PayPal
BitCoin
Facebook
Twitter
Amazon
RSS
iTunes

DoseNation Podcast

Weekly news, talk, and interviews. More »

SUGGEST A STORY  |   CREATE AN ACCOUNT  |  
DoseNation.com

Dronabinol at 'The Half Decent Pharmaceutical Chemistry Blog'

So I was looking for THC-inhalers for that hard-to-shop-for person on my Xmas list (okay, it was for me), and I came across this post on Dronabinol (pharmaceutical delta-9 cannibinoid, aka Marinol) at the Half Decent Pharmaceutical Chemisty Blog. This is a blog a didn't even know existed, so I was happy to find it. There are some pretty groovy synthesis posted recently. If you are interested in drug blogs (heh) check this site out. Note, this is mostly about legal pharmacology, ahem.

Also, if you know where to find THC inhalers (I know I saw them online a few years ago, maybe in the UK?) please post it!

Posted By jamesk at 2007-12-17 12:05:01 permalink | comments (4)
Tags: marijuana

Video: Daedelus - Fair Weather Friends

Hey everybody, it's been 101 days without color - time to do the color dance!

Posted By Scotto at 2007-12-16 17:45:15 permalink | comments (1)
Tags: daedelus

Interview with Dr. Ralph Metzner

Joanna Harcourt-Smith has been publishing a series of podcasts on her Future Primitive site. She wrote in to tell us about a recent podcast interview of particular interest to the DoseNation crowd:

Last week I had a wonderful conversation with psychologist, writer and researcher Dr Ralph Metzner. This is an candid and deep exchange of ideas about the past and the possible future, a historical document that speaks about the birth of LSD research at Harvard and beyond. I am proud to offer you this gift, hope you will take the time to listen...
Posted By Scotto at 2007-12-16 16:47:09 permalink | comments
Tags: ralph metzner gaialogue

'Cannabis and Cannabinoids in the 21st Century'

Via the MAPS list, we learn of an interesting new video published by the University of Wisconsin-Madison, on the topic of "Cannabis and Cannabinoids in the 21st Century: Medical Marijuana." The speaker is David Bearman, MD, "a Santa Barbara, California physician and surgeon with Wisconsin roots."

Bearman is one of the leading physicians in the U.S. in the field of medical marijuana. He has spent 40 years
working in substance and drug abuse treatment and prevention programs. Bearman was a pioneer in the free and community clinic movement.

They don't offer embedding options for their videos, but you can playback in Quicktime on their site or download an MP3 of the audio.

Posted By Scotto at 2007-12-16 16:39:18 permalink | comments (1)
Tags: medical marijuana

'Pro Celebrity Name That Drug'

This sketch from a British show called Whatever bears a remarkable resemblance to an old Michael Nesmith sketch from Elephant Parts, which I can't for the life of me find online. However, this modern version of the classic trope is nevertheless quite amusing: two teams compete against each other and the clock to determine what drug the people they're watching on TV clips are actually on.

Posted By Scotto at 2007-12-16 16:32:27 permalink | comments (2)
Tags: name that drug

Swedish self cleaning toilet ad

How can you not appreciate a commercial that features a gorgeous woman trying (and failing) to snort a mystery white powder off a self-cleaning toilet?

Posted By Scotto at 2007-12-16 16:22:44 permalink | comments
Tags: advertising

Video: The White Stripes - Fell In Love With A Girl (in Lego-vision)

Okay, so this is only marginally on topic. I am a little late to the whole White Stripes thing, but I recently saw this video 'Fell In Love With A Girl' which is animated entirely with Legos and it sort of blew my mind. I have also seen a live video of this song which rocks extremely hard for a two-piece band.

After watching this track again I can only assume this video was shot first and then "rotoscoped" into Lego-vision after the fact. Most of the animation looks like it came off an old 8-bit video gaming cartridge, but still amazing,

Posted By jamesk at 2007-12-16 11:42:04 permalink | comments (2)

Beat cops in Playboy

Dan Savage recently posted some 1971 Playboy magazine cartoons, including the attached cartoon. Makes you long for the good old days, doesn't it?
Posted By Scotto at 2007-12-16 10:30:19 permalink | comments
Tags: playboy marijuana

Oops! I guess the cat's out of the bag!

Well, it seems someone is going to be in trouble. On september 24th a plane crashed over Yucatan, not surprisingly loaded with 4 tons of cocaine. What IS(or isn't) surprising, is that this plane is not ONLY tied to the CIA, but also was used for at least 3 flights to/from Guantanamo Bay... oops!

Posted By cdin at 2007-12-15 20:17:47 permalink | comments (11)
Tags: cia assholes smuggling cocaine

Academic recycling

I had to write a short paper for a class, and it is partially about addiction, so I'm recycling it here too. Hope you like it!

In his 1998 article A New Intellectual Framework for Psychiatry, Eric Kandel spelled out a convincing case for a more biological, brain-based approach to psychiatry, and by extension psychological research as well. The intervening years have widely vindicated this program, in part thanks to the explosive growth of functional neuroimaging. But other voices at other times have sounded a note which is cautionary and contrasting.


One example is the article Is Psychology the Science of Behavior? by Marion White McPherson, published in the 1992 American Psychologist special issue on the history of American psychology. The conception of this article may have predated the contemporary explosion of brain-based psychological research; the comments are targeted at the longstanding behaviorist program, but McPherson's comments on potential risks of reductionism are still relevant in the new domain.


The article begins with a speculative history of reductionism in behavior science. Psychology is not unique among the sciences in having evolved from a non-scientific endeavor, but this transition is recent enough that some awkwardness is still visible. Behavior was chosen over mind as a focus of investigation to escape the morass of spirit and theology; quantifiable elements of behavior became the primary focus of psychology. McPherson is, in my opinion, unduly critical of these pioneers for filtering their experimentation thus. She argues that the extreme filtering of behavior down to a few numbers for each experiment betrays the true complexity of behavior, wryly commenting "the practice of defining psychology as the science of behavior while neglecting it is difficult to understand." But the scientific method requires quantification of some sort, and it is no crime for any individual investigator to define the scope of her experiment in whatever way is necessary for logistical and analytical tractability.  


Where I begin to agree with McPherson is that this practice over time has seduced us into a complacency about the complexity of real problems. In the same year, social psychologist John Booth Davies published The Myth of Addiction, a book using attribution theory to explore how the science (or, in some cases, mythology) of addiction has fallen prey to oversimplifications and even misunderstandings which could have serious consequences for treatment and prevention. Attribution theory is the study of the factors that influence how people come up with explanations for things. One of the central points is that statements are often functional rather than representational. If I ask you "How are you today?" it is likely that the answer you choose to give will be based at least as much on what kind of social interaction you want to foster as it will be on some kind of objective, factual answer to that question. Indeed, there may not be single, objectively true answers to questions about human experience and behavior, and it is even less likely that such facts as might exist will be reliably accessible to introspection. In the book, Davies points out that much of addiction lore is based on the statements made by people in treatment for addiction. He describes research carried out using undercover investigators "on the street", who ask addicts questions about their use and situations and receive answers quite in conflict with the answers received from the same people in a clinical setting.


It would be merely a different sort of reductionist error to interpret this as demonstrating that addicts lie to clinicians (although undoubtedly this does happen sometimes). The point is that addicts, like anyone else, make statements for functional reasons, which means there is indeed important psychological information present, but the important information may not be just the superficial factual content of the statement.  


Of course, this adds another layer of difficulty to the scientist's work. But this is a challenge to rise to, not an obstacle to be daunted by. The program of study of biological correlates of behavior has been immensely successful exactly because of the incredible ingenuity the scientific community has mustered in overcoming the difficulties of, say, functional neuroimaging. Our next task is to bring this same level of ingenuity to understanding the full complexity of human mind, emotion and behavior. From the present perspective it may not seem clear how to do this; the kind of ingenuity needed to understand biology and machinery is quite different from that needed to understand emotion (which might better be called "insight" than ingenuity), and it seems to be unusual for them to coexist. Nonetheless, the wide interest in interdisciplinary programs like affective neuroscience, social cognitive neuroscience, and so on suggests that this new program is well underway.

Posted By omgoleus at 2007-12-15 10:06:40 permalink | comments (1)
Tags: addiction attribution theory reductionism

« Back 10 | Next 10 » Showing 2753 to 2763 of 4121
HOME
COMMENTS
NEWS
ARCHIVE
EDITORS
REVIEW POLICY
SUGGEST A STORY
CREATE AN ACCOUNT
RSS | TWITTER | FACEBOOK
DIGG | REDDIT | SHARE