PT 640 - Alexander Beiner - Psychedelics, Culture, and the Games We Play
Release Date: 11/25/2025
Psychedelics Today
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Alexander joins Psychedelics Today to explore how psychedelics, culture, and power shape each other. A writer, facilitator, and co founder of the conference and the media platform , he has spent years thinking about how psychedelic experiences ripple into politics, economics, conflict, and community. In this episode, he and Joe trace the path from early internet forums to today’s psychedelic renaissance, and ask what it would mean to bring a truly psychedelic perspective into our institutions. Beiner is less interested in psychedelics as a niche medical tool and more interested in how they...
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Overview Evelyn Eddy Shoop PMHNP-BC joins Psychedelics Today to share her journey from Division I athlete to psychiatric mental health nurse practitioner and psilocybin research participant. In this conversation, she explains how sports injuries, OCD, and intensive treatment led her into psychiatry and eventually into a psilocybin clinical trial at Yale. Her story weaves together lived experience, clinical training, and a call for more humane systems of care and better qualitative data in psychedelic science. Early Themes: Injury, OCD, and Choosing Psychiatry Early in the episode, Evelyn...
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info_outlineAlexander Beiner joins Psychedelics Today to explore how psychedelics, culture, and power shape each other. A writer, facilitator, and co founder of the conference Breaking Convention and the media platform KAINOS, he has spent years thinking about how psychedelic experiences ripple into politics, economics, conflict, and community. In this episode, he and Joe trace the path from early internet forums to today’s psychedelic renaissance, and ask what it would mean to bring a truly psychedelic perspective into our institutions.
Beiner is less interested in psychedelics as a niche medical tool and more interested in how they can help us see through destructive cultural “games,” reconnect to our bodies, and relate across deep divides.
Early themes with Alexander Beiner
The conversation starts with Beiner’s origin story. He describes formative psychedelic experiences as a teenager, and how early access to thinkers like Terence McKenna, Timothy Leary, and the Shulgins led him onto the Grow Report forum and its associated podcasts. From there he launched his own visionary art podcast and eventually co founded Rebel Wisdom, where he focused more broadly on culture, systems, and meaning rather than only on psychedelics.
He explains that most of his writing has not been about psychedelic substances, but about a “psychedelic approach” to reality. That means paying attention to complexity, paradox, and relationship, and asking what a psychedelic form of education, politics, or media might look like. He also touches on his documentary “Leviathan,” which looks at breakdowns of trust, disembodiment, and the social forces that pull us away from what is real and relational.
Core insights from this conversation
In the middle of the episode, the discussion moves into concrete tensions in the current psychedelic resurgence. Topics include:
- How medicalization can both help and constrain access
- Cognitive liberty and the right to alter one’s own consciousness
- Psychedelic capitalism and the “Moloch” problem of destructive competitive games
- The risks and potential of psychedelic religions and new spiritual communities
Beiner highlights work on ayahuasca circles for Israelis and Palestinians, noting how “we are all one” language can sometimes block necessary truth telling about power and harm. He returns often to embodiment as a key corrective. When people slow down, feel their bodies, and notice what is actually happening in their nervous systems, they can hold disagreement without dehumanizing each other.
He also points to emerging work on psychedelics for creativity and problem solving, including stories where psychedelic insights contributed to breakthroughs in science and complex systems thinking. For him, this is one of the most exciting frontiers, because it shifts the story from “fixing a deficit” to “creating something new.”
Later discussion and takeaways with Alexander Beiner
Later in the episode, Alexander Beiner and Joe talk about cult dynamics, religious freedom, and the need for better checks and balances in emerging psychedelic communities. Beiner stresses that humans are naturally drawn into strong groups and narratives, so the key is not to eliminate “cults” but to spot harmful patterns early and build better accountability.
They explore how double binds and mixed messages can create mental distress, and how psychedelics can sometimes resolve these binds by adding new context and perspectives. From there, the conversation turns to third spaces, communitas, and the urgent need for more embodied, in person culture beyond screens, work, and home.
Practical takeaways include:
- Work with psychedelics in ways that reconnect you to your body, not just your ideas
- Treat medicalization as one path among many, not the only legitimate route
- Pay attention to group dynamics, power, and accountability in any psychedelic setting
- Look for ways to bring “psychedelic virtues” like flexibility, curiosity, and compassion into your workplace, family, and community
Frequently Asked Questions
Who is Alexander Beiner?
Alexander Beiner is a writer, facilitator, and co founder of the psychedelic conference Breaking Convention and the media platform Kinos. His work focuses on culture, systems, and how psychedelic perspectives can reshape society.
What is Alexander Beiner’s book about?
His recent book (discussed in this episode) looks at how psychedelics interact with politics, capitalism, and culture, and asks whether they can help us navigate multiple crises without getting captured by the same destructive games.
How does Alexander Beiner view psychedelic medicalization?
He sees medicalization as useful but limited. He supports access for people who need it, but worries that a purely medical frame reinforces class divides and hands too much power to psychiatry, instead of centering cognitive liberty and community based use.
What is Leviathan in Alexander Beiner’s work?
“Leviathan” is his documentary on the breakdown of trust, disembodiment, and large scale systems that pull us away from what is real and relational. It connects mythic images, embodiment, and modern crises of meaning.
What is Kinos and how does it relate to Alexander Beiner?
KAINOS is Beiner’s Substack based media platform, focused on surfacing novel perspectives and stories about culture, psychedelics, and the future. It extends many of the themes explored in this episode.
This episode places Alexander Beiner within the wider psychedelic resurgence as a voice linking inner work to outer systems. For clinicians, researchers, and community members, it offers a rich invitation to think beyond individual healing and ask how psychedelic perspectives might help us transform the cultural games we are playing.