Wednesday Apr 15, 2026
Part 4: A Psychohistory of American Psychology: Too Fuzzy, Too Soft, Too Big

In 1960, two Harvard professors took psilocybin and accidentally broke the boundaries of American psychology. What happened next is the story of a road not taken.
In Episode 4 of Psychotherapy on the Couch, Joel Blackstock explores the wild, lost era of the 1960s and 70s—a brief window when the psychological establishment dared to investigate the "unmeasurable" depths of human consciousness. We trace the divergent paths of Timothy Leary and Richard Alpert (Ram Dass), the CIA’s dark experiments with mind control (MKULTRA) and remote viewing (the Stargate Project), and the "horseshoe theory" of consciousness where neuroscientists and mystics face the exact same unsolved mysteries.
But this era of exploration didn't last. We break down how the Reagan Revolution, the gutting of the social safety net, and the creation of the DSM-III brutally slammed this door shut. Discover how American psychology traded the human soul for strict billing codes, managed care, and the illusion of total, mechanical objectivity.
If you've ever felt that modern therapy is missing a sense of meaning, spirituality, or depth, this episode explains exactly when—and why—we engineered those things out of the system.
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#psychology history, timothy leary, ram dass, psychedelics in therapy, mkultra, cia stargate project, remote viewing, dsm-3 history, reaganomics mental health, history of psychiatry, psychotherapy podcast, consciousness, terence mckenna, mental health crisis, cognitive behavioral therapy, adam curtis style, sociology, cultural critique, taproot therapy,Â
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