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Psychedelics, Transformative Experience, and Modality An Analysis of Valid and Substantially Informed Consent in Psychedelic-assisted Therapy

David Zheng

Philosophy, Psychiatry, & Psychology August 1, 2025 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.1353/ppp.0.a967327

Summary

Psychedelic-assisted therapy (PAT) is highlighted as a unique type of transformative experience (TE) that raises complex issues around informed consent. The article discusses two forms of consent: 'valid consent' and 'substantially informed consent.' It argues that while valid consent for PAT may hinge on whether TEs are necessary for its therapeutic effects, substantially informed consent is unattainable due to unmet materiality conditions.

Study at a glance

Key finding Substantially informed consent regarding psychedelic-assisted therapy is not possible due to a failure to meet the necessary conditions of materiality.

Abstract

Paul’s concepts of “Transformative Experiences” (TE) has sparked extensive discussion on multiple epistemological and ethical issues within philosophy. In particular, Paul’s work has inspired significant work on the possibility of informed consent with regard to medical interventions that may induce said TEs. One such intervention, namely Psychedelic-assisted Therapy (PAT), has been discussed at length in the psychiatric ethics literature and has posed a unique challenge to widely accepted notions of autonomy and informed consent. In the following article, I describe in detail Paul’s concept of TEs and make clear why PAT deserves to be viewed as a special kind of TE due to its distinctive ineffability. I then distinguish between two different philosophical and legal versions of informed consent, including “valid consent” and “substantially informed consent” and show that whether one can provide “valid consent” for PAT depends on whether TEs are causally necessary for PAT’s therapeutic effects. I argue that regardless of this causal question, “substantially informed consent” with regard to PAT is not possible due to a failure to meet the conditions of materiality necessary for informed consent.

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