lulzkiller
Bluelighter
TAC: I agree completely. The recreational vs. spiritual/introspective dichotomy is completely untenable. From having followed the Superiority thread slightly, it is my impression that, possibly, the attitudinal superiority issue issuing from psychedelic use could be related to upholding this dichotomy.
(To clarify my reference to the other thread: by attitudinal superiority issue I mean the fact that some users of psychedelics proclaim a deeper understanding of stuff like "the world", "reality", "everything", "life", and appear to be holier-than-thou, presumably due to some experience in an altered state. Naturally, I am not attacking the claim that psychedelics can be judged to be superior drugs by a lot of metrics [as laid out by ps00donym], and if not for this reason then at least by appeal to de gustibus non est disputandum)
So to return to the topic at hand: I would assume it to be perfectly possible for a person to have a meaningful and giving experience on psychedelics in the company of friends at a concert or festival, or doing mundane things under the influence, or focusing more on, say, the visual beauty of the experience than the (alterations in the) mental states provoked by psychedelics.
(To clarify my reference to the other thread: by attitudinal superiority issue I mean the fact that some users of psychedelics proclaim a deeper understanding of stuff like "the world", "reality", "everything", "life", and appear to be holier-than-thou, presumably due to some experience in an altered state. Naturally, I am not attacking the claim that psychedelics can be judged to be superior drugs by a lot of metrics [as laid out by ps00donym], and if not for this reason then at least by appeal to de gustibus non est disputandum)
So to return to the topic at hand: I would assume it to be perfectly possible for a person to have a meaningful and giving experience on psychedelics in the company of friends at a concert or festival, or doing mundane things under the influence, or focusing more on, say, the visual beauty of the experience than the (alterations in the) mental states provoked by psychedelics.
