I was wondering if there are any drugs out there which would be able to lobotomize someone down to the mental age of a child? The closest I could find was Chlorpromazine
>>7674056
marijuana
>>7674056
Cannabis
>>7674056
devil's lettuce
>>7674056
nigger jizz (C10H10O3)
>>7674056
Weed
>>7674056
Marijuana tended to make me feel like a 5 year old.
>>7674056
There is this asiatic plant that does exactly that. In Hindi it's called ganja, don't know about the English name.
>>7674056
High dosages of varying psychoactive drugs in order to maintain body health while still retaining mental strain. Repeat for long periods, perhaps with special conditioning procedures as well.
IF you are talking about feeling like a child for the time involved I would say mushrooms would be the closest manner to simulate a more child like state.
scapolamine
>>7674248
OP here, it was more in reference to this game where you can chemically lobotomize someone so they have the mental capacity of a child. I couldn't find much on google to see if such a thing was possible so I went to the place where people would least likely be weirded out by the question. Just a random curiosity question, I swear!
>>7674056
ethanol
>>7674056
From wiki:
>Wade Davis, a Harvard ethnobotanist, presented a pharmacological case for zombies in a 1983 paper in the Journal of Ethnopharmacology,[12] and later in two popular books, The Serpent and the Rainbow (1985) and Passage of Darkness: The Ethnobiology of the Haitian Zombie (1988).
>Davis traveled to Haiti in 1982 and, as a result of his investigations, claimed that a living person can be turned into a zombie by two special powders being introduced into the blood stream (usually via a wound). The first, coup de poudre (French: "powder strike"), includes tetrodotoxin (TTX), a powerful and frequently fatal neurotoxin found in the flesh of the pufferfish (order Tetraodontidae). The second powder consists of deliriant drugs such as datura. Together, these powders were said to induce a deathlike state in which the will of the victim would be entirely subjected to that of the bokor. Davis also popularized the story of Clairvius Narcisse, who was claimed to have succumbed to this practice.
So not so much a single drug, but a regime of "treatment" can certainly have such an effect.