Book Review - MindApps

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With an increasing amount of psychedelic research being published each and every year, those of us with an interest in consciousness have found ourselves needing a more specific framework and language that could be leveraged to analyze and discuss altered states of consciousness. MindApps: Multistate Theory and Tools for Mind Design, written by Dr. Thomas B. Roberts and published earlier this year, presents a so-called “multistate theory” as a potential framework to fill that need.

Although a lot of energy being pumped into psychedelic research is focused on finding ways to heal the sick, another equally viable application for these drugs is the betterment of well people and benefit optimization/maximization. After all, why should these powerful plants and chemicals be relegated to only those members of society who qualify as having a condition or disorder? In MindApps, Roberts explores this concept and many others in a unique, innovative, and intriguing manner.

In case you aren’t already familiar with the author, Thomas Roberts is professor emeritus at Northern Illinois University, where he’s been teaching the world’s first catalog-listed psychedelics course since 1981. He is a founding member of the Multidiscipinary Association for Psychedelic Studies, a former visiting scientist at Johns Hopkins, editor of Spiritual Growth with Entheogens, and the author of the books Psychedelic Horizons and The Psychedelic Future of the Mind.

After a brief foreword by James Fadiman (author of The Psychedelic Explorer’s Guide), Roberts opens the book with a description of his first psychedelic trip, which took place at Lake Tahoe in February 1970. As is the case for many psychonauts, Roberts’ first psychedelic experience had an enormous impact. While it wasn’t his first introduction to psychedelic ideas per se, it did send him further down the psychedelic path, which eventually led to the writing of this revolutionary book.

For those of you who don’t already know, the term “psychedelic” means “mind-manifesting,” and Roberts’ mind has graciously manifested several ideas that are introduced in the book: ideagens, mindapps, multistate theory, mind design, and mindapp artificial intelligences.

Roberts proposes the concept of the “singlestate fallacy,” which is the “hegemonic assumption that all worthwhile thinking takes place only in our ordinary, default mindbody state,” or what most people refer to as our normal waking state of consciousness. This fallacy has as its opposite a framework that Roberts has coined as “multistate theory,” a collection of many different kinds of “mindapps” into one single large, inclusive group.

You might be wondering, “What are mindapps?” Roberts explains them by using a clever analogy: “apps are to devices as mindapps are to minds.” In other words, you can “install” them on your mind for a variety of reasons and benefits. Mindapps include things like exercise routines, meditation, psychoactive plants and chemicals, yoga and the martial arts, sleep and sleep deprivation, chanting, dream work, breathing techniques, and many more like them.

MindApps explores an innovative concept dubbed “MindappAI,” which entails synthesizing new mindbody states and developing them to their highest potential. This will be a task for psychologists and other so-called “mind designers” to tackle, whipping up fresh recipes involving two, three, or even more mindapp ingredients, creating new mind-body states, relating their characteristics, and researching and perfecting them through trial and error.

Mindapps have a myriad of possible use cases—Roberts argues that they can be used to enhance the sciences and save the humanities, and that a newly emerging field of psychedelic philosophy will need to make use of them in order to reach it’s full potential.

The book closes with several points of justification for qualifying multistate theory as a new paradigm, and I have to say that I found Roberts’ argument to be quite persuasive.

But wait, there’s more! Three appendices follow the final chapter, exploring some very intriguing topics—a syllabus for a psychedelic class, how psychedelics can use the corporate system to spread around the globe, and the story of how Roberts created the LSD holiday known as Bicycle Day. These appendices are very thought-provoking and I’m interested to see what a world with widespread psychedelic college classes and psychedelic corporatism might end up looking like.

I found MindApps: Multistate Theory and Tools for Mind Design to be an excellent book. This is the first of Roberts’ books that I’ve read, and I was so impressed with it that I am looking forward to checking out his other works. If you have any interest in psychedelics, consciousness, mind design, or any of the other topics mentioned in this review then you will definitely like this book.

Click here to buy the book.

Disclaimer: Think Wilder is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to amazon.com. I may earn a small commission for my endorsement, recommendation, testimonial, and/or link to any products or services from this website.

In addition, the author provided a free copy of this book in exchange for an honest review. However, this is not a sponsored post—all thoughts and opinions expressed here are my own.

This Week in Psychoactives - 12.20.19

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CANNABIS

  • Marijuana’s Ten Biggest Victories Of 2019 (Forbes)

  • Illinois cannabis dispensaries open New Year’s Day for adult-use sales (Leafly)

  • New Jersey: Governor Signs Marijuana Expungement Bill into Law (NORML)

  • Italy legalizes 'cannabis light' (The Local)

  • Opioid Prescriptions Down In States With Legal Marijuana, Study Finds (Marijuana Moment)

  • New Jersey Lawmakers Pass Marijuana Referendum to Send to Voters in 2020 (TIME)

  • Kids Aren't Buying Weed From Legal Pot Shops, Study Finds (MERRY JANE)

  • Majority Of Americans Support Marijuana Legalization, Two More New Polls Show (Marijuana Moment)

  • State recalls cannabis vape cartridges tainted with deadly vitamin E acetate (Detroit Metro Times)

  • Survey shows boom in marijuana vaping among school kids (WHDH)

  • Regular Cannabis Use Linked to Changes in Heart Structure, Study Finds (MERRY JANE)

  • EPA Approves Pesticides For Hemp In Time For 2020 Growing Season (Marijuana Moment)

  • Zenabis recalls mislabeled CBD gelcaps that actually contained THC (Leafly)

  • Millions of Americans are driving under the influence of marijuana, CDC says (CNN)

  • Atlanta Will Seal Records for Minor Weed Offenses by February (MERRY JANE)

  • Oklahoma Activists Take First Step To Put Marijuana Legalization On State’s 2020 Ballot (Marijuana Moment)

  • Indiana resists legalization, but it’ll be a hot issue in 2020 state elections (Leafly)

  • Medical Marijuana Legalization Measure Officially Qualifies For South Dakota 2020 Ballot (Marijuana Moment)

  • Elizabeth Warren Files Marijuana Bills For Veterans And Immigrants (Marijuana Moment)

  • Patients rally in Ecuador for legal use of medical cannabis (San Francisco Chronicle)

LSD

  • Microdosing LSD for Alzheimer’s proves safe in early human trial (New Atlas)

  • Paul McCartney Disturbing Teen Drug Claim Revealed (Alternative Nation)

MAGIC MUSHROOMS

  • Andrew Yang Says He’s ‘Very Open’ To Legalizing Magic Mushrooms (The Inquisitr)

  • 'Magic mushroom' ingredient could be used to treat depression, study says (CNN)

  • E. coli Could Produce a Popular Psychedelic for Therapeutic Use (Scientific American)

  • Psilocybin: Four Important Takeaways from a Clinical Trial (Psychology Today)

  • 5 Fast Facts About Magic Mushroom Compounds (Psychedelic Science Review)

MDMA

  • MDMA Is Inches Away From Getting FDA Approval (MERRY JANE)

  • Why MDMA must be reclassified as a Schedule 2 drug (Health Europa)

  • MDMA-assisted couples therapy: How a psychedelic is enhancing intimacy and healing PTSD (The Conversation)

5-MEO-DMT

  • Psychedelic drug 5-MeO-DMT induces rapid changes in inflammatory markers (PsyPost)

  • Psychedelic Toad Makes People More Accepting and Less Depressed, Study Shows (MERRY JANE)

  • Is the Juice Worth the Squeeze: The Impact of Climate Change, Development, and Psychonauts on the Sonoran Desert Toad (Psychedelics Today)

SYNTHETIC CANNABINOIDS

  • More than a dozen children collapse after vaping fake cannabis oil laced with ‘spice’ (The Independent)

  • DEA approves synthetic marijuana for big pharma company against legalization (Stock Daily Dish)

NITROUS OXIDE

  • Doctors issue warning after 'whippits' misuse lands B.C. woman in hospital (CTV News)

KETAMINE

  • Ketamine-like drug for depression gets UK licence (The Guardian)

  • In 2019, a ketamine-based antidepressant raised hopes and concerns (ScienceNews)

OPIOIDS

  • We have a solution for the opioid epidemic. It’s dramatically underused. (Vox)

  • Purdue's Payments to the Sackler Family Grew Amid Scrutiny Over the Opioid Epidemic, Court Filing Shows (TIME)

  • Naloxone Dispensing Sees Major Increase In Last Two Years (Indiana Public Media)

METHAMPHETAMINE

CAFFEINE

  • New insights into anti-obesity mechanisms of caffeine (New Atlas)

NICOTINE

  • Congress Approves Raising Age to 21 for E-Cigarette and Tobacco Sales (The New York Times)

  • Vaping Damages Your Lungs, But Is Still Safer Than Smoking, a Long-Term Study Suggests (TIME)

  • WHO launches new report on global tobacco use trends (World Health Organization)

  • Instagram bans influencers from getting paid to promote vaping and guns (CNBC)

  • Plan to ban tobacco sales to anyone under 21 will hit the military too (Military Times)

  • Addictive nicotine in Juul nearly identical to a Marlboro: study (Reuters)

  • US permits sale of cigarettes with 95% less nicotine (The Seattle Times)

  • Why is Texas throwing high schoolers in jail just for vaping? (Washington Examiner)

BENZODIAZEPINES

ALCOHOL

  • Two standard alcoholic drinks a day no longer safe, health officials say (The Guardian)

  • The sale of alcohol at the University of South Carolina athletic events has been approved (ABC News 4)

  • My Friends Serve Underage Kids Alcohol. Should I Speak Up? (The New York Times)

NOOTROPICS

  • People Tell Us About Using ‘Smart Drugs’ to Max out Their Productivity (VICE)

KRATOM

KANNA

KAVA

  • Kava and anxiety: What science says about the popular plant supplement (Inverse)

  • Increased Import Of Kava For Personal Consumption Allowed Into Australia (Fiji Sun)

  • Welcome to Kava Culture: A Spreading Alternative to Reduce Anxiety (Filter)

DATURA

  • Vet on call: Watch out for datura plant, an animal killer (Daily Nation)

MISCELLANEOUS

  • Drug Prohibition Makes Illegal Drugs Cheaper and More Lethal, New Report Finds (MERRY JANE)

  • On Drug Decriminalization in the United States (Playboy)

  • The Vaping-Related Lung Disease Outbreak May Be Coming to an End (TIME)

  • More Americans Facing Murder Charges in Drug Deaths (Truthdig)

  • Call for pill tests as more than 50% of music festivalgoers say they take drugs (The Guardian)

  • How to Rethink Drug Dealing and Punishment (The Appeal)

  • Why Chronic Microdosing Might Break Your Heart (Chacruna)

  • “The state only detains, beats and kills us”: Testimonies from women who use drugs in Mexico (Talking Drugs)

  • How to Trip Sit (DoubleBlind)

  • Why Doctors Are Turning to Psychedelics to Treat Depression and Addiction (Men's Journal)

  • Could Micro-Dosing Psychedelics Lift Depression? (Psychology Today)

Think Wilder is reader-supported. If you enjoyed this week’s update, please consider helping out by becoming a patron, making a one-time donation, or sharing this post with a friend. Thank you for your support.

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

Image by Psychedelic Astronaut.

5-MeO-DMT Induces Rapid Changes in Inflammatory Markers

Eric W. Dolan, writing for PsyPost:

In addition to reducing symptoms of depression, the psychedelic drug 5-methoxy-N,N-dimethyltryptamine (5-MeO-DMT) appears to cause changes in inflammatory biomarkers, according to preliminary research published in the journal Psychopharmacology.

I’ve been hearing more and more about the potential anti-inflammatory indications of psychedelic drugs lately.


Marijuana’s Ten Biggest Victories of 2019

Tom Angell, writing for Forbes:

This year was a big one for marijuana.

From a first-ever congressional vote on federally legalizing cannabis to another large state ending its own prohibition law, 2019 saw the marijuana movement make advances on several fronts.

Here's a look back at cannabis’s ten biggest victories of the year.

The cannabis space experienced several revolutionary moments this year, and Angell hits on each and every one of the important highlights.


This Week in Psychoactives - 12.13.19

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CANNABIS

  • Marijuana Legalization Could Be Coming To These States In 2020 (Forbes)

  • Six Cases of Vaping Illness Linked to Legal Weed Vapes Sold in Massachusetts (MERRY JANE)

  • Officials list pot vape brands reported in US outbreak (AP News)

  • Heavy Metal Injury Caused by Vaping Confirmed in First Case Study (MERRY JANE)

  • No vapes for Newfoundland and Labrador either (Leafly)

  • MLB Officially Removes Marijuana From Banned Substances List For Baseball Players (Marijuana Moment)

  • People with Depression Are Twice as Likely to Use Pot, New Study Finds (MERRY JANE)

  • California Declares Pot Smoke and THC a Risk to Pregnant Women and Fetuses (TIME)

  • Weed Doesn’t Make Us Stupid, Yet Another Study Confirms (MERRY JANE)

  • Bees Like Big Hemp And They Cannot Lie, Study Shows (Marijuana Moment)

  • A Company Is Sending Cannabis and Coffee to Space to See if They Mutate (VICE)

  • Applying CBD Topically Can Help Jaw Pain and Facial Stress, Study Finds (MERRY JANE)

  • Study: Marijuana Retailers Not Selling to Underage Customers (NORML)

  • States prepare to purge tens of thousands of pot convictions (Los Angeles Times)

  • Trinidad And Tobago Lawmakers Approve Marijuana Decriminalization Bill (Marijuana Moment)

  • Cannabis and driving study casts doubt on zero-tolerance limits for THC (Global News)

  • Israel Is Finally Allowed to Export Medical Cannabis Overseas (MERRY JANE)

  • NHS approves CBD drugs for the first time (Leafly)

  • ‘You smoke weed?’ Teacher says her medical pot use led to harassment in suburban district (Chicago Sun Times)

MAGIC MUSHROOMS

  • New psilocybin trial data explores group psychedelic sessions (New Atlas)

  • Oregon Activists Begin Signature Gathering For 2020 Drug Decriminalization Initiative (Marijuana Moment)

  • Magic Mushroom Pill Is Being Developed to Treat Diabetes and Stop the Munchies (MERRY JANE)

  • New Psilocybin Microdosing Data: How Much is Too Much? (Psychedelic Science Review)

MDMA

  • Study: MDMA may have a surprising effect on our ability to learn (Inverse)

  • MDMA Could Be Tailored to Make It More Suitable for Treating Mental Illness (Scientific American)

SYNTHETIC CANNABINOIDS

  • Spice related hospital admissions in Sheffield fall (The Star)

NITROUS OXIDE

  • Netherlands set to ban recreational use of laughing gas (NL Times)

KETAMINE

  • Genetic Lead Suggests Ketamine May Benefit Autism, Tourette's and Schizophrenia (MedicalResearch.com)

OPIOIDS

  • In documents, US officials said almost everything they did to end opium farming in Afghanistan backfired (Stars and Stripes)

  • Home Depot faces Twitter backlash after blaming opioid crisis for recent rise in store thefts (USA Today)

  • Ten years ago, OxyContin sales dominated Philly’s pharmacies. How the powerful painkiller helped fuel a crisis. (The Philadelphia Inquirer)

METHAMPHETAMINE

  • A Dire Shortage of ADD Meds Is Pushing Some Patients to Street Meth (Filter)

CAFFEINE

  • Nestle Is Planning To Make Caffeinated Water As A Solution To Midday Drowsiness (Delish)

NICOTINE

  • Ban on vape sales in Massachusetts ends Wednesday — what happens next? (The Boston Globe)

  • The FDA Can Now Regulate Vapes and E-Cigs Like Tobacco, Court Rules (MERRY JANE)

  • Pace of Flavor Bans Accelerated in 2019 (CSP Daily News)

  • Palo Alto: Council unanimously supports banning e-cigarettes, flavored tobacco (The Mercury News)

  • Bill to raise minimum age to buy tobacco products in Kentucky to 21 pre-filed (WKRC)

ALCOHOL

  • Yet More Research Links Even Light Drinking to a Higher Cancer Risk (Gizmodo)

  • Study debunks the myth that an imposed floor on alcohol prices would punish the poor (Phys.org)

GHB

  • What is GHB?: Dangerous party drug linked to multiple overdose deaths (9News)

NOOTROPICS

KRATOM

  • Kratom leaves to be left out of new narcotics list in Thailand (AsiaOne)

MISCELLANEOUS

  • Everyone Should Understand the Potential Heart Risk of Psychedelics (The Psychedelic Scientist)

  • Silicon Valley’s psychedelic wonder drug is almost here (Fast Company)

  • This Was The Decade Drug Overdoses Killed Nearly Half A Million Americans (BuzzFeed News)

  • Study: Prior Authorization Requirement for Addiction Meds Is Killing NY Drug Users (Filter)

  • Bill would require drug screenings for children at their annual physical (WKBW)

  • ACT pushes for national pill-testing after study finds it encouraged people to ditch unsafe drugs (The Guardian)

  • Pete Buttigieg Backs Supervised Injection Facilities For Illegal Drugs (Marijuana Moment)

  • 'Drugs Without the Trip' Might Be Peak Silicon Valley (VICE)

  • Ten Must-Experience Events For The Cannabis & Psychedelic Community In 2020 (Forbes)

Think Wilder is reader-supported. If you enjoyed this week’s update, please consider helping out by becoming a patron, making a one-time donation, or sharing this post with a friend. Thank you for your support.

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

Image by Psychedelic Astronaut.