Exploring Reality, Maybe

#36 Exploring the Global Psychedelic Movement With Mike Margolies

43 min · Ayer
Portada del episodio #36 Exploring the Global Psychedelic Movement With Mike Margolies

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In this episode of Exploring Reality Maybe, we sit down with Mike Margolies, whose own path into psychedelics began with an ayahuasca experience that made him realize a different life was possible.  What followed was a major personal and professional transformation: leaving engineering, traveling through India and Southeast Asia, and eventually creating spaces where people could speak openly and honestly about psychedelics. Mike shares why honest conversation is just as important as the molecules themselves, how culture and “set and setting” shape psychedelic experiences, and why the movement must confront ethical questions around power, safety, and access.  He makes a case for plurality rather than one-size-fits-all thinking, arguing that therapy, indigenous ceremony, and other forms of psychedelic engagement can all have value when they are held responsibly. We also explore the surprising intersection of psychedelics and blockchain, the decentralized ethos behind the Global Psychedelic Society, and how that network has grown into hundreds of independent community groups around the world. From biweekly Zoom gatherings to international retreats, Mike describes a movement built on connection, shared learning, and distributed leadership. Finally, Mike reflects on ego, intuition, and the deeper question of how psychedelics may help us move toward a more liberated future.  He closes with a hopeful vision: a genuine post-prohibition world where people can relate to these medicines with more honesty, more care, and more freedom.

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46 episodios

episode #36 Exploring the Global Psychedelic Movement With Mike Margolies artwork

#36 Exploring the Global Psychedelic Movement With Mike Margolies

In this episode of Exploring Reality Maybe, we sit down with Mike Margolies, whose own path into psychedelics began with an ayahuasca experience that made him realize a different life was possible.  What followed was a major personal and professional transformation: leaving engineering, traveling through India and Southeast Asia, and eventually creating spaces where people could speak openly and honestly about psychedelics. Mike shares why honest conversation is just as important as the molecules themselves, how culture and “set and setting” shape psychedelic experiences, and why the movement must confront ethical questions around power, safety, and access.  He makes a case for plurality rather than one-size-fits-all thinking, arguing that therapy, indigenous ceremony, and other forms of psychedelic engagement can all have value when they are held responsibly. We also explore the surprising intersection of psychedelics and blockchain, the decentralized ethos behind the Global Psychedelic Society, and how that network has grown into hundreds of independent community groups around the world. From biweekly Zoom gatherings to international retreats, Mike describes a movement built on connection, shared learning, and distributed leadership. Finally, Mike reflects on ego, intuition, and the deeper question of how psychedelics may help us move toward a more liberated future.  He closes with a hopeful vision: a genuine post-prohibition world where people can relate to these medicines with more honesty, more care, and more freedom.

Ayer43 min
episode #35 Exploring Consciousness, Neuroscience, and AI With Aneil Mallavarapu artwork

#35 Exploring Consciousness, Neuroscience, and AI With Aneil Mallavarapu

In this episode of Exploring Reality Maybe, we sit down with Aneil Mallavarapu, a mathematical biologist and systems scientist whose work spans Harvard, UCSF, and the biotech industry. From modeling complex biological systems to questioning the foundations of consciousness itself, Aneil brings a rare interdisciplinary perspective to one of science’s deepest mysteries, “What consciousness really is.” We explore the famous “hard problem of consciousness,” why Aneil believes it may be framed incorrectly, and his provocative view that consciousness may be fundamental rather than something that simply emerges from matter. Drawing from physics, biology, and philosophy, he explains why understanding experience may require us to rethink some of our most basic scientific assumptions. The conversation also dives into one of today’s most controversial questions: “Can artificial intelligence ever be conscious?” Aneil shares his bold argument that digital computers may never achieve consciousness, not because of technological limits, but because of fundamental constraints in physics. He also discusses quantum theories of consciousness, the role of the brain, and why the science of consciousness may need to become more predictive and mathematically rigorous. Finally, we reflect on ego, identity, and what it means to be truly conscious. Aneil offers a fascinating perspective on how the mechanical processes of the brain may shape personality, while consciousness itself may play a deeper role in guiding awareness beyond automatic patterns. This episode offers a wide-ranging conversation about the mind, reality, intelligence, and the possibility that consciousness may be the universe's most fundamental feature.

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episode #34 Exploring Discipline, Psychedelics, and the Courage to Unlearn With Mark McGrath artwork

#34 Exploring Discipline, Psychedelics, and the Courage to Unlearn With Mark McGrath

In this episode of Exploring Reality, Maybe, we sit down with Mark McGrath—Marine veteran, former asset management professional, and an unlikely guide to thriving in chaos. Mark’s work lives at the intersection of discipline and humility, how to stay effective in complex environments without getting trapped by certainty, labels, or outdated mental models. Mark shares how a rebellious turn in high school led him into the Marine Corps, and how Jesuit education and military doctrine shaped the “cognitive operating system” he still uses today. We unpack John Boyd’s ideas—especially Destruction and Creation and the misunderstood OODA loop—and why Mark believes it’s not a “war of speed,” but a “war of orientation”, the ability to revise your relationship with reality again and again. We also explore how contemplative traditions connect with Boyd’s framework, learning, unlearning, and rebuilding perception, along with Mark’s perspective on psychedelic therapy as a tool for reorientation and healing, particularly for veterans and trauma survivors. And for those not using psychedelics, he shares practical alternatives that support adaptability. Finally, we go deep on ego, why Mark sees it as the enemy of coordination, love, and growth, and why the real discipline is learning to “kill it” daily so you can stay open, curious, and free. A conversation about resilience, consciousness, and the rare courage it takes to admit that we might be totally wrong about what we think we know.

19 de feb de 202650 min