
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
We often think of love and addiction as opposite forces. Love is life-giving. Addiction is life-limiting. Love expands your world. Addiction shrinks it. But what if I told you that biologically speaking, love and addiction are more similar than you may think. And that chatting with AI bots can actually activate part of our brain that triggers a “love” response, which mimics our brain activity when we’re experiencing addiction.
We unpack all of this in this episode of The Intersect, where I am joined by Maia Szalavitz, one of the leading voices on addiction in America. Together we dive into what’s going on in our brains when we experience love, and how like drugs, shopping and other vices, we can actually become addicted to it. Maia has written extensively on addiction. She has survived a heroin addiction herself, and unpacks how AI chatbots are designed to pull us in and keep us hooked. She reveals that addiction isn’t about a specific substance, but rather is about how addiction is defined by continued behavior despite negative consequences. That’s why obsessively relying on chatbots may be more dangerous than we think.
Topics Covered:
About Maia Szalavitz:
Maia Szalavitz is a contributing opinion writer for the New York Times and the author, most recently, of Undoing Drugs: How Harm Reduction Is Changing the Future of Drugs and Addiction. An author and journalist working at the intersection of brain, culture and behavior, Szalavitz has written for Time Magazine, the Washington Post, Elle, New Scientist, Scientific American Mind and many others. She's author/co-author of five books on subjects as wide ranging as empathy, polygamy, trauma and addictions.
Follow Maia Szalavitz on X and LinkedIn
Check out Maia’s recent piece in the NYT’s: Love Is a Drug. A.I. Chatbots Are Exploiting That.
Follow The Intersect:
Theintersectshow.com
TikTok
YouTube
Newsletter
See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
4.2
3333 ratings
We often think of love and addiction as opposite forces. Love is life-giving. Addiction is life-limiting. Love expands your world. Addiction shrinks it. But what if I told you that biologically speaking, love and addiction are more similar than you may think. And that chatting with AI bots can actually activate part of our brain that triggers a “love” response, which mimics our brain activity when we’re experiencing addiction.
We unpack all of this in this episode of The Intersect, where I am joined by Maia Szalavitz, one of the leading voices on addiction in America. Together we dive into what’s going on in our brains when we experience love, and how like drugs, shopping and other vices, we can actually become addicted to it. Maia has written extensively on addiction. She has survived a heroin addiction herself, and unpacks how AI chatbots are designed to pull us in and keep us hooked. She reveals that addiction isn’t about a specific substance, but rather is about how addiction is defined by continued behavior despite negative consequences. That’s why obsessively relying on chatbots may be more dangerous than we think.
Topics Covered:
About Maia Szalavitz:
Maia Szalavitz is a contributing opinion writer for the New York Times and the author, most recently, of Undoing Drugs: How Harm Reduction Is Changing the Future of Drugs and Addiction. An author and journalist working at the intersection of brain, culture and behavior, Szalavitz has written for Time Magazine, the Washington Post, Elle, New Scientist, Scientific American Mind and many others. She's author/co-author of five books on subjects as wide ranging as empathy, polygamy, trauma and addictions.
Follow Maia Szalavitz on X and LinkedIn
Check out Maia’s recent piece in the NYT’s: Love Is a Drug. A.I. Chatbots Are Exploiting That.
Follow The Intersect:
Theintersectshow.com
TikTok
YouTube
Newsletter
See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
32,071 Listeners
110,865 Listeners
9,618 Listeners
2,624 Listeners
34,118 Listeners
16,109 Listeners
13,850 Listeners
2,017 Listeners
31,722 Listeners
3,152 Listeners
1,050 Listeners
123 Listeners
1,421 Listeners
1,204 Listeners
125 Listeners
837 Listeners
42 Listeners
1,448 Listeners
836 Listeners
259 Listeners
3,481 Listeners
237 Listeners
305 Listeners
41 Listeners
154 Listeners
59 Listeners
85 Listeners
469 Listeners
24 Listeners
35 Listeners
62 Listeners
52 Listeners
38 Listeners
131 Listeners