Abstract

ABSTRACT This paper identifies and examines interpretations of the ontological categories of “food” and “drugs” in allopathic medicine, psychology, and psychiatry. I unearth some implicit interpretive modes in these fields to draw attention to emerging patterns of interpretation. I advance two central claims: First, while practitioners in these fields often interpret food and drugs as existing in a dichotomous relationship with one another, there are demonstrable shifts toward interpretations of food and drugs (in both the “medicinal” and “illicit/detrimental” senses of the term) as categories that overlap with one another. Second, practitioners in these fields ought to recognize these interpretations as interpretations, which both shape and are shaped by our collective experiences, in order to develop a greater understanding and more earnest evaluations of different ontological conceptions of the food-drug relationship.

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