John Lilly: Altered States
Interview with John
Lilly
Jan 1983
Omni Magazine
Citation: Hooper J. "John
Lilly: Altered States". Omni Magazine. Jan 1983.
Above the ranch-style dream houses
and seafood restaurants along the Pacific Coast Highway the
rugged, bleached Malibu canyons, twisting roads, dusty scrub
oaks, and desert sagebrush speak a supernal language. It is a
landscape of the spirit more than of the body, and Dr. John C.
Lilly, dolphin magus and scientist-turned-seeker, seems at home
here -- where the spectacular surf down at Zuma Beach is a mere
rim of white foam on the edge of the world. If life imitates
art, Dr. Lilly should live on just such a mountaintop.
It hadn't been easy to find him. When I asked scientist acquaintances about Lilly's whereabouts, most of them said something like, "Do you mean, what dimension?" Someone thought he worked with dolphins at Marine World, in Redwood City, just south of San Francisco, and, it turns out, he does. But when I phoned there, I talked to a succession of secretaries who had never heard of the remarkable Dr. Lilly. I finally left a message with "Charlie," a gate guard who told me that he sometimes "sees him go in and out." No luck. When at last I called his house in Malibu, Lilly answered the telephone himself and gave me road directions that were accurate to the tenth of a mile.
Lilly's autobiography, The Scientist (1978), begins with the creation of the universe out of cosmic dust, but his own human chronicle starts in St. Paul, Minnesota, in 1915. A scholarship whiz kid at the California Institute of Technology, Lilly graduated with a degree in biology and physics in 1938 and went on to earn his M.D. from the University of Pennsylvania. Though he became a qualified psychoanalyst, his first love was brain "hardware." His mastery of neurophysiology, neuroanatomy, biophysics, electronics, and computer theory gave him something of the technical ingenuity of the genie in The Arabian Nights From 1953 to 1958 he held two posts -- one at the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) and one at the National Institute of Neurological Diseases and Blindness -- both part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), in Bethesda, Maryland. In his early years at the NIH he invented a technique that allowed scientists for the first time to take brainwave recordings from the cortex of unanesthetized animals. He also mapped the brain's pleasure and pain systems by direct electrical stimulation of its core regions. And in 1954, tackling the classic puzzle of what would happen to the brain if it were deprived of all external stimulation, he built the world's first isolation tank.
Floating in his dark, silent, saltwater void -- the original version of which required that he wear a skindiver's mask -- Lilly discovered that sensory deprivation did not put the brain to sleep, as many scientists had supposed. Furthermore, tanking led him far afield from the doctrine that the mind is fully contained within the physical brain. The tank, he declared, was a "black hole in psychophysical space, a psychological freefall," which could induce unusual sensations: reverie states, waking dreams, even a kind of out-of-the-body travel. (Today, of course, isolation tanks are so much a part of the culture that even straitlaced businessmen routinely spend their lunch hours -- and upwards of $20 -- relaxing in health-spa tranquillity tanks based on Lilly's original design.)
More and more enamored of the deep, womblike peace he experienced in the tank, Lilly began to wonder what it would be like to be buoyant all the time. Whales, dolphins, and porpoises sprang to mind, and the rest, of course, is history. By 1961, Lilly had resigned from the NIH to found and direct the Communications Research Institute, in the U.S. Virgin Islands and Miami, Florida, for the purpose of studying these big-brained, sea-dwelling mammals. Convinced that dolphins are not only smarter but more "humane" than Homo sapiens and that they communicate in a sophisticated sonar language popularized, rather inaccurately, by the baby-talking dolphins of the film Day of the Dolphin -- Lilly began a lifelong quest to "talk" to the Cetacea. Today he uses a "two-faced" computer system called JANUS -- named after the two-faced Roman god -- to work out a human/dolphin language.
While Lilly was experimenting with otherworldly states in the isolation tank, the halcyon days of hallucinogenic research were under way at the NIMH. (LSD was not to become a controlled and, therefore, sticky substance until 1966.) Lilly, however, did not try LSD until the early 1960s. Once he did, it became his high mass. Mixing LSD and isolation tanking for the first time in 1964, he entered what he described as "profound altered states" --transiting interstellar realms, conversing with supernatural beings, giving birth to himself, and, like Pascal, exploring infinities macroscopic and microscopic. "I traveled among cells. watched their functioning . . . and realized that within myself was a grand assemblage of living organisms, all of which added up to me," he would write of his illuminations in The Center of the Cyclone(1972). "I traveled through my brain, watching the neurons and their activities . . . I moved into smaller and smaller dimensions, down to the quantum levels, and watched the play of the atoms in their own vast universes, their wide empty spaces, and the fantastic forces involved in each of the distant nuclei with their orbital clouds of force field electrons . . . It was really frightening to see the tunneling effects and the other phenomena of the quantal level taking place."
By all accounts. Lilly has probably taken more psychedelic substances -- notably LSD and "vitamin K," the superhallucinogen he prefers not to identify -- than anyone else in the consciousness business. Since the lords and overseers of establishment science frown on using one's own brain and nervous system as an experimental laboratory, Lilly today reports his findings in popular books instead of in neurophysiology papers. He makes the scene at such New Age watering holes as Esalen, in California, and Oscar Ichazo's Arica training place, in Chile. He hasn't received a government grant since 1968. When asked about him. mainstream scientists tend to shake their heads sadly, as if recalling someone recently deceased.
"The trouble with Lilly is that he is in love with death," says one neuroscientist friend of his. "But, God, is he brilliant!" Yes, he is brilliant, and, yes, he does seem to have flirted quite flagrantly with death. Though LSD- or K-related accidents have almost killed him on at least three occasions, Lilly still keeps going back to the void, once tripping on K, he tells me for 100 solid days and nights. It is also true that he has always returned to Earth, however constraining its boundaries, and that his wife, Toni, has had a good deal to do with that.
The moment I arrive at his house, having driven my rental car over zigzagging mountain roads, Lilly announces, "We have one rule in this house. No one can take drugs of any kind and drive back down that road." Five minutes later he seems to be offering me acid and K -- or did I hallucinate that? Is he putting me on? What kind of game is he playing with the anonymous reporter who has come to call?
He tapes me with a matchbook-sized Japanese tape recorder while I tape him: The phone rings and Lilly answers it, his face as immobile as the wooden Indian that guards his entryway. "Who are you?" he demands. His side of the conversation is curt. "It was someone asking about the solid-state entities," he tells me. As our interview proceeds, I watch various expressions play across his patrician, chiseled-granite face -- unexpected sweetness whenever he speaks of Toni, or of dolphins. (When talking about a dolphin, Lilly always uses the pronoun he, never it.) Sometimes his language is full-bodied, and poetic; sometimes it is a private blend of computerspeak and Esalenese, full of phrases like "Earth Coincidence Control Offices," "metaprogrammings," and "belief-system interlocks." My own questions echo in my head, and Lilly seems bored, on the verge of walking off abruptly into a zero-g universe of his own. Possibly to get rid of me for a while, he escorts me to his samadhi isolation tank.
In this warm, saline sea of isolation, where such luminaries as Nobel physicist Richard Feynman, anthropologist Gregory Bateson, psychologist Charles Tart, and est czar Werner Erhard have floated and had visions, I try to sort it all out. My visions are disconnected, rudimentary: I am a swamp plant trailing its leaves on the water; a fetus; a dolphin; a whirring brain in an inert shell. An hour and a half later (one loses track of time) I emerge and try to continue the interview. The problem is, in my state of tranquillity, I have lost interest in asking reporterlike questions, and, besides, I feel Lilly retreating more and more into some remote, glacial space behind his eyes. From another room a manic laugh track from what sounds like an old I Love Lucy show floats out to us. Some time later Toni Lilly suddenly walks in, smiling and carrying bags of groceries. Her husband jumps up to help her unload the car, and I take my cue to depart back down the mountain.
Only later, at home in the Los Angeles lowlands, do I notice that I am altered -- that for 24 hours after isolation-tanking, reality looks and feels quite different. Four weeks later I telephone Lilly, and we talk again. The following interview is the result of our afternoon together in his Malibu home and of that subsequent telephone conversation.
It hadn't been easy to find him. When I asked scientist acquaintances about Lilly's whereabouts, most of them said something like, "Do you mean, what dimension?" Someone thought he worked with dolphins at Marine World, in Redwood City, just south of San Francisco, and, it turns out, he does. But when I phoned there, I talked to a succession of secretaries who had never heard of the remarkable Dr. Lilly. I finally left a message with "Charlie," a gate guard who told me that he sometimes "sees him go in and out." No luck. When at last I called his house in Malibu, Lilly answered the telephone himself and gave me road directions that were accurate to the tenth of a mile.
Lilly's autobiography, The Scientist (1978), begins with the creation of the universe out of cosmic dust, but his own human chronicle starts in St. Paul, Minnesota, in 1915. A scholarship whiz kid at the California Institute of Technology, Lilly graduated with a degree in biology and physics in 1938 and went on to earn his M.D. from the University of Pennsylvania. Though he became a qualified psychoanalyst, his first love was brain "hardware." His mastery of neurophysiology, neuroanatomy, biophysics, electronics, and computer theory gave him something of the technical ingenuity of the genie in The Arabian Nights From 1953 to 1958 he held two posts -- one at the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) and one at the National Institute of Neurological Diseases and Blindness -- both part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), in Bethesda, Maryland. In his early years at the NIH he invented a technique that allowed scientists for the first time to take brainwave recordings from the cortex of unanesthetized animals. He also mapped the brain's pleasure and pain systems by direct electrical stimulation of its core regions. And in 1954, tackling the classic puzzle of what would happen to the brain if it were deprived of all external stimulation, he built the world's first isolation tank.
Floating in his dark, silent, saltwater void -- the original version of which required that he wear a skindiver's mask -- Lilly discovered that sensory deprivation did not put the brain to sleep, as many scientists had supposed. Furthermore, tanking led him far afield from the doctrine that the mind is fully contained within the physical brain. The tank, he declared, was a "black hole in psychophysical space, a psychological freefall," which could induce unusual sensations: reverie states, waking dreams, even a kind of out-of-the-body travel. (Today, of course, isolation tanks are so much a part of the culture that even straitlaced businessmen routinely spend their lunch hours -- and upwards of $20 -- relaxing in health-spa tranquillity tanks based on Lilly's original design.)
More and more enamored of the deep, womblike peace he experienced in the tank, Lilly began to wonder what it would be like to be buoyant all the time. Whales, dolphins, and porpoises sprang to mind, and the rest, of course, is history. By 1961, Lilly had resigned from the NIH to found and direct the Communications Research Institute, in the U.S. Virgin Islands and Miami, Florida, for the purpose of studying these big-brained, sea-dwelling mammals. Convinced that dolphins are not only smarter but more "humane" than Homo sapiens and that they communicate in a sophisticated sonar language popularized, rather inaccurately, by the baby-talking dolphins of the film Day of the Dolphin -- Lilly began a lifelong quest to "talk" to the Cetacea. Today he uses a "two-faced" computer system called JANUS -- named after the two-faced Roman god -- to work out a human/dolphin language.
While Lilly was experimenting with otherworldly states in the isolation tank, the halcyon days of hallucinogenic research were under way at the NIMH. (LSD was not to become a controlled and, therefore, sticky substance until 1966.) Lilly, however, did not try LSD until the early 1960s. Once he did, it became his high mass. Mixing LSD and isolation tanking for the first time in 1964, he entered what he described as "profound altered states" --transiting interstellar realms, conversing with supernatural beings, giving birth to himself, and, like Pascal, exploring infinities macroscopic and microscopic. "I traveled among cells. watched their functioning . . . and realized that within myself was a grand assemblage of living organisms, all of which added up to me," he would write of his illuminations in The Center of the Cyclone(1972). "I traveled through my brain, watching the neurons and their activities . . . I moved into smaller and smaller dimensions, down to the quantum levels, and watched the play of the atoms in their own vast universes, their wide empty spaces, and the fantastic forces involved in each of the distant nuclei with their orbital clouds of force field electrons . . . It was really frightening to see the tunneling effects and the other phenomena of the quantal level taking place."
By all accounts. Lilly has probably taken more psychedelic substances -- notably LSD and "vitamin K," the superhallucinogen he prefers not to identify -- than anyone else in the consciousness business. Since the lords and overseers of establishment science frown on using one's own brain and nervous system as an experimental laboratory, Lilly today reports his findings in popular books instead of in neurophysiology papers. He makes the scene at such New Age watering holes as Esalen, in California, and Oscar Ichazo's Arica training place, in Chile. He hasn't received a government grant since 1968. When asked about him. mainstream scientists tend to shake their heads sadly, as if recalling someone recently deceased.
"The trouble with Lilly is that he is in love with death," says one neuroscientist friend of his. "But, God, is he brilliant!" Yes, he is brilliant, and, yes, he does seem to have flirted quite flagrantly with death. Though LSD- or K-related accidents have almost killed him on at least three occasions, Lilly still keeps going back to the void, once tripping on K, he tells me for 100 solid days and nights. It is also true that he has always returned to Earth, however constraining its boundaries, and that his wife, Toni, has had a good deal to do with that.
The moment I arrive at his house, having driven my rental car over zigzagging mountain roads, Lilly announces, "We have one rule in this house. No one can take drugs of any kind and drive back down that road." Five minutes later he seems to be offering me acid and K -- or did I hallucinate that? Is he putting me on? What kind of game is he playing with the anonymous reporter who has come to call?
He tapes me with a matchbook-sized Japanese tape recorder while I tape him: The phone rings and Lilly answers it, his face as immobile as the wooden Indian that guards his entryway. "Who are you?" he demands. His side of the conversation is curt. "It was someone asking about the solid-state entities," he tells me. As our interview proceeds, I watch various expressions play across his patrician, chiseled-granite face -- unexpected sweetness whenever he speaks of Toni, or of dolphins. (When talking about a dolphin, Lilly always uses the pronoun he, never it.) Sometimes his language is full-bodied, and poetic; sometimes it is a private blend of computerspeak and Esalenese, full of phrases like "Earth Coincidence Control Offices," "metaprogrammings," and "belief-system interlocks." My own questions echo in my head, and Lilly seems bored, on the verge of walking off abruptly into a zero-g universe of his own. Possibly to get rid of me for a while, he escorts me to his samadhi isolation tank.
In this warm, saline sea of isolation, where such luminaries as Nobel physicist Richard Feynman, anthropologist Gregory Bateson, psychologist Charles Tart, and est czar Werner Erhard have floated and had visions, I try to sort it all out. My visions are disconnected, rudimentary: I am a swamp plant trailing its leaves on the water; a fetus; a dolphin; a whirring brain in an inert shell. An hour and a half later (one loses track of time) I emerge and try to continue the interview. The problem is, in my state of tranquillity, I have lost interest in asking reporterlike questions, and, besides, I feel Lilly retreating more and more into some remote, glacial space behind his eyes. From another room a manic laugh track from what sounds like an old I Love Lucy show floats out to us. Some time later Toni Lilly suddenly walks in, smiling and carrying bags of groceries. Her husband jumps up to help her unload the car, and I take my cue to depart back down the mountain.
Only later, at home in the Los Angeles lowlands, do I notice that I am altered -- that for 24 hours after isolation-tanking, reality looks and feels quite different. Four weeks later I telephone Lilly, and we talk again. The following interview is the result of our afternoon together in his Malibu home and of that subsequent telephone conversation.
OMNI
You're probably best
known as "Dr. John Lilly, the dolphin man." What is the aim
of your current dolphin research?
Lilly
At Marine World, we're
working with computers to develop a human/dolphin code,
analogous to the Morse code used in telegraphy. The project
is called JANUS -- for Joint Analog Numerical Understanding
System. Like the Roman god Janus, it has two "faces" -- a
dolphin side and a human side.
A human/dolphin language must contend with the fact that dolphins communicate at frequencies ten times above the human range. While our speech falls between three hundred and three thousand hertz, or cycles per second. dolphins talk to one another underwater at frequencies from three thousand to thirty thousand hertz. If you go into a pool with a dolphin and he starts whistling, you'll hear what sounds like very high-pitched squeaks. So the problem is to bring their frequency down into our sound window and ours up into theirs.
We're using a computer system to transmit sounds underwater to the dolphins. A computer is electrical energy oscillating at particular frequencies, which can vary. and we use a transducer to convert the electrical waveforms into acoustical energy. You could translate the waveforms into any kind of sound you like: human speech, dolphin-like clicks, whatever.
A human/dolphin language must contend with the fact that dolphins communicate at frequencies ten times above the human range. While our speech falls between three hundred and three thousand hertz, or cycles per second. dolphins talk to one another underwater at frequencies from three thousand to thirty thousand hertz. If you go into a pool with a dolphin and he starts whistling, you'll hear what sounds like very high-pitched squeaks. So the problem is to bring their frequency down into our sound window and ours up into theirs.
We're using a computer system to transmit sounds underwater to the dolphins. A computer is electrical energy oscillating at particular frequencies, which can vary. and we use a transducer to convert the electrical waveforms into acoustical energy. You could translate the waveforms into any kind of sound you like: human speech, dolphin-like clicks, whatever.
OMNI
Do you type something
out on the computer keyboard and have it transmitted to the
dolphins as sound in their frequency range? And do they
communicate back to the computer?
Lilly
Yes, but we actually
use two computers. An Apple II transmits sounds to the
dolphins, via a transducer, from a keyboard operated by
humans. Then there is another computer, made by Digital
Equipment Corporation, that listens to the dolphins. A
hydrophone, or underwater microphone, picks up any sounds
the dolphins make, feeds them into a frequency analyzer, a
sonic spectrum analyzer, and then into the computer. So the
computer has an ear and a voice, and the dolphin has an ear
and a voice. The system also displays visual information to
the dolphins.
On the human side it's rather ponderous, because we have to punch keys and see letters on a screen. People have tried to make dolphins punch keys, but I don't think dolphins should have to punch keys. They don't have these little fingers that we have. So we'd prefer to develop a sonic code as the basis of a dolphin computer language. If a group of dolphins can work with a computer that feeds back to them what they just said -- names of objects and so forth -- and if we can be the intercessors between them and the computer, I think we can eventually communicate. [See "Talking Computer for Dolphins," Continuum, August 1982.]
On the human side it's rather ponderous, because we have to punch keys and see letters on a screen. People have tried to make dolphins punch keys, but I don't think dolphins should have to punch keys. They don't have these little fingers that we have. So we'd prefer to develop a sonic code as the basis of a dolphin computer language. If a group of dolphins can work with a computer that feeds back to them what they just said -- names of objects and so forth -- and if we can be the intercessors between them and the computer, I think we can eventually communicate. [See "Talking Computer for Dolphins," Continuum, August 1982.]
OMNI
How long will it take
to break through the interspecies communication barrier?
Lilly
About five years. I
think it may take about a year for the dolphins to learn the
code, and then, in about five years we'll have a
human/dolphin dictionary. However, we need some very
expensive equipment to deal with dolphins' underwater sonar.
Since dolphins "see" with sound in three dimensions -- in
stereo -- you have to make your words "stereophonic words."
OMNI
You've said that
dolphins also use "sonar beams" to look at the internal
state of one another's body, or that of a human being, and
that they can even gauge another's emotional state that way.
How does that work?
Lilly
They have a very
high-frequency sonar that they can use to inspect something
and look at its internal structure. Say you're immersed in
water and a sound wave hits your body. If there's any gas in
your body, it reflects back an incredible amount of sound.
To the dolphin it would appear as a bright spot in the
acoustic picture.
OMNI
Can we ever really
tune in to the dolphin's "stereophonic" world view, or is it
perhaps too alien to ours?
Lilly
I want to. I just did
a very primitive experiment -- -a Saturday afternoon-type
experiment -- at Marine World I was floating in an isolation
tank and had an underwater loudspeaker close to my head and
an air microphone just above me. Both were connected through
an amplifier to the dolphin tank so that they could hear me
and I could hear them. I started playing with sound --
whistling and clicking and making other noises that dolphins
like. Suddenly I felt as if a lightning bolt had hit me on
the head. We have all this on tape, and it's just
incredible. It was a dolphin whistle that went
ssssshhheeeeeooooo in a falling frequency from about nine
thousand to three thousand hertz in my hearing range. It
started at the top of my head, expanding as the frequency
dropped, and showing me the inside of my skull, and went
right down through my body. The dolphin gave me a
three-dimensional feeling of the inside of my skull,
describing my body by a single sound!
I want to know what the dolphin experiences. I want to go back and repeat the experiment in stereo, instead of with a single loudspeaker. Since I'm not equipped like a dolphin, I've got to use an isolation tank, electronics, and all this nonsense to pretend I'm a dolphin.
I want to know what the dolphin experiences. I want to go back and repeat the experiment in stereo, instead of with a single loudspeaker. Since I'm not equipped like a dolphin, I've got to use an isolation tank, electronics, and all this nonsense to pretend I'm a dolphin.
OMNI
Human language isn't
merely descriptive; it has also evolved abstractions --
units symbolizing things that aren't physically real, that
have no material composition. You've written that dolphins
probably have "ancient vocal histories that their young must
learn." Do you believe their language is a symbolic system?
Lilly
Sure. If it weren't,
they wouldn't exist. They have to know different kinds of
fish and coral, the distinction between edible and inedible
-- that sort of thing. I suggest you don a dolphin suit and
join them.
OMNI
You've pointed out
that the bottle-nosed dolphin's brain is forty percent
larger than ours, and the orca [killer whale] has a brain
four times larger. These big-brained dolphins and whales
also have a larger association cortex, uncommitted to basic
sensorimotor processing and, therefore, available for
thinking. If cetaceans are smarter than we, why do we humans
assume we're the crown of creation?
Lilly
Because we can't talk
to anyone else. The highest intelligence on the planet
probably exists in a sperm whale who has a ten-thousand-gram
brain, six times larger than ours. I'm convinced that
intelligence is a function of absolute brain size. Some
years ago I solved the brain weight/body weight problem,
demonstrating that a large brain cannot exist in a small
body: it needs a massive body to protect it. A brain is very
fragile, and if it is rotated very fast -- by a blow to the
jaw, for instance -- it tears loose from its moorings and
kills itself by intracranial bleeding. So, too, as a brain
gets larger, the head surrounding it, and its moment of
inertia, must increase to prevent dangerous rotation. Maybe
the human brain can evolve further if we get control of our
genetic code. But in what direction?
OMNI
What has your intense
acquaintance with cetaceans taught you about their
character? What is their world like?
Lilly
It's mostly sonic, as
I've said, since they live in the water twenty-four hours a
day and can't see at night. They have no sense of smell, but
a very discriminating taste sense. And, of course, they're
buoyant, as you are in an isolation tank. One day while I
was floating in the tank at NIMH, I thought, "Gee, wouldn't
it be great to do this twenty-four hours a day!" When I
mentioned it to a friend, he said, "Well, try the dolphins."
So that's how I started to work with dolphins.
Having voluntary respiration, dolphins are interdependent in ways in which we aren't; they have a group mind. If a dolphin passes out for any reason, his friends must wake him up. Otherwise he'll drown. So every dolphin is aware of where every other dolphin is, just in case he's needed. "Do unto others as you would have them do unto you" is one of their rules, and, unlike us, they follow it twenty-four hours a day. They're also more spiritual, since they have more time to meditate. Try the isolation tank and you'll see what it's like.
Having voluntary respiration, dolphins are interdependent in ways in which we aren't; they have a group mind. If a dolphin passes out for any reason, his friends must wake him up. Otherwise he'll drown. So every dolphin is aware of where every other dolphin is, just in case he's needed. "Do unto others as you would have them do unto you" is one of their rules, and, unlike us, they follow it twenty-four hours a day. They're also more spiritual, since they have more time to meditate. Try the isolation tank and you'll see what it's like.
OMNI
Lilly Tell me the
circumstances that led you to invent the first isolation
tank.
Lilly
There was a problem in
neurophysiology at the time: Is brain activity
self-contained or not? One school of thought said the brain
needed external stimulation or it would go to sleep --
become unconscious -- while the other school said, "No,
there are automatic oscillators in the brain that keep it
awake." So I decided to try a sensory-isolation experiment,
building a tank to reduce external stimuli -- auditory,
visual, tactile, temperature -- almost to nil. The tank is
lightproof and soundproof. The water in the tank is kept at
ninety-three to ninety-four degrees. So you can't tell where
the water ends and your body begins, and it's neither hot
nor cold. If the water were exactly body temperature, it
couldn't absorb your body's heat loss, your body temperature
would rise above one hundred six degrees, and you might die.
I discovered that the oscillator school of thought was right, that the brain does not go unconscious in the absence of sensory input. I'd sleep in the tank if I hadn't had any sleep for a couple of nights, but more interesting things happen if you're awake. You can have waking dreams, study your dreams, and, with the help of LSD-twenty-five or a chemical agent I call vitamin K, you can experience alternate realities. You're safe in the tank because you're not walking around and falling down, or mutating your perception of external "reality."
I discovered that the oscillator school of thought was right, that the brain does not go unconscious in the absence of sensory input. I'd sleep in the tank if I hadn't had any sleep for a couple of nights, but more interesting things happen if you're awake. You can have waking dreams, study your dreams, and, with the help of LSD-twenty-five or a chemical agent I call vitamin K, you can experience alternate realities. You're safe in the tank because you're not walking around and falling down, or mutating your perception of external "reality."
OMNI
At the time you
invented the tank weren't you doing brain research at the
National Institute of Mental Health?
Lilly
Yes. I invented a
technique called an electrocorticograph, or ECG, for
implanting multiple electrode arrays onto the surface of the
brain itself without injuring brain tissue as much as
previous methods did. It was the first method for taking
electrical recordings from the brains of unanesthetized
animals -- or even of humans. On a kind of television
monitor, you could watch the brain waves moving across the
cerebral cortex in two dimensions. Basically, you pound a
short length of hypodermic needle tubing through the scalp,
adjusting it to the depth of the bone so that the scalp
closes over it. Then you can come back and put electrodes
down through that little channel.
OMNI
Was this the same
technique you used to map the brain's pain and pleasure
systems with direct electrical stimulation?
Lilly
No, that requires
putting electrodes below the cortex, into the brain's deep
motivational systems. The electrodes were the same; we just
pushed them in deeper. At McGill University in Montreal,
James Olds and Peter Milner had discovered the
positive-reinforcing systems in rats' brains. [In these
famous studies, conducted in the early Fifties, rats learned
to self-stimulate by activating electrodes in their brains'
pleasure centers.] And H. E. Rosvold, of Yale University,
had uncovered the negative reinforcing systems in cats. I
was the man who mapped both sides, positive and negative,
and I went to a higher animal, the macaque monkey.
When I did the experiments again in the dolphin, I found he could inhibit his angry, aggressive responses when I stimulated the negative systems. That was fascinating: With his large, eighteen-hundred-gram brain, he had enough cerebral cortex to veto messages from the lower centers. Men can do that, too, as scientists such as [Tulane University medical researcher] Robert Heath have shown. Once, when Heath was stimulating a patient's negative system, the patient said, "You stimulate that point again and I'll pull the electrodes out."
When I did the experiments again in the dolphin, I found he could inhibit his angry, aggressive responses when I stimulated the negative systems. That was fascinating: With his large, eighteen-hundred-gram brain, he had enough cerebral cortex to veto messages from the lower centers. Men can do that, too, as scientists such as [Tulane University medical researcher] Robert Heath have shown. Once, when Heath was stimulating a patient's negative system, the patient said, "You stimulate that point again and I'll pull the electrodes out."
OMNI
Then would you say
intelligence is a function of inhibition?
Lilly
Yes. You need a
cerebral cortex of a critical size, with fine fiber
connections running in both directions to the lower systems.
That's where the middle self ("I-me") lives, up in that
cortex -- not in the lower centers. The lower centers (our
lower self) prod us from below, as it were, with love or
hate or fear. I think that the superself controls from
somewhere "above the brain," in the spiritual domains.
OMNI
What structures are
involved in the brain's pain and pleasure pathways?
Lilly
Well, the preoptic
nucleus in the anterior hypothalamus, at the base of the
brain, is very negative. It's our main survival nucleus: If
the temperature is too hot or too cold, this nucleus freaks
out the rest of the brain. If there's too much sodium in the
blood, it freaks out the brain. It's an area for total fear.
Then, moving downward toward the spinal cord, you hit a part
of the hypothalamus that stimulates extreme pain all over
the body. If you move sideways in either direction in that
area of the brain, however, stimulation becomes incredibly
positive. Around the preoptic nucleus, you run into the
sexual system, which, in males, controls erection, orgasm,
and ejaculation -- each in a separate place -- while farther
back, in the mesencephalon, the three are integrated and
fired off in sequence.
The brain has other pleasure systems, too -- systems that stimulate nonsexual pleasure all over the body and systems that set off emotional pleasure. That is a kind of continuous pleasure that doesn't peak -- a satori of mind. Satori and samadhi [terms for enlightened-bliss states in Zen Buddhism and Hinduism, respectively] and the Christian "states of grace" seem to involve a constant influx of pleasure and no orgasmic climax -- like tantric sex. Spiritual states use these brain systems in their service. Many philosophers, including Patanjali, the second-century B.C. author of the Yoga Sutras, have said that jnana yoga -- the yoga of the mind -- is the highest form of yoga. In this self-transcendence one can experience bliss while performing God's work; only recently have I achieved this for days at a time.
The brain has other pleasure systems, too -- systems that stimulate nonsexual pleasure all over the body and systems that set off emotional pleasure. That is a kind of continuous pleasure that doesn't peak -- a satori of mind. Satori and samadhi [terms for enlightened-bliss states in Zen Buddhism and Hinduism, respectively] and the Christian "states of grace" seem to involve a constant influx of pleasure and no orgasmic climax -- like tantric sex. Spiritual states use these brain systems in their service. Many philosophers, including Patanjali, the second-century B.C. author of the Yoga Sutras, have said that jnana yoga -- the yoga of the mind -- is the highest form of yoga. In this self-transcendence one can experience bliss while performing God's work; only recently have I achieved this for days at a time.
OMNI
In your book The
Scientist you wrote, "If we can each experience at least the
lower levels of satori, there is hope that we won't blow up
the planet or otherwise eliminate life as we know it." Are
altered states necessary to our survival?
Lilly
Yes, the experience of
higher states of consciousness, or alternate realities -- I
don't like the term altered states -- is the only way to
escape our brains' destructive programming, fed to us as
children by a disgruntled karmic history. Newborns are
connected to the divine; war is the result of our programmed
disconnection from divine sources.
I am writing a book about alternate realities called From Here to Alternity: A Manual on Ways of Amusing God. On vitamin K, I have experienced states in which I can contact the creators of the universe, as well as the local creative controllers -- the Earth Coincidence Control Office, or ECCO. They're the guys who run the earth and who program us, though we're not aware of it. I asked them, "What's your major program?" They answered, "To make you guys evolve to the next levels, to teach you, to kick you in the pants when necessary."
Because our consensus reality programs us in certain destructive directions, we must experience other realities in order to know we have choices. That's what I call Alternity. On K, I can look across the border into other realities. I can open my eyes in this reality and dimly see the alternate reality, then close my eyes. and the alternate reality picks up. On K you can tune your internal eyes. They are not what is called the "third eye," which is centrally located, but are stereo, like the merging of our two eyes' images. Perhaps someday, if we learn about the type of radiation coming through those eyes, we can simulate the experience with a hallucinatory movie camera -- an alternate-reality camera.
I am writing a book about alternate realities called From Here to Alternity: A Manual on Ways of Amusing God. On vitamin K, I have experienced states in which I can contact the creators of the universe, as well as the local creative controllers -- the Earth Coincidence Control Office, or ECCO. They're the guys who run the earth and who program us, though we're not aware of it. I asked them, "What's your major program?" They answered, "To make you guys evolve to the next levels, to teach you, to kick you in the pants when necessary."
Because our consensus reality programs us in certain destructive directions, we must experience other realities in order to know we have choices. That's what I call Alternity. On K, I can look across the border into other realities. I can open my eyes in this reality and dimly see the alternate reality, then close my eyes. and the alternate reality picks up. On K you can tune your internal eyes. They are not what is called the "third eye," which is centrally located, but are stereo, like the merging of our two eyes' images. Perhaps someday, if we learn about the type of radiation coming through those eyes, we can simulate the experience with a hallucinatory movie camera -- an alternate-reality camera.
OMNI
What is so special
about vitamin K?
Lilly
It's a lot more fun
than LSD or any of the other agents, because it induces a
short trip and you can train yourself to the state. Pretty
soon you can take ten times as much and still walk around
and talk to people coherently, in spite of the fact that
reality is vibrating. I can run my computer, ski, or do just
about anything on K. I've been on it as much as a hundred
days straight. You don't really sleep, you don't really
dream, because you don't need to. And on K, I can experience
the quantum reality: I can see [eminent University of Texas
physicist] John Wheeler's hyperspace from within.
OMNI
Can you explain what
you mean by experiencing hyperspace from within?
Lilly
Wheeler's hyperspace
also is known as a "nonlocal reality." Each of a pair of
photons coming from an atom knows immediately what the other
is doing, no matter how far away from each other they are.
You can assume the existence of tachyons --
faster-than-light particles, carrying messages -- but I
prefer Bell's theorem's solution to the
Einstein-Podolski-Rosen experiment [which illustrated a
seemingly impossible connectedness between particles in two
different places]. According to [John] Bell's theorem,
hyperspace would be a region of hidden variables in which
all realities are represented at a single point and in which
there is no need for messages to travel. The "hyperspace"
with which I've been working is one in which I can jump from
one universe to another -- from this reality to an alternate
reality -- while maintaining human structure, size,
concepts, and memories. My center of consciousness is here,
and I can know immediately what's going on anywhere in the
universe. It's a domain I now call Alternity, where all
choices are possible.
OMNI
What first inspired
you to use psychotropic drugs?
Lilly
I never use the word
drug, because it leads into a legalistic morass. The Food
and Drug Administration has been putting out bulletins
lately about K, which is now listed as a possible "abused"
drug. Because abuse means literally "away from use," I
prefer the term hyperuse, or "too much use." So I don't want
to call it by its chemical name, and I think of it as
vitamin K anyway, because it gives me spiritual energy. I've
never proselytized, never advocated wholesale use of
psychedelics. They are not for everyone. When Timothy Leary
said, "Turn on, tune in, drop out," only a self-selecting
group ever tried LSD. I did not agree with him; my use was
carefully controlled investigation, not "recreational use."
There were a lot of "LSD pushers" around our LSD research at the NIMH when I was there in the Fifties, but I didn't take LSD then. After about ten years in the tank I decided there was something new to be learned. So I came out here to California, where a lady I knew who had access to pure Sandoz LSD-twenty-five gave me the LSD for my first two trips. On my first trip I went through all the usual stuff: seeing my face change in the mirror, tripping out to music. During the first two movements of Beethoven's Ninth Symphony, I was kneeling in heaven, worshiping God and His angels, just as I had in church when I was seven years old. On that trip I did every thing I'd read in the psychedelic literature so as to save time and get out of the literature the next time. During my third trip, in the isolation tank in St. Thomas in 1964, I left my body and went into infinite distances -- dimensions that are inhuman.
There were a lot of "LSD pushers" around our LSD research at the NIMH when I was there in the Fifties, but I didn't take LSD then. After about ten years in the tank I decided there was something new to be learned. So I came out here to California, where a lady I knew who had access to pure Sandoz LSD-twenty-five gave me the LSD for my first two trips. On my first trip I went through all the usual stuff: seeing my face change in the mirror, tripping out to music. During the first two movements of Beethoven's Ninth Symphony, I was kneeling in heaven, worshiping God and His angels, just as I had in church when I was seven years old. On that trip I did every thing I'd read in the psychedelic literature so as to save time and get out of the literature the next time. During my third trip, in the isolation tank in St. Thomas in 1964, I left my body and went into infinite distances -- dimensions that are inhuman.
OMNI
The Ken Russell/Paddy
Chayefsky film Altered States closely resembles your life.
What did you think of it?
Lilly
I think they did a
good job. The hallucination scenes are much better than
anything ever produced before. I understand that some of the
crew, the actors, and the producers were trained on K. The
tank scenes were fine -- except that in reality there are no
vertical tanks, only horizontal ones -- and the film implied
that use of the tank itself would cause those
out-of-the-body trips, which it doesn't.
The scene in which the scientist becomes cosmic energy and his wife grabs him and brings him back to human form is straight out of my Dyadic Cyclone [1976]. Toni did that for me. As for the scientist's regression into an apelike being, the late Dr. Craig Enright, who started me on K while taking a trip with me here by the isolation tank, suddenly "became" a chimp, jumping up and down and hollering for twenty-five minutes. Watching him, I was frightened. I asked him later, "Where the hell were you?" He said, "I became a prehominid, and I was in a tree. A leopard was trying to get me. So I was trying to scare him away." I said, "If you do that again, I'll kick you in the ass." He laughed.
The scene in which the scientist becomes cosmic energy and his wife grabs him and brings him back to human form is straight out of my Dyadic Cyclone [1976]. Toni did that for me. As for the scientist's regression into an apelike being, the late Dr. Craig Enright, who started me on K while taking a trip with me here by the isolation tank, suddenly "became" a chimp, jumping up and down and hollering for twenty-five minutes. Watching him, I was frightened. I asked him later, "Where the hell were you?" He said, "I became a prehominid, and I was in a tree. A leopard was trying to get me. So I was trying to scare him away." I said, "If you do that again, I'll kick you in the ass." He laughed.
OMNI
Can substances like K
take one to lower, as well as to higher, states? Could one
get stuck in a lower state, and is that a possible
explanation for psychosis?
Lilly
You can get into lower
states -- rock consciousness, solid-state consciousness,
whatever. If people do get stuck there, we would never hear
from them, would we? As for so-called psychosis, it's just
an insistence on staying in altered states, in spite of
everyone else. Psychotics hang around and play games with
everyone around them; it can be rather cruel. Anyone who has
worked with them knows there's a wise and healthy essence
back there, and what you have to do is contact it. Of course
everyone's different. Some schizophrenics feel pain; others
pretend pain so that they'll be taken care of.
OMNI
Did Chayefsky
interview you for either the book or the screenplay version
of the film Altered States?
Lilly
No. The manuscript of
The Scientist was in the hands of Bantam, the publishers.
The head of Bantam called and said, "Paddy Chayefsky would
like to read your manuscript. Will you give him your
permission?" I said, "Only if he calls me and asks
permission." He didn't call. But he probably read the
manuscript.
OMNI
UCLA psychologist and
drug authority Ronald Siegel maintains that the chemical you
call K can simulate the near-death experience, proving that
the near-death experience is hallucination rather than a
foretaste of things on the "other side." What is your view?
Lilly
Ron and I totally
disagree, though I like him. He is theorizing on the side of
the law. With his belief system -- that these experiences
are all wastebasket stuff -- he doesn't know alternate
realities.
My experiences have convinced me that Eastern yoga philosophy is right: that there is a purusha or atman [soul] for each person -- one for the planet, one for the galaxy, and so on. As mathematician/philosopher Franklin Merrell-Wolff says in his book The Philosiphy of Consciousness Without an Object, consciousness was first -- before the void even. When consciousness got bored and turned in upon itself, becoming conscious of itself, creation began. He/she/it created time, space, energy, matter, male, female -- the whole tableau. It all got so complicated that sneaky things may go on beyond its ken.
If you get into these spaces at all, you must forget about them when you come back. You must forget you're omnipotent and omniscient and take the game seriously so you'll engage in sex, have children, and participate in the whole human scenario. When you come back from a deep LSD trip or a K trip -- or coma or psychosis -- there's always this extraterrestrial feeling. You have to read the directions in the glove compartment so you can run the human vehicle once more. After I first took acid in the tank and traveled to distant dimensions, I cried when I came back and found myself trapped in a body. I didn't even know whose body it was at first. It was the sadness of reentry. I felt squashed.
My experiences have convinced me that Eastern yoga philosophy is right: that there is a purusha or atman [soul] for each person -- one for the planet, one for the galaxy, and so on. As mathematician/philosopher Franklin Merrell-Wolff says in his book The Philosiphy of Consciousness Without an Object, consciousness was first -- before the void even. When consciousness got bored and turned in upon itself, becoming conscious of itself, creation began. He/she/it created time, space, energy, matter, male, female -- the whole tableau. It all got so complicated that sneaky things may go on beyond its ken.
If you get into these spaces at all, you must forget about them when you come back. You must forget you're omnipotent and omniscient and take the game seriously so you'll engage in sex, have children, and participate in the whole human scenario. When you come back from a deep LSD trip or a K trip -- or coma or psychosis -- there's always this extraterrestrial feeling. You have to read the directions in the glove compartment so you can run the human vehicle once more. After I first took acid in the tank and traveled to distant dimensions, I cried when I came back and found myself trapped in a body. I didn't even know whose body it was at first. It was the sadness of reentry. I felt squashed.
OMNI
Some of your critics
have made much of the fact that intense experimentation with
LSD and K has brought you to the brink of death at least
three times. While giving yourself an antibiotic injection
during your early days of LSD experimentation, you once used
a hypodermic containing detergent foam residue, which sent
you into a coma. Then, during a period of prolonged K use,
you nearly drowned, and later you seriously injured yourself
in a bicycle accident. Were these accidents quasi-suicides
-- collisions with your brain's "self-destruct programs"?
Lilly
The whole issue of
suicide is a very complex program. I've never tried to
commit suicide, though I've been close to death. The
near-death accidents resulted from taking something and
acting in a certain way so that I ended up in great danger,
and so I've hypothesized that the brain contains lethal
programs -- self-destruct programs -- below the level of
awareness, which LSD or K can release or strengthen. My
accidents were near-death learning experiences. There's
nothing like them. They train you faster than anything I
know.
The year leading up to my bicycle accident in 1974, I spent in saton, or a state of grace. I was having a ball, mostly living in alternate realities and sometimes falling flat on my face. In The Autobiography of Ramakrishna [1836-1886, a famous Indian saint], there's a story about Ramakrishna getting ready to board a river steamer. Two of his disciples began to fight, and so Ramakrishna went into samadhi. Since he was out of his body, his disciples had to stop fighting and carry him aboard. Well, that was the sort of state I was in, and Toni was the disciple who had to "carry me around."
The year leading up to my bicycle accident in 1974, I spent in saton, or a state of grace. I was having a ball, mostly living in alternate realities and sometimes falling flat on my face. In The Autobiography of Ramakrishna [1836-1886, a famous Indian saint], there's a story about Ramakrishna getting ready to board a river steamer. Two of his disciples began to fight, and so Ramakrishna went into samadhi. Since he was out of his body, his disciples had to stop fighting and carry him aboard. Well, that was the sort of state I was in, and Toni was the disciple who had to "carry me around."
OMNI
In your reflections in
The Dyadic Cyclone, you seem to consider your accident as a
way of paying for that year of bliss.
Lilly
It terminated that
year. In our workshops we have a saying: "If you pass the
cosmic speed limit, the cosmic cops will bust you." I got
"busted." I had taken forty-two milligrams of PCP [angel
dust]. I'd been out there too long and hadn't paid enough
attention to my planetside trip; so the Earth Coincidence
Control Office called me back by throwing a bike accident at
me while I was on PCP. I appreciate what the Control Office
did. They are not cruel; they're in a state of high
indifference.
While my body was in the hospital and in a coma for five days and nights, I was in alternate universes, where the guides instructed me about various planetary catastrophes. I can't make up my mind whether that was an experience of genuine realities or just a projection of the damage to my body. In any case, I begged the guides to let me go back. I had to say, "I want to go back to Toni." At one point I clung to Toni for six solid hours so I could stay with her. It was very frightening. The guides told me, "You can stay here, in which case your body dies, or you can go back." I chose to go back to Toni, as I have chosen to go back every time.
While my body was in the hospital and in a coma for five days and nights, I was in alternate universes, where the guides instructed me about various planetary catastrophes. I can't make up my mind whether that was an experience of genuine realities or just a projection of the damage to my body. In any case, I begged the guides to let me go back. I had to say, "I want to go back to Toni." At one point I clung to Toni for six solid hours so I could stay with her. It was very frightening. The guides told me, "You can stay here, in which case your body dies, or you can go back." I chose to go back to Toni, as I have chosen to go back every time.
OMNI
Toni has obviously
been a crucial counterpoint to what you once described as
the "stainless-steel computer" part of yourself. In your
recent books you've stressed the importance of what you call
the "male-female dyad." Will you please explain this idea.
Lilly
That's the way the
universe is constructed. Do you know about the Eleventh
Commandment? It says, "Thou shalt not bore God, or He will
destroy your universe." The first step in not boring God is
to set up two opposing intellects, male and female, so that
neither can tell what the other is thinking. If you totally
fused with your mate. it might be a very dull trip.
I love female intelligences. Every single cell in your body has two x chromosomes. Every cell in my body has one x chromosome and a crippled x chromosome, an x chromosome with an arm missing, called a y chromosome. You women are so well balanced with your two x's. You can be grounded, and do the gardening, and take care of the kids and give them nurture, but we males have got to go out and explore the universe, banging our heads together and shooting one another.
I love female intelligences. Every single cell in your body has two x chromosomes. Every cell in my body has one x chromosome and a crippled x chromosome, an x chromosome with an arm missing, called a y chromosome. You women are so well balanced with your two x's. You can be grounded, and do the gardening, and take care of the kids and give them nurture, but we males have got to go out and explore the universe, banging our heads together and shooting one another.
OMNI
Was it really
necessary for you to have the near-death experiences you've
recounted?
Lilly
It was for me. It was
necessary to frighten the hell out of me, but many other
people are just born right and don't have to struggle as I
did. I had a Catholic background, a traumatic childhood --
the whole business.
OMNI
What was it about a
Catholic background that you had to "unlearn"?
Lilly
The whole construct.
I'd been taught by Irish Jesuits, who are very clever. They
made up multiple layers of rationality for the whole
Catholic structure. The nice thing about Catholicism,
however, is that it teaches you what to believe. So when you
throw it over, you know exactly what you're throwing over.
You can say, "I don't believe in the Father Almighty," and
continue right through the Apostles' Creed, the Confiteor,
and the rest of it, tossing out one tenet at a time.
I believe in God, but not in the "Catholic God," who is vengeful. There's the whole business about guilt, "impure thoughts," going to hell if you don't do what the church commands. One way this was solved for me, intellectually if not emotionally, was by reading the "Grand Inquisitor" chapter of Dostoevsky's The Brothers Karamazov in which Christ comes back to Earth. The Grand Inquisitor tells him, "When we saw those miracles in the street, we knew you were back. But this time we're not giving you any publicity. We're keeping you in this cell. We know how to run these people now." That just knocked the church right out of me, and by the time I was finished with Caltech, medical school, and psychoanalysis, that belief system was pretty well cleaned out of me.
I believe in God, but not in the "Catholic God," who is vengeful. There's the whole business about guilt, "impure thoughts," going to hell if you don't do what the church commands. One way this was solved for me, intellectually if not emotionally, was by reading the "Grand Inquisitor" chapter of Dostoevsky's The Brothers Karamazov in which Christ comes back to Earth. The Grand Inquisitor tells him, "When we saw those miracles in the street, we knew you were back. But this time we're not giving you any publicity. We're keeping you in this cell. We know how to run these people now." That just knocked the church right out of me, and by the time I was finished with Caltech, medical school, and psychoanalysis, that belief system was pretty well cleaned out of me.
OMNI
What about
psychoanalysis as religion? Both use the confessional, an
elaborate rational system for structuring the irrational,
transference, and so on.
Lilly
Well, I didn't get
into the religious aspects, as I was fortunate in having an
analyst, Robert Waelder, who was free of the dogma. He had
been trained by Anna Freud in Vienna, had a Ph.D. in
physics, and was an analyst's analyst. I took psychoanalytic
training under him for eight years, and he would go anywhere
with me. Right off, practically in our first session, I told
him I wanted to get a divorce [from his first of three
wives] but that I thought I couldn't if I was in analysis.
"Where did you learn that?" he asked. I said, "In the
Freudian literature." He said, "Dr. Lilly, we are not here
to analyze Freud, psychoanalytic literature, or other
people's rules for your behavior. We are here to analyze
you."
OMNI
How is it that,
trained for eight years in psychoanalysis, you decided to
devote yourself to brain hardware instead?
Lilly
I'd already had enough
neurophysiological training to know there were a lot of
mysteries in the brain. As Waelder said, psychoanalytic
theory accounts for about one tenth of one percent of what
goes on in psychoanalysis. I had to go further than that to
find something more satisfying, and I found it in the
concept of metaprogramming the human biocomputer.
A human being is a biorobot with a biocomputer in it, the brain. But we are not that brain, and we are not that body. A soul essence inhabits us, and, under acid, under K, under anesthesia, you'll find that the essence isn't tied to brain activity at all. Brain activity can be virtually flat, and you can be conscious -- off somewhere in another realm. You just can't communicate with people in consensus reality.
A human being is a biorobot with a biocomputer in it, the brain. But we are not that brain, and we are not that body. A soul essence inhabits us, and, under acid, under K, under anesthesia, you'll find that the essence isn't tied to brain activity at all. Brain activity can be virtually flat, and you can be conscious -- off somewhere in another realm. You just can't communicate with people in consensus reality.
OMNI
In your experience,
does the brain possess "trapdoors" into the domain of the
soul? For example, neuroscientist Arnold Mandell, of the
University of California at San Diego, has said that
chemicals such as LSD can be "pharmacologic bridges" to
transcendence.
Lilly
I agree with Mandell.
Acid -- and, better, vitamin K -- set up the chemical
configuration of your brain so as to loosen the connection
between the brain/body and the soul essence. Then the
essence can move into alternate realities. I call this
phenomenon the "leaky-mind hypothesis," or the
"escaping-self hypothesis." There are a lot of ideas about
the soul's location in the body, of course. In Spanish. when
you're scared out of your wits, you say your soul is in your
mouth -- you have el alma en la boca. But the junction
between the biocomputer and the essence is not localized in
the brain; it's throughout the body. If you get out of your
body, you can assume a fake body, an astral body, which can
walk through walls. Your essence is represented in every
cell in your body.
OMNI
Orthodox scientists
accuse you of unscientific practices, and some even suggest
that your consciousness-altering experiments and near-death
accidents have impaired your judgment. How would you reply
to them?
Lilly
Well, I'd just throw
my credentials at them, and I'd ask them to sit down and
read my papers. Only narrow-minded people criticize me,
anyway; the broadband people, who can move easily across
boundaries and disciplines, love my work. Down in Mexico,
for instance, people have been educated to respect the
superscience of the next century that their brujos and
curanderos [sorcerers or witches and healers] are capable of
calling up. My son John Lilly, Jr., who has lived for
sixteen years among the Huichol Indians, has a wonderful
movie about these matters. Our orthodoxy, on the other hand,
is very Germanic, very European: If you can't see it touch
it, or taste it, it doesn't exist.
I was brought up to divide science into theory and experiment, each guiding the other. The pure experimentalists who attack me lack good theory, but the theorists haven't done the experiments. There are really three departments to science: experiment, theory, and experience. Experience is the part that doesn't get into the scientific journals.
I was brought up to divide science into theory and experiment, each guiding the other. The pure experimentalists who attack me lack good theory, but the theorists haven't done the experiments. There are really three departments to science: experiment, theory, and experience. Experience is the part that doesn't get into the scientific journals.
OMNI
How would you answer
the charge that your self-experimentation is subjective and,
therefore, unverifiable?
Lilly
Subjectivity is
nonsense. Neither subjectivity nor objectivity exists in
nature. That's the mind-contained-in-the-brain belief of
some psychiatrists and other scientists. The subject is an
object is a subject. In a cybernetic system, you go around
in a circle, and subject and object have no reality. The
only way to isolate subject and object is to cut off the
feedback and destroy the system. It's a false dichotomy.
OMNI
Do you believe that
neuroscientists are on the verge of explaining the mind by
mapping brain chemicals and so forth?
Lilly
I haven't yet seen any
breakthroughs that are worth talking about. Neurochemistry
is interesting but not specific enough yet. I suspect we'll
find there are a million different compounds operating in
the nervous system -- specific compounds for specific
regions and specific neurons. Caltech neuroscientist and
Nobel laureate Roger Sperry's regeneration experiments [in
which he rotated a salamander's eye and the severed nerve
fibers somehow reconstructed their original connections to
the optic tectum in the brain, as if they "knew" where to
go] show that there are chemotropic substances that are
specific to each fiber. I don't read neuroscience journals
anymore; I depend on my friends to tell me what's going on.
You know, [Kurt] Godel's theory, translated, says that a computer of a given size can model only a smaller computer; it cannot model itself. If it modeled a computer of its own size and complexity, the model would fill it entirely and it couldn't do anything. So I don't think we can understand our own brains fully.
You know, [Kurt] Godel's theory, translated, says that a computer of a given size can model only a smaller computer; it cannot model itself. If it modeled a computer of its own size and complexity, the model would fill it entirely and it couldn't do anything. So I don't think we can understand our own brains fully.
OMNI
Is it an extension of
Godel's theorem, which states that some propositions can be
neither proved nor disproved within a logical system?
Lilly
It's the same thing.
If you have a closed system, the closed system can't account
for itself. A set of sets that contains itself is a set that
cannot possibly replicate itself. We are biological
computers, and what Godel said is that you cannot conceive
in full a computer the size of your own, for it would take
up all the space you live in.
A sperm whale, with a brain six times the size of ours, could model a human and do a pretty good job of it. Since the model would take up only one sixth of his software brain, he could use the remaining five sixths to manipulate the model, predict its actions, and so on. The trouble is that this big computer is caught in a body that humans can kill.
A sperm whale, with a brain six times the size of ours, could model a human and do a pretty good job of it. Since the model would take up only one sixth of his software brain, he could use the remaining five sixths to manipulate the model, predict its actions, and so on. The trouble is that this big computer is caught in a body that humans can kill.
OMNI
Could you elaborate on
your concept of programming and "metaprogramming" the
biocomputer?
Lilly
Have you seen the
movie Tron? You must, because Tron is us. In it, the
computer grabs the character played by Jeff Bridges and
takes him inside, making him a program In the computer. The
Master Control Program revolts, takes over the computer, and
defies the users. So the users send in Tron, which is a
program to destroy the Master Control Program that is
preaching disbelief in the users.
Tron shows you things that are very, very spiritual. You can think of yourself as a biocomputer or an intelligent terminal, run by a cosmic computer in the Earth Coincidence Control Office. The biocomputer contains certain wired-in survival programs dealing with eating, reproduction, and so on, which lower animals also possess. But when the biocomputer reaches a certain threshold of complexity, there are higher-level programs in the association cortex that permit such things as making models, learning to learn, choice, and so forth. We have short-term choices, but God help you if you go against the Master Control Program. A terminal cannot understand itself, because it lacks sufficient space, but a replica of itself is in the cosmic computer, which can understand it. At the highest level, your true self (the "user" in Tron) is a cosmic game player, with access to an infinite computer -- the ECCO computer. That is metaprogramming, self-metaprogramming.
Tron shows you things that are very, very spiritual. You can think of yourself as a biocomputer or an intelligent terminal, run by a cosmic computer in the Earth Coincidence Control Office. The biocomputer contains certain wired-in survival programs dealing with eating, reproduction, and so on, which lower animals also possess. But when the biocomputer reaches a certain threshold of complexity, there are higher-level programs in the association cortex that permit such things as making models, learning to learn, choice, and so forth. We have short-term choices, but God help you if you go against the Master Control Program. A terminal cannot understand itself, because it lacks sufficient space, but a replica of itself is in the cosmic computer, which can understand it. At the highest level, your true self (the "user" in Tron) is a cosmic game player, with access to an infinite computer -- the ECCO computer. That is metaprogramming, self-metaprogramming.
OMNI
How does one contact
God?
Lilly
In many cases, I
didn't know whether I was taken on a trip by God or by one
of His business officers in the outer galaxy. Guides at each
level above ours pretend to be God as long as you believe
them. When you finally get to know the guide, he says,
"Well, God is really the next level up." God keeps
retreating into infinity. I've thought that I was in the
mind of God -- seeing rotating universes, yin and yang, male
and female -- but perhaps God himself is beyond that. Have I
told you about the "Dust-bowl God"?
OMNI
No. What is the
"Dust-bowl God"?
Lilly
In my new book I have
a theory called the Dust-bowl God. God got bored with this
universe and the distribution of intelligence in it. So He
made a dust bowl out beyond the galaxies. In this dust
cloud, every particle is intelligent; on the atomic level,
each particle is as intelligent as a human being. The dust
particles made themselves into stars and planets and animals
and humans and everybody knew everybody; everything was
totally aware of everything around It. Now the problem is,
If every particle is equally intelligent and greater
assemblages are even more intelligent, what are the traffic
rules for relations between, say, humans and elephants? It
would be nice to see such a universe, wouldn't it -- the
Dust-bowl Universe?
OMNI
How would it differ
from ours?
Lilly
Right. How would it?