The Logic of Addiction

State of the Art. Cutting Edge. Cultural Psychology and Addiction.

Category: Addiction and Modern Subjectivity

  • Why I Use the Term Born Man

    The term Born Man is not chosen casually, nostalgically, or provocatively for its own sake. It is chosen because language itself has become part of the battlefield of appearance, and any serious attempt to think modern self-consciousness must reckon with that fact rather than evade it. The word man in Born Man is not a…

  • Why There is No Return to Religion Without Falsification

    Religion as a Historical Form, Not an Eternal Option The contemporary call for a return to religion, or spirituality, is often framed as a corrective to modern nihilism, addiction, violence, and technological abstraction. Such appeals assume that religion represents a lost resource that might be recovered if belief were renewed, practice reinstated, or transcendence re-affirmed….

  • The Absolute After Transcendence

    Technology, Born Man, and the Logic of Addiction Modern addiction cannot be adequately understood within moral, medical, or therapeutic frameworks alone, because it does not originate at the level those frameworks presuppose. Addiction is not a contingent pathology that happens to proliferate in modern society; it is a historically intelligible response to the completion of…

  • Addiction After Meaning: Part I

    From Depth Psychology to Civilizational Logic The original thesis The End of Addiction: A Depth Psychological View of Alcoholism was written at a historical threshold. It belongs to a moment when the inherited explanatory frameworks surrounding addiction—disease, sin, morality, spirituality—were still in active competition, still capable of organizing intelligibility. The work’s ambition was not merely…

  • The Placebo Effect and the Crisis of Meaning in Modernity

    When situated within the broader horizon of modernity, the placebo effect ceases to appear as a marginal curiosity of clinical medicine and instead emerges as a symptom of a deeper anthropological tension: the persistence of meaning as a causal force within a civilization that officially denies its legitimacy. Modernity’s self-understanding depends upon the purification of…

  • The Placebo Effect

    Meaning, Expectation, and the Biology of Healing Within medical science, the placebo effect refers to genuine physiological and psychological changes that arise not from the pharmacological properties of a treatment, but from the meanings, expectations, and contexts surrounding it. Long dismissed as a confounding variable or a methodological nuisance, the placebo effect is now recognized…