• AgentOrangesicle
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    101 year ago

    I mean, this is going to sound super-oversimplified but hopefully correct: we know that Tryptamines like LSD and psilocybin serve their most novel functions on 5-HT2A serotonin binding sites and there are a lot in the thalamus, which is largely responsible for routing information to other parts of the brain. That would explain a lot of people’s accounts of synesthesia.

    The circumstances that are necessary to promote neuroplasticity weren’t clear when I was in skool, but the fastest way to get a credible answer on the internet is to be wrong about something, so I’m going to claim it was 95.6% magic.

    • @ElectroNeutrino
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      English
      81 year ago

      One of the requirements for Brannigan’s law is that you can’t make it obvious that you’re invoking it.

    • @havokdj
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      51 year ago

      LSD is not a tryptamine, it is a lysergamide.

      • AgentOrangesicle
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        41 year ago

        Lysergemise deez nuts…

        But in good faith and context, what are the differences in action potentials? Is it worth writing about? That’s an actual question, because (apologies) I’m stoned as fuck.

        Also, how is it suddenly not a tryptamine?

        • @havokdj
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          31 year ago

          It’s all good homie lol.

          It’s not a tryptamine because that’s a different molecule altogether. LSD is a lysergic acid, while psilocybin or DMT are tryptamines

          Best way I can describe them is that lysergamide is like meeting the universe, while tryptamine is like being one with the universe.

      • AgentOrangesicle
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        21 year ago

        I… I guess because a subclass of psychoactive molecules came into existence after my education, I’m wrong. Just sucks to learn that and make sense of myself thereafter.

        • @havokdj
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          31 year ago

          I’d like to come back to apologize, I didn’t fully understand what you were saying before and wanted to clarify that you are not wrong either.

          Lysergamides are not tryptamines, but they do contain tryptamines, however they also contain phenethlyamines which, like tryptamines, are a class of psychedelic substances themselves. Although Lysergamides contain these two substances, scientists agree that they should be classified as a separate class altogether as they have both distinctive enough effects and enough variations under their tree that do not fit anywhere specifically under the tryptamine or phenethtlamine tree. As far as I’m aware, this is distinctly from a chemistry perspective and doesn’t incorporate psychonautics into it’s classification (although the reverse is usually the case).

          I wouldn’t say that anything sucks about it though, there is always new information coming out, that’s what makes science awesome. We like to think that we have got it all figured out, but there is always something that could throw everything we know off the table. Remember that the scientific method only came about in the 17th century, everything was pretty much theory up until then and that’s still a very small amount of time for us to have learned everything we have learned.

          Once again, I am sorry for how my tone may have been before. I am told I can come off as accusatory or adamant at times but I try not to be. I hope this makes you feel better, you are not wrong, there was just more to the story is all :).

          • AgentOrangesicle
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            21 year ago

            Yo, I’m just happy to learn new things! Hell, my post was imploring people to criticize it, so you aren’t wrong in “well actually”-ing me. Keep killing it and keep sharing good chemistry knowledge! Psychoactive substances are continuously more intriguing to me as I learn more.

            I met one of the grandsons of Alex Shulgin (creator of MDMA) in a drug diversion class that I taught briefly at the University of Oregon (meant for kids that were caught smoking weed in the dorms). I only hosted the class for a few months until I got complaints that I was too fascinated with the drug interactions and not with the whole “diversion” part of it.

            But hey, everyone learned not to mix central nervous system depressants, which was the largest cause of drug-related fatalities at the UO, so I think I did my job effectively. Wish they would have paid me for it.

            You’re good people, havokdjfintquuffatcpl.