Public Domain • CC0 1.0

Chris Bache Archive

A living digital archive of public talks, interviews, and reflections by philosopher-author Christopher M. Bache (2009–2025) — preserved so his teachings remain accessible to all.

Watch & Listen

Chronological Playlist (2009–2025)

Experience Chris’s evolution over time — talks and interviews in sequence. Each entry is paired with a cleaned, speaker-attributed transcript for readability and research.

Read & Study

Browse the full index of transcripts with accurate speaker attribution and links back to the original recordings. Text is searchable, citable, and suitable for scholarly work and AI research.

Why This Archive Matters

Courage, Rigor, and Vision

Across twenty years and seventy-three high-dose LSD sessions—framed by decades of scholarship and spiritual practice—Chris Bache explored the depths of the collective psyche and articulated a coherent, compassionate vision of humanity’s evolutionary potential.

Preservation for Future Generations

Digital platforms are fragile; videos disappear and links break. Clean transcripts keep these teachings readable, searchable, and citable—ready for scholars, seekers, and future learning systems.

Independent yet Complementary

Created independently by admirers of Chris’s work, this archive is non-commercial and offered under a CC0 1.0 Public Domain Dedication. It is meant to complement—not replace—the official website, books, and media channels. All materials trace back to public sources.

Scholarly Citations & Provenance

Cite This Archive

Concept DOI (always current)
10.5281/zenodo.17088457
Releases & Fixity
Use the Concept DOI above for a stable reference, or cite a specific frozen release via GitHub Releases. Each release includes manifests and checksums for verification.

Project Links

Mirrors (Internet Archive)

Scholarly Identifiers (Wikidata + OpenAlex)

Identifiers are synchronized with the canonical registry (meta@6d3606c) and shared across the Bache Archive ecosystem.

License & Use

All transcripts, metadata, and scripts are dedicated to the public domain under CC0 1.0 Universal. You are free to read, share, quote, and build upon this work without restriction.