Date of Thesis

Fall 2025

Description

This paper proposes a phenomenological investigation of addiction, with the goal of describing how it is experienced from within, as an embodied and existential phenomenon. I begin by establishing a conceptual framework—drawn from the works of existential phenomenologists Heidegger, Sartre, and Merleau-Ponty—outlining the key structures of everyday experience such as being-in-the-world, freedom, embodiment, bad faith, and sedimentation. I then turn to a description of the lived experience of addiction by drawing on various first-person addiction memoirs, showing how the aforementioned existential structures are experienced in active addiction and how pathways to sobriety reflect and are experienced as targeting these structures. I argue that addiction is experienced as a deeply sedimented process, one that is both shaped by and reinforced by the existential conditions that structure everyday life.

Keywords

Phenomenology, Existentialism, Addiction, Sobriety

Access Type

Honors Thesis

Degree Type

Bachelor of Arts

Major

Philosophy

First Advisor

Katherine Ward

Second Advisor

Jason Leddington

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