Micro-Messiahs and the Revolutionary Dynamics of Psychedelic Diffusion
Leor RosemanProphetic or messianic states of consciousness are charged with moral urgency and are active, historical, political, and sometimes infused with ego. In this paper, I inquire into psychedelic micro-messianic phenomenology and revolutionary dynamics through the historical case studies of Allen Ginsberg, Master Irineu, and John Wilson (Moonhead)—figures associated with the diffusion of LSD, Daime (ayahuasca), and peyote, respectively. I propose that, in moments of tension and uncertainty, psychedelics can catalyse micro-messianic movements through which these substances diffuse into new situations. A revelatory event motivates the subject, in fidelity to the event, to spread the substance and practice. Through the innovation, a movement emerges until it is routinised or inverted. A new status quo then stabilises, from which another revelatory event may arise. Through these historical cases, I offer a detailed analysis of such revolutionary dynamics, drawing on various theoretical perspectives (Weber, Wallace, Kuhn, Taves, Whitehouse, Rogers, Badiou, and others). In doing so, I demonstrate how psychedelic insights and actions are intertwined, and how psychedelic revelations seek to ripple outward into movements.