"No #psychotherapy serves the sole purpose of reducing psychiatric symptoms and managing mental illness. In addition, #psychotherapies always aim at enabling patients to flourish, to live “the good life,” to acquire what the Ancient Greeks called #eudaemonia.
This article addresses the ethical ramifications of using #psychedelics as catalysts of ethically charged psychotherapies as psychedelic therapies gain global traction."

https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s12152-024-09550-9

Psychedelic Therapy as Form of Life - Neuroethics

In the historical context of a crisis in biological psychiatry, psychedelic drugs paired with psychotherapy are globally re-emerging in research clinics as a potential transdiagnostic therapy for treating mood disorders, addictions, and other forms of psychological distress. The treatments are poised to soon shift from clinical trials to widespread service delivery in places like Australia, North America, and Europe, which has prompted ethical questions by social scientists and bioethicists. Taking a broader view, we argue that the ethics of psychedelic therapy concerns not simply how psychotherapies are different when paired with psychedelic drugs, but how psychedelic therapies shape and are shaped by different values, norms, and metaphysical commitments. Drawing from the published literature and interviews with seven psychedelic therapists working in clinical trials in the United States, Germany, Switzerland, and Australia, this article opens the black box of the treatments to consider the values and informal debates currently animating the therapies. Considering questions of patient autonomy, mechanisms of therapeutic action, and which therapies are best suited to pair with psychedelic substances, we examine the ethics of psychedelic therapy as an emergent form of life. To bring this form of life out in fuller relief, we conclude by comparing and contrasting it with ayahuasca use in Amazonian shamanism.

SpringerLink

Eudaemonia is spirit-wellness—beyond happiness to meaningful wholeness. Researchers found that awe, wonder, & beauty amplify meaningfulness. So really—stop and smell the roses. It’s a religious practice. #ReligiousNaturalism #science #spirituality #eudaemonia #awe #wonder #gratefulness

The study:
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/333491631_Awe_and_Meaning_Elucidating_Complex_Effects_of_Awe_Experiences_on_Meaning_in_life

Plain English article:
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/a-new-dimension-to-a-meaningful-life1/

“The primary mission of the Stoics… is to be helpful to others and serve the greater good, and they don’t do this to make themselves happy. They do it because it is the right and natural way to live.”

Ward Farnsworth, The Practicing Stoic: A Philosophical User’s Manual, Chapter 11

#Stoicism #Stoics #happiness #eudaemonia #service #virtue #howtolive @stoicism