Skip to content

How Do Psychedelics Reduce Fear of Death?

Chris Letheby

Neuroethics May 17, 2024 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.1007/s12152-024-09564-3 via Springer Nature

Summary

Psychedelic experiences can reduce fear of death by promoting non-physicalist metaphysical beliefs, rather than supporting a naturalistic worldview. This finding suggests that psychedelics may alleviate existential angst in healthy individuals by challenging their existing beliefs about reality. The paper argues for the 'Relaxed Beliefs Under Psychedelics' model as a mechanism for this effect, while also indicating that these experiences do not support neuroexistentialist approaches to spirituality.

Study at a glance

Key finding Psychedelic experiences reduce fear of death mainly by promoting non-physicalist metaphysical beliefs.

Abstract

Increasing evidence suggests that psychedelic experiences, undergone in controlled conditions, can have various durable psychological benefits. One such benefit is reductions in fear of death, which have been attested in both psychiatric patients and healthy people. This paper addresses the question: how, exactly, do psychedelic experiences reduce fear of death? It argues, against some prominent proposals, that they do so mainly by promoting non-physicalist metaphysical beliefs. This conclusion has implications for two broader debates: one about the mechanisms of psychedelic therapy, and one about the potential non-medical uses of psychedelics for the alleviation of existential angst in psychiatrically healthy people. On the first count, the paper argues that the role of metaphysical belief change in fear of death supports the “Relaxed Beliefs Under Psychedelics” (REBUS) model of psychedelic therapy over alternative accounts. On the second count, the paper argues that the role of metaphysical belief change undermines the proposed use of psychedelics in the “neuroexistentialist” project of naturalizing spirituality. The best available evidence suggests that when psychedelic experiences reduce existential angst and restore a sense of meaning in life, they do so primarily by persuading people of the falsity of a broadly naturalistic worldview, and thus do not help reconcile people to the truth of such a worldview.

Tags

Comments

No comments yet.

Log in to comment