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.)
JaneSmith, I got so involved with writing that I forget to say hi.
What you write is so rational. Yes, we have a right to respect and kindness and even caring whether we’re okay or not.
Did you ever see the list of human needs on cnvc.org? It’s at http://www.cnvc.org/fr/what-nvc/needs-list/needs-inventory. These are things that we don’t have to explain ourselves for needing. And it’s an amazing list.
Respect is on it. Acceptance. Consideration. Trust. And a lot more.
Now I need to go make dinner and get away from this computer. I am so grateful for this community.
And Wini, thanks for your nice post about my worrying about you. I was afraid you might think I was being disrespectful. I really wasn’t. It was just an expression of my own fears about being sucked in again.
The NC strategy — or getting to it as quickly as possibly — means safety to me. Not just of the ugly things they can do to my life. But the stupid things I do to myself. It’s like not hanging out with druggies after you get out of rehab.
KH: Yours was more human than mine. I don’t know which of us was more cursed. At least I knew when the mask dropped that I was dealing with something so profoundly evil that all I had was shock. I couldn’t even mourn the loss of a relationship; I realized that there had never been anything at all. The shock of it, though, ran through every cell in my body. I’ve been traumatized in ways I never imagined possible.
Your comment is an eloquent and educated perspective. It may be very true for many of the S/Ps who have wreaked havoc on the people who visit this site. Underneath all the aspects, under everything that this S/P showed to me, I don’t believe there is a human soul. I say that without anger. I don’t believe that there ever were any “hints and flashes” of what this person might have been. I have wondered if — on a metaphysical level — he is simply a non-human tool to create ultimate chaos for some purpose that I have yet to understand.
Kathleen Hawk: I was hoping (wishful thinking) that one of them, just one … would try to make a break through and take that bold step to the feeling side of life.
It was strange that he admitted that they had sites that boast about their weaknesses and how they sabotage others as a means to viewing themselves as superior. Superior to whom? Talk about being insecure and cowardly, they are worse than we even could imagine.
Peace.
Kathleen,
Excellent post. I think you out did every explanation for the spathholes (Cool term Henry),so far. Very good info. I love this site for all its loving, caring, knowledgable people! I never logout without having learned alot of new things to better arm & protect myself. Thank you all!
Wini: I’ve wished the same. While there may be miracles yet to come, I see no evidence in current literature that that breakthrough is possible.
Rune said “I have wondered if on a metaphysical level he is simply a non-human tool to create ultimate chaos for some purpose that I have yet to understand.”
I wonder about that, too. I wonder, sometimes, if my ex S is a human….with a disease that cannot be treated, or if he is actually just a disease….a disease that was placed on this earth in human form for some larger purpose, as Rune said. There are so many of them out there, and they seem to behave in the exact same ways. It’s like their was some robot army of Sociopaths, all cut from the same exact mold, in the same factory, that were scattered all over this country, and the world….for some reason. For some higher purpose.
When I am more in my “catholic” mind, I wonder what “judgement day” would be like for him – you know, after death I imagine him in front of God or St Peter, or whomever is the judge. Where would God even begin? Would God hold him accountable? Or would that be like God holding someone with Downs syndrome accountalbe for not becoming a heart surgeon? It was never even a possibilit – given his deficits. But then I start thinking that he isn’t human at all. He will never go to “heaven” and be held to the standards of all of us. He may be part of a plague of sorts – like have devastated humankind in the past.
I think one very important task is for us to learn to recognize them, and protect ourselves on the small, personal scale, and then as a culture, or, even larger, a species, learn to identify and manage (quarantine?) them or somehow treat them, somehow rewire their brains so they no longer have these deficient brains that function improperly.
But I guess the core question I wonder about – are they human like we are human? Or are they some fundamentally different creature that happens to be wearing a human body?
HH: Yes. Is this a challenge for us to re-affirm our values? To rise up and insist that compassion and responsibility and mutual respect are the values that knit together community and make life vibrant and joyful?
In our vulnerability, we are the “superior” ones. God save us, we can feel and be hurt, and it’s our STRENGTH — not our weakness.
Look at those arrogant fools who turned two children out into the cold on Christmas Day and tell me they’re superior!
Kathleen,
Greetings to you also.
Thanks for sharing that link and I’ll peruse it tomorrow as your “making dinner” statement made me hungry!…..haha.
Vegetarian Miso soup it is for me to curtail those chilly fingers of winter scraping at my door.
Interesting what you wrote concerning other basic needs for humans. See, I think that when a person is consistently decent, kind, considerate and respectful, time after time, trust is able to be born and nurtured.
I no longer trust without the benefit of time and consistently good behavior.
And the acceptance part is not essential to my life as I’m one of those freaky introvert types who must have masses of solitude.
I’m self reliant and self stabilizing without the interference or unsolicited advice from others.
But that is what’s so appealing about genuine people; the complexity and uniqueness of their personalities, characters and life-styles.
Doncha think?
Yes…it’s the “rising up” part that I wonder about. Is this the dawning of a new era in which Humans will INSIST that compassion and responsibility and mutual respect will be practiced? That any other behavior will not be tolerated? Maybe there is a parallell process going on in the world (i.e. economic meltdown) as there is in our personal lives. I had to be pushed pretty far to finally wake up. My relationship was only 9 months long…but that was 6 months too long. I started to ignore/forgive/overlook/justify/rationalize irresponsible behavior, lying, disrespect, lack of compassion, after three months together. But things had to get BAD before I finally snapped out of it, and began the process of getting out and getting over.
Maybe God (or whatever force) put these guys (and gals) here so that we would recognize, in contrast to them, that we are GOOD creatures…that we are a kind species, and that we will reject, and will not tolerate, behavior in our human community that does not reflect peace, light, and love. Not that we will hold ourselves, and each other accountable to pristine standards – but that we will recognize evil behaviors, NEVER ignore them, or rationalize them, and refuse to tolerate them.
The part of me that believes in God (and this part is coming back) as a benevolent force in the universe, believes that all of this happened for a reason. That in all of this bad behavior is a call to good. So that we will declare who we are, as a species, and who we are not.
This is all rather abstract, but it is important to me. For me, I need to make sense of all of this on a personal scale (my life, my choices, my experience, my lessons), which is critical for my survival, and I want to make sense of it on a global scale, for the sake of my (human) community – this is critical for OUR survival.
Well said. You’ve spoken many of my thoughts.
I am encouraged by the immediate and strong action that Idaho has taken regarding the men who coldheartedly put the children out into the snow. The prosecutors recognized the evil inherent in the act. Unlike the public comments on AOL that were busy creating excuses, the state was immediate and severe in naming the evil.