Kimberly T’s Reviews > What Would You Do Alone in a Cage with Nothing but Cocaine?: A Philosophy of Addiction > Status Update
Kimberly T
is 2% done
Hanna is going to argue that addiction is a pattern of behaviour. We need to explain why a person would persist in using drugs given that doing so is not good for them.
— Jul 03, 2026 10:35AM
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Kimberly’s Previous Updates
Kimberly T
is 11% done
If we want to know whether a persons drug use is or is not good for them, there are 4 variables to consider:
1. The pattern of drug use with its consequences
2. The person’s sincerely professed values and conception of their own good
3. The person’s true values and conception of their good
4. What the person ought to value/what is truly good for them apart from values/conception of their good
— 1 hour, 31 min ago
1. The pattern of drug use with its consequences
2. The person’s sincerely professed values and conception of their own good
3. The person’s true values and conception of their good
4. What the person ought to value/what is truly good for them apart from values/conception of their good
Kimberly T
is 8% done
The brain disease model therefore does more than redefine addiction in such a way as to create disagreement and limit the range of possible explanations. It also relocates it — removing addiction from the realm of behaviour and lodging it within the brain.
— Jul 07, 2026 10:36AM
Kimberly T
is 4% done
Addiction occurs precisely when drug use is psychologically unintelligible to us, by contrast with ordinary drug use. why is this person continuing to use drugs when the costs appear so severe, so profoundly counter to their own good?
— Jul 06, 2026 03:33PM
Kimberly T
is 4% done
People use drugs because they have tremendous value. But now suppose we ask: why do people use drugs despite costs such as their lives, jobs, etc? Whatever benefits of drug use remain in addiction, these costs are so evident and so severe that using seems in no way worth it - and yet, people with addiction persist.
This is Pickard’s “puzzle of addiction”.
— Jul 06, 2026 03:27PM
This is Pickard’s “puzzle of addiction”.
Kimberly T
is 4% done
As a species, we have always used drugs, and most drug use does not lead to addiction. Yet, all addiction originates with ordinary drug use.
Ex: drinking must precede alcoholism. Equally obvious but not always considered is the fact that drinking is not necessarily followed by alcoholism.
— Jul 06, 2026 03:22PM
Ex: drinking must precede alcoholism. Equally obvious but not always considered is the fact that drinking is not necessarily followed by alcoholism.
Kimberly T
is 2% done
In characterizing drug use as compulsive, the brain disease model undermines what is arguably a plank of all successful treatment, namely a sense of once’s own agency and ability to do things differently. That is, the ability to change one’s relationship to drugs and construct a life/identity where they play a less significant role.
— Jul 03, 2026 10:47AM
Kimberly T
is 2% done
Relinquishing the idea of a universal explanation or underlying essence that makes addiction what it is, and which every case of addiction must have, and no case of addiction can lack. The brain disease model is committed to such an essence, namely brain pathology.
— Jul 03, 2026 10:34AM
Kimberly T
is starting
Psychology and psychological explanation are inextricably linked with life circumstances. This is why pointing out a rat is literally alone in a cage with nothing but cocaine can be explanatory of why the rat/person might take a lot of drugs. We imagine the psychological impact of being trapped in isolation and emptiness.. misery and suffering. There is only 1 thing that offers any relief. Cocaine.
— Jul 03, 2026 10:25AM
Kimberly T
is starting
“The current dominant scientific paradigm for addiction is broken. It is time for heresy.”
It’s time. Give it to me!
— Jul 03, 2026 10:19AM
It’s time. Give it to me!

