Warning
This is an unofficial archive of PsychonautWiki as of 2025-08-11T15:14:44Z. Content on this page may be outdated, incomplete, or inaccurate. Please refer to the original page for the most up-to-date information.

Substances/Content: Difference between revisions

From PsychonautWiki Archive
Jump to navigation Jump to search
>Unity
m Grammatics
>Unity
m Grammatics
Line 1: Line 1:
A '''psychoactive substance''' is defined as a chemical substance, other than a nutrient or essential dietary ingredient, that affects brain function to produce alterations in sensation, perception, mood, consciousness, cognition, and behavior.  
A '''psychoactive substance''' is defined as a chemical substance, other than a nutrient or essential dietary ingredient, that affects nerve function to produce alterations in sensation, perception, mood, consciousness, cognition, and behavior.  


Psychoactive substances are used for a number of purposes; for example, they can be taken recreationally for their novelty and [[euphoria|euphoric]] effects, as [[entheogens]] for ritual or spiritual purposes, or as tools for augmenting and studying the mind. Many psychoactive substances have demonstrable therapeutic utility and are used in routine medical practice (e.g. [[pain relief|anaesthetics]], analgesics, [[anxiety suppression|anxiolytics]], [[antidepressants]], etc.).
Psychoactive substances are used for a number of purposes; for example, they can be taken recreationally for their novelty and [[euphoria|euphoric]] effects, as [[entheogens]] for ritual or spiritual purposes, or as tools for augmenting and studying the mind. Many psychoactive substances have demonstrable therapeutic utility and are used in routine medical practice (e.g. [[pain relief|anaesthetics]], analgesics, [[anxiety suppression|anxiolytics]], [[antidepressants]], etc.).

Revision as of 08:01, 4 May 2019

A psychoactive substance is defined as a chemical substance, other than a nutrient or essential dietary ingredient, that affects nerve function to produce alterations in sensation, perception, mood, consciousness, cognition, and behavior.

Psychoactive substances are used for a number of purposes; for example, they can be taken recreationally for their novelty and euphoric effects, as entheogens for ritual or spiritual purposes, or as tools for augmenting and studying the mind. Many psychoactive substances have demonstrable therapeutic utility and are used in routine medical practice (e.g. anaesthetics, analgesics, anxiolytics, antidepressants, etc.).

The psychoactive substance index serves to catalog and provide relevant, accurate, and unbiased information for any and all psychoactive substances, with a special focus on those that can be used as tools for expanding consciousness. The individual articles detail not just the chemistry, pharmacology, toxicity and harm potential of each substance, but also its subjective effects. This is done by following a standardized system of definitions and terminologies that can be found in the subjective effects index.

Please see our summary index to view conveniently condensed versions of each article.