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Review: Hofmann's Elixir: LSD and the New Eleusis

Albert Hofmann, discoverer of LSD, died in 2008 aged 102. This book, which he saw in proof form shortly before his death, has consequently become a posthumous tribute to the man, celebrating his life, work and influence. It takes the form of several essays by Hofmann himself, followed by a Festschrift of others by luminaries such as Ralph Metzner and Stanislav Grof, the whole ensemble edited by Amanda Feilding of the Beckley Foundation.

What comes across as intriguing is that though Hofmann chose a career path of empirical science in becoming a chemist, he nonetheless had a strong mystical orientation, which first manifested in childhood: "While I strolled through the birdsong-filled forest, freshly verdant and illuminated by the morning sun, everything suddenly appeared in an uncommonly clear light. Had I previously not looked carefully, and did I suddenly now see the spring forest as it really was? It radiated the splendour of a peculiar, heartfelt beauty, as if it wished to encompass me in all its glory. An indescribable feeling of happiness, of belonging and of blissful security perfused me."

It was this kind of perspective and serendipitous outlook that led Hofmann towards the discovery of LSD, and he gives a distinctly Jungian analysis of the string of chance events and coincidences that paved the way. Even though he was searching for a circulatory stimulant, not a psychedelic, and even though he’d synthesised the compound five years before and found it to be ineffective for that purpose, he was nevertheless drawn by its chemical structure to synthesise it again: "...a repetition, so to speak, founded on a hunch, chance had the opportunity to come into play. At the conclusion of the synthesis, I was overtaken by a very weird state of consciousness, which today one might call 'psychedelic'." Another chemist might have taken it no further, but Hofmann was sufficiently intrigued to conduct a self-experiment three days later, and the rest is history.

Posted By The Mad Artist at 2010-12-02 12:08:33 permalink | comments
Tags: Tags: Albert Hofmann Eleusis entheogens LSD psychedelic
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jon. : 2014-03-01 15:48:10
"It radiated the splendour of a peculiar, heartfelt beauty, as if it wished to encompass me in all its glory. An indescribable feeling of happiness, of belonging and of blissful security perfused me."

Is what it feels like to have that experience. or as Hendricks would say "RU Experienced" And Wilber would say "the knower and the know caught in the act of knowing. And the Hindus just used to call it Satchitannada.

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Tim. : 2010-12-03 15:06:00
Hofmann himself was the first to associate his childhood experiences in nature with his LSD experiences. Maybe the quote doesn't do this justice, but Hofmann always said these were his earliest intimations of immortality. Touching the sublime, the mystical - call it what you will, but it's hard to disagree with one man's noetic intuition.
reņģis. : 2010-12-02 18:53:27
I don't know what is "mystical" about the quote from Hoffman. It's just awe and doesn't imply anything transcendental or god-related by itself. Maybe if you really like spirituality and mysteries you can read that into the quote, but I don't.

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