Thank you all for your insightful replies. I'm sorry for my late reply. I wanted to take my time. I also had to help someone move unexpectedly last weekend and it has been over 30 degrees Celcius here in the Netherlands. I think it actually fried my brain a little.
@ArguingWAristotleTiff, thanks for your lovely words. I myself have no guilt attached to the addictions I have suffered from or am still caught up in. I have overcome my hard drug addiction, yet, I still smoke. I feel bad about it, sometimes I feel hopeless, but never guilty. I own up to the fact that these addictions are of my own choosing, perhaps even of my own making. So I can also "make them" go away.
I do not regret my party days, which really were about ten years of my life of doing hard drugs. It was excessive, it was crazy, and it may have led to insanity, but also to healing. I saw that there is a world apart from our everyday world, that there are states of mind except our everyday state of mind. That you can feel free and liberated when dancing and talking to strangers, how you feel no fear or sadness, there is just joy, or even ecstatic bliss.
All of this can make you see things in a different persective, like in the old mystery religions where initiates would dance and drink while being told the secrets of nature.
Then comes a time where you must face your addiction (to pleasure), and try to change. This is the hard part, I know... But when you overcome your dragon, you will feel like a victor.
@Bitter Crank, thank you for your replies, I am learning a lot. I naturally like the dog picture and I especially like what you say about the oxytocin being released at special or very lovely and meaningful moments in your life.
Why I am so interested in addiction and the nature/nurture debate (which we might as well call the nature + nurture discussion) is because it somehow is a good metaphor and starting point for thinking about mental illness in general.
Addiction can be seen as a battle we have to fight with ourselves, with our own mind. Just like any mental illness is really a battle for deliverance.
I once suffered from a psychosis that lasted for about four months. It was quite the trip. Of course no one knows exactly what a psychosis is, what causes it, what makes it go away or stay, etc.
The discovery of the release of chemicals in the brain may be a partial explanation for mental illnesses like acute schizophrenia, where one "suffers" from visions, hallucinations and "strange ideas". This idea has been around for at least a century. Though I think the search should be less focussed on serotonin and perhaps more on other psychedelic substances that exist in the body, like actual DMT.
The question remains what brings about these imbalances in the chemical make up of the body. The prevailing answer nowadays is: drugs and stress. I had done quite a lot of drugs in my day, so yea, that was held against me of course.
The other important point though is: no one really knows what the function of psychosis or mental illness is. We (as people) generally believe that madness, insanity, schizophrenia or psychosis, all of these related phenomena basically are meaningless nonsense that must be treated with pills because there is no time, money or expertise to ACTUALLY treat patients and make them better, so, the problem is subdued.
I am very inclined to think though that it actually has a function and is not meaningless sickness. It may be a portal to a genuine spiritual awakening (which of course is always a subjective experience).
@Hoo, thanks for the Hegel reference! I didn't know about that and will certainly check it out.
I am much interested in the topic of "opposites" being made into complements and I will try to explain why I think this is relevant here.
I came to the insight through reading the works of Carl Gustav Jung, some of you may know him. He was a doctor/psychologist/philosopher who died in the previous century. He talks about the "play of opposites" in his works, especially the ones related to alchemy. Alchemy is in a way the precursor of modern chemistry in the same way that astrology gave rise to astronomy. It sought a way to explain matter and to transform it.
Jung states that this "transformation" was sometimes a physical one (ie. trying to turn lead into gold) or a spiritual one (transforming the mind). He set up a hypothesis that the alchemical theory (almost fully shrouded in mystery) is basically a spiritual philosophy that has something to do with the phenomenon of projection.
Jung writes that the psyche has been "lost" or "imprisoned" in matter (we often project our internal microcosm or our ideas about the world onto the macrocosm, not seeing this is so) and the magnum opus or "work" would refer to becoming a master of one's own projections, withdrawing them (taking responsibility) and after that seeing things more clearly.
Now on to what this has to do with modern science. Albert Einstein has said that theoretical physicists (et al) are much inclined to think of their mental constructs not as such, but as actual reality. They do not discern between observer and the observed, so to speak. They think that what they have learned about reality is absolutely true, and their theory reflects reality perfectly.
They "project" their world view onto the world, and believe this is the world. Then they try to make this into an objective truth through the scientific method. However, all of this is man-made, even the scientific method and concepts like "truth" and "objectivity". We seem to be caught up in a world of projection, meaning: we realize not that there is a subject watching.
It is clear this applies to researchers who set up (design) an experiment and from this induce universal "truths". However, through this scientific method we may contemplate the concepts of subject and object thoroughly, and we may come to realize how and what we are projecting. So, through theoretical physics for example, one may come to self-realization, by almost meditatively examining theory.
I think this is the extent to which Carl Jung's theory can be extended.
:-)