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A related topic is List of fictional diseases See also the categories Fictional drug addicts , Fictional drug dealers , Fictional pharmacists , and Mythological medicines and drugs Pages in category "Fictional medicines and drugs"
If Drugs Were Legal (2009) – cannabis, cocaine, crack, ketamine, heroin, MDMA, LSD, amphetamines (and fictional drugs, including "dexclorazole," which mimics the effects of fluoxetine but on a much larger scale; and "xp25," which stimulates the serotonin neurotransmitters in the brain but causes sudden heart attack)
Must be a defining trait - Characters must be explicitly defined as a "drug addict" in order to qualify. These characters are portrayed with symptoms and behavioral attributes commonly associated with addiction, substance dependence, substance use disorder, reverse tolerance, recreational drug use.
Similar to the actual soma, takers of the fictional soma are emotionally strengthened, but face considerable danger. [1] In Brave New World, the fictional soma was the product of six years of research by thousands of pharmacologists and biochemists, who sought to create the ideal intoxicant. It functions similarly to alcohol, but without the ...
This is a list of genres of literature and entertainment (film, television, music, and video games), excluding genres in the visual arts.. Genre is the term for any category of creative work, which includes literature and other forms of art or entertainment (e.g. music)—whether written or spoken, audio or visual—based on some set of stylistic criteria.
Johansson portrays Lucy, a woman who gains psychokinetic abilities when a nootropic, psychedelic drug is absorbed into her bloodstream. The film was released on 25 July 2014 and became a massive box office success, [ 6 ] grossing over $469 million worldwide, more than eleven times the budget of $40 million.
The Food and Drug Administration announced it was investigating "the possible hallucinogenic effects of banana peels". Nonetheless, bananadine became more widely known when William Powell , believing the Berkeley Barb article to be true, reproduced the method in The Anarchist Cookbook in 1970, under the name " Musa sapientum Bananadine ...
Tamil Lexicon (Tamil: தமிழ்ப் பேரகராதி Tamiḻ Pērakarāti) is a twelve-volume dictionary of the Tamil language. Published by the University of Madras , it is said to be the most comprehensive dictionary of the Tamil language to date.