TLDR: In this talk, a mycologist challenges the misconceptions surrounding psychedelic substances and argues that altered states of consciousness—including dreams—are natural neurobiological phenomena that humans and animals experience regularly. Rather than aberrations or markers of insanity, these states represent dimensions of perception that have shaped human evolution and cognition.
How Did the Myth of Psychedelic Insanity Begin?
During the speaker's early years, cultural and governmental narratives framed psychedelic use as a direct pathway to mental illness. The claim was stark and unequivocal: take LSD five or six times, and you would become certifiably insane. This propaganda was widely accepted and shaped the beliefs of an entire generation, including the speaker himself. He absorbed these warnings as fact, allowing fear-based messaging to drive his understanding of what these substances actually do to the brain (0:01–0:10).
This mischaracterization persisted for decades, creating a cultural divide between those substances deemed acceptable (alcohol, pharmaceutical medications) and those labeled dangerous (LSD, psilocybin). The distinction was not based on neurological evidence but on legal and social policy. What the speaker would later discover is that the propaganda was fundamentally flawed—not because psychedelics are completely safe, but because they don't produce the outcome the propaganda claimed.
Are Altered States of Consciousness Unnatural?
The speaker presents a counterargument grounded in biology: altered states of consciousness are not aberrations but rather a natural feature of animal neurology. The evidence begins with observation. Anyone who has owned a dog or cat has witnessed them dreaming—their eyes moving rapidly, their paws twitching, their bodies responding to an internal neurological process that resembles wakefulness but occurs in sleep (0:21–0:28).
If animals dream, and humans are animals, then humans must also enter altered states of consciousness as a routine, nightly occurrence. The speaker identifies this clearly: "We all enter into the psychedelic space every night when we fall asleep we dream" (0:31–0:36). This reframing is crucial. The psychedelic experience is not alien to human neurology—it is continuous with the dreaming state that virtually every human being experiences.
The implication is significant: if dreams are normal and natural, and if dreams represent a altered state of consciousness qualitatively similar to psychedelic states, then the pathologization of psychedelics becomes inconsistent with basic neurobiology. Both dreams and psychedelic experiences involve:
- Altered perception of time and space
- Vivid visual and sensory experiences
- Reduced engagement with ordinary logical processing
- Access to unconscious or subconscious material
What Does Exploring Consciousness Reveal About Human Evolution?
The speaker was born in 1955, and from early childhood, he was drawn to instruments that revealed hidden dimensions of reality. A microscope revealed the microscopic world. Binoculars brought distant objects into focus. A telescope opened the cosmos. Each tool expanded his perception of what was possible to see—what dimensions of reality existed beyond ordinary human sensation (0:51–0:65).
He notes: "I went wow there's so many different dimensions" (0:63–0:65). This childlike wonder at the multiplicity of perceptual worlds foreshadowed his later work. When he later encountered mushrooms, he recognized them not as invaders to consciousness but as tools—much like the microscope or telescope—that reveal dimensions of consciousness and perception that are always present but ordinarily inaccessible.
Looking at evolution itself, the speaker implies that the capacity for altered states of consciousness is not a bug in the human nervous system but a feature that has been preserved and refined across millions of years of evolutionary history. Why would animals evolve the capacity to dream—to enter regular altered states—if those states served no adaptive function? The speaker suggests that "we explore other states of consciousness as a natural state of our being" (0:45–0:50), implying that this capacity is foundational to how human cognition and perception work.
How Does Understanding Consciousness Change Your Perspective?
The speaker admits he was "born confused still am" (0:43), acknowledging that consciousness itself remains mysterious and paradoxical. Yet this confusion is not a flaw—it is a recognition of the genuine complexity of the mind and perception. Rather than accepting propaganda or dogmatic claims in either direction (that psychedelics are purely dangerous or purely beneficial), the speaker models intellectual humility in the face of altered states of consciousness.
The shift is from pathologization to naturalization. If altered states are natural, then the relevant questions change. Instead of "Are psychedelics dangerous?" (a yes/no that implied they were inherently aberrant), the questions become: "What conditions and set and setting allow for beneficial exploration of consciousness? What capacities do altered states reveal? How do they relate to creativity, problem-solving, and healing? What evolutionary advantages might they confer?"
This reframing opens a more empirical, less moralized space for inquiry into the nature of consciousness itself.
Where to go from here
For those interested in deeper exploration: The speaker's body of work on mycology and consciousness, alongside figures like Rick Doblin (co-creator of this "Psychedelic Puppet Show" project), continues to investigate the intersection of fungal biology and human neurology. Readers may explore research from organizations like MAPS (the Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies), which conducts clinical research into how altered states can be used therapeutically. The shift from propaganda to science requires both skepticism of received narratives and openness to evidence—the same intellectual stance the speaker models here.



