This study analyses the notes by Alexander (Sasha) Shulgin and his role in the rediscovery of MDMA. Although he was not the first to synthesize MDMA, he was responsible for the further dissemination of it via the psychotherapist Leo Zeff (The Secret Chief Revealed) in 1977.
Abstract
“Aims: Alexander T. Shulgin is widely thought of as the ‘father’ of +/−3,4‐methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA). This paper re‐assesses his role in the modern history of this drug.
Methods: We analysed systematically Shulgin’s original publications on MDMA, his publications on the history of MDMA and his laboratory notebook.
Results: According to Shulgin’s book PIHKAL (1991), he synthesized MDMA in 1965, but did not try it. In the 1960s Shulgin also synthesized MDMA‐related compounds such as 3,4‐methylenedioxyamphetamine (MDA), 3‐methoxy‐4,5‐methylenedioxyamphetamine (MMDA) and 3,4‐methylenedioxyethylamphetamine (MDE), but this had no impact on his rediscovery of MDMA. In the mid‐1970s Shulgin learned of a ‘special effect’ caused by MDMA, whereupon he re‐synthesized it and tried it himself in September 1976, as confirmed by his laboratory notebook. In 1977 he gave MDMA to Leo Zeff PhD, who used it as an adjunct to psychotherapy and introduced it to other psychotherapists.
Conclusion: Shulgin was not the first to synthesize MDMA, but he played an important role in its history. It seems plausible that he was so impressed by its effects that he introduced it to psychotherapist Zeff in 1977. This, and the fact that in 1978 he published with David Nichols the first paper on the pharmacological action of MDMA in humans, explains why Shulgin is sometimes (erroneously) called the ‘father’ of MDMA.”
Authors: Udo Benzenhöfer & Torsten Passie
Summary of Rediscovering MDMA (ecstasy): the role of the American chemist Alexander T. Shulgin
Introduction
MDMA was first synthesized in 1912 and was rediscovered several times between the 1920s and 1960s. It was placed into Schedule I by the US Drug Enforcement Administration in 1985 and was permanently scheduled on 13 November 1986.
Shulgin published influential papers on the chemistry and psychopharmacology of MDMA well into the 1990s, but offered slightly different versions of his role in the history of MDMA in his 1986, 1990, 1991 and 1997 publications.
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Rediscovering MDMA (ecstasy): the role of the American chemist Alexander T. Shulgin
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1360-0443.2010.02948.x
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