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El. knyga: Addiction and Responsibility

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Contributions by (University of Oxford), Contributions by (University of Michigan), Contributions by (Yale University), Edited by , Contributions by (University of Pennsylvania School of L), Contributions by (University of Michigan), Edited by (Rhode Island School of Design), Contributions by , Contributions by (University of Western Ontario), Contributions by (Coatsville VA Medical Center)
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Addictive behavior threatens not just the addict’s happiness and health but also the welfare and well-being of others. It represents a loss of self-control and a variety of other cognitive impairments and behavioral deficits. An addict may say, “I couldn’t help myself.” But questions arise: are we responsible for our addictions? And what responsibilities do others have to help us? This volume offers a range of perspectives on addiction and responsibility and how the two are bound together. Distinguished contributors--from theorists to clinicians, from neuroscientists and psychologists to philosophers and legal scholars--discuss these questions in essays using a variety of conceptual and investigative tools.

Some contributors offer models of addiction-related phenomena, including theories of incentive sensitization, ego-depletion, and pathological affect; others address such traditional philosophical questions as free will and agency, mind-body, and other minds. Two essays, written by scholars who were themselves addicts, attempt to integrate first-person phenomenological accounts with the third-person perspective of the sciences. Contributors distinguish among moral responsibility, legal responsibility, and the ethical responsibility of clinicians and researchers. Taken together, the essays offer a forceful argument that we cannot fully understand addiction if we do not also understand responsibility.

The intertwining of addiction and responsibility in personal, philosophical, legal, research, and clinical contexts.
Series Foreword ix
Preface xi
1 Introduction: The Makings of a Responsible Addict
1(20)
Jeffrey Poland
George Graham
2 Drug Addiction as Incentive Sensitization
21(34)
Kent C. Berridge
Terry E. Robinson
3 Free Will as Recursive Self-Prediction: Does a Deterministic Mechanism Reduce Responsibility?
55(34)
George Ainslie
4 Addiction, Responsibility, and Ego Depletion
89(24)
Neil Levy
5 Lowering the Bar for Addicts
113(26)
Gideon Yaffe
6 Decision-Making Capacity and Responsibility in Addiction
139(20)
Louis C. Charland
7 Addiction and Criminal Responsibility
159(42)
Stephen J. Morse
8 Grounding for Understanding Self-Injury as Addiction or (Bad) Habit
201(24)
Nancy Nyquist Potter
9 Contingency Management Treatments of Drug and Alcohol Use Disorders
225(22)
Nancy M. Petry
Sheila M. Alessi
Carla J. Rash
10 Addiction, Paradox, and the Good I Would
247(22)
Richard Garrett
11 What Is It Like to Be an Addict?
269(24)
Owen Flanagan
About the Authors 293(4)
Index 297