Environmental patterning: Difference between revisions

>David Hedlund
===External links=== * [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hallucination Hallucination (Wikipedia)]
>Josikins
Grammatics
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<onlyinclude>'''Environmental geometry''' can be described as a form of a-typical [[psychedelic]] geometry which differs from [[geometry|standard geometry]] through the way it is manifested. Instead of being independent from the external environment it is entirely comprised of parts from within the external environment. This results in certain textures such as grass, carpets, asphalt, tree branches and dense vegetation forming into extremely complex geometric structures that are comprised of the original material which they are manifesting from. These structures tend to be primarily symmetrical in nature, but also include [[form constants]], [[fractals]] and disorganized geometric patterns.
<onlyinclude>'''Environmental patterning''' can be described as the experience of certain textures such as carpets, asphalt, and dense vegetation drifting into progressively complex geometric patterns that are always clearly comprised of the original material which they are manifesting from. These structures tend to be primarily symmetrical in nature, but also include [[form constants]], [[fractals]], and disorganised [[geometry|geometric patterns]].


The experience of this component is distinct from [[geometry|traditional geometry]] as it does not occur within its standardized levelling system and therefore seems to be an entirely separate [[subjective effect index|subjective effect]].</onlyinclude>
Environmental patterning is very common under the influence of moderate to [[dosage#heavy|heavy]] [[dosage|dosages]] of [[psychedelic]] compounds such as [[LSD]], [[psilocin]], and [[mescaline]]. It is also often complemented by the simultaneous experience of [[symmetrical texture repetition]], [[geometry]], and [[drifting]].</onlyinclude>
===Psychoactive substances===
===Psychoactive substances===
Compounds within our [[psychoactive substance index]] which may cause this effect include:
Compounds within our [[psychoactive substance index]] which may cause this effect include: