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kriptix2@iris.to
npub1f2gk...jky4
Cogito...
### ๐ŸŒ€ **1. Reality Tunnels** image Robert Anton Wilson (RAW), particularly in books like *Prometheus Rising* and *The Cosmic Trigger* trilogy, introduced the idea of **โ€œreality tunnelsโ€** โ€” the notion that each individual perceives reality through a unique, subjective filter shaped by beliefs, experiences, culture, and neurological wiring. > โ€œWe donโ€™t see things as they are, we see things as we are.โ€ โ€” *Anaรฏs Nin*, a quote Wilson loved to reference. In Wilsonโ€™s view: * Every person operates within a **neurological and semantic โ€œtunnelโ€** โ€” a model of reality rather than reality itself. * Conflicts, ideologies, and dogmas often arise when people mistake their tunnel for objective truth. * The key skill is **โ€œmodel agnosticismโ€** โ€” holding multiple models lightly and being open to shifting perspectives. --- ### โš›๏ธ **2. Quantum Theory and Subjective Reality** Wilson often drew analogies between his idea of reality tunnels and insights from **quantum physics**, especially the **Copenhagen interpretation** and the **observer effect**. In quantum mechanics: * **Observation affects the observed** โ€” the act of measurement collapses the wave function into a definite state. * Reality at the quantum level is **probabilistic**, not deterministic. * What we observe depends on **how** we observe it. Wilson used this as a **metaphor** (not necessarily as literal physics) to suggest: * Just as observation shapes quantum outcomes, **beliefs and expectations shape our subjective experiences**. * โ€œThe universe contains as many realities as there are observers.โ€ He playfully merged scientific language with psychological insights, creating a **psychedelic epistemology** where the boundaries between perception, cognition, and the external world blur. --- ### ๐Ÿงฉ **3. Wilsonโ€™s โ€œQuantum Psychologyโ€** In his book *Quantum Psychology*, RAW explores how **quantum theory** can serve as a model for understanding **consciousness and uncertainty**. He doesnโ€™t claim physics *proves* his ideas โ€” rather, he uses quantum principles as **metaphors** for flexibility in thinking: * **Uncertainty Principle (Heisenberg):** Our knowledge of reality is always limited and contextual. * **Wave-Particle Duality:** Things can appear contradictory depending on how we look โ€” just like political or philosophical perspectives. * **Superposition:** Multiple interpretations can coexist until we "collapse" our focus onto one. For Wilson, **the healthiest mind** is one that remains aware of this uncertainty โ€” a mind that can shift tunnels fluidly and consciously. --- ### ๐Ÿง  **4. Reality Tunnels in Modern Context** Today, the โ€œreality tunnelโ€ idea is incredibly relevant: * **Social media algorithms** reinforce specific worldviews, creating โ€œfilter bubblesโ€ โ€” literal digital reality tunnels. * **Cognitive biases** (confirmation bias, motivated reasoning) keep us inside belief systems. * **Psychedelic therapy** and meditation practices are sometimes described as tools for *escaping* or *reconfiguring* oneโ€™s tunnel. #RAW #reality #tunnel #perception #nostr #bitcoin
image ## โœ‚๏ธ The Cut-Up: How Bowie, Burroughs Rewired Language In an era where algorithms remix our playlists and feed us auto-generated news, itโ€™s easy to forget that one of the first โ€œmachinesโ€ to fracture meaning was a pair of scissors. Long before AI chatbots, there was the **cut-up technique**: a simple but radical act of slicing written text into fragments and rearranging them to reveal something unexpected. First discovered accidentally by the painter **Brion Gysin** in the 1950s and popularized by **William S. Burroughs**, the cut-up seemed, at first, like a literary prank. You take a page of writing, cut it into strips, shuffle them, and read what new sentences emerge. But to Burroughs and the artists who followed him, this wasnโ€™t just a gimmick โ€” it was **a form of magick**. Burroughs believed that language was a virus that programmed human perception, and that the cut-up could *break its control*. By cutting and recombining words, he thought one could disrupt the โ€œreality scriptโ€ that ordinary language imposes. What looks like a collage of nonsense might, in fact, be a form of divination โ€” a way to glimpse meanings that the conscious mind censors. He called this process โ€œcutting the word lines,โ€ and sometimes described it in the same breath as **scrying**, **sigil magic**, and **telepathy**. This is not as far-fetched as it sounds. Much of modern occultism โ€” from **Aleister Crowley** to **chaos magick** โ€” rests on the idea that symbols, language, and intent can shape perception and, through it, reality. Randomness isnโ€™t an obstacle in such work; itโ€™s a channel for intuition. When a tarot reader shuffles cards or an oracle casts runes, they use chance as a mirror. The cut-up operates on the same principle, but with the raw material of prose and poetry instead of divinatory symbols. For **David Bowie**, who absorbed Burroughsโ€™ ideas in the early 1970s, the cut-up became both a **creative tool and a spiritual exercise**. Heโ€™d type out pages of lyrics, cut them into phrases, and throw them on the floor, rearranging the scraps until new meanings leapt out. He described it as โ€œa kind of Western Tarot.โ€ Later, in the 1990s, he even built a computer program to automate the process โ€” a precursor to the random text generators that now power much of internet culture. Through the cut-up, Bowie sought not chaos but revelation. It helped him bypass self-consciousness, excavate his subconscious, and find unexpected phrases that seemed to arrive from elsewhere. In his hands, the method became a bridge between **art and occultism**, between creative chance and deliberate ritual. Other musicians and writers followed suit. **Genesis P-Orridge** of Throbbing Gristle and Psychic TV explicitly wove the cut-up into their magickal practice, calling it โ€œword alchemy.โ€ They treated texts like spells, cutting them apart to release their hidden energy. In the emerging field of **chaos magick**, which embraces collage, cybernetics, and pop culture as sacred material, the cut-up became a technique for hacking both language and consciousness. Why does this technique feel so potent โ€” even mystical? Because it exposes the fragile seams of meaning itself. The moment you slice a sentence, you confront the illusion that words neatly contain thought. You see, instead, that language is a shimmering field of possibilities โ€” that by rearranging it, you can change how reality *appears*. In that sense, the cut-up is both **ritual and revelation**. It invites a state of creative surrender, where chance becomes collaboration. Whether you call it art, magick, or just a clever writing trick, it remains a tool for those who sense that language doesnโ€™t merely describe the world โ€” it **builds** it. Today, in our algorithmic culture, the cut-up feels prophetic. Social media feeds and generative AI already perform digital cut-ups on a massive scale, remixing fragments of language, image, and sound into endless collage. The difference is intention. Burroughs and Bowie used randomness to *wake up* from languageโ€™s trance; our digital tools often use it to *deepen* it. But the scissors are still there for anyone who wants them. Take a page, cut it up, and see what patterns emerge. You might not summon spirits, but you may catch a glimpse of the unconscious hand that writes through you โ€” and that, in its way, is magic enough. #nostr #bitcoin
image Governments are based pincipally on force and deception. Democratic governments are based chiefly on deception, other governments on force. And democratic governments, if you get too uppity, give up on the deception and resort to brute force, as a lot of us found out in the sixites. Those who didn't find out in the sixites will find out in the near future because we're going to have a rerun. - Robert Anton Wilson #RAW #nostr #bitcoin #freepalestine ๐Ÿ‡ต๐Ÿ‡ธ
image ## **The Molecule That Nature Hid in Plain Sight** In an era where humanity scours distant planets for hints of alien chemistry, itโ€™s easy to forget that one of the most enigmatic molecules in the known biosphere โ€” N,N-dimethyltryptamine, or DMT โ€” has been quietly humming along inside Earthโ€™s own living systems for millions of years. DMTโ€™s mythology precedes its science. Known popularly as the โ€œspirit molecule,โ€ itโ€™s famous for producing minutes-long, kaleidoscopic journeys when smoked or injected โ€” experiences so profound that theyโ€™ve been likened to near-death visions, mystical revelation, or contact with other dimensions. Yet strip away the mystique, and DMT turns out to be not an exotic foreigner to human biology, but a familiar local resident. Trace quantities of it have been detected in mammalian brains, in the lungs, and in cerebrospinal fluid. The enzymes that make it โ€” most notably indolethylamine N-methyltransferase (INMT) โ€” are expressed across the body, hinting at a subtle, perhaps ancient role in metabolism. But DMT doesnโ€™t belong only to us. It appears all over the natural world: in tropical trees and scrubby grasses, in the bark of **Mimosa** and **Acacia**, in the leaves of **Psychotria viridis** and **Diplopterys cabrerana** โ€” the botanical backbone of the Amazonian brew ayahuasca. Trace analogues show up in microbes, fish, even amphibians. The more closely researchers look, the more it seems that tryptamine chemistry is a common language shared across lifeโ€™s kingdoms. That ubiquity raises profound questions. Why would evolution conserve the machinery to make a compound capable of bending perception itself? One answer may be that DMT is not made **for** consciousness at all. In plants, it could serve as a defense molecule, a deterrent to herbivory, or a by-product of general indole metabolism. In animals, some researchers suspect it acts as a neuromodulator at the ฯƒโ‚ receptor โ€” a molecular chaperone involved in cell stress and neuroprotection. DMT might be less an inner psychonaut and more a biochemical firefighter, dampening inflammation and oxidative injury. Still, its presence in the human brain invites irresistible speculation. If the brain makes a molecule that, in higher concentrations, evokes transcendence, is the line between the mystical and the molecular thinner than we think? Could spontaneous surges in endogenous DMT underlie certain altered states โ€” the vividness of dreams, the tunnel vision of a near-death experience? At present, those ideas remain hypotheses, intriguing but unproven. The moleculeโ€™s concentration in the living brain hovers at the edge of detectability; whether it ever reaches psychoactive levels naturally is an open question. The real fascination, then, may lie not in DMTโ€™s capacity to launch consciousness into orbit, but in what its very **existence** reveals. Nature tends to economize; redundant molecules rarely persist across such diverse lineages. DMTโ€™s persistence suggests utility โ€” a function deeper than the brief psychedelic fireworks that draw human attention. Perhaps itโ€™s part of a broader indole signaling network that helped living cells manage stress long before complex nervous systems evolved. Ironically, the human fascination with DMT has often outpaced the science. Online speculation paints it as a cosmic key; sensational media stories tie it to pineal glands and enlightenment. Meanwhile, the actual research community โ€” from neurochemists to pharmacologists โ€” is working through the painstaking steps of quantification, receptor mapping, and biosynthetic control. Their challenge is not to confirm myths, but to replace them with measurable mechanisms. If the 20th century was the age of neurotransmitters like serotonin and dopamine, the 21st may well become the century of the trace amines โ€” the subtle, low-abundance molecules that operate in the margins of neural chemistry. DMT may turn out to be one of those quiet modulators, tuning the brainโ€™s response to stress and metabolism rather than opening wormholes to other worlds. But even if thatโ€™s all it does, it still connects us chemically to a lineage that stretches across the green leaves of the forest and into the microbial soil beneath our feet. Itโ€™s a humbling thought: the molecule that can momentarily unmake our sense of self is also part of the ordinary biochemistry of life. The extraordinary, it seems, was hiding in plain sight all along. #dmt #technology #nostr #bitcoin
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