On Sun, 10 Feb 2008 19:16:31 -0800, "Superman Hughes TrollKiller of
s*** 24bit & squarewheel" <BillHughes@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
The Psychopathy Checklist lets us discuss psychopaths with little
risk that we are describing simple social deviance or criminality, or
that we are mislabeling people who have nothing more in common than
that they have broken the law. But it also provides a detailed picture
of the disordered personalities of the psychopaths among us. In this
chapter and the next, I bring that picture into focus by describing
the more salient features one by one. This chapter looks at the
emotional and interpersonal traits of this complex personality
disorder; chapter 4 examines the unstable, characteristically
antisocial lifestyle of the psychopath.
Emotional/Interpersonal
glib and superficial
egocentric and grandiose
lack of remorse or guilt
lack of empathy
deceitful and manipulative
shallow emotions
Social Deviance
impulsive
poor behavior controls
need for excitement
lack of responsibility
early behavior problems
adult antisocial behavior
A cautionary note: The Psychopathy Checklist is a complex clinical
tool for professional use.[1] What follows is a general summary of the
key traits and behaviors of psychopaths. Do not use these symptoms to
diagnose yourself or others. A diagnosis requires explicit training
and access to the formal scoring manual. If you suspect that someone
you know conforms to the profile described here and in the next
chapter, and if it is im****tant to you to obtain an expert opinion,
seek the services of a qualified (registered) forensic psychologist or
psychiatrist.
Also, be aware that people who are not psychopaths may have some of
the symptoms described here. Many people are impulsive, or glib, or
cold and unfeeling, or antisocial, but this does not mean they are
psychopaths. Psychopathy is a syndrome--a cluster of related symptoms.
Psychopaths are often witty and articulate. They can be amusing and
entertaining conversationalists, ready with a quick and clever
comeback, and can tell unlikely but convincing stories that cast
themselves in a good light. They can be very effective in presenting
themselves well and are often very likable and charming. To some
people, however, they seem too slick and smooth, too obviously
insincere and superficial. Astute observers often get the impression
that psychopaths are play-acting, mechanically "reading their lines."
>> >"Dr.Neuraxis®" <DN@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote in message
>> >news:ffrjo3tsv0u5mfeh99obi3cg4lg8mkoc0o@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>> >> On Sun, 13 Jan 2008 10:40:33 GMT, SupermanureHughes
>> >> <billie@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
>> >>
>> >> >
>> >> >
>> >> >Your ill-conceived scheme isn't working too well, is it, Cooyon?
>> >> >
>> >> >All that work for ... what?
>> >> >
>> >> >At least here, a few people see your crap.
>> >> >
>> >> >But waste your dwindling time any way you want.
>> >> >
>> >> >Dodo.
>> >> >
>> >> >
>> >> >>
>> >> >>
>> >> >> "Terry Dactille©~®" <pterry@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote in
message
>> >> >> news:hukon3lk7abe2j4l94aulah6itccuejgl2@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>> >> >>>
>> >> >>> Is extingui****ngly selfless, sacrificial, even unctuous in his
>> >> >> interpersonal
>> >> >>> relation****ps and will avoid the assistance of others
>> >> >>> at all costs. Can only interact with others when he can be seen
to
>be
>> >> >> giving,
>> >> >>> sup****tive, and expending an unusual effort to assist.
>> >> >>>
>> >> >>> Some narcissists behave the same way but only as a means to
obtain
>> >> >>> Narcissistic Supply (praise, adulation, affirmation, attention).
>> >> >>> This must not be confused with the behaviour of the IN.
>> >> >>>
>> >> >>>
>> >> >>>
>> >> Again his Lard****p has nothing intelligent to say!
>> >>
>> >> Hughes U Lose!
>> >
>> >
>> The Ultimate Loser!
>
>
>
>
--
“A winner makes commitment. A loser makes promises.”
“The path of least resistance is the path of the loser.”


|