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- "There’s a part of us that can’t help but see addiction as a symptom of weak character and bad judgment."
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- The view of addiction as a moral failure is causing real damage to the world
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- "The stigma against addiction is “the single biggest reason America is failing in its response to the opioid epidemic,” [Vox’s German Lopez concluded](https://www.vox.com/science-and-health/2017/12/18/16635910/opioid-epidemic-lessons) after a year of reporting on the crisis""
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- "Lives depend on where we come down. The stigma against addiction owes its stubborn tenacity to a specific, and flawed, philosophical view of the mind, a misconception so seductive that it ensnared Socrates in the fifth century BC."
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- People view addiction as a moral failure because of the subconscious societal belief that our actions always reflect our beliefs and values
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- "We tend to view addiction as a moral failure because we are in the grip of a simple but misleading answer to one of the oldest questions of philosophy: Do people always do what they think is best? In other words, do our actions always reflect our beliefs and values? When someone with addiction chooses to take drugs, does this show us what she truly cares about — or might something more complicated be going on?"
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- Plato describes acting against one's best judgement as "Akrasia"
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- "At one point their discussion turns to the topic of what the Greeks called akrasia: acting against one’s best judgment."
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- "Akrasia is a fancy name for an all-too-common experience. I know I should go to the gym, but I watch Netflix instead. You know you’ll enjoy dinner more if you stop eating the bottomless chips, but you keep munching nevertheless."
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- This makes the article more relatable
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- Addiction intensifies the disconnect between judgement and action
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- "Here’s the testimony of one person with addiction, reported in Maia Szalavitz’s book [_Unbroken Brain_](https://books.google.com/books?id=4yJ3CgAAQBAJ&lpg=PP1&pg=PA114#v=onepage&q&f=false): “I can remember many, many times driving down to the projects telling myself, ‘You don’t want to do this! You don’t want to do this!’ But I’d do it anyway.”
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