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Article
Rich Addiction
Subjectivity
  • Bennett B. Gilbert, Portland State University
Document Type
Citation
Publication Date
3-6-2024
Disciplines
Abstract

Examining the author’s own experiences of narcotics addiction reveals certain aspects of the addicted mentality that have strong ethical valence. In general, this shows that addiction is not a state fundamentally characterized by lack. The rudiments of this position are found in some contemporary philosophy of addiction; also, it is contrasted with a common widely held mistaken view. Addiction should instead be understood in continuity with and as illuminating the nature of human personhood and subjectivity. Under a phenomenology specific to the author’s experience, addiction appears as a mode of experience that has an unmanageable overflow of narratives created as discourses concerning people, events, thoughts, and feelings; narratives embodied in assemblages of objects; and narratives appearing as mental images. These considerations suggest that pre-reflective connection to the world can be profoundly illuminative but also can isolate is from the world and, further, that our ethical values form from within our lives and not as an artificial addition. Our historical, narrative self-understanding has existential and moral import. Thus, addiction by its extremity exemplifies the ceaseless ethical activity of personhood.

Rights

Copyright © 2024, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited.

DOI
10.1057/s41286-024-00179-w
Persistent Identifier
https://archives.pdx.edu/ds/psu/41363
Citation Information
Gilbert, B. Rich addiction. Subjectivity (2024). https://doi.org/10.1057/s41286-024-00179-w