The Routledge handbook of philosophy and science of addiction / / edited by Hanna Pickard and Serge H Ahmed.

The problem of addiction is one of the major challenges and controversies confronting medicine and society. It also poses important and complex philosophical and scientific problems. What is addiction? Why does it occur? And how should we respond to it, as individuals and as a society?conceptions of...

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Bibliographic Details
Superior document:Routledge handbooks in philosophy
:
TeilnehmendeR:
Place / Publishing House:Boca Raton, FL : : Routledge, an imprint of Taylor and Francis,, 2018.
Year of Publication:2019
2018
Edition:First edition.
Language:English
Series:Routledge handbooks in philosophy.
Physical Description:1 online resource (601 pages).
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Table of Contents:
  • chapter Introduction / Hanna Pickard
  • chapter PART I What is addiction?
  • chapter SECTION A Conceptions of addiction
  • chapter 1 The puzzle of addiction / Hanna Pickard
  • chapter 2 Deriving addiction: an analysis based on three elementary features of making choices / Gene M. Heyman
  • chapter 3 The picoeconomics of addiction / George Ainslie
  • chapter 4 Addiction as a disorder of self-control / Edmund Henden
  • chapter 5 Addiction: the belief oscillation hypothesis / Neil Levy
  • chapter 6 Chpater 6: Addiction and moral psychology / Chandra Sripada
  • chapter 7 Identity and addiction / Owen Flanagan
  • chapter 8 The harmful dysfunction analysis of addiction: normal brains and abnormal states of mind / Jerome C. Wakefield
  • chapter 9 The evolutionary signicance of drug toxicity over reward / Edward H. Hagen
  • chapter SECTION B Varieties, taxonomies, and models of addiction
  • chapter 10 Dening addiction: a pragmatic perspective / Walter Sinnott-Armstrong
  • chapter 11 Diagnosis of addictions / Marc Auriacombe
  • chapter 12 Reconsidering addiction as a syndrome: one disorder with multiple expressions / Paige M. Shaffer
  • chapter 13 Developing general models and theories of addiction / Robert West
  • chapter 14 Gambling disorder / Seth W. Whiting
  • chapter 15 Food addiction / Ashley Gearhardt
  • chapter 16 “A walk on the wild side” of addiction: the history and signicance of animal models / Serge H. Ahmed
  • chapter PART II Explaining addiction: culture, pathways, mechanisms
  • chapter SECTION A Anthropological, historical, and socio-psychological perspectives
  • chapter 17 Power and addiction / Jim Orford
  • chapter 18 Sociology of addiction / Richard Hammersley
  • chapter 19 The fuzzy boundaries of illegal drug markets and why they matter / Lee D. Hoffer
  • chapter 20 Multiple commitments: heterogeneous histories of neuroscientic addiction research / Nancy D. Campbell
  • chapter SECTION B Developmental processes, vulnerabilities, and resilience
  • chapter 21 The epidemiological approach: an overview of methods and models / James C. Anthony
  • chapter 22 A genetic framework for addiction / Philip Gorwood
  • chapter 23 Choice impulsivity: a drug-modiable personality trait / Annabelle M. Belcher
  • chapter 24 Stress and addiction / Rajita Sinha
  • chapter SECTION C Psychological and neural mechanisms
  • chapter 25 Mechanistic models for understanding addiction as a behavioural disorder / Dominic Murphy
  • chapter 26 Controlled and automatic learning processes in addiction / Lee Hogarth
  • chapter 27 Decision-making dysfunctions in addiction / Antonio Verdejo-Garcia
  • chapter 28 The current status of the incentive sensitization theory of addiction / Mike J.F. Robinson, Terry E. Robinson, and Kent C. Berridge
  • chapter 29 Resting-state and structural brain connectivity in individuals with stimulant addiction: a systematic review / Anna Zilverstand, Rafael O’Halloran, and Rita Z. Goldstein
  • chapter 30 Imaging dopamine signaling in addiction / Diana Martinez
  • chapter 31 The neurobiology of placebo eects / Elisa Frisaldi
  • chapter 32 Brain mechanisms and the disease model of addiction: is it the whole story of the addicted self? A philosophical- skeptical perspective / Şerife Tekin
  • chapter PART III Consequences, responses, and the meaning of addiction
  • chapter SECTION A Listening and relating to addicts
  • chapter 33 The Outcasts Project: humanizing heroin users through documentary photography and photo-elicitation / Aaron Goodman
  • chapter 34 Our stories, our knowledge: the importance of addicts’ epistemic authority in treatment / Peg O’Connor
  • chapter 35 Reactive attitudes, relationships, and addiction / Jeanette Kennett
  • chapter SECTION B Prevention, treatment, and spontaneous recovery
  • chapter 36 Contingency management approaches / Kristyn Zajac
  • chapter 37 Twelve-step fellowship and recovery from addiction / John F. Kelly
  • chapter 38 Opioid substitution treatment and harm minimization approaches / Mark K. Greenwald
  • chapter 39 Self-change: genesis and functions of a concept / Harald Klingemann
  • chapter SECTION C Ethics, law, and policy
  • chapter 40 Addiction: a structural problem of modern global society / Bruce K. Alexander
  • chapter 41 Don’t be fooled by the euphemistic language attesting to a gentler war on drugs / Carl L. Hart
  • chapter 42 Drug legalization and public health: general issues, and the case of cannabis / Robin Room
  • chapter 43 Addiction and drug (de)criminalization / Douglas Husak
  • chapter 44 Criminal law and addiction / Stephen J. Morse
  • chapter 45 Addiction and mandatory treatment / Steve Matthews.