scientificamerican | Traits that are common among psychopathic serial killers—a grandiose sense of self-worth, persuasiveness, superficial charm, ruthlessness,
lack of remorse and the manipulation of others—are also shared by
politicians and world leaders. Individuals, in other words, running not
from the police. But for office. Such a profile allows those who present
with these traits to do what they like when they like, completely
unfazed by the social, moral or legal consequences of their actions.
If you are born under the right star, for example, and have power over
the human mind as the moon over the sea, you might order the genocide of
100,000 Kurds and shuffle to the gallows with such arcane recalcitrance
as to elicit, from even your harshest detractors, perverse, unspoken
deference.
“Do not be afraid, doctor,” said Saddam Hussein on the scaffold, moments before his execution. “This is for men.”
If you are violent and cunning, like the real-life “Hannibal Lecter”
Robert Maudsley, you might take a fellow inmate hostage, smash his skull
in and sample his brains with a spoon as nonchalantly as if you were
downing a soft-boiled egg. (Maudsley, by the way, has been cooped up in
solitary confinement for the past 30 years, in a bulletproof cage in the
basement of Wakefield Prison in England.)
Or if you are a brilliant neurosurgeon, ruthlessly cool and focused
under pressure, you might, like the man I'll call Dr. Geraghty, try your
luck on a completely different playing field: at the remote outposts of
21st-century medicine, where risk blows in on 100-mile-per-hour winds
and the oxygen of deliberation is thin. “I have no compassion for those
whom I operate on,” he told me. “That is a luxury I simply cannot
afford. In the theater I am reborn: as a cold, heartless machine,
totally at one with scalpel, drill and saw. When you're cutting loose
and cheating death high above the snowline of the brain, feelings aren't
fit for purpose. Emotion is entropy—and seriously bad for business.
I've hunted it down to extinction over the years.”
Geraghty is one of the U.K.'s top neurosurgeons—and although, on one
level, his words send a chill down the spine, on another they make
perfect sense. Deep in the ghettoes of some of the brain's most
dangerous neighborhoods, the psychopath is glimpsed as a lone and
merciless predator, a solitary species of transient, deadly allure. No
sooner is the word out than images of serial killers, rapists and mad,
reclusive bombers come stalking down the sidewalks of our minds.
But what if I were to paint you a different picture? What if I were to
tell you that the arsonist who burns your house down might also, in a
parallel universe, be the hero most likely to brave the flaming timbers
of a crumbling, blazing building to seek out, and drag out, your loved
ones? Or that the kid with a knife in the shadows at the back of the
movie theater might well, in years to come, be wielding a rather
different kind of knife at the back of a rather different kind of
theater?
Claims like these are admittedly hard to believe. But they're true.
Psychopaths are fearless, confident, charismatic, ruthless and focused.
Yet, contrary to popular belief, they are not necessarily violent. Far
from its being an open-and-shut case—you're either a psychopath or
you're not—there are, instead, inner and outer zones of the disorder: a
bit like the fare zones on a subway map. There is a spectrum of
psychopathy along which each of us has our place, with only a small
minority of A-listers resident in the “inner city.” Fist tap Arnach.
3 comments:
Take the test: http://www.wisdomofpsychopaths.com/
28 out of 33 - not.surprised.at.all...,
26 of 33... Guess I'm still uncomfortable of determining what criteria meets "a person deserves it" and I like furry animals even if I have to kill them to eat them.
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