U-Spaces is an e-mail discussion group on Psychedelic music, primarily from the 60's. Psychedelic Archaeology is a series devoted to unearthing psychedelic gems and distributing them to the members in this group through trade. Every effort was made to only include original psychedelic singles which have never been reissued since their original release date (at the time). There are a few cover versions included. Sound quality varies. There may be audible vinyl pops and or tape hiss depending upon the original music source. Don't let that deter you as the music is generally an excellent listen. The music on this set of compilations includes Psychedelic Rock, Psychedelic Pop, Garage Rock.
Psilocybin and other psychedelics are not currently approved for the use of treatment, but can be studied within the context of a clinical trial. Our Center focuses on conducting research studies on psychedelics, which includes studying the potential therapeutic benefits and efficacy of psychedelics.
U Spaces Psychedelic Archaeology Vol 01 10
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The Media section of our website contains many articles and podcasts in which researchers describe the most recent findings in psychedelic science and their implications. For more frequent updates, you can subscribe to our newsletter and follow us on Facebook and Twitter.
Figure 1. A model of psychedelics instrumentalization by early humans, and of the evolutionary consequences of its intergenerational recurrence. The left side represents the process of instrumentalization, which can occur repeatedly across the life-span of a generation of hominins. The right side represents the process of niche-construction supporting gene-culture coevolution across generations as populations construct and bequeath transformed ecological and social environments that exercise selective influences on following generations (Odling-Smee et al., 2003). The left side of the diagram portrays potential selective advantages conferred by psychedelic use under the socio-ecological conditions in which our ancestors evolved. The right side illustrates the process of selective feedback through which psychedelic instrumentalization could have enhanced the creation and evolution of the human socio-cognitive niche. The four colored boxes on the left represent the major aspects of the emerging human adaptive complex that created the socio-cognitive niche; these involve skills and processes potentially amplified by psychedelic instrumentalization, with the two-directional arrows between the boxes representing the interconnectedness of these competence realms that coevolved in creating our unique adaptation mode. The emergence and persistence of this adaptive complex across human evolution permitted the progressive construction of socially modified environments (represented by the green box at the right side of the diagram) that in turn selected for enhancements in the same underlying human propensities and capabilities (represented by arrows with a plus [+] sign) that sustained the socio-cognitive niche.
In this talk, Professor Kline will draw on the records of the Maryland Psychiatric Research Center LSD Training Program Study and the papers of Grof to explore the unexpected entanglements between psychiatry, midwifery, and psychedelics.
Join us on Tuesday, November 28 at 6:30 pm in the Darden Lobby of Nau-Gibson Hall for the opening of "Contested Spaces: Examining the Past, the Present, and the Forgotten at the University." As part of the celebration of the University's Bicentennial, the exhibition seeks to explore issues of community power dynamics, exclusivity, student agency, and student responsibility at the University through the prism of spaces and their changing use and appropration over time. The project was conceived, designed, and executed by the students of Dr. Waitman Beorn's class, "Curating the Past," a new course offered by the History Department this fall. The event will begin with remarks from students in the class and a faculty speaker. Light refreshments will be provided.
This continues the "dig" of digital type archaeology from the Seybold Report. Viewed now, more than 33 years later, these texts and illustrations not only offer a view of the state of knowledge of digital typography at the time of publication but also indicate what Bigelow and Holmes were studying as the concept of what became the Lucida font family began to take form in our studio, two and a half years before the first release of Lucida in September, 1984. 2ff7e9595c
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