http://www.mcafee.cc/Bin/sb.html
Am I the only one that can strongly identify with many of these? 11/15 to be exact?
Am I the only one that can strongly identify with many of these? 11/15 to be exact?
1. Grandiose Sense of Self - I think it's part of the INTP package![]()
I think I could identify with 14/15 to some degree, and I ain't no sociopath :O
Yes it is.![]()
Sociopathy is too complex to be neatly stuffed into a diagnostic box, and being vague is an attempt to make up for this. Whether deemed beneficial or problematic a sociopath would intentionally skew their responses to diagnostic tests on a circumstantial basis regardless. Though I wouldn't call them emotionless. It's a different kind of emotion, sort of... inactivated, because it's not attached to ethics.It is that these traist are only indicators. A true sociopath has hard time empathising with other people. Then again if you get in to conflict wiht someone your brain will too be less likely feel empathy for your enemy. Sociopaths are emotionless and have many other proplems like integration to society. Labeling them as defective however is going to bring only problems to the society.
Fear of sociopathy is over-rated: http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=wisdom-from-psychopaths
This is why I brought up the chaotic good --- evil spectrum. The medicine only kills if it produces a negative result. This is why I believe sociopathy to be more common than most people think: risk assessment from a sociopath's perspective favors neutrality, which is less detectable. Sheep despise wolves yet cuddle with the shepherd who dines on lamb chops - because he deters the wolves.Their traits, if you will, seems to be like potent medicine. Too much of it will kill you while a good dose can remove you from a rut.
You should probably see a psychologist to determine whether or not you're a sociopath.
That's an interesting read. So that's how they think. Perhaps the criminally sociopathic may just be someone too immersed to tools that could be useful for success.
Their traits, if you will, seems to be like potent medicine. Too much of it will kill you while a good dose can remove you from a rut.
That's the paradox of sociopathy though: real sociopaths see nothing wrong with themselves. They typically only get diagnosed if they get caught doing something criminal and are forced to undergo an evaluation. IMO this list is more indicative of NPD?
They wouldn't do it for pure curiosity's sake?
Why are sociopaths so interested in using people?
Because they don't have to do any work themselves yet reap the benefits. Benefits are typically tangible though the type of manipulation used is highly variable. Ideally these relationships are a win/win.Why are sociopaths so interested in using people?
[*]Just because they can
[*]Because it may be easier than doing work/whatever themselves
[*]Because it's fun?
[*]Because they're bored
[*]Lecherous
[*]//Any number of reasons/just because
Rebelling against the man by using gender neutral language?
HTML:
...Now we just have to ban all of those other languages that use genders for inanimate objects.
I rather just deride the proponents of political correctness.
Hir hir, sir.Rebelling against the man by using gender neutral language?
As far as the OP goes, might as well make it official: Yes.
Sociopathy is too complex to be neatly stuffed into a diagnostic box, and being vague is an attempt to make up for this. Whether deemed beneficial or problematic a sociopath would intentionally skew their responses to diagnostic tests on a circumstantial basis regardless. Though I wouldn't call them emotionless. It's a different kind of emotion, sort of... inactivated, because it's not attached to ethics.
An interesting difference that may warrant further investigation: the focus on chaotic evil characteristics as a means to identify/diagnose what is a chaotic net neutral condition with extreme variance that encompasses the entire good/evil gradient.
Hir hir, sir.
That would be great if that's what I was trying to do.Well that was wrong way of explaining what sociopath is. I could have done better.
The best identification tool is to look at how someone accomplishes their goals and who benefits. The "how" will always be efficient, and often counterintuitive, while the sociopath will always be the "who" that benefits.The real issue is infact what you say. The use of emotions and the way they integrate is different. Most likely the best way to identifiy a sociopath is the main factor and that is how much they work. Then again many sociopaths may be hardworking people and no one would ever see them as sociopaths. It would be interesting to see research where they could tell normal people and sociopaths apart and see how many of the sociopaths are really developing and using the negative traits. I tend to believe that until then sociopath can actually be only analyzed from a point of view we choose and that is by default a criminal point of view. It is perhaps practical, but I suspect that many sociopaths are nothingl like we imagine them to be.
Hir hir tir ir nir hir rir, sir.A bit of a slip up with you gender neutrality don't ya think?
Don't you have to be charming and have a lot of people skills to be a sociopath? Don't they have to, you know, like you and let you control them so that you can use them?
I'm too antisocial and apathetic for that.... I play AD&D and I was the worst assassin ever, I stood out so much and I was so awkward, a total "I'm a killer" giveaway.
This is when I remind you that antisocial PD has extremely high co-morbidity with sociopathy (so much so that many believe they are the "same thing," although they are not).
yes I'm sure that's not what you meant but hey, I just mean, that there is probably not much of a correlation between your video game skills and your PCL-R.
You do not need to be charming or have people skills to be a sociopath any more than you need to be a sociopath to be charming and have people skills, ya dig?
Unscrupulous/psychopathic/sociopathic types can be eerily charming in a very disconcerting way. I don't think any "type" is more prone/susceptible than any other, not in the least INTP.
I think a very large majority of the world's psychopaths are probably very aware of their condition and bear it with the appropriate degree of seriousness (*snicker)
Calling it a disorder makes it easier to help the people who fulfill the criteria for it. Your line of reasoning is applicable to any mental disorder, except for that last sentence about breaking the law, which; however, makes no sense. Breaking the law is not antisocial, although it can be.
Anti social disorder is an umbrella term that is a shorthand for saying" We do not have a fucking clue what is wrong with this child". It is simply stating the obvious.
Hey man I ain't saying anything against that, nicely put. I don't think it means that the diagnosis is pointless, its heuristic yes, but what are the options? Psychology is still in the cradle and can only do so much.
The "social mores and norms" clause of the ASPD diagnosis therefore leads to a glaring contradiction when the individual moves between cultures whose mores and norms contradict.
Use question marks!!!!
Just want to chime in once more that mental/personality disorders are specifically defined as being pervasive and maladaptive.
Antisocial PD is an umbrella term for folks who constantly act out in anti-social ways (callously violating norms and mores), not necessarily just laws, (that reasoning is garbage).
It doesn't have the specific requirement of shallow affect; psychopathy is ASPD that has been taken to a higher level.
I guess ............. you mean conduct disorder.
The "social mores and norms" clause of the ASPD diagnosis therefore leads to a glaring contradiction when the individual moves between cultures whose mores and norms contradict.
This is a nice thought.
I guess, rather than defining their behavioural tendency as the negation of social mores and norms, it would be more precise to define it as the conspicuous absence of the internalisation of these pressures, regardless of social context.