yego.me
💡 Stop wasting time. Read Youtube instead of watch. Download Chrome Extension

How psychedelics work, explained in under 6 minutes | Matthew Johnson


4m read
·Nov 3, 2024

  • Every psychological experience has a biological correlate: these are two sides of the same coin. You see the color green; there's something happening in your brain that's coding that experience of the color green. So, with psychedelics, the biggest divide is whether we're talking about on the psychological side or the biological side. Does it work by hitting these brain receptors and then having other effects? Or does it work because of the experience?

Clearly, there's this very real biological effect. Something dramatic happens to the brain when you put the psychedelic in the system, but then someone has this experience, and when they change their life because of that, that ends up sounding more like they went through a really good course of psychotherapy. So, psychedelics are really interesting at that bridge between the biological and the psychological. What 'psychedelic' means from its linguistic roots is "mind manifesting." The idea that these are mind manifesting—that's consistent with this other notion that these are non-specific amplifiers.

In other words, you could have a euphoric experience. You could have a hellish experience. Also, terminology is so difficult in this area. Psychedelic can be used to refer to what are called the "classic psychedelic compounds": psilocybin, which is in magic mushrooms, LSD, DMT, which is in ayahuasca, mescaline, which is in peyote. Those are the classic psychedelics. They affect a particular type of serotonin receptor, and that's their primary mechanism of action.

But then you have other drugs that I think it's appropriate to call them psychedelic; other scientists will disagree. So, for example, MDMA will work by releasing serotonin. So, that's a different mechanism. And you have other drugs such as ketamine and PCP. So, that affects the glutamate system in the brain primarily rather than the serotonin system. So, what does psychedelic mean then if it refers to multiple pharmacological classes of drugs that work in different ways?

And the answer for me is that these are all drugs that can have a profound effect on one's sense of reality, including one's sense of self. The huge question that's always thrown out is: 'How do these psychedelics work?' And you can just come at that from so many different angles. Now to go down that biological path, what's happening?

There's a lot going on. For example, psilocybin, which people may know is the active agent in so-called "magic mushrooms." Once it's circulating through your blood, after you've eaten some of it, it actually converts to a related compound called psilocin, which is the thing that's actually hitting the brain receptors. And it activates a subtype of serotonin receptor. So, we have lots of different types of serotonin receptors in our brain. One is called the 'serotonin 2A' receptor, and psilocybin and the other classic psychedelics can latch onto that the same way that our serotonin latches onto these brain receptors.

So, psilocybin affects serotonin, but then serotonin affects the glutamate system. And then at another level, you have this massive increase in communication across these different silos in the brain. That is probably an important level of analysis that is underlying at the psychological level: patients who have claims of insight viewing themselves from a radically different perspective, from a different lens, and based on animal research, there also seems like there may be increased 'neuroplasticity' in the system so that in the days following the psychedelic experience, people are more primed to learn new things.

There's a greater ability to establish a new and more optimal normal state. So, there seemed to really be something important about 'the nature of the experience' that people have during these sessions. It's not just about hitting a certain type of serotonin receptor in the brain. There's something about the psychology of the experience that unfolds during that session that tends to be important—which is in some sense what makes the psilocybin treatments a bit more like psychotherapy than traditional psychiatric medications where you just take the pill and you forget it.

There's some interacting reasons why the psychedelic renaissance is happening now. Our society has been in a mental health crisis, and it's been stagnating. Pharmaceutical companies don't make the investments in new mental healthcare treatments like they did decades ago. I mean, the best medical treatments that we have for many addictions are substitution treatments, also known as 'agonist treatments.' And I think these are good, but when you don't see success, I would say it's probably 'cause they fail to get to the roots of these mental disorders, including addiction.

That's why I think psychedelics have been so successful. Nothing is gonna be a miracle cure for everyone—nonetheless, they have so much promise, and we have to have that balance. I think that's more possible today. - Get smarter, faster with videos from the world's biggest thinkers. To learn even more from the world's biggest thinkers, get Big Think+ for your business.

More Articles

View All
Charlie Munger: The Real Estate Crash of a GENERATION
Billionaire investor Charlie Munger just issued a dire warning about what’s ahead for the U.S. real estate market, and unlike most people who issue these types of predictions, Munger actually knows a thing or two about the topic. Before he rose to fame as…
Drop Little Droplets in My Head | StarTalk
You and I, uh, attended a party at my house, and kids, like, surr, they want to talk to you. They know who you are, and they have questions. Yeah, yeah, ‘cause my teacher can’t understand what I’m asking. I think adults also have questions, but they forgo…
Lex Fridman s Donaldem Trumpem s automatickými titulky pro ty z vás, kterým se je nedaří aktivovat.
The following is a conversation with Donald Trump on this The Lex Freedman podcast. They get any smaller and smaller, they get smaller, right? I mean, people do respect you more when you have a big camera for some reason. No, it’s cool. And about 20 guys…
Tracy Young Speaks at Female Founders Conference 2015
Hi everyone! It’s an honor to be here today. My name is Tracy Young. I’m one of the co-founders of PlanGrid. So, I need your help picturing 2010. I’m a construction engineer, new graduate with a construction management degree, and I’m on my first constru…
Science, technology, and the environment | High school biology | Khan Academy
So I really liked a snack, and one of my most favorite snacks of all time happens to be bananas. I mean, you can have them in a smoothie, with some peanut butter, on some toast—in any way, really. Usually, like most people, I just throw away the peels aft…
Erin McCoy and Kevin O'Leary discuss cottages and mortgages
[Music] I am here with my great friend Kevin Oir, and we are in the beautiful Mokes on Lake Joseph. We’re going for a little boat cruise, and we’re going to talk about real estate, especially cottage real estate, and also all the things that Kevin’s up to…