
Contents
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Looking Back Looking Back
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Unholy Feasts: The Price of Admission Unholy Feasts: The Price of Admission
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The Paradox: What Is Voluntary Is Not Voluntary The Paradox: What Is Voluntary Is Not Voluntary
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Doing the Good I Would by Doing the Good I Can Doing the Good I Would by Doing the Good I Can
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The Wisdom Group The Wisdom Group
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The Moral Group The Moral Group
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The Concentration Group The Concentration Group
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Third Level Wisdom: The Mean between Deficient and Excessive Self-Love Third Level Wisdom: The Mean between Deficient and Excessive Self-Love
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Notes Notes
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References References
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Cite
Abstract
This chapter presents the author’s account of his own addiction and how the recognition of and the struggle with it provided a window that enabled him to see himself, others, and life itself with greater clarity, depth, and compassion. Addiction is unique to the individual, giving each addict a set of “addiction-fingerprints.” Like fingerprints, addictions have certain commonalities in their origins, patterns, and consequences. These commonalities are the main topic of discussion here. As with Immanuel Kant, who stated that it was David Hume who awakened him from his “dogmatic slumbers,” it is addiction which does this awakening in the case of the author. The course and nature of addiction are discussed by charting earlier parts of the author’s personal history of addiction, the personal costs of addiction, the paradoxical character of addiction, strategies for controlling addiction, and the wisdom gained from the struggle against addiction.
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