Resistance to allowing use of psychedelic drugs originates in both religious and secular values. The difficulty in describing psychedelic experiences in traditional religious terms suggests one ground of opposition. The Westerner must borrow such words as samadhi or moksha from the Hindus, or satori or kensho from the Japanese, to describe the experience of oneness with the universe. We have no appropriate word because our own Jewish and Christian theologies will not accept the idea that man's inmost self can be identical with the Godhead, even though Christians may insist that this was true in the unique instance of Jesus Christ. Jews and Christians think of God in political and monarchical terms, as the supreme governor of the universe, the ultimate boss. Obviously, it is both socially unacceptable and logically preposterous for a particular individual to claim that he, in person, is the omnipotent and omniscient ruler of the world-to be accorded suitable recognition and honor.
Such an imperial and kingly concept of the ultimate
reality, however, is neither necessary nor universal. The Hindus and the
Chinese have no difficulty in conceiving of an identity of the self and the
Godhead. For most Asians, other than Muslims, the Godhead moves and manifests
the world in much the same way that a centipede manipulates a hundred
legs-spontaneously, without deliberation or calculation. In other words, they
conceive the universe by analogy with an organism as distinct from a mechanism.
They do not see it as an artifact or construct under the conscious direction of
some supreme technician, engineer, or architect.
If, however, in the context of Christian or Jewish
tradition, an individual declares himself to be one with God, he must be dubbed
blasphemous (subversive) or insane. Such a mystical experience is a clear
threat to traditional religious concepts. The Judaeo-Christian tradition has a
monarchical image of God, and monarchs, who rule by force, fear nothing more
than insubordination. The Church has therefore always been highly suspicious of
mystics, because they seem to be insubordinate and to claim equality or, worse,
identity with God. For this reason, John Scotus Erigena and Meister Eckhart
were condemned as heretics. This was also why the Quakers faced opposition for
their doctrine of the Inward Light, and for their refusal to remove hats in
church and in court. A few occasional mystics may be all right so long as they
watch their language, like St. Teresa of Avila and St. John of the Cross, who
maintained, shall we say, a metaphysical distance of respect between themselves
and their heavenly King. Nothing, however, could be more alarming to the
ecclesiastical hierarchy than a popular outbreak of mysticism, for this might
well amount to setting up a democracy in the kingdom of heaven-and such alarm
would be shared equally by Catholics, Jews, and fundamentalist Protestants.
The monarchical image of God, with its implicit
distaste for religious insubordination, has a more pervasive impact than many
Christians might admit. The thrones of kings have walls immediately behind
them, and all who present themselves at court must prostrate themselves or
kneel, because this is an awkward position from which to make a sudden attack.
It has perhaps never occurred to Christians that when they design a church on
the model of a royal court (basilica) and prescribe church ritual, they are
implying that God, like a human monarch, is afraid. This is also implied by
flattery in prayers:
O Lord our heavenly Father, high and mighty, King of
kings, Lord of lords, the only Ruler of princes, who dost from thy throne
behold all the dwellers upon earth: most heartily we beseech thee with thy
favor to behold....7
The Western man who claims consciousness of oneness
with God or the universe thus clashes with his society's concept of religion.
In most Asian cultures, however, such a man will be congratulated as having
penetrated the true secret of life. He has arrived, by chance or by some such
discipline as Yoga or Zen meditation, at a state of consciousness in which he
experiences directly and vividly what our own scientists know to be true in
theory. For the ecologist, the biologist, and the physicist know (but seldom
feel) that every organism constitutes a single field of behavior, or process,
with its environment. There is no way of separating what any given organism is
doing from what its environment is doing, for which reason ecologists speak not
of organisms in environments but of organism-environments. Thus the words
"I" and "self" should properly mean what the whole universe
is doing at this particular "here-and-now" called John Doe.
The kingly concept of God makes identity of self and
God, or self and universe, inconceivable in Western religious terms. The
difference between Eastern and Western concepts of man and his universe,
however, extends beyond strictly religious concepts. The Western scientist may
rationally perceive the idea of organism-environment, but he does not
ordinarily feel this to be true. By cultural and social conditioning, he has
been hypnotized into experiencing himself as an ego-as an isolated center of
consciousness and will inside a bag of skin, confronting an external and alien
world. We say, "I came into this world." But we did nothing of the
kind. We came out of it in just the same way that fruit comes out of trees. Our
galaxy, our cosmos, "peoples" in the same way that an apple tree
"apples."
Such a vision of the universe clashes with the idea
of a monarchical God, with the concept of the separate ego, and even with the
secular, atheist/agnostic mentality, which derives its common sense from the
mythology of nineteenth-century scientist. According to this view, the universe
is a mindless mechanism and man a sort of accidental microorganism infesting a
minute globular rock that revolves about an unimportant star on the outer
fringe of one of the minor galaxies. This "put-down" theory of man is
extremely common among such quasi scientists as sociologists, psychologists,
and psychiatrists, most of whom are still thinking of the world in terms of
Newtonian mechanics, and have never really caught up with the ideas of Einstein
and Bohr, Oppenheimer and Schrodinger. Thus to the ordinary institutional-type
psychiatrist, any patient who gives the least hint of mystical or religious
experience is automatically diagnosed as deranged. From the standpoint of the
mechanistic religion, he is a heretic and is given electroshock therapy as an
up-to-date form of thumbscrew and rack. And, incidentally, it is just this kind
of quasi scientist who, as consultant to government and law-enforcement
agencies, dictates official policies on the use of psychedelic chemicals.
Inability to accept the mystic experience is more
than an intellectual handicap. Lack of awareness of the basic unity of organism
and environment is a serious and dangerous hallucination. For in a civilization
equipped with immense technological power, the sense of alienation between man
and nature leads to the use of technology in a hostile spirit—to the
"conquest" of nature instead of intelligent co-operation with nature.
The result is that we are eroding and destroying our environment, spreading Los
Angelization instead of civilization. This is the major threat overhanging
Western, technological culture, and no amount of reasoning or doom-preaching
seems to help. We simply do not respond to the prophetic and moralizing
techniques of conversion upon which Jews and Christians have always relied. But
people have an obscure sense of what is good for them-call it "unconscious
self-healing," "survival instinct," "positive growth
potential," or what you will. Among the educated young there is therefore
a startling and unprecedented interest in the transformation of human
consciousness. All over the Western world publishers are selling millions of
books dealing with Yoga, Vedanta, Zen Buddhism, and the chemical mysticism of
psychedelic drugs, and I have come to believe that the whole "hip" subculture,
however misguided in some of its manifestations, is the earnest and responsible
effort of young people to correct the self-destroying course of industrial
civilization.
The content of the mystical experience is thus
inconsistent with both the religious and secular concepts of traditional
Western thought. Moreover, mystical experiences often result in attitudes that
threaten the authority not only of established churches, but also of secular
society. Unafraid of death and deficient in worldly ambition, those who have
undergone mystical experiences are impervious to threats and promises.
Moreover, their sense of the relativity of good and evil arouses the suspicion
that they lack both conscience and respect for law. Use of psychedelics in the
United States by a literate bourgeoisie means that an important segment of the
population is indifferent to society's traditional rewards and sanctions.
In theory, the existence within our secular society
of a group that does not accept conventional values is consistent with our
political vision. But one of the great problems of the United States, legally
and politically, is that we have never quite had the courage of our
convictions. The Republic is founded on the marvelously sane principle that a
human community can exist and prosper only on a basis of mutual trust.
Metaphysically, the American Revolution was a rejection of the dogma of
Original Sin, which is the notion that because you cannot trust yourself or
other people, there must be some Superior Authority to keep us all in order.
The dogma was rejected because, if it is true that we cannot trust ourselves
and others, it follows that we cannot trust the Superior Authority which we
ourselves conceive and obey, and that the very idea of our own
untrustworthiness is unreliable!
Citizens of the United States believe, or are
supposed to believe, that a republic is the best form of government. Yet vast
confusion arises from trying to be republican in politics and monarchist in
religion. How can a republic be the best form of government if the universe,
heaven, and hell are a monarchy? Thus, despite the theory of government by
consent, based upon mutual trust, the peoples of the United States retain, from
the authoritarian backgrounds of their religions or national origins, an
utterly naive faith in law as some sort of supernatural and paternalistic
power. "There ought to be a law against it!" Our law-enforcement
officers are therefore confused, hindered, and bewildered—not to mention
corrupted—by being asked to enforce sumptuary laws, often of ecclesiastical
origin, that vast numbers of people have no intention of obeying and that, in
any case, are immensely difficult or simply impossible to enforce—for example,
the barring of anything so undetectable as LSD-25 from international and
interstate commerce.
Finally, there are two specific objections to use of
psychedelic drugs. First, use of these drugs may be dangerous. However, every
worth-while exploration is dangerous—climbing mountains, testing aircraft,
rocketing into outer space, skin diving, or collecting botanical specimens in
jungles. But if you value knowledge and the actual delight of exploration more
than mere duration of uneventful life, you are willing to take the risks. It is
not really healthy for monks to practice fasting, and it was hardly hygienic
for Jesus to get himself crucified, but these are risks taken in the course of
spiritual adventures. Today the adventurous young are taking risks in exploring
the psyche, testing their mettle at the task just as, in times past, they have
tested it—more violently—in hunting, dueling, hot-rod racing, and playing
football. What they need is not prohibitions and policemen, but the most
intelligent encouragement and advice that can be found.
Second, drug use may be criticized as an escape from
reality. However, this criticism assumes unjustly that the mystical experiences
themselves are escapist or unreal. LSD, in particular, is by no means a soft
and cushy escape from reality. It can very easily be an experience in which you
have to test your soul against all the devils in hell. For me, it has been at
times an experience in which I was at once completely lost in the corridors of
the mind and yet relating that very lostness to the exact order of logic and
language, simultaneously very mad and very sane. But beyond these occasional
lost and insane episodes, there are the experiences of the world as a system of
total harmony and glory, and the discipline of relating these to the order of
logic and language must somehow explain how what William Blake called that
"energy which is eternal delight" can consist with the misery and
suffering of everyday life.
The undoubted mystical and religious intent of most users of the psychedelics, even if some of these substances should be proved injurious to physical health, requires that their free and responsible use be exempt from legal restraint in any republic that maintains a constitutional separation of church and state. To the extent that mystical experience conforms with the tradition of genuine religious involvement, and to the extent that psychedelics induce that experience, users are entitled to some constitutional protection. Also, to the extent that research in the psychology of religion can utilize such drugs, students of the human mind must be free to use them. Under present laws, I, as an experienced student of the psychology of religion, can no longer pursue research in the field. This is a barbarous restriction of spiritual and intellectual freedom, suggesting that the legal system of the United States is, after all, in tacit alliance with the monarchical theory of the universe, and will, therefore, prohibit and persecute religious ideas and practices based on an organic and unitary vision of the universe.
The undoubted mystical and religious intent of most users of the psychedelics, even if some of these substances should be proved injurious to physical health, requires that their free and responsible use be exempt from legal restraint in any republic that maintains a constitutional separation of church and state. To the extent that mystical experience conforms with the tradition of genuine religious involvement, and to the extent that psychedelics induce that experience, users are entitled to some constitutional protection. Also, to the extent that research in the psychology of religion can utilize such drugs, students of the human mind must be free to use them. Under present laws, I, as an experienced student of the psychology of religion, can no longer pursue research in the field. This is a barbarous restriction of spiritual and intellectual freedom, suggesting that the legal system of the United States is, after all, in tacit alliance with the monarchical theory of the universe, and will, therefore, prohibit and persecute religious ideas and practices based on an organic and unitary vision of the universe.
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