Showing posts with label Sasha Shulgin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sasha Shulgin. Show all posts

Thursday, November 18, 2010

Sasha Shuglin needs our Support!

Shulgin
This morning Alexander “Sasha” Shulgin, Worlds Greatest Pharmacologist & Research Chemist who created hundreds of psychoactive compounds has suffered from a stoke in route to the hospital for a scheduled test on a foot ulcer that was not healing and may need to be amputated. Sasha & Ann have been seriously struggling recently and they can certainly use our love & support in any way possible. Sasha and Ann are two great minds & souls who have done many wonderful things for our community.

If possible, please send a donation of any size directly to his family to help during these difficult times.

Their Paypal address is annandsashashulgin@comcast.net 

Mailing address:
Sasha Shulgin
Transform Press
PO Box 13675
Berkeley CA 94712.

I am sending a gift to them tomorrow. If you wish to sign the card, please leave a comment below and I will include it with the delivery.

You can also make a charitable tax deductable donation to help preserve his life's work via EROWID.

The world loves more because of you Sasha! Wishing you a peaceful and speedy recovery.

All Love & Light,
E

Sunday, February 28, 2010

MIT: Expand Your Mind

Expand Your Mind: Getting a Grasp on Consciousness
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Running Time: 1:44:28

Featuring:
Alexander "Sasha" Shulgin
Christof Koch
Patricia Churchland
Ira Flatow

About the Lecture

At some point, these panelists suggest, the issue of defining consciousness may just disappear. Suggests Christof Koch: “Let’s treat consciousness as an empirical problem to be tackled by the biological sciences.”

Koch makes distinctions between different kinds of consciousness: sleep and its varied stages; awareness of sounds, sights and smells; levels of arousal. All these different states are properties “of complex adaptive networks with massive feedback shaped by natural selection.” And there are many behaviors that occur without consciousness. “When we talk, we don’t know what we’re going to say,” says Koch. His research has focused on finding “neural correlates of consciousness.” In one experiment with patients whose brains were implanted with 100 electrodes, he flashed pictures of Jennifer Aniston and the Sydney Opera House. While the patients could not remember what they’d seen, neurons responded selectively to these images. Studies like this, with even more sensitive tools, may some day help develop an information-based theory of consciousness, Koch says.

Mental phenomena are nothing but phenomena of the physical brain, says Patricia Churchland. It’s “an illusion of the brain” to think that we have a “nonphysical soul that does our feeling.” But how the brain creates constructs of itself and things in the world remains a major puzzle. For instance, how does a brain “habitually represent goals, plans and projects -- things that don’t yet exist?” And what about the huge amount of spontaneous activity in the brain that occurs while we’re resting? We don’t understand how the “organization of a motor response is achieved,” nor how these responses are integrated across sensory systems together with memory. Churchland anticipates a fundamental shift in looking at the brain that will merge philosophical and neurobiological issues.

In his day, Alexander Shulgin explored consciousness through “the art of chemistry.” He synthesized a version of mescaline and invented other psychedelic drugs, experimenting on himself, before the era of government and university regulations. “Each material had to be learned, as a new meeting…. The beauty of the final results, finding out what the effects were, was that you couldn’t be wrong.” If he reported visual enhancements, and recall of memories, his data was “always a winner,” because it was mostly a matter of subjective experience. Shulgin rues the laws and propaganda against psychedelic drugs, because he believes these drugs would serve as a useful “probe to look at the function of mind.”

Link: http://mitworld.mit.edu/video/342

Monday, October 6, 2008

Horizons 2008: Perspectives on Psychedelics

The second annual Horizons forum is for learning about psychedelics. It seeks to open a fresh dialogue about psychedelics and challenges society to rethink their role in history, culture, medicine, spirituality and art. Featuring a small group of dedicated researchers and activists who have orchestrated a renaissance in psychedelic research that is re-shaping the public's understanding of these unique substances. Horizons brings together some of the brightest minds and boldest voices in this movement to share their research, insights and dreams for the future.

Streaming Audio 64kbps: Horizons 2008

To download, right click on any file size and save as:

Download the complete conference *
MP3 ZIP 64Kbps [165 MB]
MP3 ZIP VBR Mp3 [238 MB]
*The Shulgins talk must be downloaded separately.

Individual Audio Files 160Kbps MP3 64Kbps MP3 VBR MP3
Allan Hunt Badiner 55 MB 22 MB 31 MB
Dan Merkur 54 MB 22 MB 31 MB
Daniel Pinchbeck 52 MB 21 MB 30 MB
David Nichols 56 MB 22 MB 32 MB
Dmitri Mugianis 33 MB 13 MB 19 MB
Rick Doblin 57 MB 23 MB 33 MB
Robert Forte 45 MB 18 MB 26 MB
Roland Griffiths 61 MB 24 MB 36 MB
*The Shulgins N/A N/A 50 MB

Horizons

Friday, September 26, 2008

2008 Burning Man: Entheon Village Lecture Series

 *NOTE: These files are now available again. Download them while you can.

Here are some mp3 recordings from Entheon Village's Lecture Series held at the 2008 Burning Man! The links are listed below for your convenience and are hosted by CSSDP. Should you have any of the other talks, please email me or post the links in to the comments of this entry. Last but not least, if you find these talks of value please donate to CSSDP or MAPS.

Sasha and Ann Shulgin
MAPS/Shulgin_Sascha_Ann.mp3

Rick Doblin:
entheon08/doblin_1.mp3
entheon08doblin_2.mp3

Sameet Kumar, Matt Johnson, Alicia Danforth:
entheon08/panel1_1.mp3
entheon08/panel1_3.mp3

Troy Dayton, Randolph Hencken, and Rick Doblin:
entheon08/panel2_1.mp3
pinchbeck_1.mp3

Daniel Pinchbeck:
entheon08/pinchbeck_2.mp3
entheon08/pinchbeck_3.mp3

Charles Shaw:
entheon08/shaw_1.mp3
entheon08/shaw_2.mp3

www.GaianBotanicals.com

Tuesday, May 13, 2008

The Shulgins explores the Surreality of Inner Space, 1 drug at a time

Self-Experimenters: Psychedelic Chemist Explores the Surreality of Inner Space, One Drug at a Time.

From: Scientific America

Alexander Shulgin endured a government crackdown and hallucinations of his bones melting in pursuit of new mind-bending compounds

By David Biello

This is the final story the series of eight stories in our feature on self-experimenters.

Alexander Shulgin is the world's foremost "psychonaut." The 82-year-old chemist has not only created more of the 300 known consciousness-altering (or psychoactive) compounds than anyone living or dead, he has, by his own account, sampled somewhere between 200 and 250 of them himself—most of them cooked up in the musty lab behind his home in the hills east of Berkeley, Calif., where he has shared many a chemical voyage with his wife of 26 years, Ann.

"I take them myself because I am interested in their activity in the human mind. How would you test that in a rat or mouse?" says Shulgin, known to friends as Sasha.

He has paid the price for his avocation. Some of his creations have induced uncontrollable vomiting, paralysis and the feeling that his bones were melting, among other terrors. And though some believe Shulgin has opened the doors of perception to a new class of potentially therapeutic mind-altering compounds, others argue that he bears responsibility for the damage that ongoing abuse of such now-illicit substances can cause.

As a student at the University of California, Berkeley, in the 1950s, Shulgin's gateway drug was mescaline, a naturally occurring psychedelic found in peyote and other groovy cacti. "It introduced me to new colors which I had never seen before," Shulgin says. "It allowed me to interpret whatever I was looking at with an entirely new vocabulary…. And yet, what a simple structure!"

In the 1960s, while working as a biochemist at The Dow Chemical Co. in San Francisco, he couldn't resist tinkering with the potent mescaline molecule. He synthesized entirely new compounds that retained similar, trippy qualities. Some variations were less potent, but others were even more powerful or imparted their own unique twist.

Shulgin, who left Dow in 1965 to consult for the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) among other pursuits, offered the best of his new chemical darlings to Ann, his second wife; the most promising of these were passed along to a close circle of 10 friends until the mid-1990s, when the DEA, no longer paying for his services, raided his lab and revoked his license to work with illegal drugs.

His personal favorite, which he describes as "extraordinarily comfortable and quite erotic," is known simply as 2C-B for its chemical makeup.

One by one, Shulgin has seen many of the compounds he invented or experimented with become illegal in the U.S., including some that have never been synthesized by anyone and some that he thought might prove therapeutic, such as MDMA (3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine), better known as ecstasy. "I was very sad to see MDMA achieve the status of a Schedule 1 drug," a designation that prohibits its manufacture or use in the U.S., he says. "I felt that it would inhibit research into its medical value and that's the way it's turned out."

Some researchers agree that the government's response to psychoactive drugs has deprived them of a unique window into human consciousness. After all, rodents will happily ingest most intoxicants and narcotics —from marijuana to heroin—but not the headier psychedelics.

"Peculiarly, not only did we make them illegal, but we backed away from them scientifically," says neuroscientist Roland Griffiths of Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, one of the researchers who is restarting basic research into psychedelics. His lab has shown that psilocybin, the active ingredient in the variety of fungi known as magic mushrooms, can bring on lasting feelings of well-being. This may indicate that it could be harnessed to help clinically depressed or addicted patients.

Shulgin, who continues to study cacti for new chemical routes to altered states, predicts that by the year 2060, the number of different known psychedelics will have grown from 300 to 2,000. He intends to discover—and perhaps sample—as many of them as he can. "It is like opening a door to a hallway," he says, "that has unopened doors for its entire length, and behind every door is a world with which you are totally unfamiliar."

Ann & Sasha Shulgin on the Psychedelic Salon

Tuesday, April 15, 2008

Please send Love, Light and Blessings to Sasha Shulgin!

Sasha's surgery to replace his aortic heart valve was a success. He is now recovering at home. Please send him lots of love and healing energy. This past year has been a difficult road for him and Ann. Lets pray that he quickly returns him back to his usual, extraordinary self!

We love you Sasha!

Thanks for bringing us all soooo much love!

Be well soon!