BBC Radio 4's voice of astringent good sense has an article in today's Times on the subject:
it is reported that prescriptions of the drug Methylphenidate - commonly sold as Ritalin - have risen sharply in a decade. Last year in England there were 359,000, the vast majority to children under 16. This is a mind-altering drug, described by its most bitter opponents as "prescription crack"; in the United States 6 per cent of all children take it. Here it is less than 1 per cent, but rising fast: for this is the cure-all for the fairly newly defined condition of "ADHD" - attention deficit hyperactivity disorder.She is as concerned with this as I am, and takes a similar line to the one I took in an article in OpenMind a couple of years ago.
The only thing I would question is the implication behind her:
sometimes I wonder whether future generations may not look back at our habits and shudder in their turn.I hope they will do just that. But if they don't, our habits are still wrong.
Beware of what Popper calls "moral futurism" - the belief that what comes later must necessarily be better. Whether it stems from a belief in Liberal Progress, in Divine Providence or in Marxist metaphysics, it is mistaken.
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