<a href="http://www.gamespot.com/news/show_blog_ ... re;6">Long URL that caused the page to scroll and bothered Kupek</a>
I was there on that fateful day, were you?
Oh yeah, but I love how the APA's gonna actually put it into the DSM-IV. I read through some of that during my uni studies, so much of the crap is very similar and actually feels like a symptom more than the disease it's labelled as.Tessian wrote:As Eric so eloquently put it-- gaming addictions are just symptoms of bigger problems... in other words there's no such thing as being addicted to the internet-- you've got something else wrong, like you just have an addiction problem in general that would just as easily happen with gambling, alcohol, etc...
Look where I come from :-)Kupek wrote:I never realized how paranoid you are.
Hmmm...what's the point of presenting evidence on your side? Gee, I dunno. Maybe it would lend credibility to your claims?Zeus wrote:I'd try to prove the point, but what's the sense?
You're a little too close to the subject to say how it is, sorry dude .Zeus wrote:Seriously, though, it's not paranoia or pessimism on my part, it's just the way it is.
No, it would just be labelled as "Zeus, you're paranoid" or "Zeus, stop being so pessimistic". I've tried arguing stuff like this many times before. There really is no point when I know what the response is going to be (I've actually argued this exact point here before). It ends up in the same place, either I change the way I think simply because a lot of others think differently, without actually providing any strong evidence to back their claims, or I shut up 'cause no one is listening anyways and I'll just be labelled as a complainer. I choose the latter.SineSwiper wrote:Hmmm...what's the point of presenting evidence on your side? Gee, I dunno. Maybe it would lend credibility to your claims?Zeus wrote:I'd try to prove the point, but what's the sense?
And they haven't really come out and said "it ain't no addiction". They're doing it the right way, they're sayin' "we're not sure yet, let's study it and revisit it in 2012".Kupek wrote:I think it's clearly different than physical addictions, but I see no reason why it can't be an addiction like food, porn or gambling. As long as an activity triggers the right type of reward response in the brain, it can be an addiction.