Book Review - Ishmael

Ishmael.jpg

Ishmael is a philosophical novel written by Daniel Quinn that was published in 1992. The story begins with a newspaper ad: "Teacher seeks pupil. Must have an earnest desire to save the world. Apply in person." The unnamed narrator decides to check it out and finds himself in a room with a telepathically-communicating gorilla named Ishmael. The basic plot of the book involves a Socratic dialogue between Ishmael and the narrator focusing on "how things came to be this way" for humankind.

The concepts covered during their conversation include an exploration of the mythological thinking that forms the underpinning of our modern civilization's consciousness and consequential actions, that humans are not the pinnacle of evolution (nor exempt from the laws of nature or the rule of the Gods), and how the story we have chosen to enact has contributed to our ethical understanding of the world and a potential societal and environmental collapse that lurks just beyond today's horizon. There is also a story woven throughout the main Socratic dialogue that features Ishmael's history as a member of a menagerie and adoption by a wealthy benefactor.

Some of the major themes in the book include the idea that the Book of Genesis from the Bible truly refers to the decimation of nomadic hunter-gatherer societies by agricultural societies, that eating the fruit from the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil convinced modern humans that they have the right to decide which species live and die, and that there is nothing fundamentally wrong with people—rather it is the story told for the last ten thousand years by Mother Culture that has been enacted that is harmful. This last aspect of the book really reminded me of Charles Eisentein's The More Beautiful World Our Hearts Know is Possible, which echoes and expands upon a lot of the points Quinn makes about that story.

Following Ishmael are two books penned by Quinn that form a loose trilogy: The Story of B, a 1996 spiritual sequel, and My Ishmael, a 1997 followup. So far I have only read the first book in this trilogy, but hope to make my way through the rest of it in due time.

I greatly enjoyed this novel. Early on, it reminded me of Sophie's World, a novel by Jostein Gaarder that was the center of discussion during an International Baccalaureate Theory of Knowledge course in high school. I suppose I drew that comparison due to the format of the book—a wise teacher with an understanding of philosophy uses the Socratic dialogue method to teach philosophical concepts to a pupil. The method involves the pupil working through the concepts "out loud" throughout the book's pages, which allows the reader to absorb them in a different manner than if they had been presented directly from the teacher. Another book I have read that uses the same style is Plato's The Republic. Although it isn't my favorite format, I think it may be growing on me because I really enjoyed Ishmael, and a major reason for that was the way the book allowed me to work through the concepts alongside the pupil. There is quite a bit to absorb from this novel, and it definitely warrants a re-read at some point.

Overall, I found Ishmael to be an excellent book and would recommend it to anyone frustrated with the current state of the world, an interest in human and evolutionary history and/or philosophy, and environmental activists that would like to see positive global changes come to fruition. With knowledge like this in our toolbox, I firmly believe humanity could rethink its position in nature's hierarchy, construct a new story for modern culture to enact, and reverse its course for the betterment of all life on Earth and beyond.

5/5 stars. 263 pages

Weekend Thoughts - 9.5.15

Image by mark6mauno, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by mark6mauno, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Happy Saturday y'all! Below, I have rounded up some things for you to think about this weekend:

1. An interesting take on AI in an article titled Will Artificial Intelligence get high? This is something I had never considered before, but it is an interesting concept to explore. I like this quote at the end: "So if there ever is an epic battle between the sentient machine and humanity, AI has already won; because we are starting to depend on it—and only because we designed it that way."

2. ATTN: 5 Charts That Prove the War on Drugs Is a Nightmare. Here are the main points:

  1. More federal prisoners are being given longer sentences than before the 1980s—average prison sentence for federal drug offenders rose 36% while sentences for all other offenders declined 3%.

  2. Sentences have become increasingly harsh for federal drug offenders—probation has virtually disappeared as a sanction for them.

  3. The war on drugs hasn't stopped people from using illicit substances—in fact, illegal drug use has increased.

  4. Federal law enforcement agencies have been targeting mostly low-level drug offenders—nearly half of those sentenced for drug crimes in 2009 were street-level dealers or below while suppliers and importers represented just 11%.

  5. Reduced sentences does not translate into higher recidivism rates.

I definitely suggest taking a look at the article and sharing it with your family, friends and open-minded colleagues.

3. In commemoration of today's holiday, Jury Rights Day, I wanted to share an article about how Denver is unconstitutionally harassing citizens that inform the public about the process of jury nullification. For those of you not in the know, jury nullification is a legal practice that gives the jury in a trial the right to acquit a defendant (even if the members of the jury may believe the defendant performed an illegal act), because they don't believe the defendant should be punished for it. This has proved to be a very powerful tactic in drug war reform, as juries can decide to simply not punish a defendant for a law that may have been broken, on the collective opinion that the law itself is unjust. The fact that Denver is attempting to prevent people from spreading information about jury nullification is upsetting and wrong. More people ought to know that they can have a huge impact when serving on juries, so please share the knowledge about this practice with your friends and family.

4. In a news story that reminded me of the stoner comedy Biodome, it seems that NASA has initiated a Mars isolation experiment on Earth by securing six people for one year inside a dome in Hawaii. The idea behind the experiment is to maintain a Mars-like environment with no animals and limited vegetation and keep the team in isolation to prepare them for living on Mars. The structure they are living in is 36 feet in diameter and 20 feet tall, and the crew is expected to eat foods like powdered cheese and canned tuna, only go outside if fully dressed in a space suit, and have extremely limited access to the Internet. I'm sure they won't be laughing nearly as much as Pauly Shore and Stephen Baldwin did in the movie.

5. A new study shows that long exposure to minute amounts (below the level permissible in U.S. water) of Monsanto's Roundup can lead to liver and kidney damage. The research looked at prolonged exposure to the herbicide and one of its key ingredients—glyphosate. Do these findings constitute more evidence that we should let our wildlife grow wilder?

6. This article on why drug tests are a massive scam really nails it. I've long been a ferocious opponent of the drug testing industry, and this article points out many of the reasons that I have come to that conclusion. Among some of the best tidbits from the article: the tests are easily beaten, they discriminate against drugs that are actually less harmful, they waste money for employers and provide a constant revenue stream for private corporations that administer them, and they don't deter drug use. In many cases employers end up losing their most qualified employees due to drug testing. Gifted and talented students are prevented from participating in extracurricular activities due to drug testing, and/or lose their access to federal aid for university. Did you know that 90% of positive drug tests are attributed to cannabis use, and that if you smoked a joint three Friday nights ago and remained completely sober since then, you would likely still test positive for cannabis use? Why is it acceptable for alcohol users to get completely blitzed in their free time with a drug that is far more harmful than cannabis, yet smokers are discriminated against through the unconstitutional practice of drug testing? If you have any doubts about the lack of merit concerning drug testing, I beg you to read this article.

That's all for this week's edition of Weekend Thoughts. Until next week, keep thinking wilder.

 

This Week in Psychedelics - 9.4.15

Image by Dahtamnay, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by Dahtamnay, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Cannabis

  • Cannabis Study: Indica And Sativa Are Basically The Same Thing At This Point (SFist)
  • Oregon wedding features marijuana bar, budtender (KGW)
  • Scientists Are Trying to stop GMOs on a New Front: Weed (ATTN:)
  • The Latest Craze In Winemaking: Marijuana-Infused Wine (Vinepair)
  • Weekend Weirdness: Drone Deliveries are Making Cannabis Rain from the Heavens (Leafly)
  • Value of On-Site Cannabis Dispensaries Is Missed in Federal Regulations (The Huffington Post)
  • Cannabis-industry women are blazing a path to equity (The Oregonian)
  • College Students Now Prefer Daily Smoke to Daily Toke, Research Says (Slate)
  • An Australian medical cannabis company just sold its first pot pills (Mashable)
  • Mom: Cannabis oil drastically improving daughter's life (11 Alive)
  • These Colorado Vets Are Suing Over Marijuana (ATTN:)
  • MassRoots applies to be first cannabis company listed on Nasdaq (MarketWatch)
  • Missouri Man Sentenced To Life in Prison Over Marijuana Is Set Free (The Huffington Post)
  • 5 Countries Where Marijuana is Cheapest and Most Expensive (ATTN:)
  • The Green Rush: Finding Tech Business Opportunities Within The Cannabis Sector (TechCrunch)
  • Legal Cannabis Creates Yet Another Spinoff Industry—Wall Street-Style Data Analytics (The Stranger)
  • Canadian Cannabis Firms Close Merger (24/7 Wall St.)
  • Denver Initiative Allowing Marijuana Use in More Settings Is Nixed (Reason)
  • Sports Pain Management Panel Presented At Cannabis World Congress In L.A. (The Weed Blog)
  • Do Alaska cannabis regulations allow for chefs to get in the game? (Alaska Dispatch News)
  • How taking cannabis harms fertility: Smoking pot more than once a week 'lowers sperm count by a third - and adding cocaine and ecstasy to the mix cuts it in half (Daily Mail)

LSD

MDMA/Ecstasy

Ayahuasca/DMT

Iboga/Ibogaine

  • Conference To Explore The Proven Addiction Busting Power Of Ibogaine (Reset.me)

Synthetic Cannabinoids/Psychoactive Research Chemicals

  • 2C-I & 2C-B: Research Chemicals Before it Was Cool (Burners.me)
  • Users Say the 'Smart Drug' Modafinil Is the New Adderall — Only Better (Vice News)
  • K2, a Potent Drug, Casts a Shadow Over an East Harlem Block (The New York Times)
  • MTV is Looking For A Few Good Flakka Addicts (Forbes)
  • There's No Such Thing as Synthetic Marijuana (ATTN:)
  • Inside the chemical underground: the truth about legal highs (Herald Scotland)
  • LSD In Newfoundland And Labrador Fake, Dangerous: Police (The Huffington Post)
  • Township program highlights dangers of synthetic LSD (Houston Chronicle)
  • Autopsy: Marijuana, synthetic psychedelic found in Christian Taylor (Fox 4 News)
  • RCMP Warning of NBome, Dangerous Drug Entering Province (VOCM)

Dissociatives

  • R-ketamine: a rapid-onset and sustained antidepressant without psychotomimetic side effects (Nature.com)

Opiates/Opioids

  • Young Hands in Mexico Feed Growing US Demand for Heroin (The New York Times)
  • Philistines brought opium to Israel during Iron Age (The Statesman)
  • Mexican opium production rises to meet heroin demand in US (The Independent)
  • The new face of heroin calls for compassion, but the old was a scourge (The Washington Post)
  • Could new synthetic opioid one day lead to home-brew heroin? (CNN)
  • AG Announces $325000 Agreement with Naloxone Manufacturer (Patch)
  • Opium Harvest More Profitable for Mexican Children than School (Breitbart News)
  • ACT drug overdose reversal program should be rolled out nation-wide, expert panel says (ABC)
  • San Francisco Police Officer Uses Naloxone Anti-Overdose Kit To Save Man's Life (CBS)
  • First Missouri Naloxone Program Up and Running (KBIA)
  • Law enforcement officers as medical first responders can save lives (EMS1.com)
  • Rand Paul: 'If you work all day long, you don't have time to do heroin' (CNN)
  • Can synthetic narcotics lead to heroin? (WESH)
  • Doctors reminded its okay to prescribe Naloxone for drug users (WTTV CBS4 Indy)
  • Heroin kills, says Effingham woman eight months sober (Effingham Daily News)
  • Illinois House Leaders Override Governor's Veto On Heroin Addiction Bill (NPR)
  • Naloxone can save someone (Blue Ridge Now)
  • Editorial: Does US pill crackdown help Mexican heroin sales? (Redding Record Searchlight)
  • UK sees huge rise in heroin and morphine-related deaths (The Guardian)
  • Pa: Police using heroin antidote have saved 289 lives across the state (LancasterOnline)
  • Baltimore just got a massive donation of overdose-reversing naloxone (Baltimore Business Journal)
  • Drug raids highlight geographic reach of heroin problem (WISH-TV)

Absinthe

Miscellaneous Psychedelics/Psychoactives/Drug Policy

  • Oliver Sacks: Psychedelic drugs 'taught me what the mind is capable of' (The Washington Post)
  • Psychedelic Society Revisited: On Reducing Valves, Reality Tunnels and the Question of Psychedelic Culture (Psychedelic Press UK)
  • Photographer captures drug users on cocaine, LSD, ketamine and MDMA (Metro)
  • Survey Data Highlight The Tenuous Relationship Between Drug Panics And Reality (Forbes)
  • Psychedelic Swirls Show Algae Bloom from Space (Yahoo! News)
  • Less than a month until Plant Consciousness in London (Psychedelic Press UK)
  • Miley Cyrus Ditches Pop for Lesbian Sex and Psychedelics on 'Dead Petz' (Out Magazine)

Disclaimer: "This Week in Psychedelics" does not censor or analyze the news links presented here. The purpose of this column is solely to catalogue how psychedelics (and other psychoactives) are presented by the mass media, which includes everything from the latest scientific research to misinformation.

Weekend Thoughts - 8.29.15

Image by Tina Sbrigato, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by Tina Sbrigato, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Happy Saturday y'all! Below, I have rounded up some things for you to think about this weekend:

1. Health information researcher, writer, and teacher Deane Alban wrote a brilliant article on Reset.me that covers the topic of how processed foods hijack the brain. Among the shocking tidbits included: the United States ranks last among developed countries in life expectancy and overall health and modern wheat is an addictive substance that produces a high similar to heroin, morphine or Oxycontin (in fact, administering naloxone, which is normally used during heroin overdoses, will eliminate the withdrawal process from wheat!). People don't often think of foods as drugs, but they certainly behave as drugs in the body, often producing undesirable psychoactive and physiological effects as well!

2. This article from Psychology Today suggests that mere exposure to conspiracy theories can make you less pro-social and less likely to accept established scientific principles. Dubbed the "Conspiracy Effect", the author argues that it isn't necessary to believe in the conspiracy theory; it is sufficient to have simply come in contact with the theory itself. According to his research, this can lead to a paranoid delusional worldview and a distrust of science. This part really got me: "...studies have shown that people who believe in conspiracy theories often espouse mutually contradictory explanations about the same event and are even eager to endorse entirely made-up conspiracy theories. In sum, it's not really about the actual evidence but rather about whether a theory is consistent with a larger conspiratorial worldview." At any rate, it's definitely worth assessing your current reality-tunnel, a concept that Timothy Leary and Robert Anton Wilson often used to describe individual worldviews.

3. I found an article titled It is Time We Discussed Abolishing the Police from Counter Punch to be interesting. Especially this part: "There are many people who think the police exist to fight crime. The reality is that the police exist to maintain the status-quo with the rich on top and everyone else fighting for scraps. During the uprising in Ferguson last year comedian Chris Rock commented, 'If poor people knew how rich rich people are, there would be riots in the streets.' The police represent the first line of defense between the rich and the rioters. Those involved in the Black Lives Matter movement—the latest challenge to the racist status-quo—learn quickly the true function of the police as they are shouted at and insulted by police in riot gear who hem in their marches, as they have their photos taken by police surveillance teams for further investigation, as they deal with the never ending stream of plain-clothes cops intimidating, monitoring, sowing seeds of distrust. Knowing the political role of the police perhaps it is time to stop hoping for reform and start imagining a world without the police." There are certainly legitimate situations where it seems like we would need official enforcement, such as a volatile hostage situation or a burglar attempting to escape on foot. But the ongoing trend of police groups infiltrating Left-leaning political reform movements certainly does seem like the law enforcement organization is positioned between the haves and the have-nots, as the author has described.

4. Cop Shoots and Kills Man Threatening Him With a Spoon—Although the cop had a body camera available, it was not turned on. Although it is upsetting that a man with a spoon was murdered by a cop, it does make sense though: cops prefer foods that don't require utensils, like donuts.

5. Some great videos on The Real History of Drugs have been making the rounds this week. The videos are short and take a look at some of the racist underpinnings of the drug war. The drugs featured include cocaine, MDMA, cannabis, opium, and LSD. I highly suggest giving them a watch—you may even learn something that you didn't know beforehand!

That's all for this week's edition of Weekend Thoughts. Until next week, keep thinking wilder.

This Week in Psychedelics - 8.28.15

Image by Dahtamnay, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by Dahtamnay, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Cannabis

  • Russia threatens to block Wikipedia over cannabis page (The Independent)
  • Top 50 Most Influential Marijuana Consumers (Marijuana Policy Project)
  • Are Workplace Cannabis Policies Lagging Behind The Times? (ATTN:)
  • Republican voters to feds: Butt out of marijuana reform (The Washington Post)
  • Where Can You Smoke Legal Pot? (Reason)
  • Pioneer Pot States Have Collected More Than $200 Million In Marijuana Taxes (The Huffington Post)
  • Marijuana Producers Gobble Up Warehouse Space in Denver Area (The Wall Street Journal)
  • Misinformed Cannabis Policies Prevent Access to Life-Saving Treatments (Huffington Post)
  • Memoninee tribal members vote yes on legalizing marijuana (TV Newsroom)
  • What Marijuana Does to Your Metabolism (ATTN:)
  • So what happens when teen pot smokers get older? Study finds new "surprising" answer (Rare)
  • How Legal Marijuana Is Working in Colorado (Reason)
  • Marijuana Does Not Affect Brain Volume, Study Finds (Time)
  • Black Lives Matter Organizers Call for Marijuana Decriminalization (Marijuana.com)
  • Arizona Campaign Could Earn More Than $40 Million for Schools (Marijuana Policy Project)
  • Natural pest control business gets boost from medical cannabis industry (Global News)
  • Chile Is About to Decriminalize Marijuana (Alternet)
  • Marijuana Legalization 2015: Is It Time For The Cannabis Industry To Grow Up And Go To College? (International Business Times)
  • El Cerrito: Cannabis industry figure says legalization inevitable (Contra Costa Times)
  • The Movers, Shakers and Bakers in the Cannabis Revolution (The Huffington Post)
  • Government issues damning response to 200,000-signature cannabis legalisation petition (The Independent)
  • Despite petition, government has no plans to legalise cannabis (The Guardian)
  • 'Focusing on medicinal cannabis is missing the point' (Stuff.co.nz)
  • Cannabis Journalism Class At DU Tackles A Trailblazing Trend (CBS Denver)
  • State panel considers cannabis business case (The Telegraph)
  • Why medical marijuana can still get you fired in Illinois (Chicago Tribune)
  • Marijuana-Legalization Campaign Outraged by Arizona Republic's Erroneous Op-Ed on Tax Revenue (Phoenix New Times)
  • BC parents seeking court order to treat severely ill baby with cannabis oil (CTV News)
  • Drug syndicates using profits from cannabis crops to import ice into Victoria (Herald Sun)
  • Group hears ideas for distributing cannabis in Georgia (WXIA-TV)
  • Would proposed rule contradict Alaska initiative on cannabis gifts? (Alaska Dispatch News)

LSD

  • Artist Took LSD And Spent 9 Hours Drawing Herself To Show The Effect Drugs Have On Brain (A Plus)
  • Stare Into a Person's Eyes and Weird Things Will Happen (Newser)
  • The 10 Most Insane LSD Movies of All Time (Papermag)
  • Know The Facts: Do You Really Know How Illegal Drugs Affect Your Health? (Medical Daily)

Psilocybin/Magic Mushrooms

  • Psilocybin Mushrooms - Flesh of the Gods (Eagle Shaman)
  • Psilocybin Helped Me Connect And Awaken To Life's Infinite Possibilities (Reset.me)

MDMA/Ecstasy

  • Steve Nash to produce film on legal ecstasy in 80s-era Dallas (Fox Sports)
  • Police warn about "unusually" pure ecstasy pills (Mixmag)
  • Why the Party Drug Molly Isn't What You Think It Is (NBC4 Washington)
  • L.A. Rave Canceled Following Suspected Drug Deaths (Los Angeles Weekly)

Ayahuasca/DMT

  • Loreen admits using a natural, South America drug (oikOTimes)

Peyote/Mescaline

  • ACLU: Peyote smokers, not cake bakers, deserve their freedom (OneNewsNow)

Iboga/Ibogaine

Salvia Divinorum

  • Salvia prohibition to come next February: Health Canada (Ottawa Sun)

Synthetic Cannabinoids/Psychoactive Research Chemicals

  • New Yorkers are taking dangerous drugs in nightclubs without even knowing it (Business Insider)
  • Users describe the effects of the drug some are calling 'weaponized marijuana' (Business Insider)
  • City Council wants to crack down on synthetic weed (New York Post)
  • Delhi Police so far unsuccessful in tracking party drug 'Meow Meow' (The Economic Times)

Dissociatives

  • Pediatric pain control in EMS — Is Ketamine the next big thing? (EMS1.com)

Opiates/Opioids

Absinthe

  • The Perfect Salad Has Absinthe, Cheese, and Watermelon (Munchies)

Miscellaneous Psychedelics/Psychoactives/Drug Policy

Disclaimer: "This Week in Psychedelics" does not censor or analyze the news links presented here. The purpose of this column is solely to catalogue how psychedelics (and other psychoactives) are presented by the mass media, which includes everything from the latest scientific research to misinformation.