Psychedelic Men
Did LSD kill the '50s?
Arguably the second most memorable Good Friday in history took place in the basement of Boston University's Marsh Chapel on April 20, 1962, when a graduate student under the academic direction of Timothy Leary dosed 10 subjects with the hallucinogen psilocybin and another 10 with a placebo containing niacin. Among those receiving psychoactive drugs was the generally sober and eminently respectable MIT religion professor Huston Smith, whose understanding of divinity was forever changed.
Smith, author of The Religions of Man, was no slouch when it came to grokking theology in all its manifestations. Yet his "encounter that Good Friday," writes religion journalist Don Lattin in his thoroughly engaging (if sometimes overblown) book The Harvard Psychedelic Club (HarperOne), "was the most powerful experience he would ever have of God's personal nature.…From that moment on, he knew that life is a miracle, every moment of it, and that the only appropriate way to respond and be mindful of that gift was to share it with the rest of the world."
Packing his book with many strange, wonderful scenes worthy of a book on psychedelics, Lattin argues that America was radically transformed by an unlikely quartet that did a little time—and lots of drugs—at Harvard in the early 1960s. Along with Leary and Smith, the "psychedelic club" included the psychologist Richard Alpert, who would go on to co-author a hugely popular version of The Tibetan Book of the Dead with Leary and recreate himself as the countercultural mystic Baba Ram Dass, and Andrew Weil, the alternative medicine guru whose undergraduate exposés of Leary and Alpert's unorthodox methods ultimately led to their flight from the university. In characteristically over-the-top prose, Lattin enthuses that this strange quartet "changed the way we see the very nature of reality."
By kickstarting the drug-drenched 1960s, he writes, the club didn't just tune in, turn on, and drop out of normal society. It "changed nothing less than the way we look at mind, body and spirit." Lattin credits his phantasmagoric foursome with pushing America from "mechanistic thinking to mysticism" and "from the scientific to the shamanic." New ages, it turns out, don't just happen on their own. They often benefit from transformational Viagra.
All four of the club members went on to differing levels of renown, infamy, and enlightenment. Leary became the godfather of the counterculture, an irrepressible trickster figure who hung with the Beatles and served time in prison and exile before becoming an early apostle of cyberspace whose ashes were shot into orbit after his death in 1996. Ram Dass earnestly pursued strains of Eastern mysticism, wrote the hippie classic Be Here Now, struggled with his homosexuality, co-founded the Seva Foundation (which directs health and welfare projects in India and elsewhere), and still works to personify "compassion in action" even after a debilitating stroke. Andrew Weil became an M.D., spent years trying to atone for his role in blowing the whistle on Leary and Alpert in Cambridge, wrote in defense of altered consciousness, and ultimately created his own multimillion-dollar industry in alternative medicine.
Smith, now 90, is the least well-known of the crew. He stayed within the academic establishment, became a leading theorist of religious pluralism and the subject of a Bill Moyers series, and has seen his Religions of Man sell more than 2 million copies.
They are all interesting characters, to be sure, and well worth reading about. But did they really "kill the fifties and usher…in a new age for America"? Did they lay "a cornerstone for what would be built…from the progressive visions of the psychedelic sixties" and change "the way we view the world, heal ourselves, and practice religion"? Lattin offers up little more than assertion by way of proof. The oft-pilloried 1950s—the decade that produced Catcher in the Rye, On the Road, Invisible Man, Atlas Shrugged, Rebel Without a Cause, the English translation of The Second Sex, the modern civil rights movement, and an endless series of individualistic avenues of expression such as rock and roll, pop art, and a satiric new variety of standup comedy—were hardly the prison of repressive conformity that Lattin and most critics of the decade assume.
If anything, the '50s were the exact moment when longstanding economic, cultural, and political hierarchies started breaking down faster than Marlon Brando in On the Waterfront. Even the self-avowed socialists who founded the magazine Dissent in mid-decade argued against groupthink, claiming in their founding statement that they were fighting for the "dignity of the individual."
More important perhaps, it is necessary to distinguish the "progressive visions" of the '60s from the destructive ones. Letting your freak flag fly is one thing (especially if you pay for it with your own dime); creating well-intended yet economically disastrous programs such as Medicare is something else.
While America today is certainly (and thankfully) a much looser, more tolerant, less-buttoned-down country than it was 50 years ago, that process was well under way before Leary, Alpert, Smith, and Weil crossed paths in Cambridge. Their contributions are worth reflecting on and learning from, but as with psychedelics themselves, you shouldn't oversell the highs or minimize the lows.
Nick Gillespie is editor in chief of reason.tv and reason.com.
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Radically transforming America for the worse is a Harvard tradition.
you might be right...but not because of the above mention psychedelic professors, but because of people like Rage Against the Machine's Tom Morillo and his love for Che Guevara flags on his guitar amplifiers during the Saturday Night Live Show (hosted by Republican presidential candidate Steve Forbes). Regardless of his Ivy League credentials, people like him neither impress me or transform me like acid did when I was a young teenager. I and other acid lovers owe a great debt to Albert Hoffman and other psychedelic pioneers such as mentioned above, regardless of their educational status. You have to admit that the psychedelic experience has had a tranformative effect on American society, for better and for worse!
It was obviously worse for you...
may I ask why? Why is the most important word in my vocabulary. It should be yours too!
Hehe! This is really funny! I really enjoyed reading this post! stenosis of spine
I thought the 50s died at 12 a.m., January 1, 1960. To all of those who protest my literal assessment of such, go ahead and take another hit, inhale, and contemplate.
Nice. You're off by a year. But you knew that.
No, I'm pretty sure the 50's are years of the form 195x. If he had said the 196th decade you might have a point.
Wow, gotta love those 50's. those were the days!
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For me, the sixties ended that day in 1978.
I thought the 50s died at 12 a.m., January 1, 1960. To all of those who protest my literal assessment of such, go ahead and take another hit, inhale, and contemplate.
Because there was no year zero, the Fifties ran from January 1, 1951 to December 31, 1960.
Didn't we sort this all out when people were celebrating the millenium a year early?
Yes, and the conclusion is the 50s run from 50 to 59. There's mathematically correct and socially correct. The decades are social constructs, and if you ask 100 people on the street I'll bet not one of them subscribes to your theory. If we were discussing the 5th decade of the century, your interpretation would be correct.
A very clear and concise response, that; Do you think you will end a decade's run of pedantry? If you repeat the same thought patterns enough, there is no escape. Save yourself, and let R.C. enjoy his elite private reality.
Um, no. "50's" just refers to years with a 50 in them, not the 196th decade AD. At least that was always my take.
R.C.
You have now reignited one of the biggest nerd fights ever. Other than the fight over the number of Star Trek episodes, there is no bigger nerd fight than over when a decade begins.
LOL! Fuck...I'm choking on my beer!
The 1960s shouldn't look too smugly on the 1950s. After all, Playboy was first published in 1953.
Am I the only man who thinks women in Playboy were betting looking in the 50s and 60s than they are now or have been for about 25 years?
If you said more like the past 15 years, you may have a point. But its history is still unfolding.
In the 50s they really did look like really hot chicks who came off the street and took off their clothes. Now they look like silicon injected freaks.
Playboy, like many things, reached its peak of achievement in the '70s, as far as I'm concerned, with some very good years in the '80s, too. The Silicone Revolution of the '90s is probably what ruined it, along with more drastic airbrushing.
Yeah 70s Playboys are pretty much the high point of the whole thing. Especially early 70s. I haven't looked at one since the 90s but even then it was full of these uncanny female-like pneumatic plastic simulacra.
My collection only goes back to the early 70's so if you include that decade then I've got to agree with you.
Oh, and I *do* read it for the articles.
... Hobbit
As libertarians, let's not forget about the unjustified ban on silicone implants in the '90s that forced American models to use aesthetically inferior saline. That has something to do with it, too.
Ram Dass made me gay.
Be down here now.
Leary always was a pantload, stoned or sober. I always figured he was in it for the free ass.
indeed Leary got a lot of booty...he was THE acid pimp!!!!
The 1950s, even with the cultural repression, was a bastion of personal freedom compared with the Brave New World we live in now.
you got that right, brudda
I feel like we've been here before.
Nick Gillespie sucks Ron Paul's dick for inspiration.
As inspiration goes, he could do a lot worse. Would you prefer that he find his inspiration sucking the nipples of Bill Clinton's moobs?
Ah...fuck dude...really?
you may wish to take your history a bit further back and do some revisions.
http://www.chicagotribune.com/.....1625.story
At least Timothy Leary faced death with spine. In fact he showed courage on numerous occasions in his life. It's difficult not to set everything else aside and respect such a man.
Besides, over the years much of what was negative and attributed to the good doctor was either myth, misunderstanding, or mistaken interpretation.
If nothing else, Dr. Leary made the name Timothy forever sound considerably less effeminate.
I've always thought the "1950s" (that is, the cultural, political, economic mores we associate with the period) died in late 1963, when JFK's brains were blown out in Dallas. 1964, the year of LBJ vs. Goldwater, the Beatles and Stones, Muhammad Ali's heavyweight title and the Gulf of Tonkin, is the first real year of "the Sixties."
The 1960s weren't so different from the 1950s. And the 1950s weren't so different from the 1940s, and so on back through history.
I haven't read the book, so I don't know how far the author is overreaching.
But try this experiment. Go read through Life magazine, available from Google books, from say 1955 to 1972.
You see a really big jump in tone, style and attitude in about mid 1966. And a lot of it is tied explicitly to the effect that LSD had on American culture. When it first appeared, the attitude to LSD was worlds apart from how it is now. It was not seen as a "hard drug" at first.
There's also the usual gradual change in popular culture from all kinds of other sources, evolving organically in the period of post-war prosperity and technological advancement. But you really do notice a fault line at the point where LSD hits the culture.
No mention of Marshall McCluann?
giving credit to lsd for killing the 50s would support the case for its prohibition IMO. But I do not believe that to be the case. There will always be weird people. Maybe people will never be able to be as weird as they used to be. Life nowadays amounts to shuffling around rather than performing skilled tasks. I say that lsd could have certainly had an overwhelming influence on the arts, along with all the other drugs...
I think the assertion that they changed anything but themselves is a bit off. The LSD experience was always a personal, inner experience, not a political act. They didn't change the way we look at reality, the acid did.
For me, the ultimate LSD experience was a night spent following a blind dog through a maze of illusions until the morning light revealed that my neighbors were, in fact, living skeletons composed of thousands of tiny insects, and that cows have amazing tongues that they lick their nostrils with. Not exactly world changing, but you really had to be there.
Sometimes I sound like I'm arguing, when I'm actually not. I just have a way of putting my posts stronger than intended.It's easier to keep out of the conversation and not take the chance of being misunderstood.
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The 1960s shouldn't look too smugly on the 1950s. After all
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I just have a way of putting my posts stronger than intended. | ran ??? |
it is so true being able to distinguish "progressive visions" of the '60s from the destructive ones...
age for America"? Did they lay "a cornerstone for what would be built?from the progressive visions of the psychedelic sixties" and change "the way we view the world, heal ourselves, and practice religion"? Lattin offers up little more than assertion by way of proof. The oft-pilloried 1950s?the decade that produced Catcher in the Rye, On the Road, Invisible Man, Atlas Shrugged, Rebel Without a Cause, the English translation of The Second Sex, the modern civil rights movement, and an endless series of individualistic avenues of expression such as rock and roll, pop art, and a satiric new variety of standup comedy?were coach sunglasses
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ARGUABLY THE second most memorable Good Friday in history took place in the basement of Boston University's Marsh Chapel on April 20, 1962, when a graduate student under the academic direction of Timothy Leary dosed 10 subjects with the hallucinogen psilocybin and another 10 with a placebo containing niacin. Among those receiving psychoactive drugs was the generally sober and eminently respectable MIT religion professor Huston Smith, whose understanding of divinity was forever changed.
ARGUABLY THE second most memorable Good Friday in history took place in the basement of Boston University's Marsh Chapel on April 20, 1962, when a graduate student under the academic direction of Timothy Leary dosed 10 subjects with the hallucinogen psilocybin and another 10 with a placebo containing niacin. Among those receiving psychoactive drugs was the generally sober and eminently respectable MIT religion professor Huston Smith, whose understanding of divinity was forever changed.
"The novelist lies helpless before what he knows he will read in tomorrow's newspaper," wrote Philip Roth in 1961. "The actuality is continually outdoing our talents, and the culture tosses up figures daily that are the envy of any novelist."
He could have been writing about Timothy Leary, who then was gaining notoriety for experimenting with psychedelic drugs at Harvard and now is the subject of an eminently readable but ultimately disappointing biography by music writer Robert Greenfield. Leary didn't just champion the use of mind-blowing substances and technologies in the years before his ashes were shot into space after his 1996 death from prostate cancer. His very life was as richly bizarre -- in ways both good and bad -- as any acid trip could possibly be.
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Leary's story reads like a glorious Day-Glo inversion of what we've come to expect of the Greatest Generation, that cohort of Americans who suffered through the Great Depression and braved World War II and are now revered for an implacable sense of civic responsibility and a casual stoicism. As his famous catchphrase -- "Turn On, Tune In, Drop Out" -- attests, Leary, born in 1920, was no organization man, saying in his final interview, "My life work has been to empower individuals . . . to free herself and himself to grow and be more free.
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Quick Answer: Yes LSD did kill 50's smh
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socialists who founded the magazine Dissent in mid-decade argued against groupthink, cla
hat moment on, he knew that life is a miracle, every moment of it, and that the only appropriate way to respond
ive visions of the psychedelic sixties" and change "the way we view the world, heal ourselves, and practice religion"? Lattin offers up little more than assertion by way of proof