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Psychedelics Foster Epistemic Humility

david-blackbourn

By David Blackbourn

shutterstock 2464614483
in this article
  • The REBUS Model and the Default Mode Network
  • The Noetic Quality of Mystical Experiences
  • Humility as a Tool for Individual Healing
  • Humility as a Tool for Societal Change
  • The Guru Trap
  • Final Thoughts
david-blackbourn

By David Blackbourn

Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of the Chemical Collective or any associated parties.

We live in a world which demands absolute certainty. The digital platforms that monopolise so much of our attention bubble us up and spoon-feed us our own opinions back to us. Dogma thrives in this kind of environment. Society rewards those who shout the loudest. Nuance is often brushed off as uncertainty, weakness, or hesitation. This is an increasingly deep societal wound with far-reaching consequences. People can now reach a state in which they guard their opinions like a fortress. Opinion becomes belief, becomes an entire identity. Culture wars abound.

Epistemic humility becomes a lifeline when so many people have become so entrenched. It is not about playing dumb or shrugging your shoulders. Epistemic humility is admitting that your knowledge has severe limits. Your beliefs may well be completely false, regardless of how concrete they can appear in your mind. Admitting this can be very difficult. It fundamentally alters and undermines your previous perception of reality.

Modern science is increasingly pushing the benefits of psychedelics for tackling treatment-resistant challenges, like depression and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). This is obviously important, valuable work – these conditions are a result of entrenched negative thought cycles. However, a much larger structural shift is happening beneath this positive clinical surface. The true and lasting impact of the consumption of these substances is their ability to shatter our preconceptions and allow us to move past this rigidity of thought. The complete removal of certainty of perception is a means to tackle fundamental misunderstandings that have unbelievably negative consequences for the individual and the world as a whole.

The REBUS Model and the Default Mode Network

The physical root of the widespread mental rigidity resides within what is known as the Default Mode Network. The Default Mode Network (DMN) is a web of interacting brain regions that is “involved in self-related cognitive functions like rumination, introspection, self-reflective thoughts, and autobiographical memory”. Simply put, the DMN is a large part of what constructs our sense of self. As psychiatrist Matthew Brown describes it, the DMN serves to “remind you that you are you.”

Maintaining a coherent story is key to fitting new information into what we already know. This allows us to make predictions about what is likely to happen (for example: drop object, object hits ground). The psychological stability this provides is necessary for survival (for example: fire burns, a sabretooth tiger is dangerous), but if it solidifies too narrowly, whatever the cause of this may be, it can lock people behind invisible, often brutally restrictive mental walls. 

So, how exactly do psychedelics break these walls down? Robin Carhart-Harris and Karl Friston explored the process in their Relaxed Beliefs Under Psychedelics (REBUS) brain imaging research. The research revealed that psychedelics’ interaction with the 5-HT2A serotonin receptors severely weakens the grip of the preconceptions about our conscious experience. The structure of the brain itself becomes more malleable and less static. Its neuroplasticity (ability to change) increases for a short period, providing a window of opportunity to dismantle the behavioural patterns at the heart of conditions like treatment-resistant depression (TRD). 

The brain does not just passively record reality; it operates as a prediction engine, which actively builds reality from past experience. Sensory data is filtered through the pre-existing internal model. This is a top-down process that psychedelics completely flip. The predictions are removed, and at the same time, sensory input, devoid of filters, ratchets up dramatically. Faced with this flood of raw data, the actual hardware of the mind is chemically pressed into admitting its perception amounts to nothing more than an (albeit effective) educated guess. This biological surrender to the chemical effects of a psychedelic is a physical catalyst for epistemic humility.

The Noetic Quality of Mystical Experiences

The American philosopher and psychologist William James famously said that mystical experiences have an “epistemologically authoritative noetic quality”. This means that mystical experiences have the potential to reveal profound truths and insights which can “change the way people think”

James described the noetic quality in his book, The Varieties of Religious Experience:

Although so similar to states of feeling, mystical states seem to those who experience them to be also states of knowledge. They are states of insight into depths of truth unplumbed by the discursive intellect. They are illuminations, revelations, full of significance and importance, all inarticulate though they remain; and as a rule they carry with them a curious sense of authority.

This can be positive or negative depending on how these potential insights are interpreted, and creates a bit of a philosophical paradox for psychedelics, especially in a therapeutic context

Psychedelics are considered to induce ““mystical-type” experiences, [which are] routinely measured with instruments such as the Mystical Experience Questionnaire”

This evaluates four factors:

  1. feelings of unity and changes to the sense of self, profundity, and that the experience seems extraordinarily real (the noetic quality described by James)
  2. positive emotions
  3. alterations to the senses of time and space
  4. ineffability (that the experience is difficult to adequately describe using words)

This combination of factors, especially the noetic quality of the experience, poses a potentially serious risk. You might easily swap old dogmas for new ones that are just as limiting. Falling into this spiritual trap ruins any chance of epistemic humility.

The philosopher Chris Letheby tackles this issue from a naturalistic perspective in his book, Philosophy of Psychedelics. Over the years, there has been a huge amount of debate over what is known as the “comforting delusion objection”. This questions whether any personal growth gained from a psychedelic experience is actually philosophically valid.

“Some psychedelic users claim sincerely to encounter genuinely existing disembodied entities, spirit realms, and transcendent Grounds of Being”.

Letheby does not concur with the assertion that these are representations of truth, or breaking through the veil to a new reality:

“On principled philosophical grounds, naturalists reject these claims as arising from compelling drug-induced hallucinations — misrepresentations of reality.”

This does not mean these claims should be outright rejected. Letheby argues that while psychedelics do not provide any actual supernatural insight, they do not need to be beneficial:

“Many psychedelic states…despite having real epistemic flaws…also have significant epistemic benefits that are not available by any alternative means.”

If the danger of latching onto the perceived truth of these experiences can be bypassed, then psychedelics simply provide the means to strip away preconceptions and leave you exposed to the unreality of lived experience. The sheer staggering complexity of it all, of your brain and nature itself, is what kills intellectual arrogance. There is no need for esoteric facts to explain it. Clinical trials consistently highlight “awe” as a main emotional driver for the success of psychedelic-assisted therapy. Awe hits when you are presented with something so vast and complex that you are unable to comprehend or explain it. The mind has to surrender and drop the habit of pretending to know everything. This forcibly pushes you into a position of humility. You finally comprehend the true limits of your understanding. This provides an opportunity for change.

Humility as a Tool for Individual Healing

This shift in mentality is a big change for clinical psychiatry. It is key to treating stubborn mood disorders. The DMN has been found to be particularly overactive in certain mental health conditions. Conditions like anxiety, depression, and addiction are not simply chemical imbalances; they are fixed patterns of behaviour – effectively, negative mental thought loops, seemingly without a way out. The epistemic trap of a condition like depression is not just the individual feeling sad, they are also on top of that certain that they are worthless and the environment they inhabit is hostile, and their future is without hope. These are not passing feelings; they are experienced as facts. This is a complete calcification of perception. 

Psychedelic-assisted therapy shatters this rigidity via its disruption of the DMN. The depressive story is broken. This enforced state of epistemic humility allows the individual to see their negative beliefs from a different perspective. Perhaps they are not facts; they are constructed. This is the first step to actually healing. Once a patient admits (internally) that their take on reality is flawed, a window of neuroplasticity opens in which real behavioural change is possible.

Humility as a Tool for Societal Change

The impact of epistemic humility stretches way beyond the individual. It offers a powerful counter-narrative to our absurdly polarised society. We live in the era of the culture war. Every aspect of life seems to be somehow ideologically opposed. The rigid certainty on either side of a debate reduces a debate to simple shouting. The mental flexibility gained from psychedelic experience softens the hard edges of personal identity. The epistemic humility they promote challenges the foundations of groupthink and dogma that are key to maintaining authoritarian belief systems.

Studies have consistently shown that psychedelic use correlates strongly with a measurable drop in authoritarian traits. People also feel a significantly closer connection with the natural world. When we stop demanding absolute certainty, the urge to force this certainty onto others naturally fades as well. Recognising our own limits and flaws makes us more tolerant of other views. A functioning democracy simply cannot survive without stripping away this hostile defensiveness that is so corrosive to constructive debate.

The psychedelic community outside of a therapeutic context regularly falls into this trap of absolute certainty. What is known as psychedelic exceptionalism is the arrogant belief that “psychedelics are somehow better and more useful than other classes of drugs”, or that people who trip are more enlightened or ethical than those who don’t. This kind of elitism directly contradicts the humility these compounds can promote. All that has happened in this scenario is that mainstream political dogma has been replaced by equally rigid spiritual or esoteric dogma. This achieves absolutely nothing; it’s just another echo chamber. Real cognitive freedom is not just swapping one static belief system for another; it is recognising the inherent limits of any system of belief at all.

The Guru Trap

So, we can confirm pretty categorically that temporarily disabling the ego does not guarantee that you will gain any profound insights. If you use psychedelics regularly, it is easy to fall into the trap of “spiritual bypassing”. This term was coined in 1984 by meditation teacher and psychotherapist John Welwood. It is described as “the use of spiritual practice and beliefs to avoid dealing with our painful feelings, unresolved wounds, and developmental needs.”

In the context of the psychedelic experience, this mistakes the chemical-induced state of experience without boundaries with an actual state of enlightenment. This is the ego hijacking the profundity of the experience, the second it reforms. This creates a pretty awful state of psychedelic narcissism and self-delusion. “When self-delusion is the operating principle, psychedelics can amplify the delusion”. The drug can, in fact, reinforce a new kind of mental rigidity.

On top of that is an additional risk. If we remove our deepest-held preconceptions, ideas of right and wrong, this creates a window for potential change, yes, but also a window of intense vulnerability. Being in a state of profound psychological malleability carries large psychological and social risks. Your critical faculties are severely limited, and you are in a state of heightened suggestibility. In this state, it is very easy to gravitate (or be pushed) toward unhinged, magical, or conspiratorial beliefs. This is likely why psychedelics and psychoactive substances as a whole are such a common element of many cults and fringe societal groups. Charismatic, manipulative people can take advantage of people in this hyper-suggestive state.

You don’t simply trip and immediately arrive at a state of persisting sober humility. This is not a final destination; it is a window of opportunity. Maintaining epistemic humility requires effort and ongoing integration of psychedelic/mystical experiences. The trip itself only provides the flexibility required for change – it does not mean it’s time to suspend critical thinking. Community support and sober self-reflection are paramount, or profound realisations can quickly disappear, or harden into new forms of dogma.

Final Thoughts

Taking a psychedelic substance could be described as an exercise in unlearning. These compounds interact with the serotonin receptors in your brain to provide an intense window of neuroplasticity. This temporarily dissolves the ego and all sense of certainty. This physical brain change can create a huge psychological release of deeply ingrained feelings and behaviours. This shatters the rigid belief systems which block you from personal healing and increasingly polarise and fracture society as a whole.

The true value of these states is not that they reveal previously unseen cosmic truths or profound spiritual revelations. Their value lies in their ability to counter the idea of truth itself. You are never going to find definitive answers to the mysteries of existence from inside a human brain. Psychedelics remind you of that fact. You are exposed to the sheer vastness and complexity of untethered conscious experience. This is a vulnerable state prone to self-manipulation or manipulation by others. The wisdom brought back from a trip is not a new doctrine to spread; it is a recognition of how limited your human perception is.

Integrating these experiences is paramount to their benefit. It requires a radical shift in how we value authority and knowledge. They show us that we have to stop pretending that certainty is a sign of intellectual strength. It’s just plain arrogance. To progress, society must become a place where openly admitting ignorance is an act of courage. We inhabit a continuous state of uncertainty, choosing to live within that might be scary, but it’s far more real than latching onto any kind of definitive answer. This is the true expression of epistemic humility, and potentially a means towards a better, kinder, more understanding world.

David Blackbourn | Community Blogger at Chemical Collective

David is one of our community bloggers here at Chemical Collective. If you’re interested in joining our blogging team and getting paid to write about subjects you’re passionate about, please reach out to Sam via email at samwoolfe@gmail.com

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