I was recently reading a 2003 paper in the journal Nature called Forensic psychology: Violence viewed by psychopathic murderers which is both interesting and frustrating. Interesting because it demonstrates that, even amongst murderers, psychopathic murderers are different. Frustrating because the authors extrapolate their finding in a way that is ultimately misleading being so narrow as to completely miss the point.
I pick this particular study only because it is rather typical of scientific studies in the field: 1. it neglects to consider what the psychopath gets out of behaving the way he does, and 2. it let’s the psychopath off the hook.
The study
13 psychopathic murderers, 17 non-psychopathic murderers, 39 psychopathic other offenders and 52 non-psychopathic other offenders were given the Implicit Association Test (IAT) .
Briefly, uppercase words (for example, ‘UGLY’) are classified as being ‘pleasant’ or ‘unpleasant’, and lowercase words (for example, ‘kill’) are classified as ‘violent’ or ‘peaceful’, by pressing corresponding buttons. When the same response key is assigned for both the unpleasant and violent words (this is termed the congruent condition), most people find the task easy. But when pleasant and violent words share the same response key (the incongruent condition), most people find this confusing. The association between ‘pleasant—unpleasant’ and ‘violent—peaceful’ is indexed by means of the IAT effect (reaction time for the incongruent condition minus reaction time for the congruent condition).
Result
The psychopathic murderers showed a much lower IAT effect than the non-psychopathic murderers or the other psychopaths in the study.
The researchers’ conclusion
They conclude that there are two groups of psychopaths, one of which has an increased disposition towards extreme violence. So far so good. They also claim the following:
Our results indicate that the reduced violent-IAT effect seen in psychopathic murderers is likely to be due to their abnormal beliefs about violence, rather than to some other nonspecific effect such as poor impulse control and/or deficits in decision-making. Psychopathic murderers have diminished negative reactions to violence compared with non-psychopathic murderers and other offenders.
The fallacy
The great sociologist C. Wright Mills once said: “Every cobbler thinks leather is the only thing,” by which he meant ‘read what I write critically; I’m a sociologist and so I tend to have a sociological explanation for everything.’ Well, our researchers have done something similar. Because their test has found abnormal cognitive associations regarding violence among psychopathic murderers, they take it that this accounts for the psychopathic murderers’ predisposition to extreme violence. The authors’ speak of psychopaths having “deficient social beliefs” and “negative beliefs”, and it is these “abnormal beliefs about violence” (and not poor impulse control and/or deficits in decesion-making) that make them disposed towards extreme violence.
But this factor just happens to be what the researcher’s have been testing; just because they found it doesn’t mean that it is THE predisposing factor. Presumably if they had been testing, say, cholesterol-levels and found a difference they’d say that’s they key.
But it’s worse that that. Something in they way they phrase the matter concerns me. They say (with my reworkings in bold):
- “…due to their abnormal beliefs about violence”.
…due to their pleasure in violence (which is, of course accompanied by abnormal beliefs). - “Psychopathic murderers have diminished negative reactions to violence compared with non-psychopathic murderers and other offenders.”
They have increased positive reactions to violence.
In the British TV show Cracker, the main character, Dr. Fitzgerald is asked why he drinks and smokes so much. “Because I like it!”, he says defiantly. This precisely the point. Maybe Fitz could be shown to have abonormal beliefs about drinking and smoking (he’s a gambler too), but he’s insightful enough to know that it’s not the beliefs that cause the behaviour – he does them because he wants to.
Psychopaths enjoy doing evil; they do it not despite the pain it cause others but because that pain increases their enjoyment.
Leave pleasure out of the picture and we missed an awful lot. Or am I wrong?
OxDrover-I sincerely apologize, I did not mean to offend anyone.
H
I apologize. Did not mean to offend.
This may be an older post, but it is so helpful for me. These people…these creatures…inflict pain and anguish deliberately, and with MALICE because they can.
One of the things that I find so compelling about typical spath psych studies is that they usually involve inmates and ex-cons. Until the spath does something that lands them in The Stir, they move through the general population like a defoliant leaving a swath of destruction behind them.
Thanks for this article.
the research that shows brain activity in response to similar categories of words as used in this study, show very different activity for ppaths and non ppaths. the ppaths DO NOT respond with much brain activity or in the same parts of the brain as we would to words like ‘kill’.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N-X_GFOKtDM&feature=related
most of us have noticed the unusual ways that ppaths use speech. it is rather unordinary in many ways. read Hare’s book, Without Conscience, for more information.
And quite a while ago I posted some ‘ppath quotes’ here (from ppath serial killers), which both illustrate their unusual use of words and their lack of remorse, and dare i say their satisfaction with what they have done in their lives.
“I was completely swept along with my own compulsion. I don’t know how else to put it. It didn’t satisfy me completely so maybe I was thinking another one will. Maybe this one will, and the numbers started growing and growing and just got out of control, as you can see.”-Jeffrey Dahmer
“I haven’t blocked out the past. I wouldn’t trade the person I am, or what I’ve done – or the people I’ve known – for anything. So I do think about it. And at times it’s a rather mellow trip to lay back and remember.” ”“ Ted Bundy
“I want to be hanged and I dont want any interference by you or your filthy kind. I just know the more about the world and the essential evil nature of man and dont play the hypocrite. I am proud of having killed off a few and regret that I didnt kill more!” -Carl Panzram
After my divorce, I remember looking back in, still not understanding why but with a somewhat clearer head and I realized that the guy had the psyche of a serial killer only he acted on his dark side in small ways, mostly, aimed towards me, the children and the family pet. I always felt that he was too big a coward to kill someone but that the necessary make up to become a serial killer was there. Of course, I wasn’t until very recently that I came to the realization that the guy was a malignant Narcissist/Sociopath and that put everything into context for me. Even the smallest and most puzzling of things the individual did and continues to do are explained by this illness. I also used to be able to predict to the most minute detail what the guys actions and steps would be but couldn’t figure out why he would do such things. Again, after my ‘discovery’ I know how and why.
That quote of Ted Bundy sounds so much like my P-son, who believes that his adult life (totally in prison) and his communication with people from the free world has given him the best education in which he is rendered THE BEST CHOICE for a person to run the entire world. He has no grasp that his life has not been a wonde4rful “success” or that he is just “another psychopathic convict low-life” to everyone except just ANOTHER convict psychopathic low life. He may be the smartest worm in the toilet, but that doesn’t make him a “big shot.”
I lost my dear kitty, a silverpoint Siamese, while I was with the sociopath. She was fine one day, the next I had to put her down with total organ failure. (yes, I stayed with her). I never found out what happened to her. I still wonder now if the sociopath poisoned her to beat me down.
Jazzy,
My bet would be on the poison. I wouldn’t put it past them. Thanks for you input on my other post. I seem to really need affirmation, even though I know instinctively he’s loco, so many things seem surreal.
Last year, around the same time, I asked my husband for a separation. His response was “I’ve taken care of you all this time, can’t you wait until the kids graduate from high school?” He was highly invested in the relationship, as you can tell. It’s been one year of hell and I can’t wait for it to be over.
I was the one who was paranoid for so long, knowing there was something terribly wrong by unable to escape the fog. He liked me to be in the fog. Used everthing in his manipulative arsonal to make me thing I was flawed, crazy, jealous, immature, paranoid. He said he was the most sensative guy he knows, he’s a saint compared to other guys, he has the best reputation at work-people loved working for him.
The fog takes over because you think this person who “loves you more than anyone else in the world”, only cares about themselves.
I have one of those key-loggers because I found porn on two computers, one was my laptop. I wanted to catch him in one of his lies. I found he was looking at mental institutions and psychiatric medications. I saved those images to a flash drive and gave copies to my lawyer. His little intervention he called my mom about was because he said I was acting strange and he was worried about me being around the kids. A-HOLE!!!!! He is the one I need to be worried about.
One good thing about this whole situation, I will be stronger and healthier in the long run. I will be a better friend, mom, daughter, lover (if ever again!), because I will have better boundaries.
The only real thing spath ever said to me was that I was the kindest person he had ever known. He actually had a real moment, it didn’t last long. His loss.
oxy – yah, that quote REALLY speaks to their living in a completely diff world, as does what you said about your son. how incredibly freaking odd they are.