US military vet here. Anyone who's been in combat will tell you that the psychopaths do VERY well under fire. Psychopathy is absolutely essential in wartime (as Chris mentions), because you need those guys who are fearless and ruthless. They don't hesitate, they act. Saw it in action. Psychopaths emerge from combat theaters with a chest full of medals. But those same guys, turned loose in civilian life, can be monsters. I saw that, too.
"Psychopathy is absolutely essential in wartime" Absolutely not. You don't have to be a psychopath to remain calm in stressful situations. Psychopaths serve only themselves and see no difference between a friend and foe. They wouldn't think twice about shooting you as a fellow allied soldier if they had something to gain from it.
@@GameLorePage very surface level take, psychopaths do not mean unhinged traitors in combat like a free for all in the slightest - you speak from ignorance.
My friend's dad said that, in the war he fought in, the "psychos" were the one's who kicked butt on the front lines. No fear, vicious, and terribly effective in battle.
It is all nonsense. A psychopath is unlikely to make it through basic training of the US military. Maybe through other military services in the world that do not perform screening.
Nice mate, will catch the whole thing later on Spotify. Been watching a lot of your stuff lately too, your one with Andrew Huberman sent me down the rabbit hole! Was the professor you mentioned James Fallon?
When I saw your name on the title. I asked myself, the podcaster from England? Sure enough. I enjoy your podcasts. Congratulations on making it to JRE!
Talking about the researcher James Fallon, and yes, he did ask his wife, kids, close associates for an honest, frank appraisal of him. They all said, "yep. we've known for some time that you were a psychopath." He goes on to say that their feedback didn't really bug him, further substantiating his psychopathy. 😂
I thought it was psychopathy. Not sociopathy. There are small but important differences. Psychopaths are capable of being very charming and are much better at hiding their... dark passenger.
There's a high percentage of psychopaths among medical professionals, particularly surgeons. In that context, it is probably adaptive to be cold, calculating, and emotionless ... you don't want someone's emotions overcoming them when they're cutting you open. It probably also accounts for the extreme arrogance and dismissiveness often encountered in medical settings. EDIT: One of the commenters correctly points out that medical professionals score higher on psychopathic traits than the general population. That doesn't necessarily make them proper psychopaths. An important clarification.
Psychopaths and sociopaths can do things in society that others can find difficult emotionally. As well as raiding parties: surgeons, collecting of dead and post mortem, executioner, negotiators, lawyers, crime investigators, CEOs, traders and high level finance, politicians are just some that come to mind.
yes but in some of those proffesions because they are psychopaths it would take nothing for them to do something bad for there own gain,incase you didnt notis most people in goverments in positions of power have psychopathic traids,and in allot of country they are the ones fucking up the country's and having zero issue with lying straight to youre face about it.
Most psychopaths are very calculating and self serving, so yeah, why would they commit crimes? Why risk being imprisoned, it wouldn't be self serving. So interesting. They're so foreign to the normal human condition of emotions like guilt and remorse that it's so fascinating to see what goes through a their minds. And of course a lot of children who grew up with trauma become anti social too. Even if they would have grown up with a normal way of associating with people without the trauma.
@@jambononi That's wrong tbh. Most psychopaths aren't very calculating at all, in fact, one of the great signifiers of psychopathy is extreme impulsivity and a lack of ability to delay gratification; contrary to popular opinion most people in prison who are diagnosed as psychopaths are actually below average intelligence or simply have average intelligence, the image of the smart criminal psychopath who never gets caught by the police is a Hollywood trope and really isn't accurate at all.
As a psychotherapist, I have seen psychopathic tendencies and worked with those with antisocial personality disorder (the diagnosis used for this term). However some of the comments on behaviors witnessed by people they know could also be how trauma effects the brain. It’s a coping mechanism when people are exposed to traumatic things, especially over and over to become detached and cold. They also failed to mention that the researcher likely had a good upbringing, was nurtured and has low ACE scores. Individuals with the wiring to be psychopaths- combine that with neglect, poverty, abuse or childhood trauma- more likely to lead to use of drugs and to criminal acts. This is fact. Healthy attachments will allow people to develop into individuals who can live in society, hold down jobs, abide by laws and have families.
We have a BINGO folks. James Fallon had a loving caring up bring. I hear people use the good old appeal to authority. When the only thing they are an authority of is gobbledygook. You are the real deal. Thank you for your words. I hope more people will read your comments here.
Nurture has no impact on psychopathy behaviors. A person that exhibits low emotional behaviors is not a psychopath. Criminality is the best indicator of psychopathic tendencies. The idea of a harmless high functioning psychopath is nonsense.
Absolutely! When everyone and everything in life beats you down, you could become emotionally numb to everything. It’s all about survival and I think the psychopath gets this.
I was born within the same boundaries on a map as someone who is successful. Feeling proud of something you have had no part in is a sign of narcissism, isn't it?
This falls under the same banner as anxiety. Back when we survived by sticking together in tribes, we needed highly alert and restless members to detect threats during the night when everyone else was sleeping. Anxious people were extremely valuable. If everyone in the tribe was super relaxed and slept through thunderstorms, well you'd all be screwed. The issue with anxiety in todays world is that it has no place. Like an old alarm system with malfunctioning sensors. But not so long ago it was a crucial survival instinct that kept us, and others alive. I believe this can still be observed in the social hierarchy of Chimpanzees and other species of monkeys.
You are 100% correct except in the respect as in anxious we’re the sole people responsible for our survival, in my opinion. I think you should read more into evolutionary psychology, involving ALL of the brain variants. I think you’d like it. I’m regards to psychopathy, they were responsible for our advancement into uncertain situations. I have sources and people to look into if interested
@@chrisw8049 What you're sharing already makes sense to me. I can tell the anxiety is a hyper-alertness out of self preservation. Please do share these sources you speak of
There is an interesting documentary of the man who did the study on Psychopathy -and found out he was one himself. I loved the part where they interviewed his family and his brother said it all made sense. When the psychopathic brother got angry, he'd start a relentless pursuit for vindication. The family reasoned that it was their loving family structure that kept him in line to a fair degree.
It is well understood that many ceos of major corporations would be considered psychopathic. Having a personality trait that allows them to make decisions indifferent of impacts to people/employees allows decisions to be made to benefit the company exclusively. Also surgeons are often psychopathic. This benefits their performance as they are able to view the patient as an object with its components rather than a human being with feelings and emotions. This allows them to focus on the task at hand.
Wow I’m so glad they left the last part about narcissism in. I used to have two terribly toxic friends that got so nasty when I cut my friendship off with them and everything he said about vulnerable narcissists is spot on for them. I could never quite describe to people why they were so awful and now I can.
Ex-wife and I talked for over a decade about how she'd watched her mother 'go crazy' during her youth (vulnerable narcissist) and the hell it had made out of her childhood. Said she always feared she could have the same thing happen to her. I hate being able to confirm that it really does transfer through genetics and that I watched it happen to a woman I love, apparently like she watched it happen to her mom.
@@Anon-pl8kz I know what the problems are at both our ends. She and I talked about them regularly for years (not fought, not argued, not even raised our voices) Worked instead as a team trying to care for each other, plan and problem solve. She had lived through her teen years emotionally tormented by her own mothers 'erratic and dramatic' (NPD) behavior which she survived by learning to be quiet and 'keeping her head down'. She kept that learned ability to suppress herself until she couldn't anymore apparently. Ever felt a spring released from containment jump away?
most vulnerable narcissists have been bullied as kids and spend their lives chasing approval. I know one from my highschool years ago and guess what hes in jail for murder now
I don't know when they changed the rules in the DSM but when I studied Psychology in college it was well understood that criminal behavior are Psychopathy was correlated but not required. There are many high functioning people in very large organizations that got there bc of their ability to not care about the consequences.
@@CalebSpears1 It's not only about empathy, but also about risk tolerance - psycopaths are rather reckless and many are employed in jobs at the edge, where they stop just short of going over, where a hormal human will stop well in advance.
Most people are self centered and don't care about consequences as long as they are removed from them. Its perhaps the only real evil in the world and its utterly banal.
The DSM has been changing a lot. Psychiatrists can’t use conversion therapy for kids thinking they are transgender or other made up genders, they have to affirm their misguided beliefs that they are trapped in the wrong bodies. Breaking the law didn’t and shouldn’t correlate to what makes a psychopath. The intelligent ones know how to manipulate people into breaking the law for them.
even if he is talking a load of shit!? now of the info he got from his "researcher" is even close to an accurate representation of the professors work.
SCIENTIST'S FOUND THAT LEFTIST'S BRAIN'S REACT LESS THAN PEOPLE ON THE RIGH WHEN SHOWN DISTURBING IMAGES = LEFTIST ARE MORE LIKELY TO BE PSHYCOPATH'S .............
James Fallon is the professor he’s speaking of. I met him on a shuttle from the airport years ago. Nicest, most interesting person I’ve met. He’s done a lot of interviews regarding this and other mental stuff. So fascinating!
Back in the day, an outlaw was someone who had traveled from one town to another. In the 1200s, if you were traveling to another town by yourself, it’s probably because you killed somebody in the last town you were in. The sheriff used to go from town to town investigating whether there were any major crimes to report, but also whether there were any outlaws, meaning just that there was someone new in town. I learned this in English legal history in law school.
@@TheTurbanatore Find used test masters workbooks online. Take 3-4 practice tests. Stop studying at least a week beforehand or you’ll burn out. Don’t go to law school if you can’t break 160.
@@davidusa47 Thank you for the amazing advice. If you don’t mind sir, I have another question: How long do you suggest I study for the LSAT? And Do you recommend I study while I’m completing my bachelors degree or should I start studying after I finish my degree?
@@TheTurbanatore You should major in philosophy. It teaches you logic, which helps on the LSAT and as an attorney. If you can’t cut it in philosophy class (I couldn’t; I also didn’t go straight to law school), check out English or History. All of these majors require you to read a lot. If you’re majoring in anything law related as an undergrad (like criminal studies), it means you probably shouldn’t go to law school. No offense.
@@davidusa47 I major In philosophy at UBC in Canada and minor in Law. I was thinking of writing my LSAT in October, but don't think I will have enough time to study, as I will be doing classes while I study.
Chris Williamson mentions that there is a point system to determine who meets the criteria of being a "psychopath". Almost everyone will experience a psychopathic tendency, whether in regards to a particular thing or a product of what is around them. Just like mental health in general, usually these actions are never cause for concern until a significant portion of your daily life or others are effected by those tendencies in a significant way. This being said, those who deal with high stress situations, emergency services, bosses, service men, leaders, will be required to act very differently than most so they can think clearly, to increase the neural pathways and circuits through repetition, to be able to respond effectively.
You can train or desensitize yourself to different stimuli overtime or increase your regulated psychopathic traits but the core of actual psychopathy is a gift of an innate ability to already have the desensitization built in or low autonomic nervous system arousal.
Aren't we all just narcists and psychopaths and every other cist and path🤷♂. Just because we haven't been put in that kind of situation does not mean that we're not. I've seen horrible shit and felt empathy yet I too would want nothing more for people to ef off after they ate at my home too.
I learned the most important phrase in the army It was in relation to soldiers... but it actually makes more sense to me in relation to humans... Theres no such thing as a bad person/soldier. There are only improperly motivated people/soldiers....
I dealt with a Psychopath Narcissists 2 years ago... Freaking Terrifying!! And that's exactly what He does. Once people figure him out in an area, he just moves....
Just because most of the psychopaths in the worlds of banking, finance, politics, military, media, and entertainment haven't yet been caught for committing crimes doesn't mean that's not what's happening. It doesn't make them any less psychopathic. They have a system around them to hide their crimes and pin it onto others
Psychopath doesn't = criminal. It might be that the clinical diagnosis is required, but then being a psychopath on the way to a crime is therefore not a psychopath technically. But it's like autism, it's a way in which the brain works. The thing you have to understand is that not all psychopaths have a desire or need to commit crimes. It's just that if they do commit a crime, they don't feel remorse. So they won't be sad for the person they murder or steal from. Or there's things that aren't 'crimes' but are considered immoral. Like sabotaging someone else's career in order to take their place. Like releasing a smear campaign on someone who's done nothing wrong. But feeling zero remorse for those acts. So an example of a psychopath in the music industry is getting an 18 year old pop star to sign a contract so they have no rights to the music. Knowing that they will lose out if they become successful. It's not a crime to do that, but it is psychotic.
@@BradSabako Are you serious? This happens all the time. The billionaires pay to have laws put in place that help them and screw the country. They should be publicly executed
2 masters of the podcast conversation, a beautiful flow ....erudite ....concise...interesting and inspiring! Right up there with some of my all time favourite rogan episodes!
He's a grifter. He couldn't contain his laughter when talking about people losing their jobs for speaking out and not being woke or politically correct, saying they're stupid and they get what is coming to them.
Hey! Great conversation by the way, but I really wanted to say. I have been watching JRE for about 12 years. It has really changed my life in many positive ways!! Mostly because of the variety of people Joe has had on, and the eclectic topics that get discussed!! From Health, eating and sleep. To philosophy and morals etc!! And the surprises!! I watched the Kat Williams interview today. I was totally shocked by the subjects they spoke about. I didn't know much about Kat outside of his stand up. Turns out they are made for each other! Also!! Partly because I'm English maybe, but I love this Chris Williamson guy. And like many of his classic guests. Feel like Chris is one of them now. I could listen to these two aaaaalll day very happily!! 😁😁
Lookup Sam Vaknin, a professor in psychology. He’s by far one of the most educated people on this Earth when it comes to Narcissism, psychopathy, and other mental disorders. It’s a lot more complex than people would ever imagine with a lot of overlap.
Yes it is easy to fall into generalisations here, when in fact we are probably all capable of these types of states to one degree or another if the circumstances were warranted. Humans behaviourally adapt as well and can be passed down subconsciously over generations and through cultural group think, what can appear to be just genetics can actually be genetic adaptation.
@@gaussminigun7095 My favourite video is the one where he compares narcissism, borderline, psychopathy and autism. ua-cam.com/video/UMtGBZnX2do/v-deo.html
I think if you examine the top of any hierarchy, you'll find that psychopathy probably isn't uncommon at the top in the leadership bracket. There's a reason so many of these people become uber successful. Turns out it's a trait that relentlessly pushes people to seeking status and power.
Conscientiousness is a trait that is universally prevalent in those fields. It's actually the 2nd strongest correlate of long term life success. Conscientious people feel guilt and are more likely to act with integrity and less likely to leech off others. There are SOME psychopaths in those fields, but most psychopaths can't work 60-80 hours a week. And trust and trustworthiness actually happen to be hugely economically useful, especially in societies like America which, while somewhat corrupt, are nowhere near as corrupt as the systems in, say, India. There are niches where psychopaths can thrive, but generally speaking the upper echelons of most hierarchies have people who aren't psychopathic. They might be low in compassion and politeness (agreeableness), which makes them competitive, and, if they're conscientious, makes them hyper-critical and unforgiving, but not psychopathic.
im convinced every bigger CEO out there is psychopathic. no sane person would want to keep making money even if you can afford literally everything at that point
@@paveantelic7876 That's a stupid claim. People don't only become successful for money. They do it for status, competition, etc. By the way, psychopaths are notoriously lazy, but CEOs notoriously work 80-90 hours a week. Psychopaths have to move from victim to victim, because people find out their manipulation, but CEOs have to depend on their reputation which follows them wherever they go. Psychopaths are non-productive, but non-productive CEOs get fired.
Yup. Our unit psychiatrist told us that if we didn’t have trauma after our deployment we should really worry. He made it easier for us to get therapy when we got home.
Herpes is a common infection or condition, affecting about 1 in 4 American adults, Hsv 1 & Hsv 2 are the common types of Herpes virus and if untreated, they can get unbearable and cause severe medical issues, I'm so glad I'm over herpes and its stigma. all thanks to Dr. Aloha ua-cam.com/channels/_YFEEZEr1BxGkNg1d4vqww.html 🌿🍂💕
I am a psychologist I know the professor he is talking about and this is all bollocks. Mischaracterizing at best down right lying for effect at worst. -He was studying the genetic component of psychopathy and found he share the gene that is present in around 70% of psychopaths convicted of violent crimes. -You do not have to be convicted of a crime to be classified as a psychopath -There are many high functioning psychopaths in society who excel in areas such as business and politics where ruthlessness and focus are rewarded. -Apart from the genetic component of psychopathy the trigger to acting in a violent way stereotyped with psychopathy is still a traumatic event of abuse. -Psychopathy and sociopath don't tend to stand out as he characters them as they are very adapt at reading people and situations so as to act in a social acceptable way. IN SHORT: HE IS FULL OF SHIT ;-)
@@rubymclovely747 I’m guessing that you, like a lot of people, haven’t listened to the full podcast and are basing your conclusion solely on this little snippet? Chris is a podcaster. He’s not an expert in any particular field. He admits (in this very show) that during his interviews he is the dumbest person in the room. What you are watching here is not two brilliant minds exchanging factual information, it’s two dudes chewing the fat over interesting shit they’ve heard. Sometimes that shit can be so interesting, it prompts some listeners to go and further investigate the topic themselves. Maybe he butchered the facts, but do you remember every little detail of everything you ever talk about? They’re just having the craic. Context is EVERYTHING. For a psychologist you seem very judgemental.
Not all psychopaths decide to do bad things. You can lack empathy and be really good at your job. It's less of a distraction and you come off as confident.
True, their decision not to do bad things is not out of empathy or morals. It is because it would not serve them to do bad things. It is not about conscience.
It’s not just about doing their jobs. Psychopaths lack empathy, shame and guilt. They’re also fearless and operate like a hunter looking for prey. These traits make them dangerous to he around because you don’t know when they will screw over you. They’re monsters in human skin
I think the biggest determining factor between the differences of the two psychopaths, the ones that are unhinged so to speak, and those that have it under control, is a basic self awareness and adaptation around their environment. Those that are essentially smart enough to understand that they're an abnormality, and to act, as to blend in and not muddy the waters, they gain an incognito like ability to live life semi comfortably. Just appearing normal enough to blend in, understanding the implications of their own actions. They become aware of the fact that giving into base impulses will only cause themselves and others around them discomfort or worse. They come to the conclusion, logically of course, that they'd be better off blending in, and acting. Rather than to act upon their disorder. The psychopath is fully aware of their abnormalities. Those that are obvious, even those that aren't so obvious, are eventually discovered. Those with perhaps less severe psychopathic traits, learn to adapt to the environment and act as chameleons. Blending in, exhibiting behavior that is considered normal, but cautious enough as to not show their true face around anyone. It's rather frightening to think someone researching psychopaths later found out that they are the very thing they're researching. Even more frightening when they seem to piece together the puzzle that is their own life. I truly believe we can never fully know ourselves. We are destined to our pursuit of unfullfilling knowledge, never satisfied, always on the edge of discovery, but always pushed down by our own lack of capabilities. We are only human after all. Limited by the confines of our minds. We've come far, and unless we prevent ourselves from doing so, we will go much further. The almost random element of biology prevents us from truly understanding. The unique human experience is, as I see it, impossible to fully replicate. As similar as anyone of us are, we are much too different to fully understand each other. I guess that's what makes life so interesting at the end of the day. Edit: I'm not one to leave messages based on the reactions of my comments, but I can't express how much joy these comments are bringing me. I always doubt myself, and to see all of you getting value from my words is wonderful. Thank you all!
@@rjparsons3568 about 20-30 minutes. Had a cigarette while I was outside. I was a bit drunk and high while writing, so you can take from that what you wish.
You don’t have to be a psychopath to not have a problem killing people. Especially if there is a cause/reason to defend or anything like that. Some people miss some sensitivity buttons, while other kind of sensitivity is still there. Not all people are the same.
That neurologist finding out he was a psychopath in the course of studying psychopaths' brain scans sounded like such a "...and they found out the call was coming from UPSTAIRS" story I had to google it, lol.
I think you’re talking about James Fallon who did brain scans on psychopaths at UC Irvine back in the 2000s and found out he has the same psychopathic characteristics in his own brain scans!
SCIENTIST'S FOUND THAT LEFTIST'S BRAIN'S REACT LESS THAN PEOPLE ON THE RIGH WHEN SHOWN DISTURBING IMAGES = LEFTIST ARE MORE LIKELY TO BE PSHYCOPATH'S .............
I think I might be a vulnerable narcissist. Not as bad as I once was about it though. Took a lot of pain and torment to realize it and mitigate its impact on myself and the world around me.
I think I’m in the same boat. I ask people around me and they deny it but I think I just do good job of hiding my true nature. I’ve always pushed people away out of fear of ruining them and I think this may be why.
@JohnRichards-r6y Right. I think the people like use can do it be aware or ourselves and try our best to do what is best for those around us, or at least the ones we love.
@@jamesnewman8011 emphasis on the ones we love haha it’s hard for me to even look at others as people unless they’re attached to someone I care about. Even then I have to make a conscious effort.
The history of the so called "Psychopath check sheet" is pretty interesting. Read "The Psychopath Test" by Jon Ronson. You will find out that the "checksheet" was never suppose to be used for legal purposes. The authentic pschopath test was found to be effective but unethical. The checklist was a poor poor substitute.
I worked for a vulnerable narcissist. It was terrible. He framed me for stuff I hadn’t done just so he could tell other people I was the problem. He was constantly gaslighting me. And I am using “gaslighting” correctly. He would try to make me think I had said or done something I hadn’t. He was emotionally manipulative. He lied pretty much all the time. He played people off against each other. He cared way too much about how he looked, the clothes he wore, how I looked, the clothes I wore, etc. He would put me down for things I did well. So I was a loser because I lift weights. And I am stupid for going to university. But the truth is, he was uneducated and weaker than your average woman. And I know that’s why he would attack me on those two points. It wasn’t until after I quit and I was teaching some psychiatrists English that one of psychiatrists told me it sounded like he was a narcissist. I had no idea what narcissists were.
I’ve always suspected this has something to do with why some women also find psychopaths extremely attractive (even if they won’t readily admit it). Life isn’t all sunshine and rainbows. Sometimes it’s war, and psychopaths are better suited for mentally enduring the brutal hell that war often entails. A psychopath who is able to exercise self-control over their impulses for violence can become a hero. It’s like Robert Sapolsky says, “We love violence, just in the right context.”
@@bighands69 He mentioned that they won't readily admit it. It's young and naive women that find antisocial behavior irresistible in men, they outgrow it eventually if their minds aren't too fucked up. The idea is that they want a ferociously aggressive, fearless man to protect them--but, then they realize that they need protection from those men most of all, and some will outgrow their attraction to them when they start thinking that having the status of being with a man who dominates at any and all cost is more aggravation than it's worth.
@@bighands69 Clearly you haven't heard of how many letters murderers get from women. And clearly you aren't familiar with Jordan petersons work on the subject. SOME women fall for psychopaths due to their manipulative behavior and often its the bright women. Strange world. I wish it was as simple as "no they dont"
@@devilsoffspring5519 It is only a small number of women that find those antisocial behaviors irresistible and the reason for that is because those women confuse those behaviors with character and assurance. It is the same reason why some women are attracted to married men or men of authority. There is also cases of women being attracted to catholic priests who can never marry.
@@homosapien4833 Roughly around one in ten people have an IQ that is below independent function levels. In men those levels of IQ develop certain types of behaviors and they also do the same in women. Those women with lower IQ levels are not function by any normal standard and will find them self doing things outside the norms of human behavior. Historically in liberal culture post 1800s women with lower IQ levels can actually still find them self in a good relationship with a man and have a perfectly healthy family as their desires to love the children still apply. The problem is when those women meet men who are manipulative and in the modern world there is a large number of psychopathic men that will prey upon those women when society knows exactly what those men are.
same for special forces units, lots of them score high in psychopathy which is really useful since they are in highly traumatic and stressful situations, and being able to easily regulate emotions would be very useful. Also you would guess that there would be psychopaths in jobs like spec ops since these jobs might bring the thrill, but will also bring immense prestige as well.
The ability to easily regulate emotion is not an APD characteristic. Psychological screening is conducted for Tier 1 operators and they're "supposed" to screen these people out, but it depends.
With this usually you find some who are more or less already on the scale of anti social personality disorder than full blown psychopaths. If they end up that it’s usually because they’re “made” as the repeated killing etc is something that they eventually become desensitized too or easier with X amount of times they’ve killed. I’m sure there’s a couple born ones in the regular military ops tho. Golden state killer, Israeli Keys, BTK, David Berkowitz, Dahmer are a couple that were just standard military.
Yes! This is just like Casey from yellowstone. Watch him closely and he is cold, emotionless and just loves day to day not grieving too much. Numb to his surroundings and the killing he had to do through out the show.
@@anthonyp3113 Tier 1, remember - not Tier 2 though. Tier 2 still includes things like SEALS, MARSOC, 75th Rangers, and so on. I am aware that they still do a lot of the same polygraph testings, screenings, etc - but Tier 2 is still something to be highly considered when talking about this.
@@anthonyp3113 aspd is a spectrum. In reality they're only screening out the low functioning ones who lack self awareness. Every single candidate that is a sociopath/psychopath that passes selection is automatically high functioning since they demonstrated an ability to hide their behavior.
Interesting topic - I once read that the difference between a psychopath is a physical distinction/malformation in the brain. There is a connection missing between the Prefrontal cortex and the amyglada. These areas of the brain perceive emotion, guilt, fear, and anxiety. The pathway is was found to be severed most often by some type of brain injury. Whether the injury is caused by assault, accidental dropping, or car accident this connection is severed, and thus allows psychopaths to act in a way that many of us normally wouldn't because these areas of the brain would hinder our ability to function so brazenly.
I am afraid that is not the case. A psychopath is not a medical condition nor is it something that can be easily studied through psychology. What normally defines a psychopath is the acts that they committed not psychoanalysis. What is labelled as psychopathy is most likely to manifest in men but it does happen in women as well but in much lower numbers. People have a tendency to confuse general psychological health conditions, psychosis and sociopathic behaviors with that of psychopathic behaviors.
@@bighands69 Firstly, I wasn't stating an opinion. This is was a FACT widely accepted by the psychology field. Thirdly, I never stated it was a medical condition, not where you got that from, but if you want to get technical, please see the examples below as I do think it would be a medical condition if a person wanted to push that narrative. Any physical alteration of the body that is not considered normal is classified as an injury, correct? A broken arm, is a medical injury, a fractured bone is a medical injury, a cardiovascular seizure aka heart attack is considered a medical injury. Why would a physical disconnection between two important areas in the brain not classy as a medical injury?
@@ethan.... we can all push a narrative. I'm not sure I know a completely accurate FacTermination, no matter how prevailing the accredited conglomerate explanation may hold
Yeah why do people throw that underrated term around? How is he underrated? He’s on the rogan podcast, he has his own podcast, has a massive following.
The professor that he’s talking about is Dr. James H. Fallon, Professor Emeritus, Anatomy & Neurobiology School of Medicine at the University of California, Irvine. Extremely interesting study he did. If you want to listen to him speak on the matter check out episode 2 of a podcast called Sword and Scale.
The guy (the psychopath study doctor/prof) wrote a book on it. He looked into his past and he saw things like playing chess with his children and not allowing them to win. That he would compete in chess, with children. His own kids. little things like that. A really interesting book.
I had a boss who was a grandiose narcissist with psychopathy (his ex-wife’s therapist told her he seemed to have the traits). He brought a gun to work and threatened to blow my co-workers brains out for losing a deal. A family member is a vulnerable narcissist (diagnosed by a psychologist). I’m MUCH more afraid of her. My former boss was like a house cat. He’d probably murder someone if he thought he could get away it. But at the end of the day knows who fills his food bowl. She’s more like an anxious rat terrier that was beaten as a puppy. She’s a terrible combination of fearful and aggressive. She’s completely unpredictable.
Psychopaths gravitate towards being ceos, politicians, police officers, military, race car drivers. Very few of them go on to do heinous violent crimes. People hear the word "psychopath" and immediately identify it with someone like Ted Bundy, when overall this just is not the case. ASPD has a wide range of individuals who fall under this umbrella. Its my belief psychopathy is a major advantage in a society like ours. Fear response holds most people back from ever chasing their dreams, or accomplishing much. Most will just live a boring, comfortable existence in exchange for a false sense of safety.
No, psychopaths don't lack fear of speaking etc in groups. They lack boundaries and fear in a moment carried by an absurd but to themselves valid principle in their head which was made usually prior to their actions, and when they lack desire to live then how far they take it can be horrendous and therefore they'll be known as the Ted Bundy type. Sure a psychopath characteristic might be more common in a successful person however their brain needs more than this one element for success.
Psychopathy combined with antisocial or borderline personality disorders are the the types that do the most horrific things. You should also look into how many sociopaths there are in a given population, there's a lot more than you'd think.
A "Vulnerable Narcissist" will "LURE" you in....Test you until you Break....then when you have no other choice but to leave out of pure survival...Try to DESTROY you for LEAVING.
He wasn't a Psychopath because he didn't have any "activation", the reason he had no "activation" is because he knew what the questions and scenarios would be, therefore no surprise. He knew the standards, the questions, the scenarios and the quantifying statistics. In other words, he knew what was coming, what would be said and seen and didn't react the way that someone being put in that situation, out of the blue, would react. Everyone missed that, nobody took that into consideration. When I know how a situation is going to proceed, in all steps, I'm not surprised or trigger to activate the same responses as a person that had no clue what was going to happen. The END..
Well, these tests are designed so that you react primitively. Even if I knew that someone would show me something gross I would still have an emotional reaction. Maybe not on my face but brain activity cannot lie.
Psychopathy as a desirable trait in certain cultures, industries, battle situations, leadership or management roles etc, has been around forever. It's probably why its still so prevalent in the gene pool. There are varying levels of psychopathy which fit in nicely with multiple scenarios. Psychopaths and narcissists can also respond and react and modify their behaviors to better suit a role.
@\f_a/ I don't think that's fair. He attempted to address a more interesting "why" going beyond yours from an evolutionary psychology POV. It's like asking "Why are humans altruistic?" You have to try and reason macro benefits.
@\f_a/ I don't see the point. Like it or not, psychology is a soft science. There is no definitive evidence on the origin of psychopathy or psychopathic traits. You even somewhat contradict yourself pointing out the biological and environmental. On serotonin levels - right - we're just discovering there's never been data to substantiate the claim that depression is caused by serotonin imbalances, JUST NOW. They can't get simple mental conditions right, it's just mathematical models and guesswork on correlations. As much as I think studying the psyche is **interesting** I despise the way consensus is formed and every bullsh*t revision of the DSM.
Psychopathy is not desirable and has never been elevated in a society. A person that is a psychopath is not a tool and cannot be reasoned with. They generally cannot function in society without others acting as their guarantor.
Psychopaths can live crime-free life, especially when pursuing business careers. They often screw people over and for them the end always justifies the means - that's why they make up high percentage (in comparison to population avarage) of the upper echelon positions of big companies.
You should look into the dark triad. You might find it interesting. What you're describing is the Machiavellian aspect of the dark triad. "The end justifies the means."
@@DL900RME I appreciate you, man, but I know the topic, although I never did a deep dive into Machiavellianism. I have a black metal band dedicated to pathology of conciousness, so I know a lot of stuff people don't know. F.e. Plutchik's three-dimensional emotion cone / wheel of emotions is fascinating - I bet you that most people don't know that boredom in high intensity is disgust, and disgust. At first you think that it's BS, but if you think about it if someone is extremely boring you, you feel some type of way towards them, and you want to get rid of them from your vicinity, or remove yourself from their company. Psychology is fascinating, but I don't have a degree, and my intrest lays in the pathologies. Substance abuse, mental illness. Fuukkk, I still fully don't understand my fascination in being the dominating person in BDSM, cause in 'real life' I'm VERY empathic and sometimes I'd rather help someone, while I myself need help. So on some level I want to have someone's will under my command, and physically that's easy for me, cause I am 6'8'' (202cm) and I am pretty athletic and a little bear-like xD Of course I set up safe words, three to be exact. One is for my sub to tell, if I'm too easy, second one is if I'm too hard and need to adjust, and third is outright stop. I tell those three words before session and first thing I do is ordering to repeat those words and what they mean. BDSM without consent is straight up abuse, and in situations where "no" doesn't mean "no" I can imagine having no safe word only with my future wife (if she'll be into that of course). In Plutchik wheel 'Submission' is combination of tree with TRUST and FEAR and 'Love' is also TRUST, but mixed with JOY. Like before, at first glance BDSM seems like "nasty kink", but it has more in common with Love than you think, cause both submission and love are "made" out of two ingredients, and they share one. Any comment? I love talking bout' psychology, but rarely I find someone that knows or is interested in the 'darker' stuff so to speak. Cheers, and have a good day! Hope to hear back from you ^_^ PS. I live in Poland, so the BDSM knowledge is unfortunately very limited in most people (although most girls are happy to try basic D/s stuff and enjoy it very much in my experience :P)
I saw a study recently that psychopaths have more children on average so well it may be maladaptive to the individual (sometimes) it may be also be an excellent strategy for propagating your genes.
You don't need to have committed a crime to be a psychopath. You can have behavior that is borderline criminal or that is destructive to others in a carefully constructed way so as to be legally done
Facts. Most criminals are not psychopath. I know people that join gangs out of fear or just trying Impress girls or just get money. Most criminals want money. But I agree with you
@@bento4876 That is not how they are classified by institutions. Criminal behavior is one-factor among 8 and you don't need all 8 to have the personality disorder. Just about 5
Mad seeing Chris on rogan when a few year back he was one of those typical club promoters in Newcastle haha Good on ya mate and class that ya representing the north east 👏🏻
I was looking for this. I remember Chris with his big hair promoting the "carnage" bar crawl down in the big market.... And now he's on Joe Rogan. Good on him.
guess im a psychopath cause I indeed too, get pissed quietly when people eat my food... imagine going to a family bbq and bringing leftovers and you come back later after putting it in the fridge and someone's already ate it... or going out to get food and put it on the table and go to quickly take a shower to come back to realize that your 5 piece tender has turned into a 2.....
A few important points in this conversation need to be pushed back on a bit: 1. The question itself of “why hasn’t psychopathy been bred out of existence?” begs the question. It assumes the conclusion that psychopathy is a genetic trait being passed on reproductively. It’s a question about the heritability of psychopathy as a neat genetic sequence. But we actually don’t know the heritability of psychopathy. It appears to be both nature and nurture (genetics and environment), so the question of whether psychopathy is evolutionarily adaptive or not is not something we can actually answer or speculate on unless we know for sure how heritable it is on a molecular genetic level. 2. Even if psychopathy were highly heritable (let’s say 75% or more), by definition, a psychopath is someone who is capable of manipulating others and hiding their lack of empathy well through other mechanisms, such as charm or success. This doesn’t at all preclude them from reproducing. Evolution is always a question of the traits that led to survival long enough to be able to reproduce. Psychopaths aren’t automatically negated from reproduction because psychopathy doesn’t impair the ability to reproduce (i.e. psychopaths don’t die off before the age of reproduction). In fact, they might be more successful at reproducing given their psychopathy (if you catch my drift). 3. The question of what purpose does psychopathy serve is a teleological question, which Dawkins would tell you has no place in a discussion about evolutionary biology. Evolutionary biology is not that kind of thing. Though it’s a very clean and elegant explanation, the theory of evolution cannot explain teleological reasons for what purpose certain traits serve-it’s purely about genetic selection, not necessarily what makes “sense” to us humans who are meaning-making machines. 4. Those are not exactly the definitions of grandiose vs. vulnerable narcissist. Both types are seeking approval from others, which is what can make them dangerous (re: what happens when they don’t get validation? Will they retaliate? Will they dominate?). Vulnerable narcissists use a mechanism of gaining pity or sympathy while grandiose narcissists use a mechanism of demanding “respect” for their grandeur, and when either of them don’t get it, they dominate/harm in some capacity the person who isn’t feeding into their illusions of either grandeur or weakness. These are points that any first or second year psych, biology or even philosophy student could push back against from this video. Not saying this to be smug, but this is why it’s important to ask yourself always whether the person you’re listening to is an authentic expert or not. I could tell within the first two minutes that he’s not a psychologist or has even taken college level psychology courses. There’s lots of research available about psychopaths conducted by clinical psychologists, so if you are interested in understanding psychopaths (especially if you’re a survivor of a narcissistic family member or spouse), then go find that information because it’s really important psycho-adaptively for us to understand psychopaths so we don’t become victims of them.
My mother is a vulnerable (or covert) psychopath and my stepfather is the grandiose type. Having this language helps to alleviate the pain this causes/has caused. It’s become more and more clear as an adult. I have a feeling there are more of them than we realize.
The first part of the conversation when they were talking about the usefulness of a psychopath to a tribe and a wartime berserker setting is a part of the brain that functions not only like a psychopath but also as in on-off mechanism for consciousness. This is really well explained by the documentary done by the History channel, with Henry Rollins as a host,. It is called The warrior Gene. It explains the berserker mode where a warrior will black out and handle battle anyway necessary. It is important to note though this can be separate from the psychopath Gene which is conscience of its own actions and doesn't feel regret or remorse afterwards. I wish there was more that is known about these two different modes. But research is limited. The best example of this that I can think of in modern media is the swedish movie girl with a dragon tattoo when they introduce her father during the third film and they talk about him having a berserker mode.
Man, I used to spend hours and hours researching psychopathy. There are some really great documentaries out there on clinical psychopathy. It's been really cool watching the public consciousness become more aware of what a psycopath is, clinically, not in the movies
Love the thumbnail for this. Anyone that recognized that thumbnail moment, if you haven't seen the Weird Al, Huey Lewis parody of that moment, you are missing out.
@@JamesBongo Narcissism, like any psychological diagnosis, is a distinct set of behaviors and beliefs. So if your argument is that humans don't display distinct patterns of behavior and thought I think you're going to have a hard time convincing people that these diagnosis' don't exist.
@@Michaeldoors that is kind of what I'm saying. humans can fluid personality and I do not think that we can accurately discribe the human consciousness much less diagnose it
@@Michaeldoors most psychiatry is based on the supposition that we know what a "normal" human is supposed to look like. Its extremely reductionist labeling all quality deemed "bad" as illness. Once you believe there are devils all around you you will start to see them.
My personal viewpoint is that different human personalities, disorders, and even simply how some humans like psychopaths are wired differently, are like the different animal, plant, fungi, and other kingdoms in a rainforest that all are interdependent and interconnected on each other. For example, leaf cutter ants chewing on leaves does thin the canopy a bit and can let a bit more light through to the seedlings and plants below, even if it hurts the tree a bit, from my understanding the tree will eventually produce alkaloids that are too toxic to the ants so that it will not be stripped bare. Psychopaths are known to make excellent surgeons, lawyers, and chefs for obvious reasons and those are all professions we need and benefit from in society. I believe that the term psychopath is so heavily associated with murder and similarly shocking and horrific crimes that it can be difficult to view the wiring of a psychopath from a different lens.
As I was listening, I immediately thought psychopaths sound similar to incels: people who blend in, but only a small fraction get bad attention. Also, I just listened to a recent interview on Triggernometry on incels.
In movies there’s always the one guy a society calls upon for help. That person is either in a padded room, locked up in glass cages, locked up in chains, etc. then the glorious scene comes where they set that person free. Nothing needs to be said to them. You know they will handle business and then you can capture them again and wait for the next time you need them.
But the problem is, Grandiose Narcists can lead to getting other people injured or killed in certain situations by putting them in compromising or dangerous positions, then act like they did nothing wrong. Not as dangerous as a Vulnerable Narcists, but still dangerous none the less.
Generally speaking, borderline personalities, narcissists and psychopaths etc, are three types of people you can comfortably exploit and treat like utter shit as they are the garbage of humanity.
@@lachlanmclennan2188 aren’t sociopaths and psychopaths similar? I thought a sociopath was generally a psychopath but more so a product of their environment/upbringing. Whereas a psychopath is generally born a psychopath.
This was a very interesting story, and I'm a bit fascinated by how the professor conducting the research project ended up being a psychopath himself. I personally have known a few psychopaths unfortunately, with my uncle being one of them. He is just an absolutely unhinged cantankerous human being, showing very little to no ability to respect personal boundaries and constantly bullies pretty much anyone he comes into contact with. He once choked my cousin for stealing the headlights off his truck and the entire time, was completely quiet and mute beating him up and showing no ounce of rage. That just blew my mind away. I certainly could never maintain that level of composure in a dangerous situation like that, especially when I'm not sure what the other person is capable of.
@@Mereship It definitely is. And a lot of them tend to have a narcissistic element to them as well, because the ones I've known constantly play mind games on you and one you up. They can cause some really fucked up PTSD and major anxiety problems.
This argument is easy to counter. Because most really tough high testosterone men are altruistic. In fact high testosterone seems to be correlated with altruism and empathy. They are tough, but fair. In other words, they are righteous. They lack empathy for people who do terrible things, but DO have empathy for good people. These men, the Navy Seals, the "heroes" have the mental fortitude to be violent without being sociopathic. These are the tough people who keep us safe. We'll do just fine without psychopaths in the genepool.
I believe that the reason why there are so many psychopaths and sociopaths in society in this day and age is because of multiple reasons that you can't just pin down, but a major part is how they were raised, especially if a child is abused/neglected.
No, its because its optimal in may ways and roles. High rates of success but not without risk. Much better than being a nobody who judges off of empathy.
This is what I tell my wife when she asks why I get so angry at times, that anger is a tool, that's in our DNA, I have to be willing and able to take a life, defending myself or my loved ones at any given time. You gotta learn to control it, but being able to go psycho when needed, is a handy tool to have in the arsenal..
@jhony 3tears that's a lotta of words, I didn't read them but I assume they are some of the best words ever written, so I went ahead and gave you a thumbs up.. I hope you have an awesome day today my friend. Keep on using them words....!!..
My mother was a vulnerable narcissist. No cap: I'm pretty sure I would've had a happier childhood if I had been raised by that psychopath professor Williamson was talking about. Also, a minority of psychologists believe Borderline Personality Disorder should be reclassified as a form of vulnerable narcissism. I mention that in case anyone here has experience with people with BPD; you may see similarities if you compare the two disorders "on paper".
struggling with this scenario with one of my in laws. super insecure, uncontrollable anger where they largely resort to personal attacks to hurt someone, they're just sad and miserable on the inside and need always to latch on to something as the source of their pain and trauma - as soon as that one source disappears, it's replaced by another. often times it's people they have an issue with. it's a very painful situation dealing with them.
I was in love with a psychopath. He was a surgeon. He lost his license for assaulting his patients while they were under anesthesia. I found out when I saw him on the news.
You were in love with his money and image, hoping that other women would be jealous of you having a boyfriend that was a surgeon. At least grow enough ovaries to admit THAT.
Sometimes it takes a while to spot one, but once you do, you should have no contact because they take no accountability for their actions what so ever. They also have many other undesirable traits like narcissism.
Unless you are a psychiatrist that has graduated Med school there is no way you can “spot” one. You have absolutely no idea what you’re identifying and it is wrong to label people as such when you do not have the knowledge or tools to do so.
The psychopathic professor said, in his own words on a video interview, that his friends and family all said they knew he was a psychopath and weren't surprised by the results.
@@zafmo9829 He didn't present himself as grumpy at all. He seemed normal. I'm just quoting him. It was a fascinating TV documentary. It was about "The Warrior Gene" and it was hosted by Henry Rollins. It's on UA-cam if anyone wants to watch it.
I think you're focusing on the actual clinical "psycopaths," meaning the meet so many traits on the check list. There are degrees though. I'm sure there are many people that might has have 75% of them minimum that needs to be met to be diagnosed as a psychopath. They may have just the right ones, but not the ones that makes life problematic. I'd read an article written by a psychiatrist and historian that proposed that many of the war heroes of the ancient world: Achilles, Ajax or guys like the Roman Officer war hero turned traitor coriolanus and later Scipio Aemilianus. Aemilianus was 17 when fighting in the Third Macedonian war. His father was the General (I believe), and at the end during mop up actions, he discovered his son was missing. He was told that he went with some cavalry to chase down enemy soldiers that had fleed. At this point it was days that gone by and everyone was prepared for the worse. The army liked his son, so they too were upset. On the last day when his father had accepted that they must have been killed when they went out to go after enemy soldiers, when a loud whoop came from outside his tent. Then he heard his son's name being yelled. He walked out to see his son riding in with a few comrades; completely covered in blood and gore. They had spent days killing and butchering all enemies they faced. Battles back then were bloody by nature, so the fact they went out of their way to pay so much attention to the scene meant it must have been much more gruesome than normal. This book puts forth the idea that many of these exceptional soldiers were likely to have been psycopaths as we know them. That just because the wars were violent it doesn't change the facts that a man killing another man would still be an unnatural thing to do, something most people can't do without severe motivation.
It’s James Fallon with the book and his “story” is pure guff. He had OCD when he was a child. Anxiety attacks. He had no callous unemotional traits as a child. He’s not a psychopath at all. The study design he did is not diagnostic of being a psychopath. He did the number one thing a scientist should never do which is to claim causal connections when nothing more than correlation was shown, in a sample size of one - him. He’s just an outlier. Please read Kent Keihls book The psychopath whisperer, or Without Conscious by the father of psychopathy Robert Hare. It all helped Fallons book sell though… Fallon is no where near being a psychopath. He’s a professor of a lab in the US. Trust me - it’s boring. A psychopath would not last a single day. You could not get more un- psychopathic. He has no traits. Apart from the stories he tells about his home life and unconnected stuff about the debunked “warrior gene”. Big respect for Chris. As a guy from Newcastle who did my masters and PHD at Newcastle, and have plans to make my mark on the world. Respect brother. How you managed to emerge sane from the world of nightclub promotion is beyond me. I just about escaped doorwork with my life intact.
So after hearing about the two types of narcissists, having grown up with a mother as one and an aunt (her sister) as the other... holy Christ it all makes sense now
if your asking whether narcissism is just female psychopathy then no, they are two separate things, psychopaths can be narcissistic and narcissists can be psychopathic. Males are more likely to be a narcissist or a psychopath, however women are more likely to have narcissistic traits, that last part is my theory but women seem much more self centered
@@marcosenarosa4877 if you ask me, women are socialized to be centered on _connections,_ where men are socialized to be centered on _achievements._ a person could be self-centered either way.
@@RatPfink66 I agree with your idea but don't see how it relates to narcissism at all, but it does relate to self centeredness which tells me that self absorbed is a better word which I should've used. Everyone is self centered
They're talking about the story of Dr James (Jim) Fallon, who has interesting stories and theories as to how childhood experience and key development milestones can either kick off manifested psychopathy or keep it in check.
Unfortunately, most high-level psychopaths commit crimes completely out in the open on a mass scale and get away with it totally scot-free. How do you factor these types in to your equation?
This is the main problem. All the other discussion and arguments are moot. What is the meta-crisis? It's a crisis in consiosuenss. Being as strong and kind of a person as possible while defending and protecting humanity.
US military vet here.
Anyone who's been in combat will tell you that the psychopaths do VERY well under fire. Psychopathy is absolutely essential in wartime (as Chris mentions), because you need those guys who are fearless and ruthless. They don't hesitate, they act. Saw it in action. Psychopaths emerge from combat theaters with a chest full of medals. But those same guys, turned loose in civilian life, can be monsters. I saw that, too.
Can you mention instances of monsters?
@@pillu7063 Moronic claim
"Psychopathy is absolutely essential in wartime" Absolutely not. You don't have to be a psychopath to remain calm in stressful situations. Psychopaths serve only themselves and see no difference between a friend and foe. They wouldn't think twice about shooting you as a fellow allied soldier if they had something to gain from it.
@@pillu7063 lol not at all
@@GameLorePage very surface level take, psychopaths do not mean unhinged traitors in combat like a free for all in the slightest - you speak from ignorance.
My friend's dad said that, in the war he fought in, the "psychos" were the one's who kicked butt on the front lines. No fear, vicious, and terribly effective in battle.
Bunny and Barnes from Platoon!
It is all nonsense. A psychopath is unlikely to make it through basic training of the US military. Maybe through other military services in the world that do not perform screening.
@@DrManhattan8472me and my brother have discussed this scene. Where he's looking down and smoking a cigarette
I agree I read your top generals are psychopaths
"Look at that subtle colouring. The tasteful thickness. Oh my God. It even has a watermark." Thanks for having me mate!
You did great Chris
Something wrong, Chris? You're sweating...
Nice mate, will catch the whole thing later on Spotify. Been watching a lot of your stuff lately too, your one with Andrew Huberman sent me down the rabbit hole!
Was the professor you mentioned James Fallon?
When I saw your name on the title. I asked myself, the podcaster from England? Sure enough. I enjoy your podcasts. Congratulations on making it to JRE!
You done us proud.
Talking about the researcher James Fallon, and yes, he did ask his wife, kids, close associates for an honest, frank appraisal of him. They all said, "yep. we've known for some time that you were a psychopath." He goes on to say that their feedback didn't really bug him, further substantiating his psychopathy. 😂
He isn't a sociopath, he's a psychopath.
I thought it was psychopathy. Not sociopathy. There are small but important differences.
Psychopaths are capable of being very charming and are much better at hiding their... dark passenger.
@@burtan2000 it totally was, I misspoke, but also acknowledged that in a previous comment... I've now edited the comment to reflect that. 👍
@@burtan2000 Indeed. This video explains the how psychopaths are made, and touches on the differences.
ua-cam.com/video/AHk7S6prF6M/v-deo.html
@@burtan2000 you must be a bot, people who comment wouldn't have fixed his spelling instead ridiculed him for no reason.
There's a high percentage of psychopaths among medical professionals, particularly surgeons. In that context, it is probably adaptive to be cold, calculating, and emotionless ... you don't want someone's emotions overcoming them when they're cutting you open. It probably also accounts for the extreme arrogance and dismissiveness often encountered in medical settings.
EDIT: One of the commenters correctly points out that medical professionals score higher on psychopathic traits than the general population. That doesn't necessarily make them proper psychopaths. An important clarification.
And thats why they be killing us now
That's why the medical community didn't really fight back over the pseudoscience and absurdity of the coronavirus and how it was handled
I'd rather have a perfectionist god slit me open than a mediocre butcher.
Do you want someone with no empathy cutting your body though 😂
Largest percentage of psychopaths are in politics because only in government can one literally get away with theft and mass murder.
Psychopaths and sociopaths can do things in society that others can find difficult emotionally. As well as raiding parties: surgeons, collecting of dead and post mortem, executioner, negotiators, lawyers, crime investigators, CEOs, traders and high level finance, politicians are just some that come to mind.
yes but in some of those proffesions because they are psychopaths it would take nothing for them to do something bad for there own gain,incase you didnt notis most people in goverments in positions of power have psychopathic traids,and in allot of country they are the ones fucking up the country's and having zero issue with lying straight to youre face about it.
This is the best comment.
Definitely not sociopaths
Psychopaths, sure. Not so with sociopaths. Sociopaths are impulsive and uncontrolled. They are reckless, and wouldn’t be fit for these jobs.
@@bunsenn5064 psychopathic tendencies would be better to say. But Jeffery Dahmer was presentable to most people evem police.
The book is called the psychopath inside. He found that without trauma in their life psychopaths will most likely not commit serious crimes.
Yes. Those brought up well will often find them selfs high ranking army or SAS, or fighters, rock climbers etc
Most psychopaths are very calculating and self serving, so yeah, why would they commit crimes? Why risk being imprisoned, it wouldn't be self serving. So interesting. They're so foreign to the normal human condition of emotions like guilt and remorse that it's so fascinating to see what goes through a their minds.
And of course a lot of children who grew up with trauma become anti social too. Even if they would have grown up with a normal way of associating with people without the trauma.
@@jambononi That's wrong tbh. Most psychopaths aren't very calculating at all, in fact, one of the great signifiers of psychopathy is extreme impulsivity and a lack of ability to delay gratification; contrary to popular opinion most people in prison who are diagnosed as psychopaths are actually below average intelligence or simply have average intelligence, the image of the smart criminal psychopath who never gets caught by the police is a Hollywood trope and really isn't accurate at all.
Crazy
@@TheOlzee "high ranking officers, SAS and... Rock climbers??? Bloody rock climbers 😆. Pull the other one lol
As a psychotherapist, I have seen psychopathic tendencies and worked with those with antisocial personality disorder (the diagnosis used for this term). However some of the comments on behaviors witnessed by people they know could also be how trauma effects the brain. It’s a coping mechanism when people are exposed to traumatic things, especially over and over to become detached and cold. They also failed to mention that the researcher likely had a good upbringing, was nurtured and has low ACE scores. Individuals with the wiring to be psychopaths- combine that with neglect, poverty, abuse or childhood trauma- more likely to lead to use of drugs and to criminal acts. This is fact. Healthy attachments will allow people to develop into individuals who can live in society, hold down jobs, abide by laws and have families.
Thank god an actual accurate professional explanation, JRE guests have a tendency to want to relate everything back to monkeys
We have a BINGO folks. James Fallon had a loving caring up bring. I hear people use the good old appeal to authority. When the only thing they are an authority of is gobbledygook. You are the real deal. Thank you for your words. I hope more people will read your comments here.
Nurture has no impact on psychopathy behaviors. A person that exhibits low emotional behaviors is not a psychopath.
Criminality is the best indicator of psychopathic tendencies. The idea of a harmless high functioning psychopath is nonsense.
Absolutely! When everyone and everything in life beats you down, you could become emotionally numb to everything. It’s all about survival and I think the psychopath gets this.
@@bighands69 are you insane nurture has an impact on everything
As a Brit, I'm proud of Chris Williamson and his journey as a podcaster. Wish him luck in his US journey. He's a skilled podcaster.
I've listened to him for atleast 2 years he has a good way to view things. I think
Crazy to think how far he has come since being on love island
Yeah he's done us proud. Good lad.
Excellent point . Couldn't agree more.
I was born within the same boundaries on a map as someone who is successful. Feeling proud of something you have had no part in is a sign of narcissism, isn't it?
This falls under the same banner as anxiety. Back when we survived by sticking together in tribes, we needed highly alert and restless members to detect threats during the night when everyone else was sleeping. Anxious people were extremely valuable. If everyone in the tribe was super relaxed and slept through thunderstorms, well you'd all be screwed. The issue with anxiety in todays world is that it has no place. Like an old alarm system with malfunctioning sensors. But not so long ago it was a crucial survival instinct that kept us, and others alive. I believe this can still be observed in the social hierarchy of Chimpanzees and other species of monkeys.
in my opinion anxiety has a place still. it's hypersensitivity to the data in the environment. one can train oneself to hone that skill
Interesting and agreeable. I use my anxiety for self-improvement every single day, without fail. It's all about focusing your "power"
@@zapthefirst3423 Interesting you should say that, as I’ve just recently started looking at it in the same way. TOTAL game changer.
You are 100% correct except in the respect as in anxious we’re the sole people responsible for our survival, in my opinion. I think you should read more into evolutionary psychology, involving ALL of the brain variants. I think you’d like it.
I’m regards to psychopathy, they were responsible for our advancement into uncertain situations. I have sources and people to look into if interested
@@chrisw8049 What you're sharing already makes sense to me. I can tell the anxiety is a hyper-alertness out of self preservation. Please do share these sources you speak of
There is an interesting documentary of the man who did the study on Psychopathy -and found out he was one himself.
I loved the part where they interviewed his family and his brother said it all made sense.
When the psychopathic brother got angry, he'd start a relentless pursuit for vindication. The family reasoned that it was their loving family structure that kept him in line to a fair degree.
What's the name of the documentary please?
*Atheists*
@@Drdoofenshmirts Do elaborate, please.
@@Lordradost Awesome I'll look it up, thanks!
@@Lordradost go outside and touch some grass
It is well understood that many ceos of major corporations would be considered psychopathic. Having a personality trait that allows them to make decisions indifferent of impacts to people/employees allows decisions to be made to benefit the company exclusively. Also surgeons are often psychopathic. This benefits their performance as they are able to view the patient as an object with its components rather than a human being with feelings and emotions. This allows them to focus on the task at hand.
Wow I’m so glad they left the last part about narcissism in. I used to have two terribly toxic friends that got so nasty when I cut my friendship off with them and everything he said about vulnerable narcissists is spot on for them. I could never quite describe to people why they were so awful and now I can.
Ex-wife and I talked for over a decade about how she'd watched her mother 'go crazy' during her youth (vulnerable narcissist) and the hell it had made out of her childhood. Said she always feared she could have the same thing happen to her.
I hate being able to confirm that it really does transfer through genetics and that I watched it happen to a woman I love, apparently like she watched it happen to her mom.
@@M-S_4321 Are you sure there isn't a problem at your end?
@@Anon-pl8kz I know what the problems are at both our ends. She and I talked about them regularly for years (not fought, not argued, not even raised our voices) Worked instead as a team trying to care for each other, plan and problem solve. She had lived through her teen years emotionally tormented by her own mothers 'erratic and dramatic' (NPD) behavior which she survived by learning to be quiet and 'keeping her head down'. She kept that learned ability to suppress herself until she couldn't anymore apparently. Ever felt a spring released from containment jump away?
most vulnerable narcissists have been bullied as kids and spend their lives chasing approval. I know one from my highschool years ago and guess what hes in jail for murder now
@@adriankelly350 name?
I don't know when they changed the rules in the DSM but when I studied Psychology in college it was well understood that criminal behavior are Psychopathy was correlated but not required. There are many high functioning people in very large organizations that got there bc of their ability to not care about the consequences.
We see it every day..
Surgeons, morticians, combat soldiers, CEOs, all jobs that can allow you to thrive with lower levels of empathy
@@CalebSpears1 It's not only about empathy, but also about risk tolerance - psycopaths are rather reckless and many are employed in jobs at the edge, where they stop just short of going over, where a hormal human will stop well in advance.
Most people are self centered and don't care about consequences as long as they are removed from them. Its perhaps the only real evil in the world and its utterly banal.
The DSM has been changing a lot. Psychiatrists can’t use conversion therapy for kids thinking they are transgender or other made up genders, they have to affirm their misguided beliefs that they are trapped in the wrong bodies.
Breaking the law didn’t and shouldn’t correlate to what makes a psychopath. The intelligent ones know how to manipulate people into breaking the law for them.
So happy for Chris this is a huge moment in his career and he fully deserves it! Modern wisdom is my daily fix, keep up the great work brother.
even if he is talking a load of shit!?
now of the info he got from his "researcher" is even close to an accurate representation of the professors work.
He is just a liar praying on those without critical thinking for clicks and likes.
A grifter at best.
Loooooool
@@rubymclovely747 Seems like you would have been great in raiding parties
SCIENTIST'S FOUND THAT LEFTIST'S BRAIN'S REACT LESS THAN PEOPLE ON THE RIGH WHEN SHOWN DISTURBING IMAGES = LEFTIST ARE MORE LIKELY TO BE PSHYCOPATH'S .............
James Fallon is the professor he’s speaking of. I met him on a shuttle from the airport years ago. Nicest, most interesting person I’ve met. He’s done a lot of interviews regarding this and other mental stuff. So fascinating!
He was masking
Back in the day, an outlaw was someone who had traveled from one town to another. In the 1200s, if you were traveling to another town by yourself, it’s probably because you killed somebody in the last town you were in.
The sheriff used to go from town to town investigating whether there were any major crimes to report, but also whether there were any outlaws, meaning just that there was someone new in town.
I learned this in English legal history in law school.
How did you study for your LSAT?
@@TheTurbanatore Find used test masters workbooks online. Take 3-4 practice tests. Stop studying at least a week beforehand or you’ll burn out. Don’t go to law school if you can’t break 160.
@@davidusa47 Thank you for the amazing advice. If you don’t mind sir, I have another question: How long do you suggest I study for the LSAT? And Do you recommend I study while I’m completing my bachelors degree or should I start studying after I finish my degree?
@@TheTurbanatore You should major in philosophy. It teaches you logic, which helps on the LSAT and as an attorney. If you can’t cut it in philosophy class (I couldn’t; I also didn’t go straight to law school), check out English or History. All of these majors require you to read a lot.
If you’re majoring in anything law related as an undergrad (like criminal studies), it means you probably shouldn’t go to law school. No offense.
@@davidusa47 I major In philosophy at UBC in Canada and minor in Law. I was thinking of writing my LSAT in October, but don't think I will have enough time to study, as I will be doing classes while I study.
Chris Williamson mentions that there is a point system to determine who meets the criteria of being a "psychopath". Almost everyone will experience a psychopathic tendency, whether in regards to a particular thing or a product of what is around them. Just like mental health in general, usually these actions are never cause for concern until a significant portion of your daily life or others are effected by those tendencies in a significant way. This being said, those who deal with high stress situations, emergency services, bosses, service men, leaders, will be required to act very differently than most so they can think clearly, to increase the neural pathways and circuits through repetition, to be able to respond effectively.
You can train or desensitize yourself to different stimuli overtime or increase your regulated psychopathic traits but the core of actual psychopathy is a gift of an innate ability to already have the desensitization built in or low autonomic nervous system arousal.
Aren't we all just narcists and psychopaths and every other cist and path🤷♂. Just because we haven't been put in that kind of situation does not mean that we're not. I've seen horrible shit and felt empathy yet I too would want nothing more for people to ef off after they ate at my home too.
@@sbshaunb95 Traits yes...disorder/brain wiring no
BTW: you cannot perform this test on your own.
Jesus christ that was good
I learned the most important phrase in the army
It was in relation to soldiers... but it actually makes more sense to me in relation to humans...
Theres no such thing as a bad person/soldier.
There are only improperly motivated people/soldiers....
Super fascinating. I think self awareness is key to addressing this issue personally and as a society.
Is it fascinating? Or do you just have mashed potatoes for brains?
I dealt with a Psychopath Narcissists 2 years ago... Freaking Terrifying!!
And that's exactly what He does. Once people figure him out in an area, he just moves....
Psychopaths are often pointing out other individuals as psychopaths. That is exactly what they do.
That's not true, I didn't move.
No. Wait.
Give some examples...this is kinda fascinating.
Why would they move? I don't get it, most of them hide and its not like they have some criminal tendencies, all they have to do is to not lose mask
Just because most of the psychopaths in the worlds of banking, finance, politics, military, media, and entertainment haven't yet been caught for committing crimes doesn't mean that's not what's happening. It doesn't make them any less psychopathic. They have a system around them to hide their crimes and pin it onto others
The ones in positions of power are also writing laws that make their actions legislatively legal even if they're morally unethical.
@@eqmuse that’s bs. Give me exact examples of that happening.
Psychopath doesn't = criminal.
It might be that the clinical diagnosis is required, but then being a psychopath on the way to a crime is therefore not a psychopath technically. But it's like autism, it's a way in which the brain works. The thing you have to understand is that not all psychopaths have a desire or need to commit crimes. It's just that if they do commit a crime, they don't feel remorse. So they won't be sad for the person they murder or steal from.
Or there's things that aren't 'crimes' but are considered immoral. Like sabotaging someone else's career in order to take their place. Like releasing a smear campaign on someone who's done nothing wrong. But feeling zero remorse for those acts.
So an example of a psychopath in the music industry is getting an 18 year old pop star to sign a contract so they have no rights to the music. Knowing that they will lose out if they become successful. It's not a crime to do that, but it is psychotic.
@@BradSabako Are you serious? This happens all the time. The billionaires pay to have laws put in place that help them and screw the country. They should be publicly executed
Good points being made. 👏
Not all criminals are psychopaths either.
2 masters of the podcast conversation, a beautiful flow ....erudite ....concise...interesting and inspiring! Right up there with some of my all time favourite rogan episodes!
True!
deep troof
Chris is such a great communicator
He's a retord
I’m so proud of Chris! What a journey
--The--Plot--Against--the--President--👈 -on--Tubi--
If Jean Claude van Damme and Clint Eastwood had a baby..it would be this guy.
What's his story?
@Connor XT sounds inspirational
Wow what a good little boy!
"He may be a psychopath, but he's our psychopath". Generation Kill (2008). Great series.
TiKI 66
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Great book. The series left out lots of events from that units deployment.
I thought it was from House of Gucci
A true psychopath is never yours. Lame ass quote lol
Lol!!
Happy to see Chris here, i have followed him for some time, and have really come to like him
Lol!
From Windsor Ontario Canada just south of Detroit Michigan USA ciao
The guy is actually smart and very knowledgeable.
He's a grifter. He couldn't contain his laughter when talking about people losing their jobs for speaking out and not being woke or politically correct, saying they're stupid and they get what is coming to them.
@@realCharAznable calm yourself
Hey! Great conversation by the way, but I really wanted to say. I have been watching JRE for about 12 years. It has really changed my life in many positive ways!! Mostly because of the variety of people Joe has had on, and the eclectic topics that get discussed!! From Health, eating and sleep. To philosophy and morals etc!! And the surprises!!
I watched the Kat Williams interview today. I was totally shocked by the subjects they spoke about. I didn't know much about Kat outside of his stand up. Turns out they are made for each other!
Also!! Partly because I'm English maybe, but I love this Chris Williamson guy. And like many of his classic guests. Feel like Chris is one of them now. I could listen to these two aaaaalll day very happily!! 😁😁
Lookup Sam Vaknin, a professor in psychology. He’s by far one of the most educated people on this Earth when it comes to Narcissism, psychopathy, and other mental disorders. It’s a lot more complex than people would ever imagine with a lot of overlap.
Yes it is easy to fall into generalisations here, when in fact we are probably all capable of these types of states to one degree or another if the circumstances were warranted. Humans behaviourally adapt as well and can be passed down subconsciously over generations and through cultural group think, what can appear to be just genetics can actually be genetic adaptation.
link us the best vid please
@@gaussminigun7095 the myth of the fearless psychopath
@@gaussminigun7095 My favourite video is the one where he compares narcissism, borderline, psychopathy and autism.
ua-cam.com/video/UMtGBZnX2do/v-deo.html
Yes and Sam Vaknin is also a self proclaimed narcissist. Fascinating!
I think if you examine the top of any hierarchy, you'll find that psychopathy probably isn't uncommon at the top in the leadership bracket. There's a reason so many of these people become uber successful. Turns out it's a trait that relentlessly pushes people to seeking status and power.
Conscientiousness is a trait that is universally prevalent in those fields. It's actually the 2nd strongest correlate of long term life success. Conscientious people feel guilt and are more likely to act with integrity and less likely to leech off others.
There are SOME psychopaths in those fields, but most psychopaths can't work 60-80 hours a week. And trust and trustworthiness actually happen to be hugely economically useful, especially in societies like America which, while somewhat corrupt, are nowhere near as corrupt as the systems in, say, India.
There are niches where psychopaths can thrive, but generally speaking the upper echelons of most hierarchies have people who aren't psychopathic. They might be low in compassion and politeness (agreeableness), which makes them competitive, and, if they're conscientious, makes them hyper-critical and unforgiving, but not psychopathic.
im convinced every bigger CEO out there is psychopathic. no sane person would want to keep making money even if you can afford literally everything at that point
@@paveantelic7876 That's a stupid claim.
People don't only become successful for money. They do it for status, competition, etc.
By the way, psychopaths are notoriously lazy, but CEOs notoriously work 80-90 hours a week. Psychopaths have to move from victim to victim, because people find out their manipulation, but CEOs have to depend on their reputation which follows them wherever they go. Psychopaths are non-productive, but non-productive CEOs get fired.
@@paveantelic7876 Who said CEOs can afford everything?
DC is loaded...they are all psychopaths.....dictators are normally psychopaths
Yup. Our unit psychiatrist told us that if we didn’t have trauma after our deployment we should really worry. He made it easier for us to get therapy when we got home.
Herpes is a common infection or condition, affecting about 1 in 4 American adults, Hsv 1 & Hsv 2 are the common types of Herpes virus and if untreated, they can get unbearable and cause severe medical issues, I'm so glad I'm over herpes and its stigma. all thanks to Dr. Aloha ua-cam.com/channels/_YFEEZEr1BxGkNg1d4vqww.html 🌿🍂💕
Dudes got some excellent pen flipping skills at the end there
And little else
Chris is brilliant, and he's getting better and better.
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Lol!!!
He's like Jordan Peterson, minus the intelligence.
So proud of Chris to get to where he has got. Fully deserved for the work he has put in over the years.
Tiki 2
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No this is
ua-cam.com/video/YatAytP-3_g/v-deo.html
finally here 🔞
I am a psychologist I know the professor he is talking about and this is all bollocks.
Mischaracterizing at best down right lying for effect at worst.
-He was studying the genetic component of psychopathy and found he share the gene that is present in around 70% of psychopaths convicted of violent crimes.
-You do not have to be convicted of a crime to be classified as a psychopath
-There are many high functioning psychopaths in society who excel in areas such as business and politics where ruthlessness and focus are rewarded.
-Apart from the genetic component of psychopathy the trigger to acting in a violent way stereotyped with psychopathy is still a traumatic event of abuse.
-Psychopathy and sociopath don't tend to stand out as he characters them as they are very adapt at reading people and situations so as to act in a social acceptable way.
IN SHORT:
HE IS FULL OF SHIT ;-)
Cool
@@rubymclovely747 I’m guessing that you, like a lot of people, haven’t listened to the full podcast and are basing your conclusion solely on this little snippet?
Chris is a podcaster. He’s not an expert in any particular field. He admits (in this very show) that during his interviews he is the dumbest person in the room. What you are watching here is not two brilliant minds exchanging factual information, it’s two dudes chewing the fat over interesting shit they’ve heard. Sometimes that shit can be so interesting, it prompts some listeners to go and further investigate the topic themselves. Maybe he butchered the facts, but do you remember every little detail of everything you ever talk about? They’re just having the craic.
Context is EVERYTHING.
For a psychologist you seem very judgemental.
Congrats to Chris. Big move being able to do JRE far earlier than anticipated.
he's well above rogans interlect.
He's ready to stop using diapers now
Not all psychopaths decide to do bad things. You can lack empathy and be really good at your job. It's less of a distraction and you come off as confident.
some psychopaths may even do some ebil things
True, their decision not to do bad things is not out of empathy or morals. It is because it would not serve them to do bad things. It is not about conscience.
It’s not just about doing their jobs. Psychopaths lack empathy, shame and guilt. They’re also fearless and operate like a hunter looking for prey. These traits make them dangerous to he around because you don’t know when they will screw over you. They’re monsters in human skin
I think the biggest determining factor between the differences of the two psychopaths, the ones that are unhinged so to speak, and those that have it under control, is a basic self awareness and adaptation around their environment. Those that are essentially smart enough to understand that they're an abnormality, and to act, as to blend in and not muddy the waters, they gain an incognito like ability to live life semi comfortably. Just appearing normal enough to blend in, understanding the implications of their own actions. They become aware of the fact that giving into base impulses will only cause themselves and others around them discomfort or worse. They come to the conclusion, logically of course, that they'd be better off blending in, and acting. Rather than to act upon their disorder. The psychopath is fully aware of their abnormalities. Those that are obvious, even those that aren't so obvious, are eventually discovered. Those with perhaps less severe psychopathic traits, learn to adapt to the environment and act as chameleons. Blending in, exhibiting behavior that is considered normal, but cautious enough as to not show their true face around anyone. It's rather frightening to think someone researching psychopaths later found out that they are the very thing they're researching. Even more frightening when they seem to piece together the puzzle that is their own life. I truly believe we can never fully know ourselves. We are destined to our pursuit of unfullfilling knowledge, never satisfied, always on the edge of discovery, but always pushed down by our own lack of capabilities. We are only human after all. Limited by the confines of our minds. We've come far, and unless we prevent ourselves from doing so, we will go much further. The almost random element of biology prevents us from truly understanding. The unique human experience is, as I see it, impossible to fully replicate. As similar as anyone of us are, we are much too different to fully understand each other. I guess that's what makes life so interesting at the end of the day.
Edit: I'm not one to leave messages based on the reactions of my comments, but I can't express how much joy these comments are bringing me. I always doubt myself, and to see all of you getting value from my words is wonderful. Thank you all!
We everyone we find our life we lose it.
This was a great read thank you
@@jakeoutlaw3056 I actually really appreciate this comment. Sometimes I wonder if I ramble, but it's nice to see people enjoying it.
How long did it take for you to type that 😵
@@rjparsons3568 about 20-30 minutes. Had a cigarette while I was outside. I was a bit drunk and high while writing, so you can take from that what you wish.
Watching joes podcast guarantees me to always have a interesting convo that I bring to the table🤣
If this is interesting to you, I have a 5 hour Don Lemon interview I think you would enjoy.
So happy for Chris. He's extremely well researched and smart. He works hard and really deserved this 👏
Works hard and is smart but is not a psychologist and shouldn’t be talking on this topic.
@@done1961 yikes
@@done1961 why not?
@@done1961 Shut up.
What did he "deserve?"
You don’t have to be a psychopath to not have a problem killing people. Especially if there is a cause/reason to defend or anything like that. Some people miss some sensitivity buttons, while other kind of sensitivity is still there. Not all people are the same.
That neurologist finding out he was a psychopath in the course of studying psychopaths' brain scans sounded like such a "...and they found out the call was coming from UPSTAIRS" story I had to google it, lol.
Lol!
Can you explain what this means please? I don't understand the reference
Most psychologists choose that profession to treat their own psychosis
@@leomn2075 Good man
His name is Jim Fallon.
I think you’re talking about James Fallon who did brain scans on psychopaths at UC Irvine back in the 2000s and found out he has the same psychopathic characteristics in his own brain scans!
Lol
SCIENTIST'S FOUND THAT LEFTIST'S BRAIN'S REACT LESS THAN PEOPLE ON THE RIGH WHEN SHOWN DISTURBING IMAGES = LEFTIST ARE MORE LIKELY TO BE PSHYCOPATH'S .............
The Psychopathic Mind. Excellent book.
He was doing brain scans of other researchers as a control group and one of the controls was a psychopath. They checked and it was his scan
Is that the same guy who said you had to have a certain gen to become a violent psycopath?
Psychopathy is my new favorite word.
I will use it in everyday conversation from now on.
It's a good band name. Probably already taken lol.
"this sandwich is so psychopathy"
Why the fuck would you use that everyday? Thats insane and stupid
I think I might be a vulnerable narcissist. Not as bad as I once was about it though. Took a lot of pain and torment to realize it and mitigate its impact on myself and the world around me.
I think I’m in the same boat. I ask people around me and they deny it but I think I just do good job of hiding my true nature. I’ve always pushed people away out of fear of ruining them and I think this may be why.
@JohnRichards-r6y Right. I think the people like use can do it be aware or ourselves and try our best to do what is best for those around us, or at least the ones we love.
@@jamesnewman8011 emphasis on the ones we love haha it’s hard for me to even look at others as people unless they’re attached to someone I care about. Even then I have to make a conscious effort.
The history of the so called "Psychopath check sheet" is pretty interesting. Read "The Psychopath Test" by Jon Ronson.
You will find out that the "checksheet" was never suppose to be used for legal purposes. The authentic pschopath test was found to be effective but unethical. The checklist was a poor poor substitute.
what was the authentic psychopath test? and why is it unethical?
@@yuzan3607 Probably tested their degree of psychopathy in real life scenarios.
I just read this book today. Pages 84-126 were especially good and fascinating.
I worked for a vulnerable narcissist. It was terrible. He framed me for stuff I hadn’t done just so he could tell other people I was the problem. He was constantly gaslighting me. And I am using “gaslighting” correctly. He would try to make me think I had said or done something I hadn’t. He was emotionally manipulative. He lied pretty much all the time. He played people off against each other. He cared way too much about how he looked, the clothes he wore, how I looked, the clothes I wore, etc. He would put me down for things I did well. So I was a loser because I lift weights. And I am stupid for going to university. But the truth is, he was uneducated and weaker than your average woman. And I know that’s why he would attack me on those two points.
It wasn’t until after I quit and I was teaching some psychiatrists English that one of psychiatrists told me it sounded like he was a narcissist. I had no idea what narcissists were.
Always fun when these guys describe your best personality traits
lmaooooo bruh
🙄
anyone else notice how crazed Chris's face is when he is talking about the professor
Yea I'm that guy too. Always think ill self destruct eventually but never do. I have zero emotions. It bothers others. Especially when you have kids
I’ve always suspected this has something to do with why some women also find psychopaths extremely attractive (even if they won’t readily admit it). Life isn’t all sunshine and rainbows. Sometimes it’s war, and psychopaths are better suited for mentally enduring the brutal hell that war often entails. A psychopath who is able to exercise self-control over their impulses for violence can become a hero. It’s like Robert Sapolsky says, “We love violence, just in the right context.”
Women do not find psychopaths' attractive and are repelled by them. Women that are attracted to them tend to be vulnerable.
@@bighands69 He mentioned that they won't readily admit it. It's young and naive women that find antisocial behavior irresistible in men, they outgrow it eventually if their minds aren't too fucked up.
The idea is that they want a ferociously aggressive, fearless man to protect them--but, then they realize that they need protection from those men most of all, and some will outgrow their attraction to them when they start thinking that having the status of being with a man who dominates at any and all cost is more aggravation than it's worth.
@@bighands69 Clearly you haven't heard of how many letters murderers get from women. And clearly you aren't familiar with Jordan petersons work on the subject. SOME women fall for psychopaths due to their manipulative behavior and often its the bright women. Strange world. I wish it was as simple as "no they dont"
@@devilsoffspring5519
It is only a small number of women that find those antisocial behaviors irresistible and the reason for that is because those women confuse those behaviors with character and assurance. It is the same reason why some women are attracted to married men or men of authority.
There is also cases of women being attracted to catholic priests who can never marry.
@@homosapien4833
Roughly around one in ten people have an IQ that is below independent function levels. In men those levels of IQ develop certain types of behaviors and they also do the same in women.
Those women with lower IQ levels are not function by any normal standard and will find them self doing things outside the norms of human behavior. Historically in liberal culture post 1800s women with lower IQ levels can actually still find them self in a good relationship with a man and have a perfectly healthy family as their desires to love the children still apply.
The problem is when those women meet men who are manipulative and in the modern world there is a large number of psychopathic men that will prey upon those women when society knows exactly what those men are.
same for special forces units, lots of them score high in psychopathy which is really useful since they are in highly traumatic and stressful situations, and being able to easily regulate emotions would be very useful.
Also you would guess that there would be psychopaths in jobs like spec ops since these jobs might bring the thrill, but will also bring immense prestige as well.
The ability to easily regulate emotion is not an APD characteristic. Psychological screening is conducted for Tier 1 operators and they're "supposed" to screen these people out, but it depends.
With this usually you find some who are more or less already on the scale of anti social personality disorder than full blown psychopaths. If they end up that it’s usually because they’re “made” as the repeated killing etc is something that they eventually become desensitized too or easier with X amount of times they’ve killed. I’m sure there’s a couple born ones in the regular military ops tho. Golden state killer, Israeli Keys, BTK, David Berkowitz, Dahmer are a couple that were just standard military.
Yes! This is just like Casey from yellowstone. Watch him closely and he is cold, emotionless and just loves day to day not grieving too much. Numb to his surroundings and the killing he had to do through out the show.
@@anthonyp3113 Tier 1, remember - not Tier 2 though. Tier 2 still includes things like SEALS, MARSOC, 75th Rangers, and so on. I am aware that they still do a lot of the same polygraph testings, screenings, etc - but Tier 2 is still something to be highly considered when talking about this.
@@anthonyp3113 aspd is a spectrum. In reality they're only screening out the low functioning ones who lack self awareness. Every single candidate that is a sociopath/psychopath that passes selection is automatically high functioning since they demonstrated an ability to hide their behavior.
Interesting topic - I once read that the difference between a psychopath is a physical distinction/malformation in the brain. There is a connection missing between the Prefrontal cortex and the amyglada. These areas of the brain perceive emotion, guilt, fear, and anxiety.
The pathway is was found to be severed most often by some type of brain injury. Whether the injury is caused by assault, accidental dropping, or car accident this connection is severed, and thus allows psychopaths to act in a way that many of us normally wouldn't because these areas of the brain would hinder our ability to function so brazenly.
I am afraid that is not the case. A psychopath is not a medical condition nor is it something that can be easily studied through psychology.
What normally defines a psychopath is the acts that they committed not psychoanalysis. What is labelled as psychopathy is most likely to manifest in men but it does happen in women as well but in much lower numbers.
People have a tendency to confuse general psychological health conditions, psychosis and sociopathic behaviors with that of psychopathic behaviors.
@@bighands69 Firstly, I wasn't stating an opinion. This is was a FACT widely accepted by the psychology field.
Thirdly, I never stated it was a medical condition, not where you got that from, but if you want to get technical, please see the examples below as I do think it would be a medical condition if a person wanted to push that narrative.
Any physical alteration of the body that is not considered normal is classified as an injury, correct? A broken arm, is a medical injury, a fractured bone is a medical injury, a cardiovascular seizure aka heart attack is considered a medical injury.
Why would a physical disconnection between two important areas in the brain not classy as a medical injury?
@@ethan.... we can all push a narrative. I'm not sure I know a completely accurate FacTermination, no matter how prevailing the accredited conglomerate explanation may hold
This was so interesting, need to watch the whole podcast now!
As interesting as a Whoppi Goldberg movie
Chris Williamson is so underrated! I love his podcast, and I'm so glad he's getting exposure from this podcast! Thanks for having him on.
Why is he underrated?
Yeah why do people throw that underrated term around?
How is he underrated? He’s on the rogan podcast, he has his own podcast, has a massive following.
Loooooool
hes overrated though....
The professor that he’s talking about is Dr. James H. Fallon, Professor Emeritus, Anatomy & Neurobiology School of Medicine at the University of California, Irvine. Extremely interesting study he did. If you want to listen to him speak on the matter check out episode 2 of a podcast called Sword and Scale.
The guy (the psychopath study doctor/prof) wrote a book on it. He looked into his past and he saw things like playing chess with his children and not allowing them to win. That he would compete in chess, with children. His own kids. little things like that. A really interesting book.
What is the book called
I had a boss who was a grandiose narcissist with psychopathy (his ex-wife’s therapist told her he seemed to have the traits). He brought a gun to work and threatened to blow my co-workers brains out for losing a deal.
A family member is a vulnerable narcissist (diagnosed by a psychologist). I’m MUCH more afraid of her.
My former boss was like a house cat. He’d probably murder someone if he thought he could get away it. But at the end of the day knows who fills his food bowl.
She’s more like an anxious rat terrier that was beaten as a puppy. She’s a terrible combination of fearful and aggressive. She’s completely unpredictable.
Pretty cool to see Chris on the podcast. Crazy how he first came on the scene on Love Island. His podcast is great, definitely check it out.
Psychopaths gravitate towards being ceos, politicians, police officers, military, race car drivers. Very few of them go on to do heinous violent crimes. People hear the word "psychopath" and immediately identify it with someone like Ted Bundy, when overall this just is not the case. ASPD has a wide range of individuals who fall under this umbrella. Its my belief psychopathy is a major advantage in a society like ours. Fear response holds most people back from ever chasing their dreams, or accomplishing much. Most will just live a boring, comfortable existence in exchange for a false sense of safety.
This is a bunch of book selling nonsense.
You know what kind of person tries to defend and promote psychopathy...?
Bundy was bi-polar and psychopaths are generally male, fill most of the prison population, do worse at school. most achieve nothing in life.
No, psychopaths don't lack fear of speaking etc in groups. They lack boundaries and fear in a moment carried by an absurd but to themselves valid principle in their head which was made usually prior to their actions, and when they lack desire to live then how far they take it can be horrendous and therefore they'll be known as the Ted Bundy type. Sure a psychopath characteristic might be more common in a successful person however their brain needs more than this one element for success.
Based take
Loooooool
Psychopathy combined with antisocial or borderline personality disorders are the the types that do the most horrific things. You should also look into how many sociopaths there are in a given population, there's a lot more than you'd think.
Sneaky evil twisted people
We are Not all evil
That is true. But nevertheless, it's not enough to be common or for the way medical professionals treat it differently in adulthood.
I agree. I can count at least 8 just in the small circle around me, ex-girlfriends, family and ex-friends.
A "Vulnerable Narcissist" will "LURE" you in....Test you until you Break....then when you have no other choice but to leave out of pure survival...Try to DESTROY you for LEAVING.
He wasn't a Psychopath because he didn't have any "activation", the reason he had no "activation" is because he knew what the questions and scenarios would be, therefore no surprise.
He knew the standards, the questions, the scenarios and the quantifying statistics. In other words, he knew what was coming, what would be said and seen and didn't react the way that someone being put in that situation, out of the blue, would react. Everyone missed that, nobody took that into consideration.
When I know how a situation is going to proceed, in all steps, I'm not surprised or trigger to activate the same responses as a person that had no clue what was going to happen.
The END..
I was thinking the same thing. A person would def have less of a reaction to things if they knew they were coming..
He's probably a narcissist and used this story of self discovery to become famous and popular.
Well, these tests are designed so that you react primitively. Even if I knew that someone would show me something gross I would still have an emotional reaction. Maybe not on my face but brain activity cannot lie.
Yeah that story has been debunked years ago. It's about James Fallon
@@Womenandwine I agree 100%. Just imagine how un "activated" you would be if you knew about your own surprise birthday party, before it happened.
4:02 "who the f are all these people in my house and eating my food" 😆 sounds just like my dad
Psychopathy as a desirable trait in certain cultures, industries, battle situations, leadership or management roles etc, has been around forever. It's probably why its still so prevalent in the gene pool. There are varying levels of psychopathy which fit in nicely with multiple scenarios. Psychopaths and narcissists can also respond and react and modify their behaviors to better suit a role.
@\f_a/ I don't think that's fair. He attempted to address a more interesting "why" going beyond yours from an evolutionary psychology POV. It's like asking "Why are humans altruistic?" You have to try and reason macro benefits.
@\f_a/ I don't see the point. Like it or not, psychology is a soft science. There is no definitive evidence on the origin of psychopathy or psychopathic traits. You even somewhat contradict yourself pointing out the biological and environmental. On serotonin levels - right - we're just discovering there's never been data to substantiate the claim that depression is caused by serotonin imbalances, JUST NOW. They can't get simple mental conditions right, it's just mathematical models and guesswork on correlations. As much as I think studying the psyche is **interesting** I despise the way consensus is formed and every bullsh*t revision of the DSM.
Psychopathy is not desirable and has never been elevated in a society. A person that is a psychopath is not a tool and cannot be reasoned with. They generally cannot function in society without others acting as their guarantor.
I used to work at a psych facility with patients, the nurses used to use the Psych Techs that were a little off when patients got out of hand
Psychopaths can live crime-free life, especially when pursuing business careers. They often screw people over and for them the end always justifies the means - that's why they make up high percentage (in comparison to population avarage) of the upper echelon positions of big companies.
You should look into the dark triad. You might find it interesting. What you're describing is the Machiavellian aspect of the dark triad. "The end justifies the means."
@@DL900RME I appreciate you, man, but I know the topic, although I never did a deep dive into Machiavellianism. I have a black metal band dedicated to pathology of conciousness, so I know a lot of stuff people don't know.
F.e. Plutchik's three-dimensional emotion cone / wheel of emotions is fascinating - I bet you that most people don't know that boredom in high intensity is disgust, and disgust. At first you think that it's BS, but if you think about it if someone is extremely boring you, you feel some type of way towards them, and you want to get rid of them from your vicinity, or remove yourself from their company.
Psychology is fascinating, but I don't have a degree, and my intrest lays in the pathologies. Substance abuse, mental illness.
Fuukkk, I still fully don't understand my fascination in being the dominating person in BDSM, cause in 'real life' I'm VERY empathic and sometimes I'd rather help someone, while I myself need help. So on some level I want to have someone's will under my command, and physically that's easy for me, cause I am 6'8'' (202cm) and I am pretty athletic and a little bear-like xD Of course I set up safe words, three to be exact. One is for my sub to tell, if I'm too easy, second one is if I'm too hard and need to adjust, and third is outright stop. I tell those three words before session and first thing I do is ordering to repeat those words and what they mean. BDSM without consent is straight up abuse, and in situations where "no" doesn't mean "no" I can imagine having no safe word only with my future wife (if she'll be into that of course).
In Plutchik wheel 'Submission' is combination of tree with TRUST and FEAR and 'Love' is also TRUST, but mixed with JOY. Like before, at first glance BDSM seems like "nasty kink", but it has more in common with Love than you think, cause both submission and love are "made" out of two ingredients, and they share one.
Any comment? I love talking bout' psychology, but rarely I find someone that knows or is interested in the 'darker' stuff so to speak.
Cheers, and have a good day! Hope to hear back from you ^_^
PS. I live in Poland, so the BDSM knowledge is unfortunately very limited in most people (although most girls are happy to try basic D/s stuff and enjoy it very much in my experience :P)
I saw a study recently that psychopaths have more children on average so well it may be maladaptive to the individual (sometimes) it may be also be an excellent strategy for propagating your genes.
Let's see the citation
@@anthonyp3113 It would explain the state of the world would it not
@@Skateandcreate9 I'd have to see the study first to see if it can even be used to generalize to those with APD let alone the entirety of humanity.
So Elon?
You don't need to have committed a crime to be a psychopath. You can have behavior that is borderline criminal or that is destructive to others in a carefully constructed way so as to be legally done
Facts. Most criminals are not psychopath. I know people that join gangs out of fear or just trying Impress girls or just get money. Most criminals want money. But I agree with you
Did you not listen? He said thats how they are classified by the institutions.
@@bento4876 That is not how they are classified by institutions. Criminal behavior is one-factor among 8 and you don't need all 8 to have the personality disorder. Just about 5
This episode was informative. I love this channel
I guess if you've literally never heard anything before
Mad seeing Chris on rogan when a few year back he was one of those typical club promoters in Newcastle haha
Good on ya mate and class that ya representing the north east 👏🏻
Just shows how far you can go if you've got the goods, you put the work in and take the right risks. Good lad.
💯💯
Thought I could detect a north east twang 👍
I was looking for this. I remember Chris with his big hair promoting the "carnage" bar crawl down in the big market.... And now he's on Joe Rogan. Good on him.
@@youaretheproles I remember too! I used to play cricket with/against this lad - go on son!
Joe wanted to say "mm, Brendan Schaub" when Chris was describing the vulnerable narcissist.
spot on
Lol I was thinking that too 🤣
U made it chris...we love u...what an episode this was... complete gold ❤️
He's a big boy now! No more peeing the bed.
guess im a psychopath cause I indeed too, get pissed quietly when people eat my food... imagine going to a family bbq and bringing leftovers and you come back later after putting it in the fridge and someone's already ate it... or going out to get food and put it on the table and go to quickly take a shower to come back to realize that your 5 piece tender has turned into a 2.....
Psychopathy is awesome when completing tasks... Don't let your feelings and emotions cause you to quit
A few important points in this conversation need to be pushed back on a bit:
1. The question itself of “why hasn’t psychopathy been bred out of existence?” begs the question. It assumes the conclusion that psychopathy is a genetic trait being passed on reproductively. It’s a question about the heritability of psychopathy as a neat genetic sequence. But we actually don’t know the heritability of psychopathy. It appears to be both nature and nurture (genetics and environment), so the question of whether psychopathy is evolutionarily adaptive or not is not something we can actually answer or speculate on unless we know for sure how heritable it is on a molecular genetic level.
2. Even if psychopathy were highly heritable (let’s say 75% or more), by definition, a psychopath is someone who is capable of manipulating others and hiding their lack of empathy well through other mechanisms, such as charm or success. This doesn’t at all preclude them from reproducing. Evolution is always a question of the traits that led to survival long enough to be able to reproduce. Psychopaths aren’t automatically negated from reproduction because psychopathy doesn’t impair the ability to reproduce (i.e. psychopaths don’t die off before the age of reproduction). In fact, they might be more successful at reproducing given their psychopathy (if you catch my drift).
3. The question of what purpose does psychopathy serve is a teleological question, which Dawkins would tell you has no place in a discussion about evolutionary biology. Evolutionary biology is not that kind of thing. Though it’s a very clean and elegant explanation, the theory of evolution cannot explain teleological reasons for what purpose certain traits serve-it’s purely about genetic selection, not necessarily what makes “sense” to us humans who are meaning-making machines.
4. Those are not exactly the definitions of grandiose vs. vulnerable narcissist. Both types are seeking approval from others, which is what can make them dangerous (re: what happens when they don’t get validation? Will they retaliate? Will they dominate?). Vulnerable narcissists use a mechanism of gaining pity or sympathy while grandiose narcissists use a mechanism of demanding “respect” for their grandeur, and when either of them don’t get it, they dominate/harm in some capacity the person who isn’t feeding into their illusions of either grandeur or weakness.
These are points that any first or second year psych, biology or even philosophy student could push back against from this video. Not saying this to be smug, but this is why it’s important to ask yourself always whether the person you’re listening to is an authentic expert or not. I could tell within the first two minutes that he’s not a psychologist or has even taken college level psychology courses. There’s lots of research available about psychopaths conducted by clinical psychologists, so if you are interested in understanding psychopaths (especially if you’re a survivor of a narcissistic family member or spouse), then go find that information because it’s really important psycho-adaptively for us to understand psychopaths so we don’t become victims of them.
Thanks a Ton Emily!
Well said. Similar ideas about homosexuality.
My mother is a vulnerable (or covert) psychopath and my stepfather is the grandiose type. Having this language helps to alleviate the pain this causes/has caused. It’s become more and more clear as an adult. I have a feeling there are more of them than we realize.
I meant “narcissist” but honestly it’s a thin line I’m sure.
“who tf are these people in my house eating my food”
valid tbh
The first part of the conversation when they were talking about the usefulness of a psychopath to a tribe and a wartime berserker setting is a part of the brain that functions not only like a psychopath but also as in on-off mechanism for consciousness. This is really well explained by the documentary done by the History channel, with Henry Rollins as a host,. It is called The warrior Gene. It explains the berserker mode where a warrior will black out and handle battle anyway necessary. It is important to note though this can be separate from the psychopath Gene which is conscience of its own actions and doesn't feel regret or remorse afterwards.
I wish there was more that is known about these two different modes. But research is limited.
The best example of this that I can think of in modern media is the swedish movie girl with a dragon tattoo when they introduce her father during the third film and they talk about him having a berserker mode.
You’re crazy
Henry Rollins is definitely a grandiose narcissist.
@@ritchcarcass8624 how
@@RR-xz6bv I’m jk
Berserkers may have also drank an amanita muscaria brew before going into battle, so that may also play a role
Man, I used to spend hours and hours researching psychopathy. There are some really great documentaries out there on clinical psychopathy. It's been really cool watching the public consciousness become more aware of what a psycopath is, clinically, not in the movies
Love the thumbnail for this. Anyone that recognized that thumbnail moment, if you haven't seen the Weird Al, Huey Lewis parody of that moment, you are missing out.
I missed that part. I was trying to feed a kitten to this atm machine.
Impressive
Try getting a reservation a dorcia now Paul
why did all the bots attack my comment? i wasn't first nor have i had the most likes. haha
My baby daddy/ex husband is a vulnerable narcissist diagnosed with NPD. He is the worst person on earth and is extremely toxic.
i have diagnosed my x wife as a vulnerable narcissist, thanks to this 7 minute clip, LoL kidding, not kidding
My mother too lol
Narcissism is "real" if you believe in it
@@JamesBongo Narcissism, like any psychological diagnosis, is a distinct set of behaviors and beliefs. So if your argument is that humans don't display distinct patterns of behavior and thought I think you're going to have a hard time convincing people that these diagnosis' don't exist.
@@Michaeldoors that is kind of what I'm saying. humans can fluid personality and I do not think that we can accurately discribe the human consciousness much less diagnose it
@@Michaeldoors most psychiatry is based on the supposition that we know what a "normal" human is supposed to look like. Its extremely reductionist labeling all quality deemed "bad" as illness. Once you believe there are devils all around you you will start to see them.
My personal viewpoint is that different human personalities, disorders, and even simply how some humans like psychopaths are wired differently, are like the different animal, plant, fungi, and other kingdoms in a rainforest that all are interdependent and interconnected on each other. For example, leaf cutter ants chewing on leaves does thin the canopy a bit and can let a bit more light through to the seedlings and plants below, even if it hurts the tree a bit, from my understanding the tree will eventually produce alkaloids that are too toxic to the ants so that it will not be stripped bare. Psychopaths are known to make excellent surgeons, lawyers, and chefs for obvious reasons and those are all professions we need and benefit from in society. I believe that the term psychopath is so heavily associated with murder and similarly shocking and horrific crimes that it can be difficult to view the wiring of a psychopath from a different lens.
The old saying "it takes all kinds
As I was listening, I immediately thought psychopaths sound similar to incels: people who blend in, but only a small fraction get bad attention.
Also, I just listened to a recent interview on Triggernometry on incels.
So short answer is that you've never bothered to pick up a book and study the topic. Cool. I'd expect nothing less from a Joe Rogan fan.
@@joshlangston3653
TiKI 66
ua-cam.com/video/YatAytP-3_g/v-deo.html
😬
💯
I had a couple of "Job coaches" at job centres when I was unemployed, am pretty sure they were both Psycopaths.........both female too 🤔
Lol
I was a participant in one of these studies. It fulfills all the volunteer credits you need for the entire semester.
you do NOT have to commit crimes to be considered psychopathic (I work for a Psychopathy research organization)
In movies there’s always the one guy a society calls upon for help. That person is either in a padded room, locked up in glass cages, locked up in chains, etc. then the glorious scene comes where they set that person free. Nothing needs to be said to them. You know they will handle business and then you can capture them again and wait for the next time you need them.
Like Sean Connery in The Rock 🤘
The plot of soldier boy in “the boys”
@jhony 3tears wtf does that even say. Get a life
Suicide squad
Vin Diesel’s character in “Pitch Black”.
But the problem is, Grandiose Narcists can lead to getting other people injured or killed in certain situations by putting them in compromising or dangerous positions, then act like they did nothing wrong.
Not as dangerous as a Vulnerable Narcists, but still dangerous none the less.
Unstable might be a better word for it rather than dangerous
Narcissists, sociopaths and psychopaths are all fundamentally different conditions.
Narcissism and psychopathy are not synonymous
Generally speaking, borderline personalities, narcissists and psychopaths etc, are three types of people you can comfortably exploit and treat like utter shit as they are the garbage of humanity.
@@lachlanmclennan2188 aren’t sociopaths and psychopaths similar? I thought a sociopath was generally a psychopath but more so a product of their environment/upbringing. Whereas a psychopath is generally born a psychopath.
This was a very interesting story, and I'm a bit fascinated by how the professor conducting the research project ended up being a psychopath himself. I personally have known a few psychopaths unfortunately, with my uncle being one of them. He is just an absolutely unhinged cantankerous human being, showing very little to no ability to respect personal boundaries and constantly bullies pretty much anyone he comes into contact with. He once choked my cousin for stealing the headlights off his truck and the entire time, was completely quiet and mute beating him up and showing no ounce of rage. That just blew my mind away. I certainly could never maintain that level of composure in a dangerous situation like that, especially when I'm not sure what the other person is capable of.
That’s actually one of the criteria in the Dsm. Reckless disregard for the safety of self or others.
@@Mereship It definitely is. And a lot of them tend to have a narcissistic element to them as well, because the ones I've known constantly play mind games on you and one you up. They can cause some really fucked up PTSD and major anxiety problems.
This argument is easy to counter. Because most really tough high testosterone men are altruistic. In fact high testosterone seems to be correlated with altruism and empathy. They are tough, but fair. In other words, they are righteous. They lack empathy for people who do terrible things, but DO have empathy for good people. These men, the Navy Seals, the "heroes" have the mental fortitude to be violent without being sociopathic. These are the tough people who keep us safe. We'll do just fine without psychopaths in the genepool.
I believe that the reason why there are so many psychopaths and sociopaths in society in this day and age is because of multiple reasons that you can't just pin down, but a major part is how they were raised, especially if a child is abused/neglected.
Psychopaths are not “made.” They are born a psychopath.
Sociopaths or secondary psychopaths are made from trauma primary psychopaths have different brains
Meritocracy
@@chrisw8049 i genuinely dont believe that. But if you have any sources for that statement i would like to know
No, its because its optimal in may ways and roles. High rates of success but not without risk. Much better than being a nobody who judges off of empathy.
This is what I tell my wife when she asks why I get so angry at times, that anger is a tool, that's in our DNA, I have to be willing and able to take a life, defending myself or my loved ones at any given time. You gotta learn to control it, but being able to go psycho when needed, is a handy tool to have in the arsenal..
You need to see a psychiatrist
@@ShogunTen I do , and a therapist, and probably a team of specialists, around the clock
@jhony 3tears that's a lotta of words, I didn't read them but I assume they are some of the best words ever written, so I went ahead and gave you a thumbs up.. I hope you have an awesome day today my friend. Keep on using them words....!!..
someone gets it
My mother was a vulnerable narcissist. No cap: I'm pretty sure I would've had a happier childhood if I had been raised by that psychopath professor Williamson was talking about. Also, a minority of psychologists believe Borderline Personality Disorder should be reclassified as a form of vulnerable narcissism. I mention that in case anyone here has experience with people with BPD; you may see similarities if you compare the two disorders "on paper".
struggling with this scenario with one of my in laws. super insecure, uncontrollable anger where they largely resort to personal attacks to hurt someone, they're just sad and miserable on the inside and need always to latch on to something as the source of their pain and trauma - as soon as that one source disappears, it's replaced by another. often times it's people they have an issue with. it's a very painful situation dealing with them.
@@exclusivefresh
Yep, exactly what I’m dealing with.
sounds like my sister
Most people in the mental health industry are narcissists themselves.
10 years dealing with an ex partner who had this. Do everything to get away and stay away.
I was in love with a psychopath. He was a surgeon. He lost his license for assaulting his patients while they were under anesthesia. I found out when I saw him on the news.
You were in love with his money and image, hoping that other women would be jealous of you having a boyfriend that was a surgeon. At least grow enough ovaries to admit THAT.
Sometimes it takes a while to spot one, but once you do, you should have no contact because they take no accountability for their actions what so ever. They also have many other undesirable traits like narcissism.
that sounds more like a personal experience than a good baseline
@@alexandrebravo4472 , Yes I have had experiences with a few of them.
A psychopath is a malignant narcissist
Unless you are a psychiatrist that has graduated Med school there is no way you can “spot” one. You have absolutely no idea what you’re identifying and it is wrong to label people as such when you do not have the knowledge or tools to do so.
Still, if you can identify danger stay away. Limit interaction and grey rock as needed.
The psychopathic professor said, in his own words on a video interview, that his friends and family all said they knew he was a psychopath and weren't surprised by the results.
Lol!!
He's a grumpy individual. That's all. Don't look too much into this over analysing
@@zafmo9829 there are plenty of grumpy people that aren't psychopathic. Don't oversimplify a condition that has been studied for centuries.
@@zafmo9829 He didn't present himself as grumpy at all. He seemed normal. I'm just quoting him. It was a fascinating TV documentary. It was about "The Warrior Gene" and it was hosted by Henry Rollins. It's on UA-cam if anyone wants to watch it.
😂
I think you're focusing on the actual clinical "psycopaths," meaning the meet so many traits on the check list. There are degrees though. I'm sure there are many people that might has have 75% of them minimum that needs to be met to be diagnosed as a psychopath. They may have just the right ones, but not the ones that makes life problematic.
I'd read an article written by a psychiatrist and historian that proposed that many of the war heroes of the ancient world: Achilles, Ajax or guys like the Roman Officer war hero turned traitor coriolanus and later Scipio Aemilianus. Aemilianus was 17 when fighting in the Third Macedonian war. His father was the General (I believe), and at the end during mop up actions, he discovered his son was missing. He was told that he went with some cavalry to chase down enemy soldiers that had fleed. At this point it was days that gone by and everyone was prepared for the worse. The army liked his son, so they too were upset. On the last day when his father had accepted that they must have been killed when they went out to go after enemy soldiers, when a loud whoop came from outside his tent. Then he heard his son's name being yelled. He walked out to see his son riding in with a few comrades; completely covered in blood and gore. They had spent days killing and butchering all enemies they faced.
Battles back then were bloody by nature, so the fact they went out of their way to pay so much attention to the scene meant it must have been much more gruesome than normal. This book puts forth the idea that many of these exceptional soldiers were likely to have been psycopaths as we know them. That just because the wars were violent it doesn't change the facts that a man killing another man would still be an unnatural thing to do, something most people can't do without severe motivation.
It’s James Fallon with the book and his “story” is pure guff. He had OCD when he was a child. Anxiety attacks. He had no callous unemotional traits as a child. He’s not a psychopath at all.
The study design he did is not diagnostic of being a psychopath. He did the number one thing a scientist should never do which is to claim causal connections when nothing more than correlation was shown, in a sample size of one - him. He’s just an outlier. Please read Kent Keihls book The psychopath whisperer, or Without Conscious by the father of psychopathy Robert Hare.
It all helped Fallons book sell though…
Fallon is no where near being a psychopath. He’s a professor of a lab in the US. Trust me - it’s boring. A psychopath would not last a single day. You could not get more un- psychopathic. He has no traits. Apart from the stories he tells about his home life and unconnected stuff about the debunked “warrior gene”.
Big respect for Chris. As a guy from Newcastle who did my masters and PHD at Newcastle, and have plans to make my mark on the world. Respect brother. How you managed to emerge sane from the world of nightclub promotion is beyond me. I just about escaped doorwork with my life intact.
So after hearing about the two types of narcissists, having grown up with a mother as one and an aunt (her sister) as the other... holy Christ it all makes sense now
I see very few comments from or about women here. Is narcissism simply psychopathy gendered female? Turned toward individuals rather than goals?
if your asking whether narcissism is just female psychopathy then no, they are two separate things, psychopaths can be narcissistic and narcissists can be psychopathic. Males are more likely to be a narcissist or a psychopath, however women are more likely to have narcissistic traits, that last part is my theory but women seem much more self centered
@@marcosenarosa4877 if you ask me, women are socialized to be centered on _connections,_ where men are socialized to be centered on _achievements._ a person could be self-centered either way.
@@RatPfink66 I agree with your idea but don't see how it relates to narcissism at all, but it does relate to self centeredness which tells me that self absorbed is a better word which I should've used. Everyone is self centered
They're talking about the story of Dr James (Jim) Fallon, who has interesting stories and theories as to how childhood experience and key development milestones can either kick off manifested psychopathy or keep it in check.
Psychopathy is human nature, every1 has it but how some have more is their life experiences combined with natural amount.
No it is not human nature it is an abhorrence to human form. It is not the norm nor is it something that is part of human biological selection.
Thank fuck, somebody gets it!!!
@@timothythompson7750 it's cause your 1st name
@@MonsterHunterPV huh?
@@timothythompson7750 Timothy, we share the same name homie lol
Unfortunately, most high-level psychopaths commit crimes completely out in the open on a mass scale and get away with it totally scot-free. How do you factor these types in to your equation?
that's a gigachad psychopath
This is the main problem. All the other discussion and arguments are moot. What is the meta-crisis? It's a crisis in consiosuenss. Being as strong and kind of a person as possible while defending and protecting humanity.
@@gxlorp Yes! Good point.
Its nice to think freely, but fact is that is a wrong statement...
Like politicians and news reporters.