Addiction as Entrenchment

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Dennis Hackethal’s avatar
Dennis HackethalOP revised 1 day ago·#3040
6th of 6 versions

My Conjecture

Conjecture: addiction is the result of the entrenchment of a conflict between two or more preferences in a mind.

Picture a smoker who wants to give up smoking but also really enjoys smoking. Those preferences conflict.

If the conflict is entrenched, then both preferences get to live on indefinitely. The entrenchment will not let the smoker give up smoking. He will become a chain smoker.

Solutions for the conflict may need to be found creatively, case by case. It depends on the nature of the particular entrenchment and the preferences involved. A more overarching answer for how to cure addiction might involve Randian ideas around introspection and getting one’s reason and emotions in the proper order.

Dennis Hackethal’s avatar
Dennis HackethalOP, about 1 year ago·#733

How is this theory new?

Criticism of #3040Criticized3
Dennis Hackethal’s avatar
Dennis HackethalOP revised about 1 year ago·#746
2nd of 2 versions

Prevailing explanations (#734) attribute addiction to desensitization. My theory doesn’t do that.

Criticism of #733
Dennis Hackethal’s avatar
Dennis HackethalOP, about 1 year ago·#748

Prevailing explanations do not mention entrenchment. They do not refer to any epistemological concepts. My theory does.

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Dennis Hackethal’s avatar
Dennis HackethalOP, about 1 year ago·#749

Prevailing explanations are immoral (#739) and false (#742). My theory does not have those flaws from the linked criticisms.

Criticism of #733
Knut Sondre Sæbø’s avatar
Knut Sondre Sæbø, revised by Dennis HackethalOP 10 months ago·#1210
2nd of 2 versions

There is a similar (identical?) theory put forward by Marc Lewis in The Biology of Desire. He explains addiction as the process of "reciprocal narrowing". The process of reciprocal narrowing does not remove conflicting desires, but instead reinforces a pattern of dealing with conflict through a progressively narrower, habitual response (substance, action, mental dissociation). Addiction, therefore, as you suggested, is a process of managing the "conflict between two or more preferences within the mind."