I don’t think describing the experience itself is very helpful to answering the question.. The comment seems as close to an answer of “yes, it’s likely you would find the results of a trip irreducibly spiritual or some other nonsense” as someone would actually give, but because of the vagueness that seems to be intrinsic to descriptions of the experience of a trip, I’m not even sure if you’re espousing such things or not.
In my experience, it is possible to bring parts of the experience back and subject it to analytical and critical thinking, but it is very challenging. The trip does tend to defy comprehension by the normal mode of consciousness, which is why descriptions have the quality you call “vagueness”. In short, distilling more than “irreducibly spiritual nonsense” from the trip takes work, not unlike the work of organizing thoughts into a term paper. It can be done, and the more analytical your habits of thought to begin with, the more success I think you could expect.
I don’t think describing the experience itself is very helpful to answering the question.. The comment seems as close to an answer of “yes, it’s likely you would find the results of a trip irreducibly spiritual or some other nonsense” as someone would actually give, but because of the vagueness that seems to be intrinsic to descriptions of the experience of a trip, I’m not even sure if you’re espousing such things or not.
In my experience, it is possible to bring parts of the experience back and subject it to analytical and critical thinking, but it is very challenging. The trip does tend to defy comprehension by the normal mode of consciousness, which is why descriptions have the quality you call “vagueness”. In short, distilling more than “irreducibly spiritual nonsense” from the trip takes work, not unlike the work of organizing thoughts into a term paper. It can be done, and the more analytical your habits of thought to begin with, the more success I think you could expect.