But even "chemistry" can influence a person's consciousness or soul. With psychedelic or dissociative substances (i.e., hallucinogenic substances), a person experiences spiritual experiences, e.g., astral travel, depersonalization, or unification with the Absolute. Personally, I am in favor of using drugs to treat mental disorders.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dissociative
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psychedelic_drug
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_psychedelic_drugs
But it is important that the psychiatrist also understands the drugs they prescribe, and unfortunately, this is where the problem lies. If I had a choice, I would rather test a psychiatric drug on myself in a pharmaceutical company's laboratory than entrust myself to the care of Slovak or Czech psychiatrists who do not understand drugs at all. Testing a drug on a human in a pharmaceutical company's laboratory is a very safe thing – I don't want to go into the exact scientific procedures of how it works there. The person being tested receives such a low dose of the drug that they may not even register any significant changes in consciousness, let alone any side effects, but the instruments can already record them. On the contrary, psychiatrists in Slovakia often give a patient such a horse dose of the drug during a normal hospitalization that they can even fall unconscious – this is a very serious risk.