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Psychedelic Last Rites

Wayne Glausser

Oxford Scholarship Online March 22, 2018 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.1093/oso/9780190864170.003.0007

Summary

The chapter compares the Catholic sacrament of extreme unction with modern psychedelic therapy for dying patients. While extreme unction is seen by Catholics as a vital preparation for heaven, Protestants view it skeptically. In contrast, since the 1960s, psychiatrists have used LSD and psilocybin to help terminal cancer patients manage anxiety and depression. The chapter discusses how this new therapy mirrors the intentions of the old sacrament while also facing similar challenges.

Study at a glance

Population terminal cancer patients
Key finding Psychedelic therapy shares both the high purposes of extreme unction and some of the associated problems.

Abstract

This final chapter compares the Catholic sacrament of extreme unction with modern experiments in psychedelic therapy for the dying. Extreme unction has an unusual history within Christianity: Catholics embrace it as a last, crucial fortification of the soul that prepares someone for heaven, but Protestants, going back to Calvin, view it as a fraudulent mystification. Secular scientists have come up with something comparable to the old sacrament. Beginning in the 1960s, and resuming very recently, psychiatrists have experimented with LSD and psilocybin in an attempt to help patients with terminal cancer overcome anxiety and depression. This chapter explores all facets of the psychedelic “sacrament” as it entangles with extreme unction. The new therapy shares both the high purposes of the old last rites and some of the problems that have surrounded it.

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