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The Myth of Addiction
 
 
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The Myth of Addiction [Paperback]

John Booth Davies
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
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Product details

  • Paperback: 192 pages
  • Publisher: Routledge; 2nd Revised edition edition (16 Jan 1998)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 9057022370
  • ISBN-13: 978-9057022371
  • Product Dimensions: 22.6 x 15 x 1.4 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 72,937 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
  • See Complete Table of Contents

Product Description

Review

..."Challenging, readable and often insightful..."
-Richard Eiser of "Times Higher Educational Supplement
..."The most challenging book to have appeared in the field of addiction studies in many years."
-Nick Heather of Centre for Alcohol & Drug Studies, UK
"I believe that all who work in one way or another in addiction would benefit from reading this book."
-Robert West of "British Journal of Addiction

Product Description

Current attitudes toward drug misuse in the media, government and even treatment centres, often exaggerate the pharmacological power of drugs. Their coercive influence is widely believed to be so great that to experiment with a drug is tantamount to addiction. Davies argues that such beliefs are largely inaccurate and harmful. Research shows that explanations for drug use vary according to circumstances. Drug users may explain that they have lost their willpower and capacity for personal decision-making, because this is the explanation expected of them, but most actually use drugs because they want to and because they see no good reason for giving them up. Addicted behaviour is therefore a form of learned helplessness, not an effect caused by narcotic intake.

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Attribution theory is a general title for a body of theory and research into the ways in which people explain why things happen. Read the first page
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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Index | Back Cover
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10 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A classic book on drug theory and drug policy, 4 Mar 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: The Myth of Addiction (Hardcover)
Simply one of the most refreshing and illuminating books I have read in the area of drug theory, and the implications of drug theory for drug policy. In the current anti-intellectual climate towards how we speak and how we are supposed to think about 'drugs' this book is a bold as it is original. His other work isn't bad, either!
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Very Uninformed, 31 July 2010
By 
B. Potts "Pottsy918" (Maidstone) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Myth of Addiction (Paperback)
The author has clearly failed to understand the distinction between recreational drug us and addiction. He seems to think that all drug users are perceived by society as addicts and is trying to show that this is not the case. However his argument centres around denying that addiction that renders the addict helpless against their drug of choice really exists. He seems to think that despite the fact that an addict may loose everything of value in their lives due to their addiction they are only doing it because they can see no good reason not to. If he was an addict or had worked closely with addicts I think he would soon realise how uniformed this opinion is.

He has failed to really understand the nature of addiction or society's view of it and drug use in general. I couldn't see any redeeming features in his argument other than a need for a rethink of societies view on the "war on drugs".
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Amazon.com: 3.7 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)

1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Ridiculous, 14 Jan 2011
By audie517 - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Myth of Addiction (Paperback)
This is the most ridiculous book I've ever read. I almost threw it across the room. If addiction was merely JUST willpower then there wouldn't be as many addicts as there are. There is also a reason that only (with few exceptions) 12-step groups like Alcoholics Anonymous and Narcotics Anonymous actually work. Agreed that there are always exceptions to everything and that a lot of addicts start out using drugs because they WANT to, almost all addicts end up not being able to stop and that has NOTHING to do with sheer willpower or a moral failing!! It has been scientifically proven that the brain literally changes once a person has become addicted and that it becomes another survival instinct that even outweighs the human instincts of eating, sleeping, and having sex. Get your ignorance in check please.

1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars very few people get it, 27 July 2008
By Aidan - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Myth of Addiction (Paperback)
if you have a friend or a relative who is using drugs and you feel you don't understand and/or you're afraid of the possible consequences of drug use, i advise you to read this book of all books. maybe you won't agree with what's said in it, maybe you don't want to believe it's true, but read it anyway. it's a different point of view on the subject, if less held.

1 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Myth of a spiritual program, 20 April 2007
By Zulu Warrior "71RoadRunner" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Myth of Addiction (Hardcover)
1 of 4 people found the following review helpful:

Serentiy Prayer, March 10, 2007

Here is the full text of the chapter "Hitler and Buchman" from the book Christianity and Power Politics by Reinhold Niebuhr, the eminent theologian who authored The Serenity Prayer. This appears to be a word-for-word reprint of Niebuhr's criticism of Buchman that first appeared in The Christian Century magazine, October 7, 1936, pages 1315 and 1316.


HITLER AND BUCHMAN
On returning from Europe, Frank Buchman, Oxford group revivalist, is quoted by a reputable New York paper as having said: "I thank heaven for a man like Adolf Hitler, who built a front-line defense against the anti-Christ of communism.... My barber in London told me Hitler saved all Europe from communism. That's how he felt. Of course I don't condone everything the Nazis do. Antisemitism? Bad, naturally. I suppose Hitler sees a Karl Marx in every Jew. But think what it would mean to the world if Hitler surrendered to the control of God. Or Mussolini. Or any dictator. Through such a man God could control a nation overnight and solve every last bewildering problem."
In this interview the social philosophy of the Oxford group, long implicit in its strategy, is made explicit, and revealed in all its childishness and viciousness. This philosophy has been implicit in Buchmanite strategy from the beginning. It explains the particular attention which is paid by Mr. Buchman and his followers to big men, leaders, in industry and politics. The idea is that if the man of power can be converted, God will be able to control a larger area of human life through his power than if a little man were converted. This is the logic which has filled the Buchmanites with touching solicitude for the souls of such men as Henry Ford or Harvey Firestone and prompted them to whisper confidentially from time to time that these men were on the very threshold of the kingdom of God. It is this strategy which prompts or justifies the first-class travel of all the Oxford teams. They hope to make contact with big men in the luxurious first-class quarters of ocean liners.


A NAZI PHILOSOPHY
In other words, a Nazi social philosophy has been a covert presumption of the whole Oxford group enterprise from the very beginning. We may be grateful to the leader for revealing so clearly what has been slightly hidden. Now we can see how unbelievably naïve this movement is in its efforts to save the world. If it would content itself with preaching repentance to drunkards and adulterers one might be willing to respect it as a religious revival method which knows how to confront the sinner with God. But when it runs to Geneva, the seat of the League of Nations, or to Prince Starhemberg or Hitler, or to any seat of power, always with the idea that it is on the verge of saving the world by bringing the people who control the world under God-control, it is difficult to restrain the contempt which one feels for this dangerous childishness.
This idea of world salvation implies a social philosophy which is completely innocent of any understanding of the social dynamics of a civilization. Does Mr. Buchman really believe that the dictators of the modern world create their dictatorships out of whole cloth? He does not know, evidently, that they are the creatures more than the creators of vast social movements in modern history. The particular social forces which create dictatorships are on the whole the decadent forces of a very sick society. The sickness of that society is the sickness of sin; and if a word of God is to be spoken in such an hour as this let it be the woe of Christ upon his Jerusalem or the prophecy of judgement which an Amos or Jeremiah pronounced upon their civilization.

THE PRODUCT OF THE QUIET HOUR
There is unfortunately not the slightest indication that the prophetic spirit of the Bible has ever entered into this pollyanna religion by way of the quiet hour. Several times Mr. Buchman has confessed that the word of God which he heard in his quiet hour was the slogan: "An international network over spiritual live-wires," whatever that may mean. In other words, the world is to be saved by a vulgar advertising slogan rather than by a genuine priestly and prophetic mediation of the judgement and the mercy of God upon a sinful world.


THE MAN OF POWER
In the simple and decadent individualism of the Oxford group movement there is no understanding of the fact that the man of power is always to a certain degree an anti-Christ. "All power," said Lord Acton with cynical realism, "corrupts; and absolute power corrupts absolutely." If the man of power were to take a message of absolute honesty and absolute love seriously he would lose his power, or would divest himself of it. This is not to imply that the world can get along without power and that it is not preferable that men of conscience should wield it rather than scoundrels. But if men of power had not only conscience but also something of the gospel's insight into the intricacies of social sin in the world, they would know that they could never extricate themselves completely from the sinfulness of power, even while they were wielding it ostensibly for the common good.
Mr. Buchman has greater aptness for advertising slogans than for historical perspectives. Otherwise he might have had occasion to meditate upon the life of Oliver Cromwell. Cromwell was a Christian in the real sense. There was a vital Christian faith in him which is hardly available for a modern statesman even after the ministrations of the Oxford group. Cromwell really wanted to do the will of God -- and thought he was doing it. Yet nothing in Cromwell's personal religion could save his dictatorship from being abortive and self-devouring. Let Mr. Buchman read about Cromwell's campaign in Ireland and the religious pretensions he made for his ambitions there and learn something of the moral complexities which men of power face and the temptations to which they succumb. It might be added that Cromwell's genuine religion not only failed to make his dictatorship palatable; it also failed to save him from the personal temptation to arrogance and cruelty.
The life and religion of Bismarck suggest similar lessons. Bismarck, who established a slightly more palatable dictatorship in Germany than Hitler's was a convert of the pietist movement. This movement was informed by an evangelical fervor which some of us may be pardoned for preferring to the sentimentalities of the Oxford groups. It deeply affected Bismarck. He was in certain areas of his life a very genuine Christian. But his surrender to God hardly accomplished the results in politics which Mr. Buchman envisages as a possibility in the case of Hitler's conversion. It did not help God to "control his nation overnight and solve every last bewildering problem."
The increasingly obvious fascist philosophy which informs the group movement is in other words not only socially vicious but religiously vapid. The slightest acquaintance with the history of Christian thought on the problem of the relation of the absolute demands of the gospel to the relativities of politics and economics would prove its childishness. A careful study of the gospel itself, particularly its abhorrence of the self-righteousness of the righteous, would reveal the danger of any doctrine which promises powerful men the possibility of fully doing the will of God. They had better be admonished that after they have done what they think right they will still remain unprofitable servants.
The Oxford group movement, imagining itself the mediator of Christ's salvation in a catastrophic age, is really an additional evidence of the decay in which we stand. Its religion manages to combine bourgeois complacency with Christian contrition in a manner which makes the former dominant. Its morality is a religious expression of a decadent individualism. Far from offering us a way out of our difficulties it adds to the general confusion. This is not the gospel's message of judgement and hope to the world. It is bourgeois optimism, individualism and moralism expressing itself in the guise of religion. No wonder the rather jittery plutocrats of our day open their spacious summer homes to its message!

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