Skip to content
ADVERTISEMENT
Sign In
  • Sections
    • News
    • Advice
    • The Review
  • Topics
    • Data
    • Diversity, Equity, & Inclusion
    • Finance & Operations
    • International
    • Leadership & Governance
    • Teaching & Learning
    • Scholarship & Research
    • Student Success
    • Technology
    • Transitions
    • The Workplace
  • Magazine
    • Current Issue
    • Special Issues
    • Podcast: College Matters from The Chronicle
  • Newsletters
  • Virtual Events
  • Ask Chron
  • Store
    • Featured Products
    • Reports
    • Data
    • Collections
    • Back Issues
  • Jobs
    • Find a Job
    • Post a Job
    • Professional Development
    • Career Resources
    • Virtual Career Fair
  • More
  • Sections
    • News
    • Advice
    • The Review
  • Topics
    • Data
    • Diversity, Equity, & Inclusion
    • Finance & Operations
    • International
    • Leadership & Governance
    • Teaching & Learning
    • Scholarship & Research
    • Student Success
    • Technology
    • Transitions
    • The Workplace
  • Magazine
    • Current Issue
    • Special Issues
    • Podcast: College Matters from The Chronicle
  • Newsletters
  • Virtual Events
  • Ask Chron
  • Store
    • Featured Products
    • Reports
    • Data
    • Collections
    • Back Issues
  • Jobs
    • Find a Job
    • Post a Job
    • Professional Development
    • Career Resources
    • Virtual Career Fair
    Upcoming Events:
    An AI-Driven Work Force
    University Transformation
Sign In
psychedelic illustration of dolphins, researchers and LSD tabs
Andy Bourne for The Chronicle

Tripping on LSD at the Dolphin Research Lab

How a 1960s interspecies-communication experiment went haywire.

The Review | Essay
By Benjamin Breen February 27, 2024

In the 1930s, the married anthropologists Gregory Bateson and Margaret Mead had seen themselves as scientists seeking to expand the accepted limits of “normal” human behavior, communication, and consciousness. By the 1940s they came to believe that their project could help ensure the survival of humanity itself, threatened as it was by the spread of fascism and the advent of atomic warfare. They regarded both as a product of “pathogenic” cultural patterns — ideas that drive you insane.

By 1963 Bateson and Mead were divorced. But Bateson continued to see himself as pushing the boundaries of science to prevent feedback loops of conflict, which led him to the psychoanalyst John C. Lilly’s Communications Research Institute on St. Thomas in the U.S. Virgin Islands. By then Lilly’s professional résumé was impeccable: degrees from Caltech and Dartmouth, a stint teaching at Penn, previously the head of a government research lab at the NIH, and now running his own lavishly funded institute. Moreover, for reasons that remained somewhat mysterious, he had managed to persuade NASA to fund his efforts to teach dolphins how to speak English.

To continue reading for FREE, please sign in.

Sign In

Or subscribe now to read with unlimited access for as low as $10/month.

Don’t have an account? Sign up now.

A free account provides you access to a limited number of free articles each month, plus newsletters, job postings, salary data, and exclusive store discounts.

Sign Up

In the 1930s, the married anthropologists Gregory Bateson and Margaret Mead had seen themselves as scientists seeking to expand the accepted limits of “normal” human behavior, communication, and consciousness. By the 1940s they came to believe that their project could help ensure the survival of humanity itself, threatened as it was by the spread of fascism and the advent of atomic warfare. They regarded both as a product of “pathogenic” cultural patterns — ideas that drive you insane.

By 1963 Bateson and Mead were divorced. But Bateson continued to see himself as pushing the boundaries of science to prevent feedback loops of conflict, which led him to the psychoanalyst John C. Lilly’s Communications Research Institute on St. Thomas in the U.S. Virgin Islands. By then Lilly’s professional résumé was impeccable: degrees from Caltech and Dartmouth, a stint teaching at Penn, previously the head of a government research lab at the NIH, and now running his own lavishly funded institute. Moreover, for reasons that remained somewhat mysterious, he had managed to persuade NASA to fund his efforts to teach dolphins how to speak English.

Though Bateson was never truly on board with Lilly’s project of teaching dolphins how to speak, he spoke vaguely but fervently of the institute’s work as somehow connected to his larger goal of healing a sick society through interdisciplinary science. “I hope from the dolphins we may learn a new analysis of the sorts of information which we need — and all mammals need — if we are to retain our sanity,” Bateson pronounced grandly to reporters at a fund-raising gala for the institute.

Anyone observing his daily work at the lab might have been surprised by such claims. The truth was, Bateson spent most of his time struggling to learn the basics of dolphin behavior. Each day, he carefully documented such activities as “genital stimulation” and “beak propulsion.” Diagrams of dolphin movements covered his desk; photographs of their underwater acrobatics hung in the darkroom. Bateson’s notebooks from this period resemble the work of a deranged football coach, with thousands of colorful loops, arrows, and dashes indicating movements in a pool that was perpetually clouding due to inadequate filtration.

And then there were the tapes — hundreds of reels of magnetic audio and Super 8 film. One surviving clip shows Lois Bateson, his third wife, with a dolphin named Sissy. Lois’s auburn hair tied in a bun, she looks apprehensive, as if suddenly aware of the enormous strength of the cetacean she is swimming beside. In another recording, a young CRI staffer named Margaret Howe can be heard struggling to teach a young male dolphin named Peter how to speak in human-sounding phonemes. Progress is slow. “ONE... TWO... THREE... FOUR... FIVE... SIX...,” Howe counts, only to be interrupted by a shriek from Peter that sounds more like a satellite signal than a human voice. “Now, now, Peter,” she chides gently.

The recordings were grist for Lilly’s mill. By 1963, he was absolutely convinced that his dolphins were uttering coherent words in English — but at a speed so rapid and a pitch so high that only computerized manipulation could make them understandable. The payoff was vague, but in his mind immense. After all, if he could bridge the barrier in communication between these two radically different species, how could Americans and Soviets continue to claim that communication between their own camps was impossible?

Six months into Bateson’s time at St. Thomas, a young Harvard assistant professor named Carl Sagan arrived for a tour. Not yet famous, but already a brilliant writer, the 29-year-old astronomer saw the visit as a tropical diversion from his research into the question of why Venus’s atmosphere was so blisteringly hot. But Sagan was also visiting in a semi-official capacity: He and Lilly belonged to the same secret society.

In 1961, Sagan helped plan one of the first conferences on extraterrestrial life. The organizers had sought not just scientists interested in first-contact scenarios but also someone who already spoke to “aliens” — or at least the closest parallel that Earth afforded. Lilly was the obvious choice. Afterward, Sagan founded a whimsical scientific fraternal organization, the Order of the Dolphin, that was partially inspired by Lilly’s work. Now, three years later, Sagan was finally visiting Lilly’s “aliens” in person.

Sagan’s first encounter at the Communications Research Institute was with a young male dolphin named Elvar. “We entered a medium-sized room at the far corner of which was a large polyethylene tank,” Sagan wrote. A dolphin was floating inside it, observing Sagan “with his head thrown back out of the water.”

“Carl, this is Elvar; Elvar, this is Carl,” Lilly said by way of introduction. Then, as Sagan recalled, “Elvar promptly slapped his head forward, down onto the water, producing a needle-beam spray of water that hit me directly on the forehead.”

“Well, I see you two are getting to know each other,” Lilly said, then left the room.

ADVERTISEMENT

The dolphin rolled over to present his belly. Sagan rolled up his shirtsleeves and began scratching Elvar like a dog. The dolphin demanded more, then more again, until Sagan tired of the game. Elvar responded by leaping so high that “only high tail flukes were in contact with the water.” As he did so, he emitted a single shrill syllable. It sounded to Sagan as if he had shrieked, “More!”

Sagan “bounded out of the room” and excitedly announced the news to Lilly, who seemed entirely unsurprised. “Good, that’s one of the words he knows,” he replied.

Sagan was delighted by the trip. Afterward, however, he began to wonder about the quality of the research. Sagan and his close friend the astronomer Frank Drake were becoming experts in identifying signals amid seas of noise picked up by radio telescopes. They agreed that the institute’s work set off alarm bells. Lilly appeared to be cherry-picking his data, carefully selecting the snippets of “dolphinese” that resembled human language and excluding the rest.

The most unsettling feature of the institute, however, was not Lilly’s quixotic obsession with dolphin speech. It was the fact that his dolphins kept dying.

ADVERTISEMENT

Among those who questioned Lilly’s actions at the lab was Ted Nelson, a young Harvard graduate who had first met Lilly on a train in New Jersey. Nelson was intrigued by the idea of studying animal communication with computers. And he adored Gregory Bateson, with whom he shared an office. But Lilly struck Nelson as needlessly callous. True, the institute’s director was “brilliant and persuasive, and a fantastic self-publicist,” Nelson admitted. Yet he was, at heart, “ruthless ... a con man.”

For a time, Nelson worked on a promotional video about the lab’s work. It was meant to be a puff piece, but Nelson found the job unexpectedly difficult. The trouble was, he wrote, that the tropical splendor of the lab’s setting kept swerving unexpectedly toward a more unsettling ambience:

Through the windows, it was just before twilight and beautiful: The palm trees were blowing, pelicans scudded by. Atmosphere. Then I panned the camera across the room, showing concern on everybody’s faces as they watched oscilloscope traces leaping. We were actually hearing what the scope showed: the shrieking and whistling of our dolphin pals in the tank on the floor below, coming out of different speakers as the sound was transposed from different audio ranges.

The truth was that Lilly’s research with animals relied on what scientists at the time called “operant conditioning” — a polite term for using pain to control animal behavior.

ADVERTISEMENT

By the spring of 1964, an unlikely psychedelic subculture had emerged among a group of scuba divers, actors, and producers who worked on the television shows Sea Hunt (1958–61) and Flipper (1964–67). Their mentor was Oscar Janiger, a UCLA psychiatry professor and friend of Sidney Cohen, Aldous Huxley, and Betty Eisner. Janiger believed that psychedelics must be “institutionalized” in a “supervised context” — but he did not mean psychiatric institutions. Rather, the Eleusinian Mysteries of ancient Athens was his model, a secret rite involving a transcendent experience that occurred deep underground. It appealed to Janiger because it was supposedly open to all, but he also liked the theatricality of it.

The divers and producers associated with Sea Hunt and Flipper began using LSD. And so John Lilly, who consulted on both programs, found himself tripping for the first time in a Malibu beach house in early 1964. His guide was the actress Constance Tors, whose producer husband had hired him to consult on the film version of Flipper. While Tors looked on, Lilly injected 100 micrograms of LSD into the muscle of his thigh (for reasons he never fully explained, he did so while completely naked). As the drug kicked in, Lilly wrote that he “suddenly realized that all of my previous training leading up to this point, all of my preparation, had been worth it.” At the height of his trip, he stared at his face in a mirror for a long time. It seemed to him that his father’s face was suddenly overlaid onto his own — and then his father’s father’s, and his father’s, and so on. After two thousand or so generations, “suddenly the face of a hairy anthropoid appeared on my face.” A new kind of interspecies communion had been achieved.

While returning from Hawaii on a United Airlines flight on April 28, 1964, Lilly hatched a plan. “Dear Gregory,” he scrawled in schoolboy cursive on the airline’s complimentary stationery addressing Bateson, his associate director. “Did you ever do any serious research with LSD? Its effect on communication? On yourself? With music, noises, etc.? I’m getting some to try on a dolphin to see if it ‘forgets to breathe’ under its influence.”

He signed off with an invitation to join him: “I’m contemplating resuming the tank isolation work — are you interested? LSD in that milieu ought to push things very fast.”

ADVERTISEMENT

Stopping back in Los Angeles en route to a conference in New York, Lilly then tripped for a second time with Constance Tors. The next day, he boarded a flight to New York City to present a paper on dolphins at a conference of acoustic scientists. And then, after delivering his speech, exiting the conference room, and hitting the button of a hotel elevator, Lilly collapsed.

By his own account, he awoke three days later in a hospital bed, entirely blind. Slowly an explanation came together. When he injected himself with LSD, Lilly believed, tiny bubbles in the detergent used to clean the hypodermic syringe had entered his bloodstream, “cutting off the circulation to very critical parts of my brain, including the visual cortex.” Lilly claimed he spent six weeks in recovery before returning to St. Thomas. By this time, news of the event was circulating throughout the scientific community — and, of course, among his employees. “The rumor went around that the episode had happened as a result of taking LSD,” Lilly explained ruefully. After all, “LSD was found in my briefcase in the hospital.”

Lilly resolved to extensively test the drug on the animals before he would try it again himself. But he was reassured about the risks, he wrote, when “the six dolphins tested apparently had very good trips.”

From that point onward, Lilly began habitually tripping on LSD in his deprivation tank, floating motionless for hours at a time while he practiced his dolphin-inspired breathing technique. At a stroke, the Communications Research Institute had become a drug research center.

This essay is adapted from Tripping on Utopia: Margaret Mead, the Cold War, and the Troubled Birth of Psychedelic Science, out earlier this year from Grand Central Publishing.

We welcome your thoughts and questions about this article. Please email the editors or submit a letter for publication.
Tags
Scholarship & Research Innovation & Transformation
Share
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • Facebook
  • Email
About the Author
Benjamin Breen
Benjamin Breen is an associate professor of history at the University of California at Santa Cruz.
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT

More News

Mangan-Censorship-0610.jpg
Academic Freedom
‘A Banner Year for Censorship’: More States Are Restricting Classroom Discussions on Race and Gender
On the day of his retirement party, Bob Morse poses for a portrait in the Washington, D.C., offices of U.S. News and World Report in June 2025. Morse led the magazine's influential and controversial college rankings efforts since its inception in 1988. Michael Theis, The Chronicle.
List Legacy
‘U.S. News’ Rankings Guru, Soon to Retire, Reflects on the Role He’s Played in Higher Ed
Black and white photo of the Morrill Hall building on the University of Minnesota campus with red covering one side.
Finance & operations
U. of Minnesota Tries to Soften the Blow of Tuition Hikes, Budget Cuts With Faculty Benefits
Photo illustration showing a figurine of a football player with a large price tag on it.
Athletics
Loans, Fees, and TV Money: Where Colleges Are Finding the Funds to Pay Athletes

From The Review

A stack of coins falling over. Motion blur. Falling economy concept. Isolated on white.
The Review | Opinion
Will We Get a More Moderate Endowment Tax?
By Phillip Levine
Photo illustration of a classical column built of paper, with colored wires overtaking it like vines of ivy
The Review | Essay
The Latest Awful EdTech Buzzword: “Learnings”
By Kit Nicholls
William F. Buckley, Jr.
The Review | Interview
William F. Buckley Jr. and the Origins of the Battle Against ‘Woke’
By Evan Goldstein

Upcoming Events

Plain_Acuity_DurableSkills_VF.png
Why Employers Value ‘Durable’ Skills
Warwick_Leadership_Javi.png
University Transformation: A Global Leadership Perspective
Lead With Insight
  • Explore Content
    • Latest News
    • Newsletters
    • Letters
    • Free Reports and Guides
    • Professional Development
    • Virtual Events
    • Chronicle Store
    • Chronicle Intelligence
    • Jobs in Higher Education
    • Post a Job
  • Know The Chronicle
    • About Us
    • Vision, Mission, Values
    • DEI at The Chronicle
    • Write for Us
    • Work at The Chronicle
    • Our Reporting Process
    • Advertise With Us
    • Brand Studio
    • Accessibility Statement
  • Account and Access
    • Manage Your Account
    • Manage Newsletters
    • Individual Subscriptions
    • Group and Institutional Access
    • Subscription & Account FAQ
  • Get Support
    • Contact Us
    • Reprints & Permissions
    • User Agreement
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Privacy Policy
    • California Privacy Policy
    • Do Not Sell My Personal Information
1255 23rd Street, N.W. Washington, D.C. 20037
© 2025 The Chronicle of Higher Education
The Chronicle of Higher Education is academe’s most trusted resource for independent journalism, career development, and forward-looking intelligence. Our readers lead, teach, learn, and innovate with insights from The Chronicle.
Follow Us
  • twitter
  • instagram
  • youtube
  • facebook
  • linkedin