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Unbinding the self

Chris Letheby

Philosophy of Psychedelics August 1, 2021 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.1093/med/9780198843122.003.0007

Summary

Psychedelic therapy may help individuals revise rigid self-models by 'unbinding' the self, facilitating experiences of ego dissolution and psychological insight. This process involves both neural and psychological plasticity, as well as the development of new self-models. The chapter discusses how this predictive self-binding account can encompass various mechanisms of psychedelic therapy, such as connectedness, acceptance, and emotional breakthroughs.

Study at a glance

Key finding Psychedelics can facilitate ego dissolution and psychological insight by revising entrenched self-models through a two-factor process involving neural plasticity and new self-modelling.

Abstract

‘Unbinding the self’ outlines the predictive self-binding account of psychedelic therapy introduced by Letheby and Gerrans (2017). On this account, the networks targeted by psychedelics integrate or ‘bind’ information from multiple sources into a hierarchical predictive model of the self. In pathological conditions, detrimental forms of self-modelling can become rigidly entrenched. By ‘unbinding’ the self-model, psychedelics facilitate experiences of ego dissolution and psychological insight in which pathological self-models can be revised. On this view, psychedelic therapy has a two-factor structure: it involves (a) the induction of neural and psychological plasticity, and (b) the discovery and consolidation of new forms of self-modelling. The chapter shows how this account can subsume many candidate mechanisms of psychedelic therapy, including feelings of connectedness and acceptance, psychological insight, emotional breakthrough, and mindfulness-related capacities. The chapter concludes with some brief remarks on philosophical questions about self and self-consciousness.

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