clearlyone
Rising Star
sorry... deleting duplicate post.
gibran2 said:Most people assume that everyday experience is real. When discussing reality in a practical rather than metaphysical sense, I agree. So what is it about our everyday experiences that lead us to believe they are real?
I think this is a much more interesting question than questions concerning whether or not the realms visited via psychedelic experiences are real.
So, what is it about everyday subjective experience that leads you to believe it is real?
Mr_DMT said:There is no point in trying to find out the truth!
JamesLove said:While I think clouds is doing the best job in trying to articulate what I am getting at, I am going to have to be the one that points out an inconsistency of his.
"hallucination is a perception in the absence of a stimulus"
Then he says datura and other alkaloids in affiliation with hallucination. Obviously datura is a stimulus.
Perhaps his schizophrenic analog would fit best into his definition. However, there seem to be a lot of people who use the term hallucination in conjunction, with say, LSD.
I am probably getting a bit picky here on focusing on his definition rather than his main point. But it is better to have a solid base to work with.
clouds said:JamesLove said:While I think clouds is doing the best job in trying to articulate what I am getting at, I am going to have to be the one that points out an inconsistency of his.
"hallucination is a perception in the absence of a stimulus"
Then he says datura and other alkaloids in affiliation with hallucination. Obviously datura is a stimulus.
Perhaps his schizophrenic analog would fit best into his definition. However, there seem to be a lot of people who use the term hallucination in conjunction, with say, LSD.
I am probably getting a bit picky here on focusing on his definition rather than his main point. But it is better to have a solid base to work with.
You are right. But, technically speaking, there cannot really be an absence of a stimulus in that context. Not even in schizophrenia. Schizophrenics are having a *sigh* neurotransmitter stimulus (Dopamine and Serotonin) [mostly dopamine]. That means that, both Datura hallucinations and schizophrenic hallucinations are caused by abnormal neural chemistry. That is called "etiology", not "stimulus". Be that the alteration of regular acetylcholine function (Datura) or dopaminergic receptors (Schizophrenia).
What the definition of "stimulus" in hallucination (in the context of comparison with illusions and visions) is trying to point out is that there is not a distortion of a shape, but rather a creation of an imaginary shape. On the other hand, the illusion is the distortion of a shape.
Just wanted to make clear the differentiation between etiology and stimulus in a hallucination. Datura is not a stimulus.
On the other hand, if John has fever and thinks a tree is a person, he is having a fever-induced illusion.
The etiology? The fever.
The stimulus? The tree.
The distortion? The shape.
The illusion? The person.
open'nheart said:the term hallucination carries a tone that implies "not real". imaginary carries a tone that implies it is gernerated internally. which would make ones mind the stimulus.
open'nheart said:edit: my post was based on a misunderstanding. but i think there is somthing to be said about the difference between brain and mind.

corpus callosum said:If post no.50 is in response to post no.49 then I apologise:?
Without undergoing some sort of breakthrough experience, whether Aya, mushrooms, vaporized DMT or salvia, the problems with your ontological assumptions just will not appear to you.JamesLove said:Anyway, ultimately, I cannot prove we are not brains in a vat. So if people are going to bring that out, it is going to be difficult to solve to answer the DMT riddle.
JamesLove said:"So what is it about our everyday experiences that lead us to believe they are real?
I think this is a much more interesting question than questions concerning whether or not the realms visited via psychedelic experiences are real."
That quote is mine. And I didn’t ask the question to suggest that our consensus reality isn’t real, but rather to stimulate thoughts concerning how we decide what is real and what isn’t. I also didn’t ask it to suggest that DMT experiences are real or not.JamesLove said:"So what is it about our everyday experiences that lead us to believe they are real?
I think this is a much more interesting question than questions concerning whether or not the realms visited via psychedelic experiences are real."
I had a funny feeling 48 hours ago b4 I made my 1st post on here it was going to come down to this. Somebody was going to bring out the atomic bomb and drop that one and pretty much kill any sort of attempt to question whether or not DMT is in one's head or if it leads to some sort of external reality.
Of course if you want to "go backwards", it is pretty much impossible to counter that argument. It would also lead to pretty much any discussion about any topic rendered mute.
I also do understand the validity of your point. Because if my "baseline" is in fact a mirage itself, any blocks I build on it will be made of sand. If our reality is BS, then perhaps the DMT vissions/hallucinations/illusions/whatever are in fact the real deal.
Somebody else made a schizophrenic point which I have often thought about as well. What if the schizophrenic people actually had advanced senses? My friend's brother sees aliens from another planet walking among us. What if he really could see this?
I saw something in Discovery (or something like that) a few months ago where some guy could "see" numbers and he could do crazy calculations in his head. Synthesia or something like that it was called. Is he crazy? Obviously not because the dude can PRODUCE when it comes to crunching numbers. It is super rare though, like maybe a dozen people or whatever in the world. I think it could be accident related from what I remember.
Anyway, ultimately, I cannot prove we are not brains in a vat. So if people are going to bring that out, it is going to be difficult to solve to answer the DMT riddle.

Definitions aren’t the point.clouds said:Even if this world / space is not "real", an illusion is still an illusion, a vision is still a vision and a hallucination is still a hallucination.
These visual phenomena are defined by a series of effects in the perception of a mind. Not by the existential validity of the ambient.