BF, even with my limited knowledge of math I can see that these are deeply dubious statements. How does reductionism struggle with emergence? This is nonsense. That seems to me to be all your notion of "transcendence" is. Yes, systems have properties not possessed by their individual components. Is this really such a big deal in 2010? I don't think so.
For me, you are just creating dualities, pitting one philosophy against another in your mind.
And then when anyone calls you on your inconsistencies you politely say Goodbye, meaning I presume, "Look, there's a limit to which I'll allow my pet vision to be questioned and now you're crossing it."
Does it occur to you that you're attached to an inconsistent philosophy for purely personal reasons?
I don't think ayahuasca is going to make you any more whole. I think you just need to stop needlessly creating dualisms.
http://www.erowid.org/chemicals/ayahuasca/ayahuasca.shtmlthere is a distinction between DMT and ayahuasca proper. Also, where are the health warnings on that page regarding DMT? Can't find anything. Search erowid for Ayahuasca.
My concern relates more to psychological damage than brain damage. Like other psychotropics, the context in which you take the drug plays an important role... Your mental and physical state, the people, the place are all part of the experience, obviously. I just wanted to mitigate your proposition that ayahuasca can only contribute to one's well-being and that no evidence to the contray exists, when in fact some report short to long term negative effects. In such cases they would probably have been better off staying away from it, at least in the particular occasion in which it has been made available to them.Also, let's consider this very important fact. Ayahuasca has been consumed for millennia in the Amazon basin. Children drink it, pregnant women drink it. Where are the reports of brain damage? We have a test group, so the evidence for any harmful effects of Ayahuasca would be easy to provide. Where is this information?
http://www.erowid.org/chemicals/ayahuasca/ayahuasca.shtml
and the experiences page:
http://www.erowid.org/experiences/subs/exp_Ayahuasca.shtml
Which is mostly positive, but not exclusively so.
My concern relates more to psychological damage than brain damage. Like other psychotropics, the context in which you take the drug plays an important role... Your mental and physical state, the people, the place are all part of the experience, obviously. I just wanted to mitigate your proposition that ayahuasca can only contribute to one's well-being and that no evidence to the contray exists, when in fact some report short to long term negative effects. In such cases they would probably have been better off staying away from it, at least in the particular occasion in which it has been made available to them.
there is a distinction between DMT and ayahuasca proper. Also, where are the health warnings on that page regarding DMT? Can't find anything. Search erowid for Ayahuasca.
Also, let's consider this very important fact. Ayahuasca has been consumed for millennia in the Amazon basin. Children drink it, pregnant women drink it. Where are the reports of brain damage? We have a test group, so the evidence for any harmful effects of Ayahuasca would be easy to provide. Where is this information?
Ayahuasca has won two landmark Supreme Court rulings here in the US. The DEA tried to argue it's harm at multiple levels of the court system, the court ruled that no sufficient evidence was provided by the DEA to support claims that it was harmful. The Supreme Court is far from a hippy organization. If there truly was evidence that it was harmful, do you not think the DEA would have presented it?
My concern relates more to psychological damage than brain damage. Like other psychotropics, the context in which you take the drug plays an important role... Your mental and physical state, the people, the place are all part of the experience, obviously. I just wanted to mitigate your proposition that ayahuasca can only contribute to one's well-being and that no evidence to the contray exists, when in fact some report short to long term negative effects. In such cases they would probably have been better off staying away from it, at least in the particular occasion in which it has been made available to them.
Such a strong reaction!And there's the minor fact that IT CAUSES FREAKING HALLUCINATIONS!!!!!
Ahem.![]()
I read the Fountainhead when I was 17 in one sitting and it changed my life. Seriously.Query: Does Pixy Mesa Ayn Rand much?
In Peru, children start drinking ayahuasca at the age of 6 years old! Can you imagine? I can't find the study now, but there was one I read where they tested two groups of children in Peru, those raised in the ayahuasca tradition, and those who did not. I forget the facts and figures, but what ever they were, they were in the positive category for the children raised on ayahuasca, they scored higher in all results.
When would I let my child take ayahuasca? When he felt he was ready and could explain to me his reasons for believing so in a way that made sense. I'm not planning on that anytime soon.
It's the only immortality we have, but it's not so bad.![]()
This is incredibly helpful in my understanding blobru! thank you so much. I'm going to digest it a bit.
Question (potentially from ignorance): The higher order of complexity arrives at it's own understanding of the pre-existing order which emerges from it's own complexity -which evolved from a previous order less complex. I get that. Are you saying that a complex system can only evaluate then it's lower order and not it's own?
If so, isn't that what I am suggesting as well or no? Isn't the higher ordering complexity implicit at the moment of it's conception of the lower?
Spend a little time with me here my friend - this is extraordinarily helpful to me - and the problem I am having is in framing my query. Not sure how well I have accomplished that. What you are saying seems to fit into a linear system - past to future, but not the other way around or all moments combined. What am I missing or what am I not considering fully?
also, do you need a roommate?![]()

Generating meaning that transcends our own mortality...We should all be so lucky.
Ok. I should point out here that Godel was a logician; so talking about Godel in terms of systems theory is speculation. It makes sense if the universe can be described as a computer (you had a link to a couple of physicists who argue that). If it can, then Godel (via Turing, who used his theorems to define computability) becomes relevant to discussions of how simple systems might create complexity in the physical world, not just the logical world. Because logic is about creating axiomatic systems; physics is about finding the one that fits reality.
According to Godel, a [sufficiently complex axiomatic] system generates many statements that are provable within the system; however, it also generates some statements that are true (evaluated outside the system), but not provable (within the system).
Now, as long as it's consistent (free of contradiction), one statement the system generates will say that it's consistent, but it won't be able to prove it (if it's inconsistent, otoh, it will be able to prove both that it's inconsistent and consistent). So, systems that tell the truth can't tell the truth (or lie) about themselves; whereas systems that lie can both tell the truth (admit they lie) and lie (swear they don't) about themselves! (Hardly seems fair, but that's logic). It's thanks to Godel's theorems we can see this paradox from outside the system, even distinguish true systems from false (inconsistent); we just can't evaluate it within the system (because to do so yields a contradiction).
It may be implicit in the axioms (rules for generating statements) of the system if it's sufficiently complex (can number its statements). Not sure if that's what you mean.
Umm, well... even as I may be stretching Godel's wings a little [a lot?] too far with the systems theory talk, you may be trying to fit him into too narrow a pigeonhole (re your idea of dialectical, transcendent truth). I think that's my fault for using similar language to engage the concepts and make the grand argument. So warning: they may sound similar, but they're not necessarily the same.
Maybe a cat.![]()
We don't know the long-term effects of taking yage, because there aren't enough Westerners regularly taking it to warrant a study or make it meaningful.
But there is a trend for recreational drugs previously presumed harmless to be later found to be not so good. See ketamine, ecstasy, stronger varieties of cannabis. Whether one would consider ayahuasca a recreational drug is debatable of course.
I've taken it and didn't consider it harmful. The western shaman was ok, I felt safe, but being subjected to his collection of Krishnamurti lectures whilst on it was a bit of a drag. However, I'm sure some people have gone a bit nuts with it, and prior history of significant psychiatric disturbance should definitely be considered exclusion criteria.
There can be a tendency for new-agers to consider that these traditional ethnic entheogens are super great panaceas for all human ailments.
And that they're being discrimated against by law-agencies to prevent Westerners healing themselves. IMO, this view rarely bears much scrutiny, and I've followed a few, as they say. Psychedelics are a double-edged sword. On balance I'd say they are as likely to **** you up as much as heal you.
Nick
Assuming the missing verb is "read":Query: Does Pixy Mesa Ayn Rand much?
I don't think it's fair to put ayahuasca in that category, not only because it is not a recreational drug (many people joke after an ayahuasca experience by stating that if anything, the experience was far from recreational), but because of the history. Other than marijuana, I am not aware of any drug (off the top of my head) that has such a vast history. (okay maybe ibogaine)
A materialist who reads Joseph Campbell, allows for a transcendent, and takes ayahuasca. See ol pal, I told you some materialists would call you a woo.
I don't think it's fair for you to categorize the healing aspect the way you did.
Caffeine? Nicotine? Opium? Coca? Betel?I don't think it's fair to put ayahuasca in that category, not only because it is not a recreational drug (many people joke after an ayahuasca experience by stating that if anything, the experience was far from recreational), but because of the history. Other than marijuana, I am not aware of any drug (off the top of my head) that has such a vast history.
Next you'll be telling us that the Emperor has no clothes!Something I feel I have been trying to point out to you pretty much throughout this thread is that the whole shamanic perspective is flawed. Believing yourself to be a self in need of healing is only one of the perspectives materialism affords. If you understand the true nature of the self, on a personal level, the truth about "healing" is laid bare. But because you can't grasp materialism, at least to the point where you can see the so-called "hard problem" for what it truly is, you can't grasp just what I'm talking about. With all your judgments and categorising, BF, you completely overlook what is right in front of you.
How about a gecko? (where is the appropriate smiley when you need it?)
Shaman wars do exist and it's a very perplexing element in that environment.