
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Marie Nyswander died in 1986. She’d achieved almost everything she set out to, but she wanted more: even better medications than methadone, fewer regulations, and the holy grail—a cure for addiction. Addiction science has come a long way since Marie’s time, and it turns out, a lot of the field’s earlier assumptions were probably wrong. Neuroscientist Kent Berridge explains why wanting something isn’t the same as liking it. But a cure is still out of our reach
4.8
240240 ratings
Marie Nyswander died in 1986. She’d achieved almost everything she set out to, but she wanted more: even better medications than methadone, fewer regulations, and the holy grail—a cure for addiction. Addiction science has come a long way since Marie’s time, and it turns out, a lot of the field’s earlier assumptions were probably wrong. Neuroscientist Kent Berridge explains why wanting something isn’t the same as liking it. But a cure is still out of our reach
43,887 Listeners
90,587 Listeners
1,243 Listeners
38,175 Listeners
1,272 Listeners
8,246 Listeners
11,921 Listeners
14,524 Listeners
2,175 Listeners
23,603 Listeners
15,962 Listeners
2,170 Listeners
138 Listeners
155 Listeners
85 Listeners