Maksutov wrote:huckelberry wrote:
Revelations is working with a set of traditional imagery and style that has no relation to drugs or psychosis. That is simple and clear whether you see inspiration from God as involved or not.
You need to do a little research into the long long history of entheogens. Goes back way before the Bible. Sorry, Huck, but the imagery and symbolism is so dense and its interpretations so various that the chaos of psychedelic experience seems spot on to me. How do you know God doesn't work through LSD and psilocybin? Someone has actually studied this...see below.
Muksutov, about research, I started college in 1967 as a nonbeliever in God but interested in the varieties of religious experience. I developed a strong preference for meditative experience rather than chemical but explored the chemical possibilities as well.I have had enough interest in world religious experience to have read some about its role in shamanistic activity.In that realm sweat lodge without drugs is more interesting to me.
However for the book of revelations we are both stuck with our own assessment of the writing style. I see contemplated reworking of dream and literary imagery with a strong intended meaning. It is easy to get lost in the forest because of the trees in the book. Expecting some one to one correspondence from image to real event is to my mind a futile undertaking. Such correspondence does not exist and to my mind is not intended. It should be open to multiple readings so I am unconcerned and uninterested in disagreement over those.
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Your quote about the experiment of LSD in a religious context is interesting. It points out how much what happens with the substance is a result of what is in the individuals mind,what they are lead to expect, directed to during the experience, context and environment. This fits my expectation that such experiences may bring out religious imagery but are likely not the source.
It reminds me of a vivid song line ( Joni Mitchell)
I saw all the bombers
flying shotgun in the sky
were turning into butterflies.
I think this is put together to suggest the sort of thing in LSD experience. It makes that suggestion to my mind. I also think it was more likely created with regular imagination wishing to express an idea with the words fashioned to suggest LSD experience for immediacy.