Mike Jay (1) (1959–)
Autor(a) de The Air Loom Gang
Para outros autores com o nome Mike Jay, ver a página de desambiguação.
About the Author
Obras por Mike Jay
Artificial Paradises: A Drugs Reader (Penguin Twentieth Century Classics) (1999) — Editor — 69 exemplares
High Society: The Central Role of Mind-Altering Drugs in History, Science, and Culture (2010) 60 exemplares
The Atmosphere of Heaven: The Unnatural Experiments of Dr Beddoes and His Sons of Genius (2009) 44 exemplares
A Visionary Madness: The Case of James Tilly Matthews and the Influencing Machine (2014) 17 exemplares
Associated Works
Oh Excellent Air Bag: Under the Influence of Nitrous Oxide, 1799-1920 (2016) — Introdução — 7 exemplares
Fortean Times 97 — Contribuidor — 3 exemplares
Fortean Times 87 — Contribuidor — 2 exemplares
Etiquetado
Conhecimento Comum
- Nome canónico
- Jay, Mike
- Data de nascimento
- 1959-12-14
- Sexo
- male
- Nacionalidade
- USA
- Agente
- David Miller (Rogers Coleridge & White)
Membros
Críticas
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Associated Authors
Estatísticas
- Obras
- 13
- Also by
- 4
- Membros
- 647
- Popularidade
- #39,006
- Avaliação
- 3.9
- Críticas
- 14
- ISBN
- 46
- Línguas
- 1
Jay’s title comes from the German author Ernst Jünger. In his 1949 novel Heliopolis Jünger coined the term psychonauts to refer to people who used drugs to explore their minds. Collectively, Jay’s subjects experimented with laughing gas, ether, chloroform, hashish, morphine, cocaine, mescaline and LSD. Some of his psychonauts will be familiar: Sigmund Freud, for example, who used cocaine and studied its potential therapeutic value, or Timothy Leary, who experimented with LSD. Jay also includes many less famous but equally influential self-experimenters, sharing their insights, their impacts and the reasons why their approaches fell from favour.
Advocates of self-experimentation insisted that, without trying it themselves, they could not understand a drug’s effects, given how inscrutable second-hand accounts could be. In the 1790s, one such psychonaut wrote of laughing gas that, under its influence, ‘I feel like the sound of a harp’. Many researchers hoped to experience the visions and feelings that the substances inspired, and thereby to determine the drugs’ value in treating ailments. Others saw substances as providing a portal to insights and truths otherwise unattainable or hidden. When the French psychiatrist Jacques-Joseph Moreau tried hashish, for example, he concluded that ‘the inner world of dreams and the waking state of reason’ could ‘coexist and observe one another’. In 1902, the American philosopher William James claimed that our ‘waking consciousness’ was not our only consciousness.
Read the rest of the review at HistoryToday.com.
Elizabeth K. Gray is the author of Habit Forming: Drug Addiction in America, 1776-1914 (Oxford University Press, 2022).… (mais)