Dr. Robert Hare, who did seminal work in identifying psychopaths, refers to them as “intraspecies predators.” This prompted questions from a Lovefraud reader who asked,
- If psychopaths are indeed natural predators (by implication, their design is part of nature’s plan to maintain some balance) then would we ever be able to weed them out of society?
- Do they have a purpose in the natural order of things?
In this article, I’m going to address the second question. Then, next week, I’ll suggest an answer to the first question.
I don’t know about a purpose, but there are researchers who believe psychopaths are around us today because they survived the natural selection process of human evolution.
These researchers call psychopathy “a nonpathological, reproductively viable, alternate life history strategy.” This theory is outlined in Coercive and Precocious Sexuality as a Fundamental Aspect of Psychopathy, a paper published in 2007 by Grant T. Harris, PhD; Marnie E. Rice, PhD; N. Zoe Hilton, PhD; Martin L. Lalumiere, PhD; and Vernon L. Quinsey, PhD.
Evolution
Let’s talk about the evolution idea first. The authors write that our distant ancestors probably formed stable groups, characterized by cooperation and adherence to rules, which enabled early mankind to survive and flourish. However, some humans survived through cheating and exploiting others—the alternative life strategy.
Grant et. al. write that from childhood, psychopathic personalities are fundamentally different from others, but the differences are not the result of a medical failure or injury. They point out that pregnancy difficulties can be related to schizophrenia and mental retardation, but not psychopathy. “While many adverse medical conditions and injuries lead to antisocial and violent behavior, our selectionist hypothesis suggests that they do not cause psychopathy,” they write.
The early psychopaths—cheaters then as now—put a lot of energy into acquiring sexual partners, and were willing to use deception and coercion to do it. As a result, they produced a lot of offspring. Even if early psychopaths died young because then, as now, they probably engaged in high-risk behavior, their liberal procreation was enough to get the hereditary train rolling.
Sex and criminal behavior
Psychopaths first have sex at a young age, have many partners, and are uncommitted in sexual relationships. Studies show that people who have this approach to sex also are more likely to engage in criminal and violent behavior.
Some people, called life course persistent offenders, Grant et. al. write, “begin aggressive and antisocial conduct at very young ages and persist at rates higher than any other offenders throughout the lifespan.”
People tend to think that their problem is poor social learning, that individuals who break laws against crime and violence also break social norms regarding sex. But research has also shown that delinquency and antisocial behavior are associated with early onset of puberty and sexual activity. Young people don’t learn, or decide, when to mature sexually. So why is there a connection between early onset of puberty and crime?
The study
Grant et. al. believe that “coercive and precocious sexuality” is not a result of the psychopathic personality, but a key to defining it. For the study described in the paper, the researchers predicted “early onset, high frequency and coercive sexuality would be a key, unique and diagnostic feature of psychopathy.”
The researchers studied the case histories of 512 male sex offenders. (Sex offenders were selected because their files generally contain detailed information about their sexual history.) They established the scores of the offenders on the Psychopathy Checklist-Revised (PCL-R). They also looked at the sexual histories of the offenders prior to age 15. A statistical analysis revealed correlations between early and frequent sexual behavior and sexual coercion with general antisocial behavior and elevated PCL-R scores.
“We propose that interpersonal sexual and nonsexual aggression are not best conceived of as the consequence of psychopathic personality traits, but as fundamental aspects of the condition itself,” the authors wrote.
Genetic history
The researchers’ expected that coercive and precocious sexuality were indicators of psychopathy because of their original hypothesis—psychopathy is an alternative life strategy.
“From a theoretical perspective, the present results lend some support to a selectionist hypothesis that psychopathy exists because it has been a heritable and reproductively viable condition during human evolution.”
Psychopaths, in other words, are not physically defective or medically ill. These researchers believe that they are just different, and, because they engaged in a lot of sex, were able to pass on their genes through the millennia.
Read the complete study:
Coercive and Precocious Sexuality as a Fundamental Aspect of Psychopathy
They are what they are
It’s shocking to think that there may be nothing medically wrong with these “intraspecies predators.” But in a way, the idea that psychopaths are pursuing an “alternate life history strategy” dovetails with what we often say here on Lovefraud. Psychopaths are what they are. They are cheaters and exploiters. They take advantage of others because that’s what they do.
Did nature intend this? I don’t know, but they survived.
While researching this story, I came across another paper with an interesting perspective on what to do about it, which I’ll discuss next week.
Star – did you get my links for the feline CRF sites?
No, I will have to go back and look. I still have not gotten the definitive diagnosis, so I’ll wait till tomorrow. There are a lot of ways to prolong the life of a cat wth CRF, including homeopathic remedies, home made diet, daily IV’s, etc. To tell you the truth, I don’t have the money or the heart to try and prolong his life. I will just make him as comfortable as possible. He has lived a long life, and the last 9 years he has spent in my care he was worshipped like a king every day. I think he will die soon, and I will just let him go. I don’t have it in me to try all these things, and I don’t think it is what he would want. He was once a very vibrant Siamese. He is now a skeleton and a shadow of his former self. I will spend the whole weekend cuddling with him.
we are both having a bad day, it looks like. What happened to you today kathy? are you okay? here you are helping me out all the while going through things yourself.
it’s a bad time for everyone. Des is preoccupied with some with things. seizures the both of them. but not bad. didn’t even reach 2 minutes so we didn’t have to pull out the diastat. just throws them off for a loop. i don’t bug her with my stuff at times like this. so i dumped my problems on you guys without giving a thought that you all have lives and worries of your own. i guess i assumed with the wisdom and experience of your posts that things have been conquered.
i’ve got all weekend to think about my issues and decide what i’m going to do next, i’ll put that on the shelf for now.
is there anyhting i can do for you? i hope i can somehow be here for you to help. i can’t tell you i’ll be of any real help per se. but a coworker friend of mine said just listening helps.
it has been a very short time for me here but i had been soothed alot here. i guess being cut off from friends at work and my regular routine i just didn’t know what to do with myself as i fell into ‘limbo’ status.
but on a great note. even though i hard a hard week before, i made new friends this week. also i just saw Star Trek’s First Contact on Sci Fi not so long ago, so i’m back in a good mood. Caprica is on now. i do not recommend it. although Battlestar galactica was epic.
Mike
Star – i was going to repost them for you – but they are not needed, you know where you are going.
i did all those things you listed. i loved my bei boy and crf took him from me.
there is a very good website – it is a yahoo group, a forum, called Angel on My Shoulders. Most of the people, mostly women, have lived through Crf with their cats. It was an amazing place. I suspect it still is.
peace
one step
I will keep that in mind if the time comes. Since I have not even gotten the diagnosis yet, I’m in a state of suspended shock–best way I know how to describe it. I can’t cry yet, because it’s not real till I hear from the vet.
Mike, it’s nice to hear from you. Sounds like a too-eventful day all around. I’m glad Des and Dolphin are okay.
That was good advice your friend gave you. And you’re really good at it. I can feel that you care, and that’s like vitamins for my heart. (Unlike you’re ex-friend, you’re not saying “Oh get over it.”)
I’m really okay. I don’t mind stuff coming up. I have a lot of old issues and behaviors to sort out. I’ve been cruising on a plateau for a while, feeling like I had everything under control. It was time for something serious to come up for me to think about. I know I’m not finished, It’s better to work on this stuff when I have a little peace, rather than having a high-speed collision with my own dysfunctional thinking in the midst of some real-life drama.
I don’t know if that makes sense, but it just the way I think.
I hope you and the family have a good weekend. From all those plants outside, it sounds like you live in a warmer place. Here, everything was covered with hard lacy frost this morning, and my car wouldn’t start. Tomorrow it will be warmer and sunny. I can’t wait.
Kathy
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Kathy I am going to second Mike and other posters who are concerned for you. You have been so strong for all of us leading the way through the crap we couldn’t see the light through. You don’t have to be strong all the time – it’s ok to crack a bit and say you don’t want to deal with any more ‘processing’. It’s a hard work – the hardest there is. I hope you are doing something nurturing for you – something non word related where you can express the unexpressable. Maybe painting or sculpting or even devising how another character might deal with this in the mirror.
You can tell me to p*** off. I’m tough enough to handle that thanks to you! But please take the warning signs that are coming up for you and DO some loving of YOURSELF. A hot bath with beautiful oils, some pampering lotions and some deep breathing with the perfect music to accompany. A massage would be a great way to release the tension from the muscles – you take in so much of our ‘stuff’ … I worry about that. Yes you are strong, but you don’t analyse our situations in a cold way – you feel them and that means absorbing some of the energy. As you know we deal with the darkest energy in these situations with spaths.
So in closing … please take care of YOU! YOU are important and wonderful and delightful and supportive and kind and helpful and nurturing and loving and patient and peaceful and strong and capable and giving and vulnerable as well. Look after the cracked places … they need extra attention.
Sending you some loving thoughts – thanks for not just going AWOL with your current focus. We all care about you – you are very important in our lives and if we were with you, well you would be inundated with caring. Someone would clean your house, someone else would put beautiful clean sheets and covers on your bed, someone else would fluff your pillows, someone would read you a story and someone else would sing you a song. Unfortunately we are not there with you so can only send our sentiments over this strange contraption called the net.
With much love (and a wee bit of concern!)
Polly
Star … I have no words – can’t even imagine what you’re going through. Please know I am thinking of you both and you are in my thoughts and prayers – you know your beautiful cat best and what is best for him.
Stargazer – I’m so sorry about your kitty cat. (((hugs))))
And also about something you posted about bouncing stuff back to spaths and you weren’t sure if anyone got what you meant? I do. I love that idea and I think it would work marvellously. I can’t wait to try it on the next Narc who makes the mistake of f**king with me 🙂 My favorite line of all, is one Kathy recommended a while back and it has stuck with me. It’s:
“That doesn’t do anything for me.”
I LOVE THAT LINE! IT’S SO FREAKEN PERFECT, especially for the Narcissistic Sociopaths.
This may sound nuts (hahahaha or maybe not!) but I’ve been practicing saying that line with a completely emotionless, Look’m right in the eye, straight face.
Kathy – I think you’re wonderful. Give as much to yourself as you give to others and don’t be so hard on yourself (((hugs))))