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mushsmile.gifOn April 18th, 1944, Albert Hoffman deliberately took an oral dose of L.S.D. Having experienced its hallucigenic effects three days earlier by accident, he wanted to explore again the effects of exposure. He found it caused not just dizziness and restlessness, but also "extreme activity of imagination." His first experience resulted accidentally when the drug was absorbed through his skin upon contact with its container. He worked at Sandoz Laboratories in Basel, Switzerland, where he had manufactured the drug three years earlier in search of a medication for respiratory troubles. mushsmile.gif
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Posted

Chemists were pretty damn cavalier with the risk of poisioning in those days. Familiarity breeds complacence. A lot of them died from poisoning or cancer, for example Mme. Curie and Emil Fisher. Lord knows how Hoffman calculated what dose he should give himself based on a completely unknown amount absorbed through the skin. LSD must have a fairly wide "therapeutic window", if you excuse my use of the term for a drug with no legitimate medicinal use.

Posted
aaah, scotty, that'd be "lysergic acid diethylamide"...

cheers,

 

I would swear I typed in "acid"...

must be trippin'...

As for the dimethylide/diethylamide...

I'm just an idiot.

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