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Love Drugs

Audiobook
Nonfiction: Science
Unabridged   8 hour(s)
Publication date: 02/11/2020

Love Drugs

The Chemical Future of Relationships

Available from major retailers or BUY FROM AMAZON
Audio CD ISBN:9781684578559
Digital Download ISBN:9781684578542

Summary

This book builds a case for conducting research into "love drugs" and "anti-love drugs" and explores their ethical implications for individuals and society.

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Product Description

Is there a pill for love? What about an "anti-love drug," to help us get over an ex? This book argues that certain psychoactive substances, including MDMA—the active ingredient in Ecstasy—may help ordinary couples work through relationship difficulties and strengthen their connection. Others may help sever an emotional connection during a breakup. These substances already exist, and they have transformative implications for how we think about love. This book builds a case for conducting research into "love drugs" and "anti-love drugs" and explores their ethical implications for individuals and society. Scandalously, Western medicine tends to ignore the interpersonal effects of drug-based interventions. Why are we still in the dark about the effects of these drugs on romantic partnerships? And how can we overhaul scientific research norms to take relationships more fully into account?

Ethicists Brian D. Earp and Julian Savulescu say that the time to think through such questions is now. Love Drugs arms us with the latest scientific knowledge and a set of ethical tools that we can use to decide if these sorts of medications should be a part of our society. Or whether a chemical romance will be right for us.

Reviews/Praise

"Love Drugs reports current science on the effect of drugs on love and sex, adds anecdotes and case studies, and combines that with ethics and wisdom on what is important. The result is a fascinating account of a future that is starting to unfold right now." —Peter Singer author of Ethics in the Real World

Author Bio

Brian D. Earp is associate director of the Yale-Hastings Program in Ethics and Health Policy at Yale University and the Hastings Center and a research fellow at the Uehiro Centre for Practical Ethics at the University of Oxford. Julian Savulescu holds the Uehiro Chair in Practical Ethics and is director of the Uehiro Centre for Practical Ethics at the University of Oxford.