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International Journal of Research and Innovation in Social Science

ISSN 2454-6186

2 papers in the library · publishing 2026

Papers

From Acute Altered States to Durable Change: A Social-Psychological Framework for Contextual Framing, Integration, and Post-Acute Stabilization

International Journal of Research and Innovation in Social Science January 1, 2026 Elias Rubenstein

Acute altered states induced by psychedelics or practices like breathwork do not reliably produce lasting change on their own. A theoretical framework argues that durable psychological, behavioral, and existential transformation depends on contextual framing, post-acute integration, and pre-existing integrative capacities, not just the intensity of the acute experience. The framework compares DMT, ayahuasca, 5-MeO-DMT, psilocybin, LSD, contemplative practice, fasting, breathwork, and near-death experiences without claiming they are identical. It concludes with testable hypotheses about how context, recall, integration, and individual differences shape outcomes.

Remote Cosmologies of Control: An Investigative Analysis of the Archon–Prison-Planet Narrative in Gnostic, Esoteric, Psychological, and Cultural Contexts

International Journal of Research and Innovation in Social Science January 1, 2026 Wynand Goosen

The prison-planet narrative, in which Earth is ruled by parasitic Archons harvesting human emotional energy through reincarnation, is not a literal cosmology but a powerful cultural metaphor for alienation, suffering, and systemic control. This article traces the idea from classical Gnosticism through Theosophy, occultism, and New Age thought, then analyzes it using comparative religion, depth psychology, critical theory, and cultural semiotics. The persistence of Archonic themes reflects enduring human concerns about autonomy, embodiment, authority, and existential purpose, revealing a symbolic system through which individuals interpret power, suffering, and the structure of reality.