Dalrymple’s answer is simple: So long as the user is human, probably not.
The Skeptical Doctor
Blog categories
Dalrymple’s Essays
- BMJ (Dalrymple)
- BMJ (Daniels)
- City Journal
- Library of Law and Liberty
- National Review (Dalrymple)
- National Review (Daniels)
- New Criterion (Dalrymple)
- New Criterion (Daniels)
- New English Review
- New Statesman
- Pajamas Media
- Salisbury Review
- Second Opinion
- Social Affairs Unit (Dalrymple)
- Social Affairs Unit (Daniels)
- Spectator (Dalrymple)
- Standpoint
- Taki's Magazine
- Telegraph (Dalrymple)
- Telegraph (Daniels)
- The Hilarious Pessimist
Dalrymple’s Books
- Admirable Evasions
- The Pleasure of Thinking
- Farewell Fear
- The Policeman & the Brothel
- Anything Goes
- Mr Clarke's Modest Proposal
- Litter: How Other People's Rubbish Shapes Our Life
- The Examined Life
- Spoilt Rotten
- The New Vichy Syndrome
- Second Opinion
- Profeten en Charlatans
- Not With a Bang But a Whimper (UK version)
- Not With a Bang But a Whimper (US version)
- In Praise of Prejudice
- Romancing Opiates
- Our Culture, What's Left of It
- Life at the Bottom
- An Intelligent Person's Guide to Medicine
- Mass Listeria
- If Symptoms Still Persist
- So Little Done
- If Symptoms Persist
- Monrovia, Mon Amour
- The Wilder Shores of Marx
- Sweet Waist of America
- Filosofa's Republic
- Zanzibar to Timbuktu
- Fool or Physician
- Coups and Cocaine
Recent Comments
- r. on Apologies for the recent hiatus
- Michael Caponiti on Apologies for the recent hiatus
- E. Derksen on Apologies for the recent hiatus
- Gayle Yee on Apologies for the recent hiatus
- Russell Taylor on Apologies for the recent hiatus
- Andrew Nelson on Apologies for the recent hiatus
- Brian on Apologies for the recent hiatus
- Ben Irvine on Apologies for the recent hiatus
- Melinda on Apologies for the recent hiatus
- W.J. Nicolai Hewett on Apologies for the recent hiatus
According to the American Heart Association, nicotine addiction has historically been one of the hardest addictions to break, while the pharmacological and behavioral characteristics that determine tobacco addiction are similar to those determining addiction to heroin and cocaine. The nicotine content of popular American-brand cigarettes has slowly increased over the years, and one study found that there was an average increase of 1.78% per year between the years of 1998 and 2005. “”:’
My own blog site <http://healthdigest101.com/index.php/