Dave, 

 

You have indulged me as much as any other human on earth, and so it distresses 
me to hear you say that I would dismiss experiences in extremis out of hand.  
Let it be the case that Archimedes solved the king’s crown problem while 
lolling in a hot bath.  Let it be the case that Kerkule solved the benzene 
problem while lolling in a hot bath.  Let it be the case that Watson and Crick 
were lolling in a hot bath (oh those Brits!) when they discovered the double 
helix.  I would say that, there was SOME grounds (however weak) to suspect that 
hot bathing led to scientific insight.  In fact, it is one of the great 
advantages of Peirce’s position that weak inductions and abduction have the 
same logical status as strong ones and worthy always to be entertained.  I 
DON’T believe, as I think many do, that extreme experiences have any special 
claim on wisdom.  Dying declarations are attended to NOT because a dying  
person necessarily has great wisdom, but because we are unlikely to hear from 
that person again in the future.   

 

I suppose you might ague that the reason to go to extreme states is the same as 
the reason to go the Antarctic or the moon.  There MIGHT be something 
interesting there, but until you have been there, you will never know, for 
sure, will you?  The crunch comes when you are deciding on how much resources 
to devote to the exploration of extremes, given that those resources will be 
subtracted from those devoted to the stuff such known realities as climate 
change.  If it’s a choice of exploring Mars or exploring climate change, you 
know where my  vote would go. 

 

But that has no bearing on whether I would encourage or discourage anyone to go 
with their individual curiosity.  One of our number here is interested in 
exploring a variant of ESP.  I say let’s go!  

 

 

Nick 

 

Nicholas Thompson

Emeritus Professor of Ethology and Psychology

Clark University

 <mailto:[email protected]> [email protected]

 <https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/> 
https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/

 

 

From: Friam <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Prof David West
Sent: Sunday, February 23, 2020 4:15 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] A longer response to Dave's question

 

Eric, Nick, et.al.,

 

"Well, [Dave] here's another nice mess you've gotten me into."

 

My issue/problem/quest — I have a body of "stuff" and I want to determine if 
there are ways to think about it in a "useful" manner.

 

The "stuff" appears pretty mundane: assertions, observations, conjectures, 
metaphors and models, even theory. The problem is provenance: directly or 
indirectly from, loosely defined, altered states of consciousness. Examples of 
indirect would be reports from enlightened mystics or dream experiences (ala 
Kekule or Jung). Direct would be psychedelics.

 

Nick might have me dismiss the entire corpus; stating it has the same value as 
the latest Marvel universe movie.

 

I disagree. But, by what means, what method, can "fact" even "truth" be 
discovered and shared. Peirce offers no real assistance. Nor does any other 
school of epistemology I have encountered.

 

Is there an approach to thinking about my "stuff" that would, at minimum, 
enable more consistent discovery of examples like Eric cites in #8 of his list. 
Would it not be useful to be able to quickly identify and focus on insights 
with the potential to "hold up pretty well."

 

Eric states there are reasons to believe (in #7) that altered states are less 
reliable, but I would argue, in some cases, the exact opposite. Especially with 
regard the ability to perceive stimuli of which perceive but never consciously 
"register" because our brain has filtered them out as being irrelevant. 
Mescaline can be an instrument as revealing as a microscope or a telescope and 
it would be worthwhile, I think, to learn how to make effective use of it.

 

The crux of my dilemma remains, I think there is gold in them thar hills, but 
don't have a means of mining and refining.

 

davew

 

 

On Sat, Feb 22, 2020, at 10:41 PM, Eric Charles wrote:

If we are willing to go back and forth a bit between being philosophers and 
psychologists for a moment, there are far more interesting things to talk about 
regarding "altered states".... here are the some of the issues: 

 

1.      When someone claims to be responding to something, we should believe 
they are responding to something. 
2.      People generally suck at stating what they are responding to, even in 
highly mundane situations. 
3.      It is worth studying any types of experiences that lead fairly reliably 
to other certain future experiences, because in such situations one has a 
chance discover what it is people are actually responding to. 
4.      As we are complex dynamic systems, human development is affected by all 
sorts of things in non-obvious ways.
5.      There is no a priori reason to discount the insights one experiences 
under "altered states of consciousness", but also no a priori reason to give 
them special credence. 
6.      The degree to which a someone has a sense of certainty about something 
is not generally a reliable measure of how likely that thing is to hold up in 
the long run, unless many, many, many other assumptions are met.
7.      There is likely good reason to think that altered states of 
consciousness are less reliable in general than "regular" states.
8.      There are many examples that suggest certain 
insights-that-turn-out-to-hold-up-pretty-well, which were first experienced 
when under an altered state, were unlikely to have been experienced without 
that altered state.  

Is that the type of stuff we were are poking at?

 

 

-----------

Eric P. Charles, Ph.D.

Department of Justice - Personnel Psychologist

American University - Adjunct Instructor

 

 

 

 

On Sat, Feb 22, 2020 at 2:30 PM Frank Wimberly <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> > wrote:

Agreed

 

---

Frank C. Wimberly, PhD

505 670-9918

Santa Fe, NM

 

On Sat, Feb 22, 2020, 12:25 PM Marcus Daniels <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> > wrote:

Frank writes:

 

<It would constitute proof that Marcus exists if he were to admit that I was 
correct in our years-ago argument when I said that gender defines an 
equivalence relation on the set of people.>

 

Definitions.  Notation.  Argh, who cares.  Where’s that neuralyzer, let me get 
rid of them.

(That should at least be evidence of continuity!)

 

Marcus

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