You are viewing a single comment's thread from:

RE: Speaking of Psychopaths

in #psychology7 years ago

Very interesting. There are so many variations to this subject matter and early identification, social and cultural surroundings do play an important role in the effect the subject will have over all.

Children identified at an early stage can be taught to integrate successfully in a subtle manner, lead by example behaviour.

Many factors can and will play a role in early teen years such as as losing alpha role playing parents, physical, emotional and mental abuse environmental challenges such as bullying at school, on social level and in sport. The wrong spark in any of these scenarios could lead to the aggressive onset in the subject bringing about the process of chameleon behaviour in order to deflect attention and self teaching tactics.

Military training can hone skill sets and in some cases lead the subject toward improved social behaviour and in others hone skills used in violence.

There are the well adjusted of the latter who learn to control their condition, distinguishing between threat and none threat. ie the quiet guy that is having breakfast at the corner table, four robbers walk in, four robbers end up dead and Mr corner table sits back down to finish his breakfast. The one had nothing to do with the other and the wrong people never get hurt.

Can these subjects be integrated, yes. It will take observation and some tricky doing at an adult level.