• @LemmysMum
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    1 year ago

    Choice is, by definition, not subject to compulsion, and if it is subject to compulsion is not a willing choice, it is forced and influenced. If you want to be a pedantic asshole at least have the intellectual integrity to be right first.

    • @[email protected]
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      1 year ago

      Compulsion is overridden choice!

      I’m not suggesting addiction is done flippant thing, it’s a serious disease.

      Quit throwing around insults then claiming I’m the one lacking integrity.

      • @LemmysMum
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        1 year ago

        And not a choice.

        Yes, action against compulsion is an active choice, but to not do so is not suddenly a lack of active choice, just a lack of ability to enforce it.

        If you’re concerned with what you are, be different.

          • @LemmysMum
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            1 year ago

            Consider a dictionary.

            I’ll repeat myself for your own benefit.

            Yes, action against compulsion is an active choice, but to not do so is not suddenly a lack of active choice, just a lack of ability to enforce it.

            Wilful ignorance devalues your position far more than an ad hominem ever will.

            • @[email protected]
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              1 year ago

              Mmk I’ll Google those for you

              Compulsion: an irresistible persistent impulse to perform an act

              Impulse: a sudden desire, whim, or inclination

              Inclination: a preference or tendency, or a feeling that makes a person want to do something

              Preference: the power or opportunity of choosing

              Addiction is the loss of power or opportunity to CHOOSE.

              You seem obsessed with the assumption that I think addicts are just weakly choosing the wrong thing, or something. That’s very much not my suggestion. Deep in the core of the brain, chemical dependence pathways influence decisionmaking in a way the victim is unable to override.