What is the single most powerful signifier of sociopathy?
How about, lack of empathy?
I don’t think so.
As an isolated factor, I don’t think lack of empathy best nails the sociopath.
Many millions of people, after all, lack empathy and aren’t sociopaths. Also, exactly what constitutes empathy is a subject of some disagreement. Some LoveFraud members, in fact, question whether sociopaths even lack empathy (some asserting, to the contrary, that the sociopaths they’ve known have used their capacity for empathy to exploit them).
But the biggest problem with lack of empathy is its weakeness in explaining the single, truly best signifier of sociopathy—the characterological exploitiveness of the sociopath.
It is a high level of exploitiveness that most singularly exposes the sociopath.
Now exploitiveness is also associated with the narcissistic personality. For this reason extremely destructive (“malignant”) narcissists can be hard to distinguish from sociopaths. Still, a high level of exploitiveness is rarely the single best signifier of narcissistic personality disorder, whereas it is, I suggest, the best single indicator of sociopathy.
Why does lack of empathy fail to explain the sociopath’s exploitiveness? It fails because most people who lack empathy are not exploitive. Just consider the autistic spectrum disorders: Lack of empathy is commonly associated with these disorders, but exploitive behavior is not.
Now it is true that empathic individuals will generally be nonexploitive. Why? Because their empathy will prove a deterrent against exploitative impulses or ideas. Empathy, in other words, surely is a powerful deterrent against exploitation.
But in someone nonexploitative (someone, say, with Asperger’s Syndrome), empathy will not be needed for its deterrent effect. However, in someone inclined to exploitation, lack of empathy will be a missing deterrent in a situation where deterrence is urgent.
Effectively, the sociopath’s exploitive nature is undeterred by empathy, which is missing, thus liberating him to exploit. And it is the sociopath’s tendency, or compulsion, to exploit, I propose, that best characterizes his sociopathy.
I’d be remiss not to clarify my working definition of empathy. Empathy, as I use it, is an experience, or appreciation, of another’s experience that, depending on the situation, elicits a thoughtful, respectful, perhaps nurturing, but never exploitive, response.
While some sociopaths may possess an evolved capacity to read others’ vulnerabilities, this doesn’t make them empathic.
It is the particular response to someone’s vulnerability that indicates the presence of empathy, or exploitation. It is the particular response, or pattern of responses, to someone’s vulnerability that separates the empathic individual from the predator.
In this respect, I regard the sociopath as seriously, and given his exploitive personality, dangerously deficient in empathy.
What about his remorselessness? Certainly the sociopath’s remorselessness is quite notable and diagnostically significant. However, I would argue that the sociopath’s remorselessness is a byproduct not of his lack of empathy, but of his exploitive personality.
Many people who lack empathy are remorseful, for instance when informed that an action they took, or something they said, left someone else feeling damaged. They may struggle to relate emotionally (or even intellectually) to the effect their behavior had on the wounded party (their deficient empathy); but they are upset to learn that their action caused damage.
In other words, they feel remorseful even though their empathy is deficient.
However, exploitation and remorselessness go hand in hand. The essence of exploitation is the intentional violation of another’s vulnerability. The exploiter knows, on some level, that his behavior is exploitive.
By definition, the exploiter is grossly indifferent to the damaging effect of his behavior on his victim. All that matters is his perceived gain, his demanded, greedy satisfaction. There is indifference to the loss and damage to others resulting from his self-centered, aggressive behaviors.
This sounds a lot like callousness; and we recognize callousness as another of the sociopath’s telling qualities. But I would suggest, again, that the sociopath’s callousness derives not from his defective empathy, but rather from his characterological exploitiveness. Most people with deficits in empathy are not callous. On the other hand, the exploitive mentality will engender a callous perspective.
I discussed in a prior post the audacity of the sociopath. I suggested a correspondence between audacity and sociopathy. But here, too, we want to get the causality correct: audacity doesn’t make for sociopathy; but the exploitive mentality will make for staggering audacity.
(My use of “he” in this post is for convenience’s sake, not to suggest that men have a patent on sociopathy. This article is copyrighted (c) 2008 by Steve Becker, LCSW.)
Star:
That’s ok, I’d rather have NC. I’m so moving on. Let his current victim buy him new clothes like I did. I don’t like her anyway…even though she is a victim. She was lurking in the shadows for 2 years and knew about me. She’s a HO. They are a perfect couple.
What’s funny is she doesn’t have the $ to support him like I did. She will have to drive him around in his car for the rest of her life. . and pay all the living expenses too. Maybe he’ll get her a nice cubic zirconia engagement ring for Christmas. LOL!!
OMG I didn’t realize how late it is. I have to get up for work at 6:30. Night all.
RUNE, we can disagree, of course respectfully. I would suggest that exploitation is essentially the intentional use/misuse of one’s power to take advantage of someone. In terms of how much, or not, the exploiter enjoys his exploitation, revels in it, and is or isn’t addicted to the delight of it, I’m not entirely sure that that matters so much. I don’t necessarily think it’s a precondition of the sociopath that he or she revels in his or her predations. I suppose that many sociopaths do “get off” on their predations and violations and that some may be driven their delight in exploiting. But I think what’s much more relevant is the pattern of exploitation and the failure to care enough about its impact to cease it. Theoretically you can have a pretty anhedonic personality (capable of experiencing little real pleasure) who is sociopathic and virtually numb in every way to the damage he or she causes.
KeepingFaith and TryingToHeal, thanks so much for the feedback!
RUNE, just to be clear, I am not suggesting that by “numb” to the damage he or she causes this means “blind” to it. The sociopath isn’t “blind” to the damage he or she causes, quite the contrary. However, I’ve worked with sociopaths who are more on the scale of indifferent to the pain and disruption they inflict than necessarily reveling in it. I also maintain that, in the final analysis, a certain history and pattern of exploiting others is most singularly suggestive of the sociopathic personality.
Steve BEcker and Rune,
I’ve known Ps like my son who revel in the abuse and misuse and “revenge” they inflict on their victims, and I’ve also known some that qualified that were just like you said “unnoticing” I think is the word I like to the pain they caused others in abusing and exploiting them. I don’t think they had the least idea that anyone else could resent or feel pain over what they had done.
My P-bio-father ususally didn’t “notice” someone’s pain or resentment, but if they were upset enough to confront him, THEN he sought revenge WITH RELISH and enjoyed seeking revenge in the most horrible way he could.
My X BF was sort of like my P-father, he didn’t notice your pain or think you had any right to pain from how he treated you, but IF YOU “INSULTED” him in any way or caused him any pain or embarasment, he was BIG into revenge and would ENJOY the pain he caused, he loved to glory in it.
And just like someone who is “violent” isn’t violent every minute of every day, just when the mood strikes them, so I think they can be both ways, even one P who is both ways, or maybe some of them have “preferred” “not noticing” your pain, or they prefer to enjoy it. How can any of us understand all of them and everything they feel or think? They can’t understand how WE FEEL so how can we understand them except by observations of many of them? Unfortunately, I have had waaaay too much practice up close and personal. LOL
who are more on the scale of indifferent to the pain and disruption they inflict than necessarily reveling in it.
I agree. Most of the offenders I have worked with, known, and studied are like this. There are some that revel in inflicting pain and these are a subclass of offenders (sadists).
Blogger, an analogy came to me of of say “rapists” —some just “rape” to degrade and control the women and some are “sexual sadists” who torture and kill their victims as well, who “get off on” the woman’s fear and the torture and the killing as much as the rape itself, or more so.
Personally, and maybe I’m wrong from a clinical standpoint, but I think all rapists qualify as psychopaths, but the torturing and mutilating and sadistic rapists are the Ps that revel in the pain of their victims.
In reading Dr. Anna Salter’s book, “Predators” I see the P mind set in the rapists of any kind.
Oxy and BloggerT: I believe all our EXs raped us. Hey, lying to us to get what they wanted, therefore, even the sexual part of our relationship is considered rape in my eyes. It certainly wasn’t LOVE.
Period.
Well there is a difference between cruelty and sadism. In fact sadistic rapists are only one type of rapists. As was reported in an FBI study:
One sexual sadist defined sadism in the following way: Sadism: The wish to inflict pain on others is not the essence of sadism. One essential impulse: to have complete mastery over another person, to make him-her a helpless object of our will, to become her God, to do with her as one pleases. To humiliate her, to enslave her are means to this end, and the most important radical aid is to make her suffer since there is no greater power over another person than that of inflicting pain on her to force her to undergo suffering without her being able to defend herself. The pleasure in the complete domination over another person is the very essence of the sadistic drive.