Pornography, the US Senate was told on 18 October, is a drug more dangerous than crack cocaine. That, at least, was the opinion of some witnesses invited to testify on 鈥渢he science behind pornography addiction鈥. It鈥檚 not a view shared by everyone.
Mary Anne Layden, co-director of the sexual trauma and psychopathology programme at the University of Pennsylvania, said unpublished research showed that 鈥渆ven non-sex-addicts will show brain reactions on PET scans while viewing pornography similar to cocaine addicts looking at images of people taking cocaine鈥. Jeffrey Satinover, a doctor whose website outlines therapies for homosexuals, described porn as a designer drug, delivered efficiently over the internet, which 鈥渄oes what heroin can鈥檛 do鈥. A third expert witness said there was an urgent need for research on addiction to 鈥渆roto-toxins鈥.
Porn, like sex, can trigger the release of natural opioids, which have a feel-good effect. But Joe Herbert, a neuroscientist at the University of Cambridge and former president of the International Academy of Sex Research, takes issue with the use of the label 鈥渆roto-toxins鈥 and the implication that these chemicals are somehow harmful. 鈥淲hat evidence is there for that?鈥 he asks. 鈥淭his is saying sex is naughty and you shouldn鈥檛 do it.鈥 The brain lights up in response to the sight of any reward. To conclude that this means porn can be compared to hard drugs is 鈥渃omplete rubbish鈥, he says.
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