Embodiment, Interaction, and Experience: Toward a Comprehensive Model in Addiction Science

Philosophy of Science 82 (5):1023-1034 (2015)
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Abstract

Current theories of addiction try to explain what addiction is, who experiences it, why it occurs, and how it develops and persists. In this article, I explain why none of these theories can be accepted as a comprehensive model. I argue that current models fail to account for differences in embodiment, interaction processes, and the experience of addiction. To redress these limiting factors, I design a proposal for an enactive account of addiction that follows the enactive model of autism proposed by Hanne De Jaegher

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