Psychopaths
Psychopaths
http://medicalxpress.com/news/2011-11-p ... ction.html
Can these studies be applied to management and executives? If we find that a significant number of Americans are psychopaths, can they democratically vote to approve of psychopathy?
Can these studies be applied to management and executives? If we find that a significant number of Americans are psychopaths, can they democratically vote to approve of psychopathy?
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Re: Psychopaths
If psychopathy is a neurological condition, is there are direct opposite I wonder? People so crippled with empathy and sympathy that they cannot function "normally"?
Is there a baseline "normal" psychology?
Is there a baseline "normal" psychology?
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Re: Psychopaths
From a social standpoint, are we justified in testing everyone for this and insisting on treatment for those who are shown to have it before they hurt someone? Note that this is a different question than it was ten years ago; we can actually hope to do something about it with cognitive therapy.
On another line of speculation, maybe all they need is for the vmPFC-to-amygdala connection to be exercised for a while and they'll start feeling things about people and stop being psychopaths.
On another line of speculation, maybe all they need is for the vmPFC-to-amygdala connection to be exercised for a while and they'll start feeling things about people and stop being psychopaths.
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Re: Psychopaths
Would you mind terribly if I didn't feel things about people?Schneibster wrote:From a social standpoint, are we justified in testing everyone for this and insisting on treatment for those who are shown to have it before they hurt someone? Note that this is a different question than it was ten years ago; we can actually hope to do something about it with cognitive therapy.
On another line of speculation, maybe all they need is for the vmPFC-to-amygdala connection to be exercised for a while and they'll start feeling things about people and stop being psychopaths.
I don't think it's right to require people to be feeling beings. I think it's enough that they live and let live. (aside from juicy hamburgers, that is)
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Re: Psychopaths
The United States is not a democracy, it's a representative republic. And we send all the crazy people to Washington now. Right Ian?Cunt wrote:http://medicalxpress.com/news/2011-11-p ... ction.html
Can these studies be applied to management and executives? If we find that a significant number of Americans are psychopaths, can they democratically vote to approve of psychopathy?
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Re: Psychopaths
The amygdala is the part of the brain that associates emotional content with things. Thoughts, incoming sensory impressions, all get combined with their emotional context at the amygdala. What's happening to these psychopaths is that the vmPFC, which is responsible for creating feelings about people specifically, that is, the emotions that make us social, doesn't transmit that context to the amygdala; people therefore are viewed by the sufferer as objects without any emotional context that would prevent harming or killing them, or engender remorse if the sufferer did harm.Cunt wrote:Would you mind terribly if I didn't feel things about people?Schneibster wrote:From a social standpoint, are we justified in testing everyone for this and insisting on treatment for those who are shown to have it before they hurt someone? Note that this is a different question than it was ten years ago; we can actually hope to do something about it with cognitive therapy.
On another line of speculation, maybe all they need is for the vmPFC-to-amygdala connection to be exercised for a while and they'll start feeling things about people and stop being psychopaths.
I don't mind, but you'd literally be insane if you didn't. By one of the definitions of insane: not having an appropriate emotional response to a situation.
It's not a requirement by law, it's a requirement by the definition of sanity.Cunt wrote:I don't think it's right to require people to be feeling beings. I think it's enough that they live and let live. (aside from juicy hamburgers, that is)
People who don't have feelings about other people are not normal. We have tens of millions of years of social behavior behind us, and those feelings are what made it work. Without them, we are destructive to those around us. It has nothing to do with morality; it's like running a steam engine without a governor. It's not illegal, but the steam engine will explode without it.
Think about it in that context instead of in the context of freedom of action.
Everyone is entitled to his own opinion, but not his own facts. -Daniel Patrick Moynihan
The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants. -Thomas Jefferson

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Re: Psychopaths
Possibly all true, but none of that says that they would surely harm or kill. Remorse doesn't help victims who are dead anyway, so is wasted.Schneibster wrote:The amygdala is the part of the brain that associates emotional content with things. Thoughts, incoming sensory impressions, all get combined with their emotional context at the amygdala. What's happening to these psychopaths is that the vmPFC, which is responsible for creating feelings about people specifically, that is, the emotions that make us social, doesn't transmit that context to the amygdala; people therefore are viewed by the sufferer as objects without any emotional context that would prevent harming or killing them, or engender remorse if the sufferer did harm.Cunt wrote: Would you mind terribly if I didn't feel things about people?
I have noticed that many on this forum don't have 'appropriate' emotional responses.Schneibster wrote:I don't mind, but you'd literally be insane if you didn't. By one of the definitions of insane: not having an appropriate emotional response to a situation.
I think they are okay anyway.
'Sanity' is no law that I know of. In addition, homosexuals have been called insane, so 'sanity' isn't a measure I have a firm respect for.Schneibster wrote:It's not a requirement by law, it's a requirement by the definition of sanity.Cunt wrote:I don't think it's right to require people to be feeling beings. I think it's enough that they live and let live. (aside from juicy hamburgers, that is)
You are certainly NOT normal.Schneibster wrote: People who don't have feelings about other people are not normal.
Spoken like a true feeling-whore.Schneibster wrote: We have tens of millions of years of social behavior behind us, and those feelings are what made it work.
Tens of millions of years of having non-feeling beings among us. Do they get a say? Or just you with your emotional responses?
I don't care what feelings you say are in your heart. I do care about actions. See the difference between our points of views? Mine lets you be who you are, yours forces others to join you in your emotional crap.
What is this 'we' shit? Maybe YOU are, but don't speak for me, okay?Schneibster wrote:Without them, we are destructive to those around us.
Wow! It sounds pretty scary when you put it that way. Good thing I don't fall for bullshit.Schneibster wrote: It has nothing to do with morality; it's like running a steam engine without a governor. It's not illegal, but the steam engine will explode without it.
I HAVE been thinking. About freedom of thought. Think about that a bit while you contemplate changing everyones brains to match your ideal.Schneibster wrote:
Think about it in that context instead of in the context of freedom of action.
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Re: Psychopaths
This sounds like the BS about motorcycle helmets and seatbelts.Cunt wrote:Possibly all true, but none of that says that they would surely harm or kill. Remorse doesn't help victims who are dead anyway, so is wasted.Schneibster wrote:The amygdala is the part of the brain that associates emotional content with things. Thoughts, incoming sensory impressions, all get combined with their emotional context at the amygdala. What's happening to these psychopaths is that the vmPFC, which is responsible for creating feelings about people specifically, that is, the emotions that make us social, doesn't transmit that context to the amygdala; people therefore are viewed by the sufferer as objects without any emotional context that would prevent harming or killing them, or engender remorse if the sufferer did harm.Cunt wrote: Would you mind terribly if I didn't feel things about people?
Not only are we preventing harm to others, we are preventing these unfortunate people from being locked up. With criminals. Without treatment. In hell. They and their victims both cry out for our intervention.
These people are insane. You're suggesting we let them wander around untreated until they maim or kill someone instead of treating them. I disagree. Strongly.
You aren't talking about what I'm talking about and need to think about this a great deal more before you say something that will piss me off seriously.Cunt wrote:I have noticed that many on this forum don't have 'appropriate' emotional responses.Schneibster wrote:I don't mind, but you'd literally be insane if you didn't. By one of the definitions of insane: not having an appropriate emotional response to a situation.
I think they are okay anyway.
This isn't a fuzzy standard. It's like claiming there's nothing wrong with someone who has a hole in their head and they ought be left alone. That's as insane as they are.
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Re: Psychopaths
Let me put it this way: these people WILL end up in prison, and WILL hurt someone very very badly first. Shall we treat them and prevent it, or not?
Everyone is entitled to his own opinion, but not his own facts. -Daniel Patrick Moynihan
The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants. -Thomas Jefferson

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Re: Psychopaths
I just googled pathological empathy:Audley Strange wrote:If psychopathy is a neurological condition, is there are direct opposite I wonder? People so crippled with empathy and sympathy that they cannot function "normally"?
Is there a baseline "normal" psychology?
http://www.oup.com/us/catalog/general/s ... 0199738571
http://ps.psychiatryonline.org/article. ... urnalID=18
http://saferelationshipsmagazine.com/ge ... er-empathy
I only skimmed these links. But I think I might have it.

I don't know what's totally normal. Pathological Normalcy?
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Re: Psychopaths
I don't understand. What would that approval mean? Psychopaths already live, what's the word? assimilated lives. Many are quite successful. And being a psychopath is different from being a serial killer.Cunt wrote:http://medicalxpress.com/news/2011-11-p ... ction.html
Can these studies be applied to management and executives? If we find that a significant number of Americans are psychopaths, can they democratically vote to approve of psychopathy?
The green careening planet
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spins blindly in the dark
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Re: Psychopaths
The first link, to Oxford University Press, is advertisement with thorough information about a book; some interesting information can be drawn from it and it looks topical for Audley's questions.
The Psychiatry Online linked looked like it was concerned with empathy deficit, which is sociopathy/psychopathy, and like it was a description of a book on it. I don't think its helpful for Audley's questions.
The last link yields this:
That link looked pretty good and pretty pertinent to Audley's questions and the most informative of the three since it's an entire article.
The Psychiatry Online linked looked like it was concerned with empathy deficit, which is sociopathy/psychopathy, and like it was a description of a book on it. I don't think its helpful for Audley's questions.
The last link yields this:
Looks like in women this produces an excess of trust that is commonly used by sociopaths to get women to do things for them.In fact, these genes influence the production of various brain chemicals which can influence just ‘how much’ empathy you have. These brain chemicals include those that influence orgasm and it’s effect on how bonded you feel while also influencing some aspects of mental health (no, no! That’s NOT a good mix!). Other brain chemicals influence how much innate and learned fear you have. However, females don’t seem to assess threats well and in females, these chemicals increase her social interactions at the same time she is not assessing fear and threats well (This is not a good thing!!). One of the final chemicals effects delaying reflexes (like getting out of the relationship) and impacts short and long term memory (remember when I talked about how you store good and bad memory–here’s the culprit!).
And since it is genetic, these kinds of genes can run in entire families that produce ‘gullible’ and ‘trusting’ individuals who seem to just keep getting hurt.
That link looked pretty good and pretty pertinent to Audley's questions and the most informative of the three since it's an entire article.
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Re: Psychopaths
I would disagree. Sociopaths generally assimilate well. Psychopaths don't; they have the problem much more seriously, and usually other problems to go along with it.hadespussercats wrote:I don't understand. What would that approval mean? Psychopaths already live, what's the word? assimilated lives. Many are quite successful. And being a psychopath is different from being a serial killer.Cunt wrote:http://medicalxpress.com/news/2011-11-p ... ction.html
Can these studies be applied to management and executives? If we find that a significant number of Americans are psychopaths, can they democratically vote to approve of psychopathy?
Everyone is entitled to his own opinion, but not his own facts. -Daniel Patrick Moynihan
The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants. -Thomas Jefferson

The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants. -Thomas Jefferson

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Re: Psychopaths
Yeah, I noted that the book looked like a good read, but I only actually read-read that last one, since it's all pop-psychology relationship stuff.
But I've been a little too eager to help or to trust for most of my life. It's gotten me in trouble.
But I've been a little too eager to help or to trust for most of my life. It's gotten me in trouble.
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Re: Psychopaths
The Psychopath Test posited that psychopath and sociopath are the same thing.Schneibster wrote:I would disagree. Sociopaths generally assimilate well. Psychopaths don't; they have the problem much more seriously, and usually other problems to go along with it.hadespussercats wrote:I don't understand. What would that approval mean? Psychopaths already live, what's the word? assimilated lives. Many are quite successful. And being a psychopath is different from being a serial killer.Cunt wrote:http://medicalxpress.com/news/2011-11-p ... ction.html
Can these studies be applied to management and executives? If we find that a significant number of Americans are psychopaths, can they democratically vote to approve of psychopathy?
The green careening planet
spins blindly in the dark
so close to annihilation.
Listen. No one listens. Meow.
spins blindly in the dark
so close to annihilation.
Listen. No one listens. Meow.
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