|
Showing 1 - 4 of
4 matches in All Departments
Dr. Winter brings order to our understanding of nutrition,
exercise, and how these factors work together in health and
illness. Many diseases-cancer, heart attack, and stroke, for
example-are discussed in detail. It is not a fad book-just pure
facts and good sense.
Dr. Winter brings order to our understanding of nutrition,
exercise, and how these factors work together in health and
illness. Many diseases-cancer, heart attack, and stroke, for
example-are discussed in detail. It is not a fad book-just pure
facts and good sense.
Prescription, illicit, and recreational drugs touch all of our
lives yet a basic understanding of these chemicals is largely
absent among Americans. Jerrold Winter offers a comprehensive
account of psychoactive drugs, chemicals which influence our brains
in myriad ways. Manifestations of their influence on the brain are
quite varied. There may be the comfort provided by opioids to those
who are dying or in pain or, in everyday life, the surge of
contentment for the users of caffeine, nicotine, heroin, alcohol,
or marijuana upon the taking of their drug of choice. Turning to
the more exotic, a drug such as LSD may alter the way the world
looks to us; it may even inspire thoughts of God. Adding to the
purely scientific questions which confront us are the ways in which
our society chooses to respond to the presence of psychoactive
drugs. Should they be banned and their users sent to prison,
tolerated as a reflection of man's eternal search for an escape
from anxiety, pain, and the monotony of daily life, or celebrated
as therapeutically useful agents? Our Love Affair with Drugs is
written for experts and novices alike. There are stories of, for
example, how Timothy Leary caused the repeal of the Marijuana Tax
Act of 1937. Readers will learn of the transformation by Sir
Charles Locock of a drug intended to dampen female sexual activity
into the first effective drug for the treatment of the ancient
disease of epilepsy. Alexander Shulgin's love of psychoactive drugs
and his unconventional research practices illuminate the story of
methylenedioxymethamphetamine, a.k.a. Ecstasy, a drug now likely to
find value in treating veterans and others suffering post-traumatic
distress disorder. Winter links the excitement of drug discovery
with the very practical matter of balancing the benefits and risks
of these drugs.
|
|