’arcy took on a U.S. biotech firm in the High Court to say breast cancer genes can't be patented.D’arcy, who survived breast cancer twice, argued genes were natural, so they couldn’t be patentable ‘inventions’.She won, and now Australia continues to be a place where genes can't be patented.