The Bergsonian Metaphysics Behind Huxley’s Doors

In Rob Lovering (ed.), The Palgrave Handbook of Philosophy and Psychoactive Drug Use. New York: Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 15-36 (2024)
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Abstract

Aldous Huxley employed, in his 1954 book on the mescaline experience, The Doors of Perception, both explicitly and implicitly the metaphysics of French philosopher Henri Bergson, notably through two concepts that Huxley named the ‘reducing valve’ and ‘Mind-at-Large’. The former concept claims that our perception of the external world and of our past is significantly filtered for the purpose of practicality. The latter idea is that the wider world, the cosmos, and the total past, exist as consciousness. It is this ‘Mind-at-Large’ that we as humans reduce into a useful fragment that comprises our finite minds. In other words, Huxley offers via Bergson a view somewhat (but not quite) in line with pantheism and extended-mind theories, one that sees the brain and body as receiving rather than generating consciousness – a top-down and exogenous approach to the mind. Huxley severely simplifies (and slightly misunderstands) Bergson’s metaphysics, so the aim of this text is to rectify and fortify Bergson’s thought in the relevant aspects, thereby offering a more coherent, correct, and comprehensive framework into which we may understand psychedelic experience through a Bergsonian, or Bergsonesque, lens.

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Peter Sjöstedt-Hughes
University of Exeter (PhD)

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