A new approach to addition and choice : akrasia and the nature of free will / Reinout W. Wiers.
Material type:
TextLanguage: English Publication details: London : Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group, 2025Description: 263 p. : illISBN: - 9781032634548
- 1032634545
- 9781040094679
- 1040094678
- 9781040094723
- 1040094724
- 616.858 23/eng/20240319 WIE
| Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Barcode | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
General Books
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CUTN Central Library Medicine, Technology & Management | Non-fiction | 616.858 WIE (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 54508 |
1. Introduction. 2. Akrasia, free will and addiction. 3. Addiction: a chronic brain disease. 4. Why addiction is (usually) not a chronic brain disease. 5. Addiction as biased choice. 6. Development, vulnerability and prevention. 7. Pills or talk-therapy?. 8. Improving choice: reward alternatives, cognitive training and mindfulness. 9. Meat addiction? Cell phones, fossil fuels and our future. 10. Conclusions and lessons. Index.
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"This engaging book provides a novel examination of the nature of addiction, suggesting that by exploring akrasia, the act of acting against one's better judgement, we can better understand our addictive behaviours. It offers an alternative to the dominant biomedical model of addiction as a chronic brain disease by looking at the nature of how we make decisions and proposing the idea that biased choice is central to addiction. The book looks at both classic substance use disorders and newer "addictions" to smartphones, meat and fossil fuels. It discusses current perspectives on free will in philosophy, psychology and neuroscience, and the questions surrounding free will vs. determinism, including our ability to steer our behaviours guided by the promise of future outcomes. Different perspectives on addiction and choice are presented in an eloquent style, and illustrated by personal stories. Through a lively discussion of the key scientific and philosophical issues surrounding addiction, this book is valuable for students in psychology, criminology, sociology and social work, as well as health care professionals and general readers interested in the nature of our free will"--
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