For decades, science believed it had addiction figured out. A rat in a cage. A bottle of drugged water. A compulsion that built until the animal could think of nothing else. The conclusion was clean, confident, and backed by mountains of data. Certain drugs were simply too powerful for the brain to resist. Exposure was the mechanism. The chemical was the enemy. There was just one problem. Nobody had thought to ask what the cage was doing to the rat. Rat Park: Escaping the Cage follows one of the most extraordinary and least discussed stories in the history of modern science. From a revolutionary experiment in a Canadian laboratory, to the jungles of Vietnam where heroin-addicted soldiers walked away from their addiction almost overnight, to the streets of Lisbon where a country tried something the rest of the world called reckless and watched its overdose deaths fall by ninety three percent, this book builds a case that is as uncomfortable as it is impossible to dismiss. Addiction was never really about the drug. It was always about the life surrounding it. Drawing on decades of research, documented history, and the kind of evidence that powerful institutions have preferred to ignore, Heinrich Wilson examines the cages that human beings build for each other and for themselves. The poverty and trauma that precede the first use. The loneliness that makes chemical relief feel not like a choice but like a necessity. The social media feeds designed by behavioral psychologists to replicate the mechanism of a slot machine. The health information locked behind language nobody can read. The war on drugs that spent fifty years fighting the wrong enemy. This is not a book about addiction. It is a book about the conditions that make addiction inevitable, and the conditions that make it unnecessary. The cage was the problem. The park is needed more.
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