You've probably heard about microdosing, which involves taking a small, "sub-perceptual" dose of psychedelics like LSD or psilocybin on a regular basis to ward off depression, anxiety, and chronic pain—or to optimize focus and boost energy.
Today's guests are James Fadiman and Jordan Gruber, authors of the new book Microdosing for Health, Healing, and Enhanced Performance. Fadiman, a Stanford-trained research psychologist who has been working with psychedelics since the early 1960s, popularized the concept of microdosing over a decade ago. They talk with Reason's Nick Gillespie about the mechanics of and theory behind microdosing, its promise and limits, and how it fits into the larger psychedelic renaissance that has been flowering for most of the 21st century. And they discuss the prospects for legalization and cultural normalization of psychedelics under the Trump administration.
1:19 — New book: Microdosing for Health, Healing, and Enhanced Performance
5:12 — How Fadiman discovered microdosing
8:10 — How Gruber began microdosing
8:57 — Microdosing is similar to a vitamin protocol
11:17 — MDMA, ketamine, and cannabis work differently
12:50 — Microdosing for depression
16:02 — Other conditions microdosing could help alleviate
19:09 — Is microdosing for life?
21:17 — How to quantify the efficacy of microdosing
30:14 — Psychedelics and drug law
37:30 — Psychedelic-assisted therapy
39:40 — Psychedelics and their benefits are nonideological
46:15 — Fadiman and Gruber's 2020 book: Your Symphony of Selves
53:45 — Drug legalization under Donald Trump
Today's sponsor:
- The Reason Speakeasy. The Reason Speakeasy is a monthly, unscripted conversation in New York City with outspoken defenders of free thinking and heterodoxy in an age of intellectual conformity and groupthink. It doubles as a live taping of The Reason Interview With Nick Gillespie podcast. The next one takes place on Tuesday, April 8, with Jeffrey Singer, who recently authored Your Body, Your Health Care. Go here to buy tickets and go here to sign up for Reason's NYC Events newsletter.
quickest route to world peace.
I agree.
Sorry, this will increase DRASTICALLY the number of misfits and psychos.
after 10 years college teaching, I go with the Bible and Frankl
"“Everyone has his own specific vocation or mission in life to carry out a concrete assignment which demands fulfillment. Therein he cannot be replaced, nor can his life be repeated … Ultimately, man should not ask what the meaning of life is, but rather he must recognize it is he who is asked. In a word, each man is questioned by life; and he can only answer to life by answering for his own life; to life he can only respond by being responsible. Thus, logotherapy sees in responsibleness [sic] the very essence of human existence.”
Some people (just some,but quite a few) have shittly lives because of immorality or laziness or fear of failing. Virtue must be brought in. If I am sad because I can't have things my way, the first question must be "Is that a good way"
“There is nothing in the world, I venture to say, that would so effectively help one to survive even the worst conditions as the knowledge that there is a meaning in one’s life.” – Viktor Frankl
Religion has been that anwer for hundreds of millions, you can't prescind from the big questions.
Look up almost any video of the last year by Aayan Hirsi Ali, the world's most famus female atheist who is now a Christian
This now is just my opinion, but the two most heinous drags on the human spirit in my lifetime are abortion (maybe your mom should have killed you -- now there's a suicide provoker)and homosexuality ( Why don't I just be guided by what I want to do not by what is right -- that is maybe the biggest death regret, "Maybe I should have changed" )
That picture broadcasts a couple things.
Those 2 guys in a bar would not last an hour. When talking with people with kids, people who work normal jobs, any bullshit about pyschedelics is duly rejected. Some of us are old enough to remember Grateful Dead concerts.