Accessibility Tools

  • Content scaling 100%
  • Font size 100%
  • Line height 100%
  • Letter spacing 100%

‘Nothing but othing!’

The use and abuse of mind-altering drugs
by
September 2023, no. 457

Psychonauts: Drugs and the making of the modern mind by Mike Jay

Yale University Press, US$32.50 hb, 369 pp

‘Nothing but othing!’

The use and abuse of mind-altering drugs
by
September 2023, no. 457

In his 1927 essay ‘On Being One’s Own Rabbit’, the British-Indian scientist and writer J.B.S. Haldane surveyed the history of an enduring but contentious approach to scientific discovery: self-experimentation. At the age of eight, Haldane tested poison gases on himself in his scientist father’s home laboratory. As an adult, among other self-experiments occasioning losses of consciousness from ‘blows on the head, from fever, anaesthetics, want of oxygen and other causes’, he once induced sufficiently high levels of oxygen saturation to suffer a violent seizure and the crushing of several vertebrae.

Haldane is one of many maverick self-experimenters rescued from varying degrees of obscurity by Mike Jay in Psychonauts, a fascinating account of psychoactive drug exploration in the hundred or so years before the explosion and subsequent suppression of psychedelics in the 1960s and 1970s. As today’s mainstreaming of consciousness-altering drugs like psilocybin and MDMA continues apace, Jay’s book honours these pioneers of the drug experience’s ‘double consciousness’ – the coterminous ‘inner world of dreams and the waking state of reason’ – who imperilled their bodies and, moreover, their minds in the pursuit of knowledge, pleasure, and transcendent experience.

The milieux they inhabited were about as far as you can get from today’s psychedelic clinical trials: literary salons, occult rituals, and smoke-wreathed gatherings from London and Egypt to Morocco, the Far East, and fin de siècle Paris. Their pharmacopeia was equally eclectic: cocaine, nitrous oxide (laughing gas), opium, ether, morphine, chloroform, amphetamines, cannabis (as well as its more concentrated form, hashish), and, later, the psychedelics mescaline (from the peyote cactus), LSD, and psilocybin (from ‘magic’ mushrooms).

Psychonauts: Drugs and the making of the modern mind

Psychonauts: Drugs and the making of the modern mind

by Mike Jay

Yale University Press, US$32.50 hb, 369 pp

From the New Issue

You May Also Like

Leave a comment

If you are an ABR subscriber, you will need to sign in to post a comment.

If you have forgotten your sign in details, or if you receive an error message when trying to submit your comment, please email your comment (and the name of the article to which it relates) to ABR Comments. We will review your comment and, subject to approval, we will post it under your name.

Please note that all comments must be approved by ABR and comply with our Terms & Conditions.