News (Media Awareness Project) - Canada: PUB LTE: Layton's Comments Won't Surprise Millions Of |
Title: | Canada: PUB LTE: Layton's Comments Won't Surprise Millions Of |
Published On: | 2003-11-12 |
Source: | National Post (Canada) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-19 06:11:50 |
LAYTON'S COMMENTS WON'T SURPRISE MILLIONS OF CANADIANS
Re: Marijuana 'Wonderful,' Should Be Legal, Layton Says, Nov. 8.
Jack Layton, leader of the federal NDP, may have broken a political
taboo, but his comments won't surprise the millions of Canadians who,
from time to time, use marijuana "responsibly." Marijuana, used in
moderation, can induce a gently altered mental state that not only
enhances enjoyment of food, music, lovemaking, etc., but might
sometimes genuinely enhance certain kinds of thinking.
In a carefully controlled experimental study that my colleagues and I
reported some years ago, there was clear evidence that, for some
people, smoking marijuana can improve certain "right hemisphere"
pattern recognition-integration abilities, even while modestly
reducing certain "left hemisphere" verbal-analytical abilities.
Whether this trade-off is worthwhile would presumably depend on what
one wants to accomplish while "high."
Richard A. Harshman, professor, department of psychology, University
of Western Ontario, London, Ont.
Re: Marijuana 'Wonderful,' Should Be Legal, Layton Says, Nov. 8.
Jack Layton, leader of the federal NDP, may have broken a political
taboo, but his comments won't surprise the millions of Canadians who,
from time to time, use marijuana "responsibly." Marijuana, used in
moderation, can induce a gently altered mental state that not only
enhances enjoyment of food, music, lovemaking, etc., but might
sometimes genuinely enhance certain kinds of thinking.
In a carefully controlled experimental study that my colleagues and I
reported some years ago, there was clear evidence that, for some
people, smoking marijuana can improve certain "right hemisphere"
pattern recognition-integration abilities, even while modestly
reducing certain "left hemisphere" verbal-analytical abilities.
Whether this trade-off is worthwhile would presumably depend on what
one wants to accomplish while "high."
Richard A. Harshman, professor, department of psychology, University
of Western Ontario, London, Ont.
Member Comments |
No member comments available...