257 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
257 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
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Aleister Crowley
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Synopsis of Six Articles on Drugs
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<HB> These articles were never written -- a great loss since Crowley
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succinctly anticipates (by at least thirty years) the main trends in
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sociological and psychopharmacological thought as they developed, often
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painfully, in the 1960s and 1970s. Although this synopsis appears to have
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been written in mid-to-late 1920s (possibly the early 1930s), the articles
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could well have appeared in The Psychedelic Review or The Journal of
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Psychedelic Drugs. Aside from underscoring Crowley's pioneering work in
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this field, this synopsis remains valuable as an outline of Crowley's
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mature view of drugs later in his life -- their use and abuse. Explanatory
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notes are provided for this publication.
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I. General Survey
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A. Almost universal ignorance of the true facts about Drugs. Wild
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statements on both sides; delights and dangers exaggerated.
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B. General account of the principal drugs which have a psychical
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interest: Alcohol, Ether, Chloroform, Hashish, Anhalonium Lewinii,
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[1] Opium (various forms), Atropine (Belladonna),[2] Stramonium,[3]
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Opium derivatives: Cocaine,[4] Morphine, Heroin.
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C. Two main types of drug: ``One man's meat is another man's poison.''
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D. Need to distinguish between the various forms of intoxication, and
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to identify the true cause of the action of any given drug.
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E. The general use of each drug, and the reason in each case of any
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tendency to abuse. The action of a certain drug upon a certain
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person in good health totally different to that upon a sick one.
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II. Historical Survey
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A. Ethnographical and climatic distribution.
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B. Connection of intoxication, mania, and religious ecstasy. Ceremoni-
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ous use of drugs by various cults.
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C. My own researches since 1899. Why I took up the study. The personal
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equation. Summary of my results. Importance of the technique of
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administration. Experiments on other people.
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III. The Abuse of Drugs
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A. Why people resort to drugs.
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1. Personal idiosyncrasy.
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2. The search for new sensations.
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3. Failure to fit environment.
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4. Ignorance.
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5. Economy.
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6. Hypocrisy. (Where Public Opinion condemns pleasure, those who
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fear it resort to secret vices.)
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7. Ambition to obtain praeterhuman power or knowledge.
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8. The stress of modern life.
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9. Excess of imagination.
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10. Excess of sensitiveness.
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11. Ennui.
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12. Pain.
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13. Moral weakness.
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14. Vice.
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B. Commoner results of abuse.
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Alcohol: well known.
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Hashish: insanity.
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Chloroform: few cases known.
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Opium (smoking): bad results rare.
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Morphine: nervous collapse, madness, insomnia, digestive trouble.
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Ether: the alcohol plus paralysis.
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Anhalonium Lewinii: insanity.
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Cocaine: nervous collapse, insanity.
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Laudanum: see De Quincey, Coleridge, and Wilkie Collins.[5]
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Heroin: like Morphine, with great dullness and depression.
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C. Conditions which lead from use to abuse.
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D. Difficulties in the way of stopping. Nature of the temptation to go
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on.
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In the case of Alcohol and Ether I find no inclination to do so, I
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take either quite casually, but instinctively avoid frequent repeti-
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tion.
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With Hashish and Anhalonium, I have a powerful repulsion and can
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only force myself to take them by a stern sense of duty.
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With Opium smoking, I indulge very mildly when the company is
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attractive; I have tried long and vainly to acquire the habit.
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With Morphine, I dislike the effect subconsciously; no temptation to
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repeat.
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With Cocaine, the first few sniffs produce an impatient uneasiness;
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I am almost irresistably driven to go on to my physiological limit
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for that time; but privation causes neither suffering nor regret.
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With Heroin over-indulgence always causes vomiting. I have succeeded
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in acquiring enough of a habit to make it hard to break off. The
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symptoms are severe; but now that I know how to employ palliatives,
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I can break away sharply and survive the craving with four days
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moderate discomfort at most. Suppression causes fear, which induces
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resumption; and fills the mind with specious arguments in favour of
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taking `one last dose.'
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IV. Commercial Aspects
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A. Effects of repressive legislation. Enormous profits to
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1. Pedlars and smugglers.
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2. Policemen.
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3. Blackmailers.
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4. Quack doctors.
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5. Sanitarium sharks.
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6. Secret nostrum vendors.
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7. Sensational journalists.
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8. Spies and officials.
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These would vanish if prohibition became effective or the laws were
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abolished.
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B. Cost to nation.
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1. Loss of `victims'' economic value.
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2. Maintenance of machinery of prohibition; inspectors, spies etc.,
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support of convicts.
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3. Loss of dignity, by making physicians and pharmacists subject to
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police degrades those professions, keeps away the best class of
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men from them, and so destroys the nation's health.
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C. Cheapness of drugs tends to drive out alcohol. Most drugs can be
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made synthetically from `harmless' ingredients.
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V. The Treament of Drug Habits
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A. Some drugs, e.g. Opium, produce a physical craving due to the
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chronic poisoning of the tissues. Suppression may therefore be
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fatal. The symptoms of suppression may be so severe that even strong
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willed people need assistance in stopping. Others, e.g. Cocaine,
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present little physical obstacle to suppression; the pull is mainly
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moral.
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B. Each patient needs special treatment. This depends on
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1. The original cause of the habit.
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2. His constitution.
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3. His environment.
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4. His prospects for the future.
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C. Various theories of cure; the main objection to each.
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D. My own theory and practice.
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The Law of Thelema is the cure. Each patient must be analysed until he
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discovers for himself the true purpose for which he came into the
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world. He will then resolve firmly to stop drugs as hindrances to his
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doing his will. He is assisted by palliatives when any physical
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symptoms tend to overcome his resolution.
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E. Palliatives useful in various crises.
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VI. The Mastery of Drugs
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A. Man must be trained to use drugs with impunity.
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B. Experiments must be made to discover how the undoubted physical and
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moral assistance of drugs may be turned to the best advantage.
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C. Results of my own researches in this direction.
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Alcohol. Too general in its action to be useful.
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Ether. Invaluable for mental analysis; also to discover one's own final
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judgment on any matter. Gives the power to appreciate the elements of
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which sensation is made up. Example: Feeling one's finger move in
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detail.
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Hashish. Good for mental analysis. Aids imagination and builds up
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courage. One can trace the genesis of ideas, solution sometimes given
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in a series of pictures. Example: How property began.
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Anhalonium Lewinii. Like Hashish. (All three excellent for enabling one
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to get behind one's superficial ideas and discover the roots of one's
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thoughts.)
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Morphine, Opium etc. Aids concentration. Relieves pressure of worrying
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thoughts; aids creative imagination. Objection: Injures executive
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ability, so that ideas are sterile.
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Cocaine. Prevents fatigue, enabling one to work at full pressure for an
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indefinite time. Example: My New Orleans method and work done at
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Cefalu.[6]
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Heroin. Combines the virtues of Opium and Cocaine. Excites imagination;
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helps concentration and calm; increases executive power and endurance.
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Example: [The Diary of a] Drug Fiend.[7]
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D. The Technique of Administration. Select proper drug by experiment.
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Dosage. The Opsonic curve.[8] The weather and other conditions.
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EDITOR'S NOTES
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1. The peyote cactus, Lophophora williamsii in modern taxonomy (sometimes
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referred to as ``31'' in Crowley's diaries - the gematria of ``A.L.'').
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Crowley refers to a Parke, Davis & Co. liquid preparation in which the
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chief alkaloid mescaline was more concentrated than in mescal buttons.
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Crowley consulted with Parke, Davis in Detroit on its preparation
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(Confessions, p. ???).
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2. Atropine is not now considered a natural component of Atropa belladonna,
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but rather a byproduct of chemical or heat extraction during which the
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chief alkaloid hyoscyamine partly changes to atropine. Neither alkaloid
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is reported to be hallucinogenic in non-toxic quantities, unlike
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scopolamine, another alkaloid present in smaller amounts. See R.E.
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Schultes and A. Hofmann, The Botany and Chemistry of Hallucinogens,
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(Springfield, Ill.: Thomas, 1973), p. 161.
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3. Stramonium is one of four divisions of the genus Datura, and has three
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species. Crowley probably refers to thorn apple, also called jimson
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weed, whose principal active component is scopolamine. Ibid, p. 167.
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4. Cocaine is not an opium derivative -- this may be a copyist's error.
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5. Laudanum is a tincture of opium. See Thomas De Quincey, Confessions of
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an Opium Eater, (London: Cresset Press, 1950); Samuel Taylor Coleridge,
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``Kubla Khan'', The Complete Poetical Works of Samuel Taylor Coleridge,
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ed. E.H. Coleridge, vol. I, pp. 295-298, (London: Oxford University
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Press, 1912); and Wilkie Collins, The Moonstone, (London: Collins,
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1925).
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6. Crowley describes the ``New Orleans Method'' as ``exciting the mind by
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morphine and then steadying it by cocaine''in The Magical Record of the
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Beast 666, ed. Symonds & Grant (Montreal: 93 Publishing, 1972), p. ???,
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which also records much of Crowley's work at Cefalu.
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7. Crowley, The Diary of a Drug Fiend, (London: Collins, 1922 and New York:
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Dutton, 1923), currently available in paperback from Samuel Weiser, Inc.
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8. The opsonic curve is probably a drug-tolerance curve, plotting dosage,
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time (frequency) and an opsonic index (of the levels of opsonin in the
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blood). Opsonin is a component of blood serum that renders foreign
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matter and toxins (such as some drug molecules) - susceptible to attack
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by phagocytes. Thus, as the opsonic index rose, dosage would need to be
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increased (according to an ``opsonic curve'') in order to overcome
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increasing drug tolerance and maintain the same level of intoxication.
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