To borrow a line from Elton John, it's a little bit funny, this feeling inside. As I write the article you're reading, I'm sipping on a potent brew, mixed with ice and tonic water, and I think it's beginning to hit. I don't feel tipsy, exactly, but I feel something. A light buzz. A twinkle in the synapses.
I'm hardly the first journalist to be drinking on the job, but in my defence, the stuff in the glass beside me isn't alcohol. It's Sentia, a concoction created by pharmacologist and addiction researcher Prof David Nutt. Billed as the future of drinking, Sentia is designed to have a neuroactive effect on the person drinking it.
You're supposed to feel the way you do after one or two alcoholic drinks. Relaxed, sociable,…
