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Narratives Of Addiction Savage Usury Kevin Mccarron

  • SKU: BELL-50720518
Narratives Of Addiction Savage Usury Kevin Mccarron
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Narratives Of Addiction Savage Usury Kevin Mccarron instant download after payment.

Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan
File Extension: PDF
File size: 6.06 MB
Pages: 222
Author: Kevin McCarron
ISBN: 9783030884604, 9783030884611, 3030884600, 3030884619
Language: English
Year: 2021

Product desciption

Narratives Of Addiction Savage Usury Kevin Mccarron by Kevin Mccarron 9783030884604, 9783030884611, 3030884600, 3030884619 instant download after payment.

Narratives of Addiction: Savage Usury is the first book to argue, in the face of more than a century’s received wisdom, that drug addiction and alcoholism are undoubtedly evidence of individual moral flaws. However, the sense of morality that underlies this book is completely severed from Christianity. Instead, it is influenced in particular by the writings of the nineteenth-century German philosophers Arthur Schopenhauer and Frederick Nietzsche, both of whom insisted that a genuine morality was actually incompatible with Christianity. The sequence of chapters moves from addictions on the streets, into rehab clinics, and finally into the meetings of Alcoholics Anonymous and Narcotics Anonymous. This is the first book to argue that the search for pleasure drives alcoholism and drug addiction and not the “numbing of pain”. Throughout the book I reject the claims of the medical profession, as embodied by the American Medical Association, that drug addiction and alcoholism are diseases, and further argue that they do not have the authority to tell hundreds of millions of Americans that addiction is not a moral failing. I also query throughout the book the claims of neuroscience, psychology, and the social sciences that addictions to alcohol and drugs are attributable to causes that their specific disciplines are best suited to understand. I argue that there is nothing complex about addiction: it is a simple behavioural disorder. It is the language routinely employed to discuss addiction that is not complex, just confused, and so it is also the rhetoric of addiction discourse, especially its use of simile, metaphor and euphemism, that this book evaluates.

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