Sociopathy, many experts agree, is a deficits disorder.
The sociopath, in this view, is missing something—things like empathy, remorse, and basic respect for the boundaries of others.
When you think of a deficit—something missing—you don’t necessarily think dire consequences.
You may think, instead, things like less”¦incomplete”¦limited.
For instance, the idea of intellectual deficit might spark the association, mental retardation.
Instead of invoking fear, this tends to elicit our understanding, even empathy. The mentally retarded individual is missing something that most of us have—a normal intellectual capacity. You think, this is unfortunate, for that person.
When you think of kids with attentional deficits, you’re likely to bring some extra patience toward the challenges their condition presents. Your accomodation is based on recognizing their behaviors as originating in a deficit.
When dealing with the Asperger’s Syndrome population, you understand their social inaptitude as arising from a neurologic difference. And so in responding to the Asperger individual’s peculiarities, you allow that he or she, on a social level, is operating with less than a full deck.
In general, when speaking of disorders of deficits, we tend, or at least try, not to take the consequences arising from the disorder personally. We recognize the deficit as something the person doesn’t ask for and, at best, struggles to control.
This isn’t to deny, or minimize, the impact of the individual’s difficult behaviors. But in locating that impact in a deficit, we can potentially experience it as less personally injurious.
Sociopathy, however, presents an interesting challenge in this regard. Research increasingly implicates brain differences in sociopaths. Sociopaths, we are learning, fail to experience and process certain emotions like nonsociopaths. Their capacity to learn from aversive consequences appears to be compromised. And they show evidence of certain enduring forms of attentional pathology, involving defective inhibitory and impulse control.
The sociopath, in a word, appears to be a psychologically handicapped individual.
Yet it’s hard to empathize with the sociopath, who himself lacks empathy. And how not to personalize his actions—actions that can cause so much personal pain? And how not to personalize that pain, even if it results from the sociopath’s deficits?
It brings to mind the concept of processing a vicious dog attack. The dog is vicious. It attacks you. It knows it is attacking you. We can even imagine that it knows, on a primitive level, that it is wounding you. The dog needs to be leashed, kept away from others. Improperly secured, it sees you walking down the street, primitively registering your vulnerability. And then it attacks, remorselessly.
While it’s true that we can ascribe to sociopaths (and not dogs) a capacity to evaluate their prey and plot their means of attack, we run the risk, I think, of giving the sociopath too much credit.
After all, if the sociopath’s deficits destine him to interpersonal exploitation, does his exploitation become personal simply by virtue of his capacity to plot it?
Sure, the vicious dog, unlike the sociopath, may lack calculation and plotting skills. But for all intents and purposes, unless locked-up, both will inevitably attack and/or violate. The vicious dog, if it doesn’t attack you, will attack someone else. And if you are lucky enough to escape the sociopath’s transgressions, someone else won’t be.
From this perspective, the sociopath’s deficits will take forms of interpersonal exploitation just as surely as the child with ADHD can be expected to obnoxiously disrupt others, heedless of their boundaries.
From this angle, it’s possible to construe the sociopath’s aggression as tantamount to a hurricane’s damaging your house. The wreckage may be great, and traumatic; but it is the wreckage, ultimately, of an irrepressibly violent, impersonal force.
Arguably, this defines the sociopath: an irrepressibly [interpersonally] violent, impersonal force.
We hope, through our awareness, prudence, and luck, never to suffer its destructiveness. But if less lucky, we can remind ourselves that the sociopath, in the final analysis, is about as pointless, worthless, and arbitrary as a natural disaster.
(My use of “he” in this article was for consistency’s sake, not to suggest that men have a patent on sociopathy. This article is copyrighted (c) 2008 by Steve Becker, LCSW.)
Dear Elizabeth Conley: One, we can never compete. There is no such animal … only that it exists down on earth. God made us all perfect. Each of us are perfect. It’s man that judges what that perfection is by the so-called competition beast that roars it’s ugly head in our competitive society.
I try not to get pulled in to all the competition that is shoved down our throats in life. Not that I couldn’t be competitive, but I stepped back and saw the bigger picture of what the reason to compete really was. I’m naturally gifted in any sports … so I just played sports for the fun of it. Not that it meant anything to me to win or loose.
Same thing at work … the bosses were always putting the carrots in front of employees to kill each other over winning the prize. It was ridiculous, it made people into animals instead of being creative. They lie, cheat, steal to win at any cost… then they could NOT produce when they got a promotion, so they kept the competitive title and bonus of more money and just shoved the responsibility of getting the work done back on me … who would rather be creative and productive and not be competitive IDIOT.
And you want to know how anti-social personalities are made … look at our society in general with all this competitive bullshit of having to win and who cares about ethics, morals, righteous qualities and the rest that comes along … just winning and getting what you want is the name of the game and the winners have more money, more toys, more titles …more wanting the superficialities in life to make them a competent person in life and forget about qualities of what really matters life.
So Elizabeth … just goes to prove, there are many more sides to looking at anything… compromise … a little of this and a little of this.
Peace.
I’m going to a different topic to post. Do you remember what communism did to people? People risked their lives to escape. Sound familiar? We’re the psychopath nation?
” just goes to prove, there are many more sides to looking at anything” compromise ” a little of this and a little of this.”
… and so we can move forward in accord, appreciating everyone’s point of view and respecting the rights of all.
God Bless You Wini. It’s always a pleasure to exchange ideas with you.
Steve Becker,
Excellent article. Thanks. I completely agree that sociopaths lack empathy, remorse, and respect for the rights of others. Maybe in some way they do have empathy, the argument that they must in order to know that they are hurting others and enjoy inflicting that pain is interesting. Personally I don’t know how much of that is emotional empathy. Or intellectual understanding upon which they gain the pleasure in the taking, the using, the manipulation, the power.
They may have some good qualities. I suppose even Ted Bundy did. However imo they are evil, absolute predators in our society, often so skilled at deception that people are unable to identify them in time to prevent the most heinous damage. I wouldn’t want one in a company I worked for. And I have worked with them before. Perhaps they do have some management skills, but in my experience, never without a knife hidden up their sleeve.
No thanks.
Wini-
It’s so true we are not called to win at all, and in reality what is “winning” a pressed board plaque, a new counter top, a better car… and those I see as WINNERS….they forfeited what’s important long ago for the ephermal.
tryingtorecover,
I remember all too well. All of our nations are flawed. Studying the genocides within the old Soviet regime and Red China made my blood run cold. What we did to the American Indians was also evil. What’s going on is the “Democratic People’s Republic” of Korea is foul too.
The very name of the DPRK shows how far a Sociopathic regime will take its disinformation (lying).
It’s not me Elizabeth, I try to live my life the way the Bible tells me. God is the one you should thank.
Peace.
Elizabeth Conley: That’s because people don’t realize that God has already given us everything we need (each and every one of us)… so some people get frighten, imagine that others are the enemies that they have to eliminate due to lack of abundance of anything in the world. There is no lack of abundance of anything. It’s all perception again. If you think negatively that there is a lack of abundance, then your actions will follow through with that mindset. Same goes with the positive mindset knowing their is enough of abundance for everyone.
Oh heck, I just wished everyone would read their Bible and stop listening to their own insecure, stupidity, selfishness and greed.
Peace.
Oh, and Elizabeth Conley: Competition is just a fancy word to hide behind the greedy intentions of why someone/anyone insists that you must compete.
Teachers start the competition early in a person’s life … go compete with your classmates so as to give your teacher a break in having to instruct you personally, on a one on one level.
High school is the same, you have to learn this so you can compete in the world.
College is the worst … forget what you’re learning, compete and cheat to get those grades that you so richly paid for.
Work … competition at it’s highest grade of showing management how they can yank your greedy strings.
And you wonder why our country is going belly up all at once. Big difference in learning to perfect how to be a greedy prick out in the world … but show me common sense, someone who can step back and see the bigger picture than the greedy myopic picture, show me who is humble and can create?
Peace.
Dear Wini,
I understand that we have a system within the management of most corporations, schools and other organizations that seems competitive in an adversarial way. It seems like the best way to get ahead is to be cut-throat. There seems to be a system of winners and losers, where the vast majority of people must be losers. This is unhealthy, in that it undermines cooperation. Usually people within an organization are happier and more productive when the cooperate. Cooperation is a very good thing.
Independence and choosing to do things to the best of one’s ability is good too. If you have a good invention or a great idea, it’s only natural to want to see your idea come to fruition. Making your dreams real is a creative process.
Wouldn’t it be awful if you couldn’t express your creativity for fear of being seen as competitive? Wouldn’t it be awful if “competitive” became the “new evil”? What if excelling at anything was seen as bad? What if “the nail that sticks up gets hammered flat” applied to anyone who had a good idea they wanted to try?
This is what I mean when I say that it is dangerous to villainize competition. Rather than consider competition innately bad, we should recognize those situations where cooperation is good.
How do we foster cooperation between employees? (Some corporations use 360 degree evaluations to achieve this. It seems to work well.) Is cooperation a good thing between students? Some educators think so. They call it cooperative learning, and in most cases all students benefit. Personally, I think competitive grading systems are unwise. It is better to establish the bar between pass and fail, and leave it at that. This does not mean that mapping student performance on the normal curve is not an effective way of discerning whether your teaching and standards have been effective or not. Students do not have to no their relative standing. That statistic can be used privately by the teacher in order to adjust instruction and evaluation methods.
If we punish people for striving, or for accidentally doing better than average, that’s a very cruel form of tyranny. I cannot see how that could benefit a culture. Let’s instead reward cooperation where it is appropriate and accept apparent competition where it is inevitable. Yes, some ideas will work better than others, some businesses will succeed while others will fail, and some students will do better than the rest. Ironically, some businesses will succeed because their employees are more cooperative with one another, or their partnerships with other businesses are more effective. Some ideas will be better than others because they are collaborative efforts, and some of the students will excel because they have benefited from the cooperative learning model. Would we punish cooperation by calling it a form of unfair competition against less cooperative entities?
No, I’m not a lawyer, nor do I play one on TV. All libertarians are this annoying!