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- From: aleph1@stein.u.washington.edu (Mitch)
- Newsgroups: alt.psychoactives,alt.zines
- Subject: INTERZINE #2: Peter Meyer
- Date: 11 Jun 1993 06:24:53 GMT
- Message-ID: <1v98flINN4ci@news.u.washington.edu>
-
- _______________________________________________________________________
-
- | Not copyright
- |
- | May be freely copied and reproduced
- |
- | n t e r z i n e
- _______________________________________________________________________
-
- { Issue #2 : Peter Meyer }
- _______________________________________________________________________
-
- Peter Meyer is best known as the developer of the MS-DOS software
- _Timewave Zero_, which demonstrates Terence McKenna's fractal model of
- time and history. In the "About the Authors" section of the software
- documentation, we learn:
-
- Peter Meyer received the first double honors Bachelor of Arts degree
- awarded by Monash University, Melbourne, majoring both in Philosophy
- and in Pure Mathematics. His mathematical research has been published
- in _Discrete Mathematics_. He has travelled extensively, and spent
- several years studying Tibetan Buddhism in India and Nepal. Peter is
- an experienced software developer and has worked internationally as a
- computer consultant. His interests include history, travel, cryptology,
- geopolitics, anthropology, religion and psychedelic research. In
- addition to _Timewave Zero_ he has written and published three C
- function libraries, a Maya calendar program and a data encryption
- software package. His DMT research has been published in _Psychedelic
- Monographs and Essays_ and in the _Yearbook of Ethnomedicine and
- Consciousness research_. His exploration of little-known areas of
- consciousness has confirmed for him both the reality of other
- dimensions of existence and of the Eckhartian/Buddhist undifferentiated
- unity underlying all phenomena. He hopes to be present at the end of
- history in 2012, 5125 years after its beginning.
-
- - some questions and answers -
-
- Q1. When you got your double honors degree in Philosophy and Pure
- Mathematics at Monash University, what did you foresee yourself doing
- in life?
-
- A1. When I finished my five-year course of studies at Monash
- University I was still somewhat naive and idealistic. During those
- years I seemed to have access to some intuitive source of metaphysical
- knowledge which apparently I have now lost - or perhaps it is more
- accurate to say that I am now less inclined to accept what I imagine
- to be the case as actually being the case (without confirming
- evidence). As a university student I felt (probably like many
- university students, at least in the 60s) that there were realms of
- knowledge waiting to be explored, and deep truths waiting to be
- discovered. This was why I studied Philosophy and Mathematics (having
- switched over from earlier undergraduate studies in natural science),
- searching for deep truths.
-
- When I graduated I had no clear idea of what I was going to do in
- life, beyond the general aim of continuing this search for deep
- truths. I gave little thought to a career, or to the question of
- earning a living. I had seriously considered doing graduate work in
- AI with John McCarthy at Stanford University, but my interest in
- psychology (especially that of Jung and of Piaget) won out. I had
- inherited some property following my mother's death in 1970, and upon
- graduating I sold this and left Australia to travel to Europe via
- Asia, which I did.
-
- Q2. What was the nature of the research you have had published in
- "Discrete Mathematics"?
-
- This was a paper entitled "On the Structure of Orthomodular Posets",
- in the 1974 volume. It was my final-year undergraduate thesis in
- mathematics, which I wrote in 1970. It is exceedingly abstract. In
- it I prove a number of theorems about the construction of orthomodular
- posets of various kinds from sets of sets satisfying certain mathematical
- conditions. As far as I know no mathematician ever extended this line
- of research any further. It was a path I went down that none cared to
- follow.
-
- Q3. What motivated you to study Tibetan Buddhism? Where in India and
- Nepal did you go to, and who did you study with?
-
- A3. As a first-year university student at the age of 18 I inclined to
- atheism and agnosticism, but I then read Christmas Humphreys' book
- "Buddhism", and immediately felt that this was a philosophy/religion
- that made sense to me. However, I still cannot quite accept what
- to some is the first principle of Buddhism, that this life is an
- unmitigated realm of suffering. I prefer to see all sentient life as
- an expression of a divine creativity, a viewpoint somewhat more akin
- to the Hindu view of the world as divine play (illusion though it
- ultimately may be).
-
- I was, like many people, first attracted to Tibetan Buddhism when
- I discovered Tibetan art, especially the thanka paintings of the
- tantric deities. This was around the time, in 1967, when I began
- doing acid, which really opened me up to metaphysical and religious
- dimensions. In the late 1960s I (with many others) read the works of
- Lama Anagarika Govinda and of John Blofeld, and I came to believe that
- the deepest truths were surely to be found in Tibetan Buddhism.
-
- I had some first-hand contact with the Tibetan tradition during my
- first visit to India in 1971. I continued on to Europe to study
- Jungian psychology, then returned to Australia in 1972 to do some
- graduate work in Kantian philosophy. I returned to Europe in 1974,
- where I met H. H. Sakya Trizin, the head of the Sakyapa Order of
- Tibetan Buddhism. I expressed to him my wish to study Tibetan
- Buddhism more deeply, and he suggested I return to North India (Dehra
- Dun) to study with him, which I did. I spent most of 1975-1979
- studying with, and in the service of, this lama (who spoke good
- English). I also received teachings from another lama, H. H. Chogye
- Trichen Rimpoche, head of the Tsharpa branch of the Sakyapa tradition,
- and abbot of the Tibetan monastery at Lumbini in Nepal.
-
- Q4. As a software developer and computer consultant, have you always
- been freelance, or did you ever work for large corporations? I am
- also curious about the nature of the "three C function libraries" and
- the data encryption software package.
-
- A4. I learned to program in FORTRAN IV in 1965, while working for a
- year with the Post Office in Melbourne. I did no programming during
- the 70s. In the early 80s I was a freelance software developer in
- California, and developed software for the Apple // which was
- published. Since then I have sometimes been employed at small or
- medium-sized corporations and sometimes have been a freelance
- consultant or developer. In the mid-80s I got into MS-DOS software
- development and during the last five years I have programmed mainly in C.
-
- In late 1989 I found myself in California, having just returned from
- 18 months in Europe, and was broke. The idea of getting a job and
- being a wage-slave for the rest of my life did not appeal to me.
- Instead I resolved to develop and publish software for a living. I
- managed to eke out a a bare existence while developing software on
- others' PCs, and during 1989-92 I created four C function libraries
- (these are tools useful to C programmers) and three application
- programs: a Maya calendrical conversion program, Timewave Zero
- (illustrating Terence McKenna's theory of time and history) and some
- data encryption software. The last incorporates an encryption method
- which I developed during 1990-92.
-
- Q5. What are "Psychedelic Monographs and Essays" and the "Yearbook of
- Ethnomedicine and Consciousness Research"? Who puts them out? What
- is their audience? Their content?
-
- A5. "Psychedelic Monographs and Essays" (published by Thomas Lyttle,
- first issued in 1985) evolved from the "Psychozoic Press" (published
- by Elvin D. Smith, first issued in 1982). Both were/are collections
- of essays and informative material dealing with all aspects of
- psychedelics and psychoactive plants and fungi, with occasional
- articles about psychedelic researchers and their work. The latest
- volume of Psychedelic Monographs and Essays is #6, and has articles
- classified under the headings of Spirituality, Psychotherapy,
- Literature, Parapsychology and Pharmacology. It is available from
- PM&E Publishing, P.O. Box 4465, Boynton Beach, FL 33424, for $20.00
- postpaid within the U.S., $27.00 outside the U.S.
-
- The "Yearbook of Ethnomedicine and Consciousness Research" is similar.
- It is edited by the German anthropologist Dr. Christian Raetsch and
- contains some articles in English and some in German. The first
- volume was published in late 1992. It is available from the publisher,
- Amand Aglaster, VWB, Postfach 11 03 68, 1000 Berlin 61, Germany.
-
- Q6. How did you get into psychedelic research? DMT research?
-
- A6. My initial awareness of the existence of psychedelics came from
- reading Aldous Huxley's "Doors of Perception" in 1966. I knew
- immediately that this was a field of research I wished to explore. My
- opportunity came a few months later when an artist friend in Melbourne
- informed me that some LSD had shown up. It was probably synthesized
- locally, and was quite impure, but blew me away. Life has never been
- the same since.
-
- I know of nothing more interesting and worthy of study than the
- multitude of conscious states available through the use of psychedelics.
- Had psychedelic research not been made illegal (this is itself a crime
- against humanity) I would presumably have pursued my biochemical/-
- psychological/philosophical studies under the auspices of academia.
- Instead I abandoned the academic world for the study of Tibetan
- Buddhism in India and later got into software development in the U.S.
- and in Europe. But I have never ceased to do psychedelics occasionally,
- and sometimes frequently, garnering such information and understanding
- as I can under the circumstances.
-
- A couple of years after I began doing acid I discovered the delights
- of marijuana and hashish, which subject I researched enthusiastically
- in Asia beginning in 1971 (when the hash shops in Kathmandu were still
- open and legal, before they were closed down at the insistence of the
- U.S. Government). Morning glory seeds in 1974. In 1978 I discovered
- psilocybin mushrooms at Palenque in Mexico. In 1983 MDMA in Berkeley.
- In 1987 DMT in Hawaii. In 1988 Ketamine in Switzerland. In 1990
- 5-MeO-DMT in Berkeley.
-
- My interest in DMT arose from hearing Terence McKenna speak of it in
- some of his taped talks (especially his "Tryptamine Hallucinogens and
- Consciousness"). My first experience with it was pretty strange; on
- my second I thought I was dying. My initial encounter on DMT with the
- alien entities did not come until two years later. As Terence has
- said, and which I can confirm, the DMT experience is the weirdest
- thing you can experience this side of the grave. The rational mind
- retreats in utter disbelief when confronted with it. Thus I resolved
- to research the topic, which I did during 1990-91 in Berkeley, where I
- had access to the Biosciences Library at U.C. Berkeley. I gathered
- reports from those few people I knew who had smoked it, and the
- article which resulted appeared simultaneously in each of the journals
- mentioned above.
-
- - the blurb for Timewave Zero -
-
- This software illustrates Terence McKenna's theory of time,
- history and the end of history as first described in the book
- "The Invisible Landscape" by him and his brother Dennis, and more
- recently in his "The Archaic Revival" (HarperSanFrancisco, 1992)
- The theory of Timewave Zero was revealed to Terence by an alien
- intelligence following a bizarre, quasi-psychedelic experiment
- conducted in the Amazon jungle in Colombia in 1971. Inspired by
- this influence Terence was instructed in certain transformations
- of numbers derived from the King Wen sequence of I Ching hexagrams.
- This led eventually to a rigorous mathematical description of
- what Terence calls the timewave, which correlates time and
- history with the ebb and flow of novelty, which is intrinsic to
- the structure of time and hence of the temporal universe. A
- peculiarity of this correlation is that at a certain point a
- singularity is reached which is the end of history - or at least
- is a transition to a supra-historical order in which our ordinary
- conceptions of our world will be radically transformed. The
- best current estimate for the date of this point is December 21,
- 2012 CE, the winter solstice of that year and also the end of the
- current era in the Maya calendar.
-
- The primary function of the software is to display any portion of
- the timewave (up to seven billion years) as a graph of the
- timewave related to the Western calendar (either Gregorian or
- Julian). You can display the wave for the entire 4.5-billion-year
- history of the Earth, note the peculiarities of the wave at such
- points as the time of the extinction of the dinosaurs (65 million
- years ago) and inspect parts of the wave as small as 92 minutes.
- The software provides several ways of manipulating the wave display,
- including the ability to zoom in on a target date or to step back
- to get the larger picture.
-
- A remarkable quality of the timewave is that it is a fractal.
- Once a part of the wave is displayed the software allows you to
- expand any smaller part (down to 92 minutes). This usually
- reveals a complexity of structure which persists however much the
- wave is magnified, a property typical of fractals. The idea that
- time has a fractal structure (in contrast to the Newtonian
- conception of time as pure, unstructured duration) is a major
- departure from the common view of the nature of time and physical
- reality. That time is a fractal may be the reason why fractals
- occur in Nature.
-
- The documentation describes the origin, construction and
- philosophical significance of the timewave, the use of the
- software, the mathematical definition of the timewave (with
- proofs of some related mathematical theorems) and certain curious
- numerical properties.
-
- An interesting part of the theory is the assertion of historical
- periods "in resonance" with each other. Resonantly we have (in
- 1993) emerged from the fall of the Roman empire and are well into
- the transitional period known historically as the Dark Ages. The
- software permits graphical display of different regions of the
- timewave that are in resonance with each other. This allows the
- period 1945 - 2012 to be interpreted as a resonance of the period
- 2293 BC - 2012 CE. New in this version is the ability to graph
- trigrammatic resonances in addition to the major resonances, and
- to construct a sequential set of eleven trigrammatic resonances.
- There is a new appendix concerning some recent mathematical results.
-
- The Timewave Zero software at last permits a scientific examination
- of Terence's long-standing claim to have discovered the root cause
- of the ups and downs of historical vicissitude. If his theory is
- confirmed then we can look forward to a rough, but very interesting,
- ride in the twenty years leading up to the climactic end-point of
- history in 2012. During this time the events of the period from
- 745 CE are expected to recur (albeit in modern form).
-
- Timewave Zero 4.12 requires MS-DOS (2.10 or later) and runs on
- IBM PC compatibles with and without a graphics adaptor.
-
- - a final note -
-
- Timewave Zero is currently published by Fringeware Inc., P. O. Box 49921,
- Austin, TX 78765, USA, and should also be available from Sound
- Photosynthesis in Mill Valley, CA and from Nightbloomers in Berkeley, CA;
- or from AO Corporation, 134 Granada Dr, Corte Madera, CA 94925.
-
- Fringeware has a mailing list:
- fringeware-request@wixer.cactus.org
-