Thank you J-Madd. I always enjoy your responds. I do enjoy the way you structure them as well. So, you start with admitting existence of strict psychological sense. GoodJ-Madd wrote:Addition? Not in the strict sense used by psychologists, at least not in my case.
A habit? Literally a habitual tendency? Something like a second nature? Definitely. I'm with Aristotle on this one: a habit that moves you away from what is good for you is a vice, and a habit that moves you toward what is good for you is a virtue. Your training habit could go either way. If it interferes with higher goods (family, faith, profession) or causes you to be reckless with your body, then it's a vice. If your training is something you can manager around your more important commitments and doesn't do your body undue harm while also making your a more capable, satisfied, and interesting human being, then it's a virtue.
Let me return the favor with another famous quote from Nietzsche: “That which does not kill us, makes us stronger.” And what makes this incredible that it can be read backwards. Basically, you need to get stronger in order not to get killed. So, primal fear of death comes knocking as a motto. Isn't it what addiction doing to us? Buys us some time, gives us an illusion? And illusion of immortality is the strongest one