Mark Kingwell

We are all addicted. Whether it’s drugs, alcohol, work, weight-loss programs, shopping, online videos, gossip, gambling, apps, comic books, at-home delivery, or new phones—anything, really, that the heart desires—we can’t seem to calm a relentless inner urge, a longing that will not be satisfied.

The least visible but perhaps most harmful addiction is thinking ourselves right. This particular form of cognitive dependency is something we may style addiction to conviction, what I call doxaholism. The simple definition of the condition is this: harmful craving for and attachment to loud, divisive, and identity-conferring opinion. The “dox” prefix here comes from the Greek word for opinion, “doxa,” and is therefore a different derivation than “doxing,” the public internet shaming or vilification of individuals you dislike.

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