New research challenges traditional accounts of why we wallow in chemical gratification
March 21, 2008World Science staff
Why do people abuse drugs? It’s not only a question worried parents ask their wayward, substance-dabbling teenagers. It’s also a deeper question asked by biologists.In general, nature has designed all creatures as exquisite machines for their own protection and propagation. Yet we’re easily and often drawn into self-destruction by nothing more than lifeless chemical lures. This weakness seems such a jarring exception, such a dismal Achilles’ heel, that it seems to demand explanation.
A new study proposes that humans and other animals have a long evolutionary relationship with brain-influencing drugs. Shown above is the plant Cannabis sativa, which produces the psychoactive ingredient in marijuana. (Image courtesy Missouri Dept. of Transportation)
Scientists typically offer the following one. Drugs are chemicals that inappropriately trigger activity in brain circuits designed for very different purposes: to provide a sense of reward for having satisfied ordinary needs, healthfully. The brain has few defenses against this chemical deception, the standard account goes, because drugs were unknown in the natural environment that shaped human evolution.
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