Dictionary Definition
hallucinogen n : a psychoactive drug that induces
hallucinations or altered sensory experiences [syn: hallucinogenic
drug, psychedelic
drug, psychodelic
drug]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- Any substance tending to induce hallucination
Derived terms
Extensive Definition
The general group of pharmacological agents
commonly known as hallucinogens can be divided into three broad
categories: psychedelics, dissociatives, and deliriants. These classes of
psychoactive
drugs have in common that they can cause subjective changes in
perception, thought, emotion and consciousness. Unlike
other psychoactive
drugs, such as stimulants and opioids, the hallucinogens do
not merely amplify familiar states of mind, but rather induce
experiences that are qualitatively different from those of ordinary
consciousness. These experiences are often compared to non-ordinary
forms of consciousness such as trance, meditation, conversion
experiences, and dreams.
One thing that most of these drugs do not do,
despite the ingrained usage of the term hallucinogen, is to cause
hallucination. Hallucinations,
strictly speaking, are perceptions that have no basis in reality,
but that appear entirely realistic. A typical "hallucination"
induced by a psychedelic drug is more accurately described as a
modification of regular perception, and the subject is usually
quite aware of the illusory and personal nature of their
perceptions. Deleriants, such as diphenhydramine and
atropine, may cause
hallucinations in the proper sense.
Psychedelics, dissociatives, and deliriants have
a long history of use within medicinal and religious traditions
around the world. They are used in shamanic forms of ritual
healing and divination, in initiation
rites, and in the religious rituals of syncretistic movements such
as União
do Vegetal, Santo Daime,
and the Native
American Church. When used in religious practice, psychedelic
drugs, as well as other substances like tobacco, are referred to as
entheogens.
Starting in the mid-20th century, psychedelic
drugs have been the object of extensive attention in the Western
world. They have been and are being explored as potential
therapeutic agents in treating depression,
Post-traumatic Stress Disorder,
Obsessive-compulsive Disorder, alcoholism, opioid
addiction, cluster
headaches, and other ailments. Early military research focused
on their use as incapacitating agents. Intelligence agencies tested
these drugs in the hope that they would provide an effective means
of interrogation,
with little success.
Yet the most popular, and at the same time most
stigmatized, use of psychedelics in Western culture has been
associated with the search for direct religious
experience, enhanced creativity, personal
development, and "mind expansion". The use of psychedelic drugs was
a major element of the 1960s counterculture, where it
became associated with various social movements and a general
atmosphere of rebellion and strife between generations.
Despite prohibition, the recreational, spiritual,
and medical use of psychedelics continues today. Organizations,
such as
Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies and the
Heffter
Research Institute, have arisen to foster research into their
safety and efficacy, while advocacy groups such as the
Center for Cognitive Liberty and Ethics push for their
legalization. In addition to this activity by proponents,
hallucinogens are also widely used in basic science research to
understand the mind and brain. In some cases, this includes
research in humans, like that conducted by Roland Griffiths and
colleagues .
Psychedelics
The word psychedelic (From Ancient
Greek ψυχή (psychê) mind, soul + δηλος (dêlos) manifest,
visible + -ic) was coined to express the idea of a drug that makes
manifest a hidden but real aspect of the mind. It is commonly
applied to any drug with perception-altering effects such as
LSD, psilocybin, DMT,
2C-B, mescaline, and
DOM as well as a panoply of other tryptamines, phenethylamines and yet
more exotic chemicals, all of which appear to act mainly on the
5-HT2A
receptor. Common herbal sources of psychedelics include
psilocybe mushrooms,
various ayahuasca
preparations, peyote,
San Pedro
cactus, and the seeds of morning
glory, and Hawaiian
baby woodrose.
Much debate exists not only about the nature and
causes, but even about the very description of the effects of
psychedelic drugs. One prominent tradition involves the "reducing
valve" concept, first articulated in Aldous
Huxley's book The
Doors of Perception. In this view, the drugs disable the
brain's "filtering" ability to selectively prevent certain
perceptions, emotions, memories and thoughts from ever reaching the
conscious mind. This effect has been described as mind expanding,
or consciousness expanding, for the drug "expands" the realm of
experience available to conscious awareness. A large number of
drugs, such as cannabis and
Ecstasy,
produce effects that could be classified as psychedelic (especially
at higher doses) but are not considered to be strictly psychedelic
drugs due to other effects that may be more (or equally) prevalent,
such as sedation or
disinhibition. In
addition, drugs such as cannabis do not affect serotonin receptors like
"true" psychedelics.
Psychedelic effects can vary depending on the
precise drug, dosage, set, and setting. "Trips" range between the
short but intense effects of intravenous DMT to
the protracted ibogaine
experience, which can last for days. Appropriate dosage ranges from
extremely low (LSD) to rather high
(mescaline). Some
drugs, like the auditory hallucinogen DIPT, act specifically
to distort a single sense, and others have more diffuse effects on
cognition generally. Some are more conducive to solitary
experiences, while others are positively empathogenic.
Many psychedelics (LSD, psilocybin, mescaline and numerous others)
are non-toxic, making it difficult to overdose on these
compounds.
Dissociatives
Dissociatives are drugs that reduce (or block) signals to the conscious mind from other parts of the brain, typically (but not necessarily, or limited to) the physical senses. Such a state of sensory deprivation can facilitate self exploration, hallucinations, and dreamlike states of mind which may resemble some psychedelic mindstates. Essentially similar states of mind can be reached via contrasting paths—psychedelic or dissociative. That said, the entire experience, risks and benefits are markedly different.The primary dissociatives are similar in action
to PCP (angel
dust) and include ketamine (an anaesthetic), and
dextromethorphan (an
active ingredient in many cough syrups). Also included are nitrous
oxide, and muscimol
from the Amanita
muscaria (fly agaric) mushroom.
Many dissociatives also have CNS
depressant effects,
thereby carrying similar risks as opioids to slowing breathing or
heart rate to levels resulting in death (when using very high
doses). This does not appear to be true in other cases; and the
principal risk of nitrous oxide seems to be due to oxygen
deprivation. Injury from falling is also a danger, as nitrous
oxide may cause sudden loss of consciousness, an effect of oxygen
deprivation. Long term use of dissociative anaesthetics such as PCP
and ketamine (and possibly dextromethorphan) have been suspected to
cause Olney's
lesions (N-methyl-d-aspartate antagonist
neurotoxicity),
though these lesions have never been demonstrated in primates to
date.
Deliriants
The deliriants (or anticholinergics) are a special class of dissociative which are antagonists for the acetylcholine receptors (unlike muscarine and nicotine which are agonists of these receptors). Deliriants are sometimes called true hallucinogens, because they do cause hallucinations in the proper sense: a user may have conversations with people who aren't there, or become angry at a 'person' mimicking their actions, not realizing it is their own reflection in a mirror. They are called deliriants because their effects are similar to the experiences of people with delirious fevers. While dissociatives can produce effects similar to lucid dreaming (during which one is consciously aware of dreaming while doing such), the deliriants have effects akin to sleepwalking (whereby one doesn't remember what happened during the experience).Included in this group are such plants as
deadly
nightshade, mandrake,
henbane and datura, as well as a number of
pharmaceutical drugs, when taken in very high doses, such as the
first-generation antihistamines diphenhydramine
(Benadryl), its close relative dimenhydrinate (Dramamine
or Gravol) and hydroxyzine, to name a few.
Native Americans also consumed massive amounts of tobacco during religious
ceremonies in order to experience the deliriant effects.
In addition to the dangers of being far more "out
of it" than with other drugs and retaining a truly fragmented
dissociation from regular consciousness without being immobilized,
the anticholinergics are toxic, carry the risk of death by
overdose, and also include a number of uncomfortable side effects.
These side effects typically include dehydration and mydriasis (dilation of the
pupils).
Most modern-day psychonauts who use
deliriants report similar or identical hallucinations and
challenges. Diphenhydramine, as well as Dimenhydrinate, when taken
in a high enough dosage, often are reported to evoke vivid, dark,
and entity-like hallucinations, peripheral disturbances, feelings
of being alone but simultaneously of being watched, and
hallucinations of real things ceasing to exist. Deliriants also may
cause confusion or even rage, and thus have been used by ancient
peoples as a stimulant before going into battle http://library.thinkquest.org/C0115926/drugs/deliriants5.htm.
History of use
Hallucinogenic substances are among the oldest drugs used by humankind, as hallucinogens naturally occur in mushrooms, cacti and a variety of other plants. Numerous cultures worldwide have endorsed the use of hallucinogens in medicine, religion and recreation, to varying extents, and some cultures have regulated or outright prohibited their use. In most developed countries today, the possession of many hallucinogens, even those found commonly in nature, is considered a crime punishable by fines, imprisonment or even death. In some countries, such as the United States and the Netherlands, partial deference may be granted to traditional religious use by members of indigenous ethnic minorities such as the Native American Church and the Santo Daime Church. Recently the União do Vegetal, a Christian-based religious sect whose composition is not primarily ethnicity-based, won a United States Supreme Court decision authorizing its use of ayahuasca.Traditional religious and shamanic use
Historically, hallucinogens have been most
commonly used in religious or shamanic rituals. In this context they are
often referred to as entheogens, and they are used
to facilitate healing, divination, communication with spirits, and
coming-of-age ceremonies. Evidence exists for the use of entheogens
in prehistoric times,
as well as in numerous ancient cultures, including the
Ancient
Egyptian,
Mycenaean,
Ancient Greek, Vedic,
Maya,
Inca the and
Aztec
cultures. The Upper Amazon
is home to the strongest extant entheogenic tradition; the Urarina of Peruvian Amazonia, for
instance, continue to practice an elaborate system of ayahuasca shamanism, coupled with an
animistic belief
system. The rise of the Abrahamic religions (Judaism, Christianity
and Islam)
caused a decline of entheogenic use of
hallucinogens use in its wake, as the authority of scripture and
the priesthood gradually reduced the role granted to direct
spiritual experience, especially by the laity . Examples of this
development include the destruction of the Eleusinian
Mysteries, which are now widely assumed to have involved
entheogenic rituals, and the Great Witch Hunt of
the Early
Modern Age, in which practitioners of entheogenic rites in
Western Europe were accused of associating with the devil. The Spanish conquistadores
associated local entheogenic traditions of South America with
heresy and satanism, and uprooted many of them, but nevertheless,
some cultures there and elsewhere have kept their traditions alive
to this day.
Early scientific investigations
Although natural hallucinogenic drugs have been known to mankind for millennia, it was not until the early 20th century that they received extensive attention from Western science. Earlier beginnings include scientific studies of nitrous oxide in the late 18th century, and initial studies of the constituents of the peyote cactus in the late 19th century. Starting in 1927 with Kurt Beringer's Der Meskalinrausch (The Mescaline Intoxication), more intensive effort began to be focused on studies of psychoactive plants. Around the same time, Louis Lewin published his extensive survey of psychoactive plants, Phantastica (1928). Important developments in the years that followed included the re-discovery of Mexican magic mushrooms (in 1936 by Robert J. Weitlaner) and ololiuhqui (in 1939 by Richard Evans Schultes). Arguably the most important pre-World War II development was by Albert Hofmann's 1938 invention of the semi-synthetic drug LSD, which was later discovered to produce hallucinogenic effects in 1943.Hallucinogens after World War II
After World War II there was an explosion of interest in hallucinogenic drugs in psychiatry, owing mainly to the invention of LSD. Interest in the drugs tended to focus on either the potential for psychotherapeutic applications of the drugs (see psychedelic psychotherapy), or on the use of hallucinogens to produce a "controlled psychosis", in order to understand psychotic disorders such as schizophrenia. By 1951, more than 100 articles on LSD appeared in medical journals, and by 1961, the number increased to more than 1000 articles. Hallucinogens were also researched in several countries for their potential as agents of chemical warfare. Most famously, several tragic incidents associated with the CIA's MK-ULTRA mind control research project have been the topic of media attention and lawsuits.At the beginning of the 1950s, the existence
of hallucinogenic drugs was virtually unknown among the general
public of the West.
However this soon changed as several influential figures were
introduced to the hallucinogenic experience. Aldous
Huxley's 1953 essay The
Doors of Perception, describing his experiences with mescaline, and R. Gordon
Wasson's 1957 Life magazine
article (Seeking the Magic Mushroom) brought the topic into the
public limelight. In the early 1960s, counterculture icons such
as Jerry
Garcia, Timothy
Leary, Allen
Ginsberg and Ken Kesey
advocated the drugs for their psychedelic effects, and a
large subculture of
psychedelic drug users was spawned. Psychedelic drugs played a
major role in catalyzing the vast social changes initiated in the
1960s. As a
result of the growing popularity of LSD and disdain for the
hippies with whom it was
heavily associated, LSD was banned in the United
States in 1967. This greatly
reduced the clinical research about LSD, although limited
experiments continued to take place, such as by Reese Jones in San
Francisco.
Legal status and attitudes
As of 2008, most well known hallucinogens (aside from dextromethorphan, diphenhydramine and dimenhydrinate) are illegal in most Western countries. One notable exception to the current criminalization trend is in parts of Western Europe, especially in the Netherlands, where cannabis is considered to be a "soft drug". Previously included were hallucinogenic mushrooms, but as of October 2007 the Netherlands officials have moved to ban their sale following several widely publicized incidents involving tourists. While the possession of soft drugs is technically illegal, the Dutch government has decided that using law enforcement to combat their use is largely a waste of resources. As a result, public "coffeeshops" in the Netherlands openly sell cannabis for personal use, and "smart shops" sell drugs like ayahuasca, Salvia Divinorum and until the ban of magic mushrooms takes effect(expected to take effect spring, 2008), they are still available for purchase in smartshops as well. (See Drug policy of the Netherlands).Since the latter part of the twentieth century,
this attitude has spread throughout Europe; many
European countries no longer actively pursue anti-drug policies,
and rarely enforce extant legal penalties for personal-use
quantities of hallucinogenic drugs. This is especially true with
mild hallucinogens such as cannabis, which is rapidly gaining
acceptance in western Europe as a harmless and socially acceptable
intoxicant, much as alcohol
is considered throughout the West. Despite being scheduled as a
controlled substance in the mid 1980s, ecstasy's
popularity has been growing since that time in western Europe and in the
United
States.
Attitudes towards hallucinogens other than
cannabis have been slower to change. Several attempts to change the
law on the grounds of freedom
of religion have been made. Some of these have been successful,
for example the Native
American Church in the United
States, and Santo Daime
in Brazil.
Some people argue that a religious setting should not be necessary
for the legitimacy of hallucinogenic drug use, and for this reason
also criticize the euphemistic use of the term "entheogen".
Non-religious reasons for the use of hallucinogens including
spiritual, introspective, psychotherapeutic,
recreational
and even hedonistic
motives, each subject to some degree of social disapproval, have
all been defended as the legitimate exercising of civil
liberties, including freedom
of thought and freedom of self-harm.
Many connect the idea of being "high" or going
through a psychedelic state, as having
brain
damage or going crazy. This is due to the effect of the drug
which, in some cases, can be overwhelming. Effects of these drugs
can mimic psychological conditions
such as psychosis,
schizophrenia, and
thought
disorder. However, this is largely a misconception of the
psychedelic state. After many studies investigating its possible
use as a "psychotomimetic" and decades of personal/spiritual use it
has become apparent that the psychedelic state is wholly different
from a psychotic state and thus is ill-compared to schizophrenia
and other mental disorders.
Several medical and scientific people, including
the late Albert
Hofmann, advocate the drugs should not be banned, but should be
strongly regulated and warn they can be dangerous without proper
psychological supervision.
http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9505E3DB153FF934A35752C0A9609C8B63&sec=&pagewanted=2
Taking a hallucinogenic drug without knowledge
can result in psychological trauma, and has occurred many times
because many psychedelic drugs such as LSD have low dose and can
easily be added to food or drink, similar to "date rape
drugs" or Mickey
Finns, and those who deliberately do that can be charged with
assault. (These
occurrences have created some urban myths
such as the blue
star tattoo myth).
Psychedelics and mental illnesses in long-term users
Most psychedelics are not known to have long-term physical toxicity. However, amphetamine-like psychedelics, such as MDMA, that release neurotransmitters may stimulate increased formation of free radicals possibly formed from neurotransmitters released from the synaptic vesicle. Free radicals are associated with cell damage in other contexts, and have been suggested to be involved in many types of mental conditions including Parkinson's disease, senility, schizophrenia, and Alzheimer's. Research on this question has not reached a firm conclusion. The same concerns do not apply to psychedelics that do not release neurotransmitters, such as LSD, nor to dissociatives and deliriants.No clear connection has been made between
psychedelic drugs and organic brain damage; however, high doses
over time of some dissociatives and deliriants have been shown to
cause Olney's
lesions in other animals, and have been suspected to occur in
humans. Additionally,
hallucinogen persisting perception disorder (HPPD) is a
diagnosed condition where visual effects of drugs persist for a
long time--although science and medicine have yet to determine what
causes the condition.
Naming and taxonomy
Introduction to the psychedelic name zoo
The class of drugs described in this article has
been described by a profusion of names, most of which are
associated with a particular theory of their nature.
Louis Lewin
started out in 1928 by using the word
phantastica as the title of his ground-breaking monograph about
plants that, in his words, "bring about evident cerebral excitation
in the form of hallucinations, illusions and visions [...] followed
by unconsciousness or other symptoms of altered cerebral
functioning". But no sooner had the term been invented, or Lewin
complained that the word "does not cover all that I should wish it
to convey", and indeed with the proliferation of research following
the discovery of LSD came numerous attempts to improve on it, such
as hallucinogen, phanerothyme, psychedelic, psychotomimetic,
psycholytic, schizophrenogenic, cataleptogenic, mysticomimetic,
psychodysleptic, and entheogenic.
The word psychotomimetic, meaning "mimicking
psychosis", reflects
the hypothesis of early researchers that the effects of psychedelic
drugs are similar to naturally occurring symptoms of schizophrenia,
which has since been discredited . It remained for a long time
somewhat of a shibboleth to be used in the titles of papers as a
signal that the researcher disapproved of the casual use of a drug,
but has now been displaced in the medical literature by
hallucinogen. The latter term is not entirely accurate, since
hallucinations, strictly speaking, must be entirely realistic but
have no basis in reality, while psychedelic effects are often
better described as distortions of the ordinary senses.
While the word psychotomimetic is now outmoded,
the theory it implies is still clearly visible in the World
Health Organization's definition of a hallucinogen as "a
chemical agent that induces alterations in perception, thinking,
and feeling which resemble those of the functional psychoses
without producing the gross impairment of memory and orientation
characteristic of the organic syndromes".
The word psychedelic was coined by Humphrey
Osmond and has the rather mysterious but at least somewhat
value-neutral meaning of "mind manifesting". The word entheogen, on
the other hand, which is often used to describe the religious and
ritual use of psychedelic drugs in anthropological studies, is
associated with the idea that it could be relevant to religion. The
words entactogen, empathogen, dissociative and deliriant, at last,
have all been coined to refer to classes of drugs similar to the
classical psychedelics that seemed deserving of a name of their
own.
Taxonomy
Hallucinogens can be classified by their
subjective effects, mechanisms of action, and chemical structure.
These classifications often correlate to some extent. In this
article, they are classified as psychedelics, dissociatives, and deliriants, preferably
entirely to the exclusion of the inaccurate word hallucinogen, but
the reader is well advised to consider that this particular
classification is not universally accepted. The taxonomy used here
attempts to blend these three approaches in order to provide as
clear and accessible an overview as possible.
Almost all hallucinogens contain nitrogen and are therefore
classified as alkaloids. THC
and Salvinorin A
are exceptions. Many hallucinogens have chemical structures similar
to those of human neurotransmitters, such as serotonin, and temporarily
modify the action of neurotransmitters and/or receptor sites.
Lewin's classes
A classical classification, mainly of historical
interest, is that of Lewin (Phantastica, 1928):
- Class I Phantastica roughly correspond to the psychedelics, which is a more modern term usually used as synonym to "hallucinogen" by people with positive attitudes towards them. Here the term is used a bit differently to discriminate one particular class of hallucinogens which it seems to describe best. They typically have no sedative effects (sometimes the opposite) and there is usually a clearcut memory to their effects. These drugs have also been referred to as the "classical" hallucinogens.
- Class II Phantastica correspond to the other classes in our scheme. They tend to sedate in addition to their hallucinogenic properties and there often is an impaired memory trace after the effects wear off.
Pharmacological classes of hallucinogens
One possible way of classifying the hallucinogens
is by their chemical structure and that of the receptors they act
on. In this vein, the following categories are often used:
- Psychedelics
(serotonin 5-HT2A
receptor agonists)
- Tryptamines
- Phenethylamines
- Substituted phenethylamines
- Substituted amphetamines
- Empathogens and/or Entactogens (serotonin releasers)
- Cannabinoids (CB-1 cannabinoid receptor agonists)
- Dissociatives
- NMDA receptor antagonists and sigma1 ligands
- Inhalants
- Cholinergics
Problems with structure based frameworks is that
the same structural motif can include a wide variety of drugs which
have substantially different effects. Another problem is that
structural classes are not mutually exclusive. Examples: - LSD is
both a tryptamine and a phenethylamine (it is simply a highly
substituted phenethylamine) - Heroin and DXM are both also
phenethylamines, though heroin is an opiate and DXM is a
dissociative hallucinogen - Methamphetamine is a simple
phenethylamine but is a psychostimulant, not a hallucinogen
Hallucinogenic organisms
The following is a list of some organisms known
to contain hallucinogens
- Plants
- Psychedelics
- Ayahuasca (contains DMT and an MAOI, commonly Banisteriopsis caapi with Psychotria viridis)
- Epená (Virola sp.) (contains 5-MeO-DMT and DMT)
- Hawaiian baby woodrose (Argyreia nervosa) (contains ergine)
- Ololiuhqui/Coaxihuitl (Turbina/Rivea corymbosa) (contains ergine)
- Tlitliltzin/Badoh Negro (Ipomoea violacea) (contains ergine)
- Iboga (Tabernanthe iboga) (contains ibogaine)
- Salvia divinorum (contains Salvinorin A)
- Cacti psychedelics
- Quasi-psychedelics
- Cannabis (contains THC)
- Sinicuichi (Heimia salicifolia) (questioned hallucinogenic activity)
- Nutmeg (Myristica fragrans) (contains Myristicin)
- Dissociatives
- there are no known "true" (NMDA antagonists) plant dissociatives
- Deliriants
- Deadly nightshade (Atropa belladonna) (contains tropane alkaloids)
- Floripondio (Brugmansia sp.) (contains tropane alkaloids)
- Henbane (Hyoscyamus niger) (contains tropane alkaloids)
- Mandrake (Mandragora sp.) (contains tropane alkaloids)
- Thorn Apple/Jimson Weed (Datura sp.) (contains tropane alkaloids)
- Psychedelics
- Fungi
- Psychedelics
- Psilocybe mushrooms (Psilocybe sp. and some Conocybe, Panaeolus and Stropharia) (contain psilocybin and psilocin)
- Ergot fungus (Claviceps purpurea) (not hallucinogenic in itself, but contains ergotamine)
- Dissociatives
- Fly Agaric mushroom (Amanita muscaria) (contains muscimol)
- Psychedelics
- Animals
- Psychedelics
- Psychoactive toads (Bufo alvarius) (contain 5-MeO-DMT and bufotenine)
- Psychedelics
See also
- Contact high
- Empathogen
- Entactogen
- Entheogen
- Ergotism
- Hallucinogenic effects of banana peels
- Psilocybin mushroom
- Psychedelic
- Psychoactive or psychotropic
- Pharmacology
- Psychedelic psychotherapy
- Research chemicals
- Richard Evans Schultes and Albert Hofmann, Plants of the Gods
- Set and setting
- Psychedelic plants
- Psychonaut
- Recreational drug use
- Responsible drug use
- Hard and soft drugs
- Altered state of consciousness
- Lucid dreaming
- Sensory deprivation
- Out-of-body experience
- Overdose
- Bad trip
- Monomyth
- Neurotheology
Footnotes
References
- Stafford, Peter. (2003). Psychedlics. Ronin Publishing, Oakland, California. ISBN 0-914171-18-6.
Literature
The literature about psychedelics, dissociatives
and deliriants is vast. The following books provide accessible and
up-to-date introductions to this literature:
- Ann & Alexander Shulgin: PIHKAL (Phenethylamines I Have Known And Loved), a Chemical Love Story
- Ann & Alexander Shulgin: TIHKAL (Tryptamines I Have Known And Loved), the Continuation
- Charles S. Grob, ed.: Hallucinogens, a reader
Winkelman, Michael J., and Thomas B. Roberts
(editors) (2007).Psychedelic Medicine: New Evidence for
Hallucinogens as Treatments 2 Volumes. Westport, CT:
Praeger/Greenwood.
The following review paper is the definitive
source of technical scientific information about hallucinogens:
- David Nichols: Hallucinogens
A scholarly bibliography on the use of these
substances in the history of psychology has also been developed for
specific use by bloggers and Wikipedians. (Abstracts included for
ease of updating.) Find it here.
External links
- Erowid is a web site dedicated entirely to providing information about psychoactive drugs, with an impressive collection of trip reports, materials collected from the web and usenet, and a bibliography of scientific literature
- Evidence: Academic ressources on hallucinogens- and MDMA research, relapse prevention and harm reduction.
- The Shroomery has detailed information about magic mushrooms including identification, cultivation and spores, psychedelic images, trip reports and an active community.
hallucinogen in Afrikaans: Hallusinogeen
hallucinogen in Bulgarian: Халюциноген
hallucinogen in Catalan: Al·lucinogen
hallucinogen in Czech: Halucinogen
hallucinogen in German: Halluzinogen
hallucinogen in Spanish: Alucinógeno
hallucinogen in French: Hallucinogène
hallucinogen in Galician: Alucinóxeno
hallucinogen in Ido: Halucinigiva drogo
hallucinogen in Icelandic: Ofskynjunarlyf
hallucinogen in Italian: Allucinogeno
hallucinogen in Hebrew: הלוצינוגן
hallucinogen in Lithuanian: Haliucinogenai
hallucinogen in Malay (macrolanguage):
Halusinogen
hallucinogen in Dutch: Hallucinogeen
hallucinogen in Japanese: 幻覚剤
hallucinogen in Polish: Psychodeliki
hallucinogen in Portuguese: Drogas
alucinógenas
hallucinogen in Serbian: Halucinogeni
hallucinogen in Finnish: Hallusinogeeni
hallucinogen in Ukrainian:
Галюциноген
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
DET,
DMT, Indian hemp, LSD, Mary Jane, STP, THC, acid, antidepressant, ataractic, belladonna, bhang, cannabis, diethyltryptamine,
dimethyltryptamine,
gage, ganja, grass, hallucinogens, hash, hashish, hay, hemp, henbane, hyoscyamus, jimsonweed, joint, kava, marijuana, mescal, mescal bean, mescal
button, mescaline,
mind-altering drug, mind-blowing drug, mind-expanding drug, morning
glory seeds, peyote,
pot, psilocin, psilocybin, psychedelic, psychic
energizer, psychoactive drug, psychochemical, psychotomimetic,
reefer, roach, stick, stramonium, tea, tranquilizer, weed