Talk:Comparison of phytocannabinoids

THC-Octyl instead of THC-JD for Tetrahydrocannabioctyl
For for Tetrahydrocannabioctyl (THC-C8), the term THC-JD is a made up marketing name by a single person who likely doesn't even have real THC-Octyl, don't let marketers push the name. Proper nicknames for Tetrahydrocannabioctyl include THC-Octyl and THC-C8 and Octyl-THC.

People trying to add unreferenced claims that they are psychedelic, likely associated with marketers. Gettinglit (talk) 23:56, 15 September 2022 (UTC)


 * Please restore "Quasi-psychedelic" to the columns that you removed from the "Other use" column for existing cannabinoids in this article. Please don't yell in the edit summary, and be silly:


 * I created this article, Comparison of phytocannabinoids.
 * I've added 36 phytocannabinoids/acids to https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Template:Cannabinoids recently. I did not know that tetrahydrocannabioctyl was synthetic when I added it (see Talk:Tetrahydrocannabioctyl).

You could thank me instead if you want. I'm sorry if I did a human error. --Bawanio (talk) 22:05, 18 September 2022 (UTC)

@Bawanio they're not "quasi-psychedelics". Prior to the 1980s THC itself was hypothesized to be a atypical hallucinogenic before the endocannabinoid system was disocovered but they are not considered atypical hallucinogenics anymore. There are marketers in the USA trying to spread false information that some are psychdelic in effect or other claims for sales and some are doing so by editing wikipedia, some marketers have even made the pages for some cannabinoids.

THC-Octly is naturally occuring in very small amounts but the nickname THC-JD is made up marketing nonsense of synthetic noid soup that hasn't been proven to actually contain any THC-Octyl. Gettinglit (talk) 13:48, 23 September 2022 (UTC)