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Addiction and Choice

Addiction and Choice

Rethinking the relationship

9780198727224
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Description
The central problem in the study of addiction is to explain why people repeatedly behave in ways they know are bad for them. For much of the previous century and until the present day, the majority of scientific and medical attempts to solve this problem were couched in terms of involuntary behavior; if people behave in ways they do not want, then this must be because the behavior is beyond their control and outside the realm of choice. An opposing tradition, which finds currentsupport among scientists and scholars as well as members of the general public, is that so-called addictive behavior reflects an ordinary choice just like any other and that the concept of addiction is a myth. The editors and authors of this book tend to take neither view. There has been an increasingrecognition in recent literature on addiction that restricting possible conceptions of it to either of these extreme positions is unhelpful and is retarding progress on understanding the nature of addiction and what could be done about it. This book contains a range of views from philosophy, neuroscience, psychiatry, psychology and the law on what exactly this middle ground between free choice and no choice consists of and what its implications are for theory, practice and policy on addiction. The result amounts to a profound change in our thinking on addiction and how its devastating consequences can be ameliorated. Addiction and Choice is a thought provoking new volume for all those with an interest in this global issue.
Product Details
OUP Oxford
84113
9780198727224
9780198727224

Data sheet

Publication date
2016
Issue number
1
Cover
hard cover
Pages count
518
Dimensions (mm)
171 x 246
Weight (g)
1080
  • Section I: Introduction; On defining addiction; Section II: PHILOSOPHICAL FOUNDATIONS; How do you know you have a drug problem? The role of knowledge of negative consequences in explaining drug choice in humans and rats; Addiction: the pleasures and perils of operant behavior; Willing Addicts? Drinkers, Dandies, Druggies and other Dionysians; Failures of Rationality and Self-Knowledge in Addiction; Normal and Addictive Desires; Addiction, Compulsion, and Weakness of the Will: A Dual-Process Perspective; Addiction as a form of akrasia; SECTION III: PERSPECTIVES FROM NEUROSCIENCE; Compulsion and choice in addiction; Choice in Addiction: A Neural Tug-of-War Between Impulse and Insight; Assessing drug choice in human addiction: Costs, benefits, and findings from current research paradigms; The role of the insula in goal-directed drug seeking and choice in addiction; SECTION IV: PERSPECTIVES FROM BEHAVIORAL ECONOMICS AND COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY; Palpating the elephant: Current theories of addiction innlight of hyperbolic delay discounting; Addiction as social choice; Nonconscious motivational influences on cognitive processes in addictive behaviors; Self-regulation, controlled processes, and the treatment of addiction; SECTION V: IMPLICATIONS FOR TREATMENT, PREVENTION, AND PUBLIC HEALTH; The Blindfold of Addiction; Behavioral Economics as a Framework for Brief Motivational Interventions to Reduce Addictive Behaviors; Role of Choice Biases and Choice Architecture in Behavioral Economic Strategies to Reduce Addictive Behaviors; How an Addicts Power of Choice is Lost and can be Regained; SECTION VI IMPLICATIONS FOR THE PUBLIC UNDERSTANDING OF ADDICTION AND FOR LEGAL RESPONSIBILITY FOR ADDICTIVE BEHAVIOR; What addicts can teach us about addiction: A natural history approach; How a stigmatic structure enslaves addicts; Addiction, Choice and Criminal Law; SECTION VII CONCLUSIONS; Ambiguous terms and false dichotomies; Overview of addiction as a disorder of choice and future prospects;
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