whoops lol wrong link in the second post! here's the link to the Radden article: link.springer.com/article/10.1...
I am extremely grateful for all of the feedback and support I’ve received on this piece over the years. It’s such a relief for it to finally be out there for real!!!
Although I didn’t know of it when I was writing this, this paper also addresses Jennifer Radden’s recent critique of my sense of agency piece. She takes AN self-control measures to be evidence against my view, when this is actually quite the opposite! (authors.wiley.com/dashboard/jo...)
In this piece I argue that anorexia and addiction are two sides of the same coin in a way that can only be recognized once we strip away their divergent phenomenological profiles. It's part of a broader effort of mine to poke holes in the trustworthiness of agential phenomenology.
If you're curious why I feel so confident in making this claim, check out my new piece, "The Horseshoe Model of pathological loss of control", forthcoming in Mind & Language! philpapers.org/rec/EVATHM
There’s an argument to be made that it is, in some sense, unethical to buy tickets to see Ariana Grande perform in the current state she’s in. I don’t feel like fleshing out the whole thing rn, but it may be on par with (indirectly) enabling an addict to get their fix of choice.