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G. Raj

2 papers in the library · 30 citations · publishing 2024-2026

Papers

The Hopkins-Oxford Psychedelics Ethics (HOPE) Working Group Consensus Statement

American Journal of Bioethics May 2, 2024 Edward Jacobs, B. Earp, Paul S. Appelbaum et al. 29 citations

A workshop on psychedelic ethics, the first Hopkins-Oxford Psychedelic Ethics (HOPE) meeting, was held in August 2023 at the University of Oxford to address ethical issues surrounding psychedelics. The organizers (BDE, DBY, EJ) aimed to foster interdisciplinary discussion on topics such as informed consent, therapeutic use, and societal implications. The report outlines the workshop's structure, key themes, and proposed guidelines for ethical research and practice in the field.

Understanding Relationship between Mystical Experiences and Yoga-based Personality Traits in Meditators, Patients with Psychosis, and Psychedelic Users: A Cross-sectional Study

Journal of Applied Consciousness Studies January 1, 2026 G. Raj, Hemant Bhargav 1 citation

Among 46 people who had a mystical experience (35 from psychedelics, 5 naturally, 6 during meditation), higher mystical experience scores correlated with lower scores on several yoga-based personality traits considered obstacles to inner peace: Asmita-Tamasic, Dvesha, Abhinivesha, and VPI-Rajas. Positive mood during the experience correlated with higher Asmita-Gunateeta scores. Psychedelic users who meditated had lower scores on Swapna consciousness, Asmita-Tamasic, and Abhinivesha than those who did not meditate. People with a current mental health diagnosis scored higher on VPI-Rajas and VPI-Tamas and on Kapha constitution. The findings suggest a yogic framework could inform psychedelic-assisted psychotherapy in India.