About 1800 the concept of addiction is introduced in the medical world. Medical doctors renounce the idea that misuse of alcohol is the result of a free choice of the drinker. The drinker is no longer seen as a responsible agent, but is declared to be under the influence of a disease. Yet the moral approach, with its accentuation of the responsibility of the drinker, does not vanish. Although a disease-approach seems to exclude moral concepts, both appear to go together well in practice. Psychiatrists in the second half of the 19th century combine the disease-concept with the so-called 'Moral Treatment'. The disease-concept is adopted by social groups with a moral background, such as the Temperance Movement in the last century and Alcoholic...
ABSTRACT The liquor control school of thought of the 1890s–1930s offered a clear alternative to alco...
drinking " is a moralized category. "Controlled drinking " or "moderate drinking...
The concept of drunkenness is hardly a novelty in the 19th century. Defined as a physical and mental...
Chronic alcohol misuse is an intractable problem for contemporary medicine. This paper explores some...
Editor’s introduction The first component of the patient-centered method distinguishes disease and i...
Despite the lack of medical consensus regarding alcoholism as a disease, many readily accept the con...
The aim of this sub-project was to analyse the alcohol question and its responses through a series o...
The notion of 'addiction' appears to present profound and intractable difficulties for contemporary ...
© 2014 Dr. Caroline Elizabeth ClarkIn mid-nineteenth-century Victoria, the courts and prisons were f...
In contemporary Britain, alcohol is an acute concern for the government and public alike. This paper...
This article draws a broad panel of the tradition of therapeutic use of alcoholics in Western societ...
Baudelaire once wrote, 'sin is seductive and should be presented as such'. However, in nin...
The drink problem: an introduction by the editor.--Evolution of the alcoholic, by H. Campbell.--Path...
This work develops an ethical analysis of alcoholism. I apply Aristotle\u27s virtue ethics to a soci...
This work develops an ethical analysis of alcoholism. I apply Aristotle\u27s virtue ethics to a soci...
ABSTRACT The liquor control school of thought of the 1890s–1930s offered a clear alternative to alco...
drinking " is a moralized category. "Controlled drinking " or "moderate drinking...
The concept of drunkenness is hardly a novelty in the 19th century. Defined as a physical and mental...
Chronic alcohol misuse is an intractable problem for contemporary medicine. This paper explores some...
Editor’s introduction The first component of the patient-centered method distinguishes disease and i...
Despite the lack of medical consensus regarding alcoholism as a disease, many readily accept the con...
The aim of this sub-project was to analyse the alcohol question and its responses through a series o...
The notion of 'addiction' appears to present profound and intractable difficulties for contemporary ...
© 2014 Dr. Caroline Elizabeth ClarkIn mid-nineteenth-century Victoria, the courts and prisons were f...
In contemporary Britain, alcohol is an acute concern for the government and public alike. This paper...
This article draws a broad panel of the tradition of therapeutic use of alcoholics in Western societ...
Baudelaire once wrote, 'sin is seductive and should be presented as such'. However, in nin...
The drink problem: an introduction by the editor.--Evolution of the alcoholic, by H. Campbell.--Path...
This work develops an ethical analysis of alcoholism. I apply Aristotle\u27s virtue ethics to a soci...
This work develops an ethical analysis of alcoholism. I apply Aristotle\u27s virtue ethics to a soci...
ABSTRACT The liquor control school of thought of the 1890s–1930s offered a clear alternative to alco...
drinking " is a moralized category. "Controlled drinking " or "moderate drinking...
The concept of drunkenness is hardly a novelty in the 19th century. Defined as a physical and mental...