ladajo wrote:You do understand that Alcohol is under prohibition? It is no longer a blanket prohibition, but a prohibition none-the-less.
Yes, of course - but notice I used the phrase
hardline prohibitionist stance, which is certainly not what we have with alcohol.
I also posit that some drugs will fall out with risks that are too high for anything but blanket control (prohibition).
That would be a value judgement - not something that can be objectively proven either way. And, though I could be persuaded otherwise, there is no drug that I know of which poses significant enough risks to non-users to justify (and here
justify is a value judgement of my own) the criminalisation and punishment of users. For me, punishing - causing harm to - those who have caused no harm is both an injustice and probably not the least harmful way of dealing with the problem anyway.
As for the pyschological and physiological components.
Yes, it is a lazy shorthand. The mind is an emergent phenomena of a physical thing; psychological effects are a special case of physiological effect. However, the term psychological is useful, because it specifies those effects that are of the mind, and because the mechanisms of physiological dependence and psychological dependence are qualitatively different. Information is involved in mind, so the psychological effects of drug addiction - memories, desires, cravings etc. - can remain active long after other purely physiological effects have disappeared.
And, just as non-drug addictions can be purely of the mind - gambling, for instance - I see no reason why a drug addiction can't be similarly of the mind.
I will, however, concede this: though I still believe that cocaine addiction is heavily weighted towards psychological effects, there is likely some degree of a purely physiological component.
I have always said that I do not have the answer.
Yep, same here. I am only expressing an opinion that's neither provably right, nor wrong. And it's not an opinion about which I am absolutely certain...
Anyhow, this discussion long since became a dreary adversarial affair, where we both just look for the tiniest holes in one another's argument to pick at or, failing that, present distorted version of those arguments (hey, at least I'm willing to own up to my strawmen). Not to say that I haven't got the time to respond to every point in your rather long posts. So that's it from me, for now. If you think that means you've won the debate - fill yer boots! He who types the longest is teh winnar!
Btw this:
in this addiction, a level of loss of free will is established
There. That would've been the next little hole I'd have picked at... (the concept of free will is bollox, imo)
