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Jan 1, 1928 — —· 98 yrs

UNITED STATES AUTHOR · DRUG ABUSE · MARIJUANA

Lester Grinspoon

Also known as: Lester Grinspoon Grinspoon

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Newton, United States
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In discussing drug control and freedom, it still makes sense to start with John Stuart Mill's essay On Liberty (1859), for all its flaws "the clearest, most candid, most persuasive and most moving exposition of the point of view of those who desire an open and tolerant society" (Berlin 1959, p. 50).

— from Drug Control in a Free Society

Most acclaimed

#2

Marihuana, the forbidden medicine

1993

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For many centuries patients and physicians have found marihuana to be a highly effective medicine. This drug, outlawed for more than fifty years in the United States, provides relief from nausea, pain, and muscle spasms, and alleviates symptoms of glaucoma, multiple sclerosis, AIDS, migraine, and other debilitating ailments. Yet the U.S. government grants only twelve patients in the entire country the right to use marihuana medically, and permits even that with great reluctance. In this important book, Dr. Lester Grinspoon and James B. Bakalar draw on twenty years of research to describe the medical benefits of marihuana, explain why it has been forbidden, and argue that full legalization is necessary to make it available to all patients who need it. Much of the book consists of accounts written by patients (including one from famed scientist Stephen Jay Gould) that dramatically illustrate not only the relief provided by marihuana but also the unnecessary distress caused by the need to obtain it illegally. Grinspoon and Bakalar recount the long history of medical marihuana use, discuss the real (as opposed to fancied) potential health hazards of the drug, and analyze the social causes of the government's insistence on making outlaws of its medical users. They find that marihuana is a remarkably safe substance and that criminalizing its use is costly, ineffective, and unfair. They conclude that legalizing it for medical purposes alone would be unworkable and that it must be given the same status as alcohol - legal, with appropriate limitations, for use by adults for any purpose.

#1

The Long darkness

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"This book grew out of a symposium that was presented in Los Angeles as part of the scientific Program of the 1983 Annual Meeting of the American Psychiatric Association." Contributors included Carl Sagan, Erik H. Erikson, Stephen Jay Gould, Robert J. Lifton, John E. Mack, Henry Steele Commanger, J. Bryan Hehir, and Jerome D. Frank.

#3

Psychedelic drugs reconsidered

1979

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