Addiction as a Disorder of Belief
Levy Neil (University of Melbourne)

May 8, 2014, 12:15pm - 2:15pm
Department of Philosophy, University of Melbourne

Old Physics G16 (Jim Potter Room)
Parkville Campus
Melbourne 3010
Australia

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Abstract: Addiction is almost universally held to be characterized by a loss of control over drug-seeking and consuming behavior. But the actions ofaddicts, even of those who seem to want to abstain from drugs, seem to be guided by reasons. In this paper, I argue that we can explain this fact, consistent with continuing to maintain that addiction involves a loss of control, by understanding addiction as involving an oscillation between conflicting judgments. I argue that the dysfunction of the mesolimbic dopamine system that typifies addictions causes the generation of a mismatch between the top-down model of the world that reflects the judgment that the addict ought to refrain from drugs, and bottom-up input caused by cues predictive of drug availability. This constitutes a powerful pressure toward revising the judgment and thereby attenuating the prediction error.  But the new model is not stable, and shifts under the pressure of bottom-up inputs in different contexts; hence the oscillation of all-things-considered judgment. Evidence from social psychology is adduced, to suggest that a similar process may be involved in ordinary cases of weakness of will.

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