RT Article T1 Klesas and Pretas: Therapy and Liberation in Buddhist Recovery from Addiction JF Implicit religion VO 22 IS 2 SP 215 OP 242 A1 Dossett, Wendy LA English YR 2019 UL https://ixtheo.de/Record/1696162726 AB This article offers an analysis of Buddhist approaches to addiction recovery in the terms of some of the key debates in addiction/recovery studies. Buddhist recovery teachings are analysed for the extent to which they embody models of addiction which construe the problem as a disease, as a moral problem, as a problem of powerlessness, as a problem of control, as a choice, as a social or a personal problem, and as continuous (or not) with putative sa?sāric experience. They are also analysed for the extent to which recovery is modelled as a change of identity or of practices, and how far ‘recovery ideals' align with Buddhist soteriology. The article exposes philosophical and epistemological diversity across Buddhist recovery pathways, and argues that the therapeutization of Buddhism (Metcalf 2002) is inadequate as a categorical frame K1 Buddhism K1 Addiction K1 Recovery K1 Soteriology K1 therapeutization DO 10.1558/imre.40694