Should You Be A Psychopath?

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Vsauce2

Vsauce2

Күн бұрын

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@Vsauce2
@Vsauce2 Жыл бұрын
Use code VSAUCE250 to get 50% off your first Factor box at bit.ly/3mG5rbL
@rubenssiomusic
@rubenssiomusic Жыл бұрын
Thanks, Psychopath Kevin!
@LikEaPhoX81
@LikEaPhoX81 Жыл бұрын
Loved the long form, this topic needed it.
@eaterofburgers1082
@eaterofburgers1082 Жыл бұрын
Couldn’t you only be diagnosed at a specific age or something
@bradpott5231
@bradpott5231 Жыл бұрын
Kevin.. whats with the face in the red... I see it behind your shoulder and it's distracting... explain???
@jamesmccomb9525
@jamesmccomb9525 Жыл бұрын
This video doesn't seem that accurate. I think you're letting the narrative run away with the script.
@thecoolaxolotlnova8523
@thecoolaxolotlnova8523 Жыл бұрын
"Psychopaths do not feel anxiety." Well at least i know I'm not a psychopath. Edit: Psychopaths do feel anxiety.
@mithos789
@mithos789 Жыл бұрын
ugh same. id love to be a psycopath just to get rid of it.
@Domebuddy
@Domebuddy Жыл бұрын
no worries, you can still be a sociopath.
@Maxry-v2y
@Maxry-v2y Жыл бұрын
No but you can train to be like one
@zacsch5364
@zacsch5364 Жыл бұрын
i'm pretty sure anxiety is something everyone that's alive can feel just in different ways.
@ShinzouKatsune
@ShinzouKatsune Жыл бұрын
​@@zacsch5364nah there are plenty that should but never experience it. You really should real up on what sociopathy really is....
@tektrixter
@tektrixter Жыл бұрын
About the statistic you quoted: it may be true that four-in-five diagnosed psychopaths are in prison, but the prison population is more likely to be tested. Like all mental issues, there will be many in the general population that qualify but do not have a diagnosis. The bias in testing will effect the statistic, likely the 80% incarceration rate is much too high.
@anaveragekiwi
@anaveragekiwi Жыл бұрын
this is a fair point
@deathlocus1571
@deathlocus1571 Жыл бұрын
​@@anaveragekiwi It's so obvious I kinda can't believe that Kevin neglected to mention it. A full, comprehensive psychological evaluation is performed on every violent criminal, while free civilians are extremely unlikely to undergo the same treatment.
@Spartan322
@Spartan322 Жыл бұрын
It does kinda also depend on how the statistic itself is scaled and what it specifically is measured in comparison to, its neither inherently wrong or right, without the input data its impossible to know.
@Pilkas_Vilkas
@Pilkas_Vilkas Жыл бұрын
It doesn't even make any sense... Some quick maths based on google - There are 250m adults in US, so 2,5m psychos. There are 1,8m total people in US jails, which is LESS than 2m psychos supposedly in jail (2,5*0,8). This would mean over 100% of people in jail are psychopaths.
@freedomofspeech2867
@freedomofspeech2867 Жыл бұрын
Maybe the study only tested the general public, extrapolated that to the whole population and compared it to the psychopaths in prison. Let's be honest, none of us has read it.
@huks9380
@huks9380 Жыл бұрын
I think it has to be said that you don't have to be a psychopath to stay calm in tense situations like surgeries since that usually comes with experience. There is also the matter of mental disassociation.
@ScribblebytesWorldwide
@ScribblebytesWorldwide Жыл бұрын
Yeah but everyone knows that all doctors are pervs.
@vixxcelacea2778
@vixxcelacea2778 Жыл бұрын
This. There is no benefit a psychopath has that a regular person can not learn. Empathy is selective in those who have it for a variety of reasons, including learning to disassociate or deal with threats, especially those of the same species. We have to be able to tell friend from foe. For a psychopath, everyone is a foe, but there are too many, so it's better to fit in and seem like a friend because it benefits them to do so. But there is no emotional connection there the way we've developed to retain bonds beyond surface level cooperation. Which has allowed our species to be greater than the sum of it's parts, because the level of cooperation we can achieve is only possible through super strong bonds. And even then we still have lots of squabbling and issues because we're a pretty infantile species given our self-awareness. We're still growing.
@TheWizaard
@TheWizaard Жыл бұрын
@@vixxcelacea2778 Yeah, this psychopath apologism is misleading and disgusting.
@Literally___Me
@Literally___Me Жыл бұрын
@@TheWizaardNot all psychopaths are psychotic
@Literally___Me
@Literally___Me Жыл бұрын
@@TheWizaardweirdly
@F_NerdShark
@F_NerdShark 11 ай бұрын
Hello! I’m autistic and I’ve been studying ASPD independently as it’s a fixation. I love this video! It’s clear;y well researched and I definitely learned a lot about the long history of psychopathy and I got some good book recommendations lol. Though I’d like to clarify that ASPD, like autism, is a spectrum disorder and that psychopaths are only at the far end of it, where sociopaths are considered more “emotional” or empathetic. Because it’s a spectrum, it;s hard to place people on it effectively, but to but it really simply, basically, sociopaths are like low functioning psychopaths who are far more impatient and don’t hide their antisocial traits as well. I should also clarify that people with ASPD are not inherently evil, which I trust that a community of people who love science would totally get, but I wanted to make clear just in case. The only thing that would make anyone “evil” is their choices - those with ASPD just tend to be more likely to make commonly considered *bad* choices. Again, I love this video! ^w^ and MASSIVE DISCLAIMER, I am no professional! I’ve done at least two years of research on ASPD because it is a fixation, but I’m no professional. Also if I phrased anything to sound harmful, accusatory, or offensive, I apologize, as being autistic, as mentioned in the video, can make it difficult for me to express my emotions and sometimes things just come out wrong lol
@AgentFulgoreBasedDepartment
@AgentFulgoreBasedDepartment 10 ай бұрын
i have ASPD. was diagnosed in my 20s (i'm 36 years old now). you did fine. i find it intriguing that studying ASPD is a fixation for you. you're correct about the spectrum part. i've known other paths (as we call each other) who were much more emotional, impulsive, petty, etc (the sociopath end of the spectrum) and unstable in general - as well as other cold, calculating, manipulative ones like myself (the psychopath end of the spectrum). my younger cousin is autistic. we used to find amusement in watching our other family members get really emotional and react dramatically to things while him and i just shrugged and were calm. it was a unique bonding experience for us. he didn't understand while i just didn't care. we were both isolated from the family due to our neurological differences and helped each other out. i'd talk him down during meltdowns when no one else could handle him, and he'd communicate when i was treading into muddy water morally without freaking out or trying to guilt trip me. he was a good kid and ended up becoming a successful adult. i'm proud of him. i hope your studying goes well. if you have any questions, don't hesitate to respond to my comment and ask.
@rainbows9060
@rainbows9060 8 ай бұрын
Also autistic, Cluster Bs are for me a "narrow interest" I dislike that term,it's what clinicians use to describe the autistis interests. May I ask,what behaviors or concerns did your parents or caregivers have,that went on for you to be diagnosed? My half brother,whom I believe to be a psychopath enjoyed lighting fires,he tortured animals and once shot up a nests containing signet swans.​@@AgentFulgoreBasedDepartment
@OpposingFork
@OpposingFork 8 ай бұрын
lol autistic
@ArthropodJay
@ArthropodJay 8 ай бұрын
@@AgentFulgoreBasedDepartment Yeah honestly. Im not ASPD but im on the spectrum like the op of the comment, I had to fake many emotions when I was a kid, except for my acual emotions like my meltdowns and when i was upset. Most notably i had to pretend to cry at my grandma's funeral. I still feel guilty for not crying, I was just a little kid though and im much more emotional as an adult LOL
@Gelato41_
@Gelato41_ 8 ай бұрын
​@@AgentFulgoreBasedDepartment evil edward elricccc
@DoodleChaos
@DoodleChaos Жыл бұрын
I can't wait to sit down and watch some relaxing youtube videos. *Kevin sends me down a rabbit hole leading to reading the Unabomber manifesto* Fascinating video! Great work, this must have taken AGES to research and edit.
@ivymuncher
@ivymuncher Жыл бұрын
how was the manifesto?
@VeganSemihCyprus33
@VeganSemihCyprus33 Жыл бұрын
Speaking of psychopathy, this is the story of your enslavement, the "elite" exposed 👉 The Connections (2021) [short documentary] 💖
@nargen5419
@nargen5419 Жыл бұрын
​@@VeganSemihCyprus33who
@derigel9783
@derigel9783 Жыл бұрын
That one is still on my 'to read' list.
@lastofthebest5102
@lastofthebest5102 Жыл бұрын
Isnt language manipulation a form of psychopathy whereby a seemingly innocuous comment has an extra space in it so as to appear as a true statement but its very existence is deceptive? Example "rabbit hole leading to reading". Let me guess, it was an error? Are you trying to convince others you are reading a certain book when in fact your comment doesnt say that at all? Relaxing how? The mere viewing of videos is, in itself, stimulating hence the reason youtube is so popular and can be moreso by adjusting the flicker rate and colors used in said videos. These are all verifiable facts that anyone can look up and see for themselves...much like the vibratory signals emitted via cell phones to make them more addictive. The colors used in the background of the guy talking are not on accident, they are probably meant to exude a sense of authority since the sheep see the police as authority figures when in fact they are merely corporate workers. Also Red is meant to excite and Blue is meant to calm which is at least partly why the police leave their lights on while at a stop and why people sensitive to colors unknowingly get nervous while around police. One color may overtake or nullify the other leaving one with a feeling of incredible intensity/nervousness/excitation (common) or very relaxed (rare). Maybe you ought to stop wasting your life "watching relaxing youtube videos" (which just sounds like a paid shill) and pick up a book instead.
@SamHammie
@SamHammie Жыл бұрын
I watched this with a friend, and said friend told me their late father was a very passionate furniture maker, and would rank tables above puppies and laughter above tables, solely because he often said that the laughter of his newborn children would be the only thing to ever bring him more fulfillment and joy than a customer thanking him and tipping him for a newly crafted table.
@TheD736
@TheD736 Жыл бұрын
I actually felt similarly. How often is a puppy useful? How often is a *table* useful? Eh? Eh? Tables rule.
@CivilizedWarrior
@CivilizedWarrior Жыл бұрын
I’m also a furniture maker, and there are precious few things in life more enjoyable than building something useful and beautiful out of a pile of raw materials. It’s about the most fun you can have with your clothes on. I use mostly recycled materials, and if you ask me, there is no better feeling of accomplishment than turning some old wood and junk most people would throw out into something practical and functional that can be used and enjoyed again, instead of being thrown in a landfill. It’s probably woefully esoteric, but there’s just something about creating beauty and function in a world that seems hell-bent on destruction and frivolousness.
@fraudulein
@fraudulein Жыл бұрын
​@@TheD736 personally the first thing in my mind upon the mention of a small fluffy animal isn't "how much utility does this have for me?", especially when the question is just about ranking words based on an arbitrary value of "emotional positivity" that you associate them with. not to claim that your way of thinking is wrong or anything; I'm sure there's also people who would rank puppies low simply due to a personal dislike of dogs etc.
@louithrottler
@louithrottler Жыл бұрын
hippy
@NeinStein
@NeinStein Жыл бұрын
"Puppies and laughter are ephemeral, but a good table lasts forever." - Furniture makers, when they go to work
@rohollahazizi9517
@rohollahazizi9517 Жыл бұрын
Please do narcissism next.
@alexandersalomonsson4721
@alexandersalomonsson4721 Жыл бұрын
yes this!
@hadensnodgrass3472
@hadensnodgrass3472 Жыл бұрын
As a narcissist, let me tell you all about it...
@CalmingWinds
@CalmingWinds Жыл бұрын
just watch trump talking, lol
@lilith1504
@lilith1504 Жыл бұрын
Psychopatch doesn't exist in DSM, it's not PDs anymore, and you have no way to deal with any psychopatch/sociopath. It's mental disorder. Also you have less change to define someone NPDs(unless you're psychologist), because you need much more time to belong with them, and on this time, you digged a hole to burry sth inside you already. You understand?
@lilith1504
@lilith1504 Жыл бұрын
@@hadensnodgrass3472 just reduce your self-esteem little bit. It doesn't hurt us at all, but we will see some funny defines every loud mouth as a narcissist 🤣
@pheresy1367
@pheresy1367 Жыл бұрын
This shows me that we need BETTER psychopath tests. I'm sure one will emerge eventually. Right now it doesn't distinguish (enough) between the truly dangerous person and people who can draw from useful "Zen States". What is that "piece" that allows someone to become a miraculous surgeon instead of a serial killer? Where is the test for that? Great video Kevin!
@a1baba
@a1baba 8 ай бұрын
Rationality and intensity of impulses. Both a surgeon with aspd and serial killer are equally dangerous people so there is no need in distinguishing them, both struggle from the same condition
@rokljhui864
@rokljhui864 7 ай бұрын
There will never be scientific tests for any of these made-up psychological labels. Because it's a load of garbage. Every person knows right from wrong, if not instinctively, then they can be taught. If you do 'psychopath' things, then are just a piece of sh!I1t
@ashn7146
@ashn7146 7 ай бұрын
I think it's the sociopath that's more dangerous, or at the very least toxic. I'm pretty sure the man with the cigarettes example was a sociopath as well. There's a pretty big overlap.
@martenveersoo8502
@martenveersoo8502 7 ай бұрын
Nurture?
@qwertydavid8070
@qwertydavid8070 6 ай бұрын
@@martenveersoo8502 Was about to say this. The people more likely to cause harm are those who probably feel like they've been cheated by society.
@enkephalin07
@enkephalin07 Жыл бұрын
What you overlook about berserkers is that they worked themselves into an altered state, with loud chants and wild dances, possibly with psychoactive substances. They weren't wired like that at all times. What we could learn from this is that there may be techniques to enter into a psychopathic mindset should there be a benefit to that, such as to provide resilience to potentially traumatic situations, or dispel stage fright so you can perform with confidence. Or to interview disaster-displaced people, some who have lost loved ones, some suffering PTSD, for days on end.
@jayrugallo2577
@jayrugallo2577 Жыл бұрын
This is deep bruv and I think it should be looked at more. Because I think with certain behaviours and/or actions that can change and/or shitdown some brain parts just like how PTSD does
@ShaunTheSheep.
@ShaunTheSheep. Жыл бұрын
Very good observation and understanding @enkephalin , I can relate and verify
@Versuffe
@Versuffe Жыл бұрын
This exists, and is used by surgeons! You can emotionally separate if trained, or you could naturally just.. be able to remove emotions for some time.
@alecshockowitz8385
@alecshockowitz8385 Жыл бұрын
Berserkers are pretty much made up anyways, but sources from the time period even. Bersekers more accurately translates to Bear Shirts, which are Scandinavians who had successfully hunted and killed a bear, typically the title was only given out to people who did it solo. Bear Shirts also were typically people who were the Generals Bodyguard or Household Guard, once Vikings became more settled. While they may have been very wild in combat, the whole army would be doing loud chants, dances and jests. The more tribal and disorganized the army, the more of this kind of stuff happens. Additionally, given their special status they were more than likely to be the most heavily armored troops on the battlefield, not bare chested. Psychoactive substances may have been used, but its difficult to say how widespread the use was throughout their armies, or how often drugs were used prior to combat for Vikings.
@koanbonwa
@koanbonwa Жыл бұрын
Very Well said. Folk need to get waaasy better at commentary Aikido than most are! 😅 Good medicine!
@Telleryn
@Telleryn Жыл бұрын
A slight tangent but it reminds me of something someone said about why D&D characters etc tend to have tragic backstories and trauma, or be slightly mad - because happy, well-adjusted sane people don't generally become adventurers, decide to go explore subterranean monster lairs with traps and ancient curses, or hunt down and fight multi-tonne fire-breathing lizards.
@csaki01
@csaki01 Жыл бұрын
And then there is just Chaotic Neutral and Chaotic Evil, they just went adventuring because it's fun. Chaotic Good also, but with some lofty dream of bettering the world. (the ADHD alignment)
@Blox117
@Blox117 Жыл бұрын
if they are responsible and caring people then it explains how they can go out to vanquish 'evil'
@PetoDiTacchino
@PetoDiTacchino Жыл бұрын
...and it still means they should score mid-high on the psycopath test, or even pass it, to endure in that kind of behaviours, that lets you confront with risks, tasks and adventures a common NPC would not even remotely elaborate on doing Heck, the Barbarian class even has that Berserk state of mind cited in the video, for example
@VeganSemihCyprus33
@VeganSemihCyprus33 Жыл бұрын
Speaking of psychopathy, this is the story of your enslavement, the "elite" exposed 👉 The Connections (2021) [short documentary] 💖
@abbyzeo4646
@abbyzeo4646 Жыл бұрын
a dead father to avenge, a best friend gone missing; if you were content with your life, why would you need to go to such great lengths to change it?
@samuelmendlowitz7276
@samuelmendlowitz7276 Жыл бұрын
Please make a part 2 talking about sociopathy and the difference between socio and psychopathy
@ricardilisgorms5003
@ricardilisgorms5003 Жыл бұрын
@@busimagen not rll sociopathy is like being antisocial while psicopathy is that plus more as the video said
@jamesfroyum23
@jamesfroyum23 Жыл бұрын
this comment thread proves that theres a lot of confusion about the two terms
@I.____.....__...__
@I.____.....__...__ Жыл бұрын
Didn't we already go through this with Kati Morton and Shane Dawson and Jake Paul a few years ago? 😒
@guntherwahlrand7417
@guntherwahlrand7417 Жыл бұрын
Officially, there is no such thing as psychopathy and sociopathy. Both are antiquated terms formerly used to describe ASPD. Psychologists and psychiatrists don't differentiate between psychopathy and sociopathy anymore, albeit there are still sociopathic and psychopathic traits. Psychopathic traits are generally considered to be biological i.e., from birth, while sociopathy develops through, well, environmental (societal) influences. A neglected child might develop certain levels of ASPD and has issues with relationships, empathy and bonding, etc. while any child could've also been born with ASPD because of which the symptoms are way more severe and neurologically ingrained, tending to have a complete disregard, lack of remorse, etc. Individuals with ASPD rarely have symptoms solely belonging to psychopathic or sociopathic spectrum, so calling a person a sociopath or psychopath is like calling a chef a vegetable cutter. It's just part of it, not the whole thing.
@Baggytrousers27
@Baggytrousers27 Жыл бұрын
​@@guntherwahlrand7417 Heard it thrown around, back in the day, about the difference between people who were born without empathy and those who've lost it: Someone who's never had it can learn to emulate it and get by in society, but someone who had the capability and lost it is unlikely to regain it. Dunno if any of that is remotely true but the spread of that belief certainly makes eveything more confusing for everyone involved.
@redmistbluemiss
@redmistbluemiss 9 ай бұрын
There's an interesting book I read while studying anthropology called Hunter In A Gather's World which hypothesizes that a lot of our currently perceived mental illnesses or disorders are actually adaptational traits for tribal living as in remote communities people with ADHD are usually hunters being hyperaware, restless, etc. Born psychopaths would be invaluable in terms of survival as they'd be unaffected by factors except prioritizing survival as the British psychiatrist Kevin Dutton has written about there's possible real world benefits and applications of such people that make them desirable and invaluable assets to society.
@paxaamericana
@paxaamericana 6 ай бұрын
That's interesting, but then that's how evolution works: when the environment changes the traits that are no longer effective adaptation become liabilities.
@brandonbombplays9304
@brandonbombplays9304 4 ай бұрын
​@@paxaamericanaThis was addressed by the people in the comment; usually, yes, that's true, but not necessarily. If the right situation occurs, it could be a very good thing, even though it realistically won't be.
@kora4185
@kora4185 4 ай бұрын
Ohh that makes sense. I have adhd and ever since I gained conscience I felt I was in the wrong place, trapped, and I envied people in stories about explorers, pirates, zombie apocalypse because I always thought I would fit better in there, actively surviving and being useful, not existing and creating monsters in my mind instead of fighting/running from real ones. For awhile I even thought there was no place for me and death would definitely be better than existing in a cage, but then I just started my own business, and I realized I wasn’t depressed and I don’t need medication for my brain, I just needed to change my circumstances and suddenly everything I thought was a curse is perfect for where I am now
@paxaamericana
@paxaamericana 3 ай бұрын
@@kora4185 that's a very interesting story. Makes me think about my own situation. There's a place for anyone, I guess, as long as we figure out what environment the very traits that make us misfits could actually lead us to success.
@Zer-ei4co
@Zer-ei4co 3 ай бұрын
@@kora4185This is beautiful. I'm glad you've found your way.
@GIRGHGH
@GIRGHGH Жыл бұрын
Having empathy doesn't exclude you from being able to remain calm. Stress mitigation can 100% be situational to where someone is only checked out emotionally while doing their task. It's dangerous to propose that it's positive for totality when most of it isn't.
@BB-qe1fc
@BB-qe1fc 11 ай бұрын
Having empathy quite obviously leads to situations where u can’t remain calm.. It’s the non empathetic who can disconnect t.. Your first statement is sorta implied
@davidabest7195
@davidabest7195 11 ай бұрын
Empathy is weakness.
@DarrenWilsonOne
@DarrenWilsonOne 11 ай бұрын
@@davidabest7195 That's a disturbingly generalized and thereby false statement.
@stellviahohenheim
@stellviahohenheim 11 ай бұрын
Calling Alex Honnold a psychopath is stretching it, if you actually watch the movie he planned the climb using ropes for years he meticulously cleans the rock that he will use for his climb. He's not a psychopath he's an athlete
@myb701
@myb701 10 ай бұрын
Spot on! That's also why "I was angry" should not be a excuse for an atrocity. ASPD peple live without empathy and shunned all their lives, if they can be calm, then so should you.
@purplemoon_alexx
@purplemoon_alexx Жыл бұрын
31:23 Yes, for most of my life, doctor would tell me I had traits of psychopathy, turns out I was just autistic. People easily confuse them and their traits
@ArbitraryEverything
@ArbitraryEverything Жыл бұрын
As a fellow autistic person with traits superficially resembling psychopathy, I can relate. Hope you found some good friends who could see through the appearances.
@purplemoon_alexx
@purplemoon_alexx Жыл бұрын
@@ArbitraryEverything yeah I do have friends, but very few and we don't talk much so yeah. I'm trying to meet new people tho, hopefully I'll find someone
@Nosirt
@Nosirt Жыл бұрын
I mean realistically, those are simply just word choices we use. Kinda like the difference between a man touching a woman’s breast and a woman touching a woman’s breast- both adults are doing equal action- it’s the social attachment that makes it difference. In the same way, many many autistic people have not similar but literally the same traits as a psychopath. We just assume different derivatives of diagnosis for them because it’s comming from different place but the end result is the same. Essentially, you are definitely not psychopath in our definition but you are a psychopath in action and result.
@Ms.Amylia_Clenny
@Ms.Amylia_Clenny Жыл бұрын
​@Nosirt As an autistic person (I have Autism): We have emotions; I feel anxiety, lust, love, fear, etc. & I acknowledge that other people feel these things too, sometimes more strongly than I do. I have much more difficulty telling when someone is feeling these emotions, though. I can't read people as well as the average person.
@Nosirt
@Nosirt Жыл бұрын
@@Ms.Amylia_Clenny it is all on a spectrum. It’s not like you are a psychopath or not- it’s how much.
@beeallen2743
@beeallen2743 Жыл бұрын
I think there's some skewing with the percentages of male and female psychopaths. Like with autism, what if psychopathy presents differently in different people? Our male-centric standards of diagnosis maybe aren't so good at detecting psychopathy in females.
@chocolatesquirrel2002
@chocolatesquirrel2002 Жыл бұрын
women are psychopathic by nature
@brennenhrebeniuk9661
@brennenhrebeniuk9661 Жыл бұрын
Traditional narcissism traits (masculine narcissism) Covert Narcissism traits (Feminine Narcissism) So i wouldn't be surprised if psychopathy had a feminine form. Yin and yang seem to exist within everything in my experience.
@milascave2
@milascave2 Жыл бұрын
I have heard that the same behaviors that get a man diagnosed with anti-social personality disorder will get a woman diagnosed as having a histrionic personality disorder. So, it seems that you're RIGHT.
@friendlyfire7861
@friendlyfire7861 Жыл бұрын
​​@@brennenhrebeniuk9661Female psychopathy comes out in divorce court. And I'm not joking. Men take breakups much harder, and women quickly come to see their erstwhile lovers as resources, nothing more, very quickly.
@brennenhrebeniuk9661
@brennenhrebeniuk9661 Жыл бұрын
@friendlyfire7861 sounds accurate! Masculine psychopathy (Yang): Charming manipulation, aggressive, cold, impulsive Like a Lion that pounces on its prey Feminine Psychopathy (Yin) Emotional manipulation, patience, calculation, superficial bubbliness Like a Black widow luring its prey until its trapped
@BryanChance
@BryanChance 10 ай бұрын
"Shoud you be a psychopath?" -- I don't think it's a choice? Is it? LOL
@Tmw82-jv6fk
@Tmw82-jv6fk 5 ай бұрын
ah.. everyone can do psychopathic behaviors no matter that person is a psychopath or not 🙂but a normal person just cant do it in a perfect form haha
@Tanjutsu4420
@Tanjutsu4420 4 ай бұрын
if it was you were already there
@LunaTheMoonWitch
@LunaTheMoonWitch Ай бұрын
Choose a class: Psychopath, Mage, Warrior, Berserker, Witch or Wizard.
@Svettulf
@Svettulf Жыл бұрын
Long format Vsauce2? Just the thing I didn't know I wanted
@VeganSemihCyprus33
@VeganSemihCyprus33 Жыл бұрын
Speaking of psychopathy, this is the story of your enslavement, the "elite" exposed 👉 The Connections (2021) [short documentary] 💖
@thedon1262
@thedon1262 Жыл бұрын
felt like a short 10 minutes for me tho, they can surely go 3 times longer, theres more were that came from!
@MemegodmiIk
@MemegodmiIk Жыл бұрын
@@VeganSemihCyprus33 I'm not watching that, instead recommend some offensive videos! ♥
@punkdoggo211
@punkdoggo211 Жыл бұрын
As someone with Aspergers Syndrome this makes a lot of sense because I always score alarmingly high on psychopathy tests (yes i know online tests aren't trustworthy), yet i do have a moral compass and a conscience that will heavily weigh down on me for percieved wrongdoing
@evapunk333
@evapunk333 Жыл бұрын
I was just thinking that because I think I may be on the autism spectrum and worried about psychopathy for a bit...but yeah, no..I'm just neurodivergent lol.
@Digital_PeterGriffin
@Digital_PeterGriffin Жыл бұрын
I have asp but I’m completely the opposite. I am empathetic to an extreme degree
@foxliasgriffinYT
@foxliasgriffinYT Жыл бұрын
@@Digital_PeterGriffin yes, i just focus on diff things n such, i wouldnt call myself less emotional at all, just not expressing it well and having trouble connecting with ppl and trust issues, i mainly just open up to ppl im super close to
@JaneNewAuthor
@JaneNewAuthor Жыл бұрын
I have trouble understanding my own and other people's emotions.
@JaneNewAuthor
@JaneNewAuthor Жыл бұрын
Suffering souls is wrong. Some of these people don't have souls at all.
@ΚώσταςΜπέκος-ι4ι
@ΚώσταςΜπέκος-ι4ι Жыл бұрын
The real psychopathic behaviour is uploading an hour long, very interesting video right before some portion of the viewers go to sleep. Well played.
@guiorgy
@guiorgy Жыл бұрын
No matter what time he uploads, some people will be about to go to sleep
@snex000
@snex000 Жыл бұрын
@@guiorgy Oh you're one of those "earth is a globe" people, huh?
@georgecataloni4720
@georgecataloni4720 Жыл бұрын
@@snex000 Nah, it's a flat disk, but the sun moves around, creating night and day differently for each region.
@Jray608
@Jray608 Жыл бұрын
@@georgecataloni4720 Oh, I see... your one of those sheep who think the Earth is real? (Out conspiracy the conspiracy theorist.)
@guiorgy
@guiorgy Жыл бұрын
@@snex000 wdym?.. Also, it's a geoid...
@beastking4373
@beastking4373 8 ай бұрын
i feel like the word ranking thing isnt a great indicator because i think a psychopath could learn and understand that normal people would rank things like puppy and laughter first and cancer and parking ticket last even if they themselves dont have any emotional reaction to those words
@EvilAng3la
@EvilAng3la Жыл бұрын
The line about the differences in the rate of male psychopath vs female caught my attention, specifically because there's a history in medicine of those big differences in gender-based results coming about due to research being done mostly or entirely on men, and not seeing how a condition can show up differently between the two. Some quick searches suggest the same here - some initial work is in this area indicates that female psychopaths can also manifest different behavioral outcomes. Such as female psychopaths being good at manipulating the differences in cultural views between men and women, resulting in more often getting others to do their dirty work, or playing victim. So we don't actually know the rates between male and female psychopaths because the criteria is too male-specific. So it's possible that there are a lot more women psychopaths walking around because people aren't looking for them properly.
@sheepyhead0399
@sheepyhead0399 Жыл бұрын
That also reminds me of the huge differences in autism in different demographics as well. Autism is HUGELY different from psychopathy, but it has a similar gender bias and different presentations. Wen it was first being researched it was pretty much only researched in young, white, male toddlers, and so for many decades, the only type of autism that counted as autism was that exhibited in privileged young boys. It's only recently come to light that autism presents very differently in marginalised groups, women being the biggest of those demographics. Often autistic women, autistic Black people, autistic queer people, etc have much more refined masking abilities (the ability to suppress autistic traits and appear neurotypical), which is a survival mechanism that leads to huge risks of anxiety, depression, and even suicidality. As a result of this, autistic women and autistic people in minority groups are often diagnosed much later in life, or not at all, because our autism presents differently and is harder to spot - it's why I was diagnosed so late, even though I showed quite clear signs when I was a child (as I grew older, I learnt to mask, and I'm only unlearning it now after it caused me a lot of damage). For a long time, because of the gender bias, it was thought that autism was WAY more common in men than in women, but only in the past few years (not even decades, years! It's all very new and recent!), it's come to light that there may actually be more autistic women than men. Interesting stuff Edit: Forgot to say as well, autistic women are WAY more likely to be misdiagnosed with other conditions, often multiple, such as OCD, anxiety, depression, bipolar disorder, panic disorder, anti-social personality disorder, narcissistic personality disorder, etc. It's possible of course to be autistic and also have other conditions like these (I'm autistic and I have an anxiety disorder for example), but it's so common for autism to be mistaken as one of these. The most common one I hear about is autistic women being misdiagnosed with bipolar disorder. Autistic women just tend to slip through the cracks, it's quite sad honestly
@Spartan322
@Spartan322 Жыл бұрын
While I won't and can't refute this idea of male-specific criteria, especially as someone who is a complementarian, thus I easily agree with psychologically distinctions between men and women quite more then just averagely. (and yes there are a surprising amount of people who reject this claim) But I will note one thing to be aware that we should not inherently look for an equal measure of occurrence in women as in men, the difference in psychologically also means the very fact that it could exist in the women is very likely to be at different rates, and its already a clear biological fact that women operate on a distinct bell curve from men, women very much trend towards more homogeneous societal operation and its quite unlikely the same applies psychologically. So while I absolutely agree, don't take me as saying that isn't true, we must be careful not to look for an equity outcome either.
@sheepyhead0399
@sheepyhead0399 Жыл бұрын
@@Spartan322 A lot of those sentences didn't make sense and I'll be honest I have absolutely not the faintest clue as to what you're on about
@Spartan322
@Spartan322 Жыл бұрын
@@sheepyhead0399 Basics of what I have said is that I agree with male/female psychological distinctions for which are stated by the comment, but in finding where the truth of that difference lies we need to then be careful to not try to produce an equal rate of the psychopathy in women as exists in men, specifically because of the psychological distinctions.
@sheepyhead0399
@sheepyhead0399 Жыл бұрын
​@@Spartan322 Oh I see, to be honest you make a good point however I think the unlikelihood of that bias is demonstrated in other conditions like autism which I happened to talk about in a previous comment where in understanding the distinctions between different demographics' autism, researchers concluded that there are likely to be more autistic women than men (rather than pushing for equal rates), very different to what was previously thought (in fact, some still believe that autism can only exist in men). I think it's more likely therefore, considering the procedures of diagnostic bodies and whatnot, that the distinctions between men's and women's psychopathy won't negatively affect the true distribution of the disorder. I guess it's not really worth worrying about, but something to keep in mind. Also no offence but you write like a redditor
@Swodish
@Swodish Жыл бұрын
"I'm not a psychopath" is exactly what a psychopath would say.
@DebNKY
@DebNKY 9 ай бұрын
"'I'm not a psychopath' is exactly what a psychopath would say" is exactly what a psychopath would say.
@Swodish
@Swodish 9 ай бұрын
@@DebNKY if I where really a psychopath, would I have killed my elderly neighbors because they made a slight noise at 1 am? Exactly didn't think so 😎😎😎 💯
@Andrewforjesus
@Andrewforjesus 9 ай бұрын
@@DebNKY ok
@Jay-nj1rq
@Jay-nj1rq 9 ай бұрын
Actually because of their narcissism, they will willingly admit they are a psychopath because they don’t see anything wrong with that.
@JoeRogansForehead
@JoeRogansForehead 8 ай бұрын
“I’m a psychopath” is exactly what a non psychopath edgy nerd would also say. Look at these comemnts
@emgoodlife6681
@emgoodlife6681 Жыл бұрын
Pyschopaths always fascinated me because I care too damn much about everything all the time. It's exhausting. Sometimes I fantasize about not caring at all. Not that I would actually want that, though.
@jessiejerome7482
@jessiejerome7482 Жыл бұрын
I hear you... I'm in the same boat, I'm emotionally exhausted all the time given the current world we are living in :( I'm always wishing I could fix everything knowing I can't... but as you said, I would not want to give it up either. I guess helping one person at a time is better than none...
@FroggyMosh
@FroggyMosh 11 ай бұрын
Yeah, I get ya. For the longest time I thought I had no feelings. Got into therapy, turns out I was depressed and living with cPTSD. From sometime in the last 5 to 10 years, I've slowly been re-gaining my feelings. Now, I also feel other's feelings which is confusing enough in its own right. At heart I'm a fixer, the eternal helper. But I don't have the energy to fix it all, or much at all. But going back to not caring isn't an option either, for I wouldn't feel a reason to be around these people, or even get out of the house.
@Youraveragedemon-n3r
@Youraveragedemon-n3r 11 ай бұрын
Hello I'm a psychopath and diagnosed with ASPD. What's it like being a normie?
@Dofungulous
@Dofungulous 10 ай бұрын
It's easy to stop caring. Figure out what is pointless to worry about and what you can actually change. Then you can fix the things that can be changed.
@joeyrinard6997
@joeyrinard6997 10 ай бұрын
I get that
@Angel-ip7pw
@Angel-ip7pw Ай бұрын
I dont think being calm in the face of danger is only present in psychopaths. I have an OCD diagnosis, Im a bit too empathetic and worried to the point I worry I could hurt people on accident obsessively. But also I am only calm when I am in a crisis, when my dad had a stroke and I helped him that was the first and only time I ever felt truly at peace and normal focus wise
@watchf
@watchf Ай бұрын
You do NOT have aura 😭🤡🤡🤡 “Oi oi oi… 🙂‍↕️🙂‍↕️🙂‍↕️” - you probably
@Angel-ip7pw
@Angel-ip7pw Ай бұрын
@ what?
@bastiaanabcde
@bastiaanabcde Жыл бұрын
I don't believe psychopaths cannot rank those 5 words. You don't need any feelings to rank those words, you just need to know how other people would rank them and what kind of associations those words have. I checked and even ChatGPT was able to do it.
@joshyoung1440
@joshyoung1440 Жыл бұрын
Then maybe that's their whole point that they'd have to copy it like chatgpt...
@RedstonerD
@RedstonerD Жыл бұрын
Chatgpt is more in line with a normal person than a psychopath is in that regard
@Delmworks
@Delmworks Жыл бұрын
In fairness, it probably could work so long as the subject hasn’t heard of it before. I guess the point is that if they screw it up they’re guaranteed a psycho but if they pass the jury’s still out.
@seancleary5875
@seancleary5875 Жыл бұрын
I do research on psychopaths at college. Yes, psychopaths can rank those words based on the emotional schemas of those words; it's obviously intuitive. But there is none or only fleeting emotion; the same thing goes for emotionally valenced images. So, if they were asked to rank those words based on what emotion was aroused when they saw those words, then they would have difficulty.
@NeroDefogger
@NeroDefogger Жыл бұрын
the way you talked about it sounded like you were a psychopath yourself and couldn't rank them by yourself, only by as you said thinking about what other people think
@Phoenix-ej2sh
@Phoenix-ej2sh Жыл бұрын
Hearing you describe the positive benefits of being psychopathic served only to remind me that we live in a society set up by and for them as opposed to a society set up by and for those with empathy.
@WithoutFear804
@WithoutFear804 Жыл бұрын
​​​@@Engictionwe decide how society runs. Not nature. The entire point of being human is the rejection of "natural" base impulse and the embarrassment of something better. We just have a long way to go
@Phoenix-ej2sh
@Phoenix-ej2sh Жыл бұрын
@@Engiction if that’s how you define “nature”, then you have no explanation for the convergent evolution of societies among humans, meerkats, or ants.
@nicholasjones3207
@nicholasjones3207 Жыл бұрын
@@Engictionthe system were in seems to reward psychopathy from where I’m standing. Snakes in suits, political Ponerology and corruptible are all books that speak to this dynamic
@Kerttis
@Kerttis Жыл бұрын
@naka8919 our "nature" is constantly evolving. you cant separate humans from their nature is correct, but the meaning of human nature has been changing over time
@BoltageHadalen
@BoltageHadalen Жыл бұрын
Basically because it wouldn't be as efficient, yeah So what? This clearly proves that the world doesn't need too many of us but neither none of us, just enough to push things towards the way of progress and betterment of life for everyone else There's a constant truth people always try to run away from but it's impossible to escape Morality and ethics are an obstacle that is needed to be put aside depending on the scenario
@doctorbright6946
@doctorbright6946 Жыл бұрын
30:00 in fact Ted once in prision said "Who says crime doesnt pay? I feel totally good about what I did"
@Caprigon
@Caprigon 8 ай бұрын
Bundy?
@melaniemagdalene1616
@melaniemagdalene1616 6 ай бұрын
​@@Caprigon No, Kaczynski
@kora4185
@kora4185 4 ай бұрын
Probably just screwing with us. Knowing this is what would piss everyone and make him feel he have the power and is superior. But he probably felt nothing good, and loathed being caught and caged like an animal.
@Skag_Sisyphus
@Skag_Sisyphus Ай бұрын
If crime didn't pay, poverty wouldn't drive it. Also, moral and legal aren't the same thing.
@melody3741
@melody3741 11 ай бұрын
A lot of times in intense situations I sort of calmly think through things and do what I need to, then after it all hapens get a flood of anxiety and realize how terrifying what just happened was.
@AndyJP
@AndyJP Жыл бұрын
Surely there is a good median between "this patient in front of me is just an object I work on" and "OMG one wrong move and I create orphans!"
@davixpixie243
@davixpixie243 Жыл бұрын
why does it have to be one line, why not both, is it true that you have to work on him, yes, is it true that he is a living breathing himan with a family, yep... narrow goals are good until they aren't, monoideologic thinking can become blinding at some point
@PlayedbyInstinct
@PlayedbyInstinct Жыл бұрын
You could start with better training. Current training methods, for example, rely on deliberately desensitising doctors by having them perform unnecessary surgeries on animals without anaesthetics. The screams of the animals being cut up while alive and conscious is supposed to prepare surgeons for 'real world' scenarios.
@shuruff904
@shuruff904 Жыл бұрын
yeah, but that OMG realization could cause nervousness or panic...and you definitely don't want a surgeon panicky while operating. of course, some work better under pressure, but it causes focus, not panic in those types. I'd rather the surgeon not care about me, but his/her career instead.
@deathlocus1571
@deathlocus1571 Жыл бұрын
@@PlayedbyInstinct Those training methods are no longer practiced, and absolutely make use of anesthesia.
@JepJongo
@JepJongo Жыл бұрын
Precisely. Fear can motivate, as well as paralyse. Maybe a surgeon should feel some sense of fear, enough to motivate them to not screw up tue job. Ot goes back to classical Greek virtue ethics. To be a coward, and to shrink in the face of hardship is not virtuous, but neither is a foolhardy attitude that does not take into account danger and consequence. Courage is the mediation between these two. All truly courageous people feel fear, it is in confronting that fear that courage is found. To a psychopath, there are no consequences to consider, which is exactly what makes them so reckless. Look into Charles Teo, a prominent Australian neurosurgeon, and you will see exactly why you do not want a psychopath performing your brain surgery.
@Skillseboy1
@Skillseboy1 Жыл бұрын
Wow amazing production. 55 minutes and it felt like nothing. Completely in the story.
@orbitalstitch
@orbitalstitch Жыл бұрын
Non of those qualities you listed at the end are exclusive to psychopaths, the problem is there are people with these traits who also don't have any sense of empathy and who use their emotional intelligence exclusively as a flashlight without care for who they're blinding. Most psychopaths we eventually unmask either because we're working backwards from the harm they've carelessly caused and trying to understand why, or because they're incompetent at pretending, there are just many mundane everyman psychopaths as there are ruthless wannabe Sherlock's.
@uninteressant2196
@uninteressant2196 Жыл бұрын
Exactly - there are firefighters that will get you out of a building for the love of their fellow humans and their job. There are visionairies that can fight for a vision because it is good, not because they are egomaniacs. Being a psychopath just absolves you from the ability to ever be truly brave, and if we could heal it we should.
@timsudmeier6482
@timsudmeier6482 Жыл бұрын
I don't think the point is that we NEED psychopaths for those jobs but rather that psychopaths are NOT ALLWAYS HARMFULL for our society
@shuruff904
@shuruff904 Жыл бұрын
yeah, but one bee doesn't count as a swarm or colony. it's the multiple combination of these characteristics that create/determine psychopaths.
@HappyBeezerStudios
@HappyBeezerStudios Жыл бұрын
That's why psychopacy is considered with 30 of 40 possible points. Having a couple of these traits is totally normal. As described, the typical "average male" gets about 4 points. And even if one scores higher, high enough to be considered a psychopath that doesn't mean one is a danger to society, one might just be a super successful entrepreneur, CEO, firefighter, surgeon, etc. jobs where the lack of empathy and structure is helpful.
@greg.kasarik
@greg.kasarik 8 ай бұрын
My number plate is literally "MPATHY", but I'm also an army veteran and only last year, went into a burning building to get people out, as everyone else stood and recorded on their mobile phones. So no. Not am I not a psychopath, but it is clear stupidity to say that only psychopaths can do these things. Why have I put my life in danger? Because I give a shit. Despite the fear of adverse consequences, I know that my failure to act will have greater consequences for others, than my mere safety. Psychopaths could never have built civilization. That takes an understanding of the fact that we are all in it together. Caring for others, even complete strangers, hurts, but it is also what makes me and those like me human. I can be ruthless, when I have to be. I can make the hard decisions that others can't. But my motivations come from a desire to ensure that the world is a better place when I leave, compared to when I arrived. I couldn't think of anyone I'd rather be. Maybe we are researching the wrong end of the spectrum.
@wolfgang01997
@wolfgang01997 8 ай бұрын
This is an amazing point. This comment needs to be more recognized. What you commented clearly states that empathy and sympathy creates a more positive and effective impact on society.
@greg.kasarik
@greg.kasarik 8 ай бұрын
@@wolfgang01997 Thanks. I think that part of the problem is that very little research into positive psychology, and positive personality traits is done. We have a DSM-V, but with the possible exception of the "Character Strengths and Virtues: A Handbook and Classification", there isn't really a similar book for the opposite side of the spectrum. The irony is that after having served in the Army, and experienced homelessness and poverty, I actually have a few diagnoses from the former book, but it is the unrecognised positive traits that keep me alive and able to help others. Edit: "This comment needs to be more recognized." Another irony. People like me get ignored. Occasionally, we'll be recognised, and soon forgotten, or idolised beyond who we truly were, (think Nelson Mandala. who was a terrorist, long before he found his true calling as a man of peace and reconciliation), but most of the people you see on your TV news are at the sociopathic end of the spectrum, even if they don't meet the full diagnostic criteria.
@tallisonrausch5719
@tallisonrausch5719 7 ай бұрын
Humble brag
@greg.kasarik
@greg.kasarik 7 ай бұрын
@@tallisonrausch5719 I'm proud of who I am and what I stand for and like the person who stares back at me from the mirror. If you honestly believe that telling people that you don't need to be a sociopath to help people, or make the difficult choices is bragging, then I feel sorry for you.
@areshera4039
@areshera4039 6 ай бұрын
@@greg.kasarik What is your body count as a veteran?
@elijahclaude3413
@elijahclaude3413 Жыл бұрын
I think a big underrated problem/consideration around the idea of whether psychopathy is 'good' is also society dependent. A huge reason why it is even good in the first place, is due to our society encouraging and rewarding those behaviors. We don't necessarily Need 'the most dangerous people to do the most dangerous jobs' and whatnot. We could instead try to automate those jobs instead, or audit their true value, or even try to create ways in which folks can do those jobs both more safely and more efficiently. For instance, the reason many of those traits are good for CEOs is because of how our society has defined businesses. We could instead have mostly co-operatives where one builds consensus instead of cutthroat negotiations. Or where the rewards are socialized such that everyone who was involved wins, rather than monopolized within winner-take-all games. The very way in which you build a system can itself bias towards certain behaviors that may not be good or desirable in other systems. I think its imperative we do that larger meta analysis before encouraging such ideas.
@Silversiren28
@Silversiren28 Жыл бұрын
We could also teach people to see the virtues of a civil and non-criminal society through self-interest, when they aren't able to grasp the concept through emotional regulation. Psychopaths also benefit from a peaceful society, and not having the many problems that come with their aberrant behavior. The problem is that they don't understand these benefits in a way that makes sense to them, and that they can self-regulate on. I would be thoroughly unsurprised if an appropriate method of instruction that they're able to learn from would sharply curtail the problematic aspects without needing to be so cruel as to punish and destroy them for simply existing. I'd expect it to be neigh on impossible to eliminate societal incentives for psychopathic traits that don't extend to the degree where such a person becomes a problem for society. At the smallest scale of social units, there is an extreme degree of benefit for the non-psychopaths to fall under the protection of those who are capable of weathering the storms of life and ruthlessly eliminating external threats to the social unit, be it a family or a city, or country, or what have you. This can be as banal as someone simply outcompeting someone for a lucrative promotion or raise so they can provide better for themselves and their dependents, or it can be a larger affair where a nation has to choose who lives and who dies because there's no other way around a given problem. Any meta-analysis would need to consider these types of factors, as well as the differences in outcomes that will occur due to removal of 'psychopathic' traits such as conditionally disregarding concerns of empathy during a crisis situation. I would give direct examples of real world scenarios in which the death toll is frequently increased by orders of magnitude due to unwillingness to take strong enough measures early, but these sorts of topics tend to be heavily censored on the internet these days and would not agree with the conclusions that are permitted to remain.
@awseko4732
@awseko4732 Жыл бұрын
Society didn't decide the behavior's. It's just what naturally occurs as humans. This is the free market. Modern Darwinism. Anything besides what currently exists is something that society decides.
@lucykoelle6602
@lucykoelle6602 Жыл бұрын
please stop putting evolution as the same as capitalism. Capitalism isn't inate or how all societies work.@@awseko4732
@Willy_Warmer
@Willy_Warmer Жыл бұрын
Our society isn't encourging those behaviours, nature is. In nature, the strongest, most ruthless, most selfish often are the ones who survive and thrive. The human brain hasn't evolved nearly enough to steer away from that.
@cyfangz9238
@cyfangz9238 Жыл бұрын
@@Willy_Warmer wow, everything you said is wrong. you known nothing of nature or evolution, never use those terms again
@50shadesofshrek43
@50shadesofshrek43 Жыл бұрын
Man never disregard the amount of courage a non psychopath can muster. With or without them things will get done
@TheWhiteCompany-oj1yy
@TheWhiteCompany-oj1yy Жыл бұрын
courage and fearlessness are in totally different tiers one who has courage is weak on the inside but wheres a mask a persona and temporarily becomes strong while one who is fearless has no weakness except there one fearlessness .
@TheWhiteCompany-oj1yy
@TheWhiteCompany-oj1yy Жыл бұрын
@@TheSlovakImperator whys that?
@gravity00x
@gravity00x Жыл бұрын
fearlessness does not make a good doctor. none of the psychopathic traits are necessary to be good at your job. the video makes a very missleading point. psychopaths are absolutely not necessary for a "better" society. nor are they necessary for a functioning society. in fact, they are the ones who destroy a functional society from the top down.
@Dice-Z
@Dice-Z Жыл бұрын
@@TheWhiteCompany-oj1yy Your definition is nonsense. If you are fearless, it takes no strenght whatsoever to be fearless. Courage is the act of being stronger than your weaknesses. It's strenght itself. Fearlessness leads to recklessness, which demarks a lack of intelligence, both physical and emotional. And a lack of intelligence is weak. Someone who fears death and will do everything to overcome it is stronger than someone who doesn't care about dying. It's why fear as a response has survived evolution as a prime ability for any intelligent living being to have. Because harnessing fear will make you stronger than anyone who is fearless. There is no more ferocious animal than an animal scared for its life willing to fight to death to defend it. This is why psychopaths aren't the majority of the human population. If it were that good, it would be a trait that keeps getting passed down. No, it's best when it's at a low percentage of the population. The strongest people fear and respect death, they simply aren't cowards. Because they know bravery. The strongest armies in history aren't the ones that sent meat fodder by the thousand to die, but those smaller, tightknit armies of brave people always backing eachothers, defeating much bigger armies with strategical might and with minimal losses. It's all about knowing how to turn off that fear in the heat of battle, or better yet, have full control of it. It takes far more discipline than simply being born fearless.
@TheWhiteCompany-oj1yy
@TheWhiteCompany-oj1yy Жыл бұрын
@@Dice-Z why should it matter how strong someone is as a human beings strength can only go so far its not about the willpower, determination, and courage someone can conjure because reality doesn't care about these things i feel as if the way you think about soldiers is wrong so soldiers are inferior its honorable that they still continue to fight regardless of how they feel which does so true strength but true strength cannot match the focus resolve and cold hearted calculation of a machine like entity you say fearlessness leads to recklessness but this is simply not true i believe that human beings have a dormant potential within all of them but it can only be brought out with fearlessness a courage's person sees the world differently then a fearless person the fearless person sees the world without the pre existing fear and that allows them to see that anything could be possible without there pre existing biases that they could be wrong because they dont care again would you rather have a surgeon that is courage's do your surgery which is still human prone to emotion do it as yes they can have empathy and understanding for others but they have no control over it or the cold hearted calculating machine who is focused on the goal and WILL have a certian outcome
@Killgrave13
@Killgrave13 Жыл бұрын
I'm a diagnosed "sociopath". I think they called it anti-social personality disorder, but from what I'm told, I was made this way, not born.
@Ashley.084
@Ashley.084 Жыл бұрын
if I'm remembering correctly sociopaths are half made that way, but genetics also play a part. its always been there, but can be "unlocked' with a traumatic event. While psychopaths are most often born that way, genetics are often the only factor. Both have ASPD. Don't quote me on it though
@deathlocus1571
@deathlocus1571 Жыл бұрын
Make sure it isn't autism. I was likened to a socio/psychopath by myself and others, along with being wrongfully diagnosed with things like depression when in reality It was just autism.
@kimmeex
@kimmeex Жыл бұрын
If you havent commited felonies you aint sht
@lolunicornsaj8907
@lolunicornsaj8907 Жыл бұрын
Do you like it? also sorry if that question is insensitive, I was wondering if it's like more enjoyable to be a sociopath or an empath.
@Killgrave13
@Killgrave13 Жыл бұрын
​@@lolunicornsaj8907 Sure, I like it. Having a bunch of emotions seems very tiresome to me. You can ask questions, I don't mind. It's actually fun to answer because normally this is something I hide. I don't know how it is to be an empath. I love my kids and my mum. Every other emotion is extremely hard for me, and I need to fake it.
@AttemptedPretzelMaker
@AttemptedPretzelMaker Ай бұрын
9:05 I put table over dog
@sirlordcomic
@sirlordcomic Жыл бұрын
Eskimos called psychopaths “kunlangeta” , These were men who lied, cheated, stole, and took sexual advantage of women, and didn't care about punishments. Apparently, the Inuit way of dealing with these socially deviant individuals was to quietly push them off the ice.
@macysondheim
@macysondheim 11 ай бұрын
Those are actually traits that all men possess.
@martinsaad5125
@martinsaad5125 11 ай бұрын
@@macysondheim Hey who hurted you?
@stefantkalcic1491
@stefantkalcic1491 11 ай бұрын
​@@martinsaad5125 Obviously men did, bruh.
@martinsaad5125
@martinsaad5125 11 ай бұрын
@@stefantkalcic1491 yeah but who specifically?
@Kleptocracy154
@Kleptocracy154 11 ай бұрын
Yes but some act on them and some don't. Its easier to be evil than to be good.
@bird3938
@bird3938 Жыл бұрын
The timing of this vid is crazy. Just saw a post saying that living with adhd/autism is life on a hard mode bc the job industry is built to benefit only people with psychopathy and the more you think about it the more it rings true.
@impooping69
@impooping69 Жыл бұрын
Not just specifically the job market, but capitalism in general
@Wisdawms
@Wisdawms Жыл бұрын
that's so true
@matthewtaylor2040
@matthewtaylor2040 Жыл бұрын
Every word nowadays has a positive/negative. We're getting closer everyday to being ok about being the things that were once not ok to be
@Griffith74
@Griffith74 Жыл бұрын
@@impooping69 ib4 a rant on how communism is the solution
@userequaltoNull
@userequaltoNull Жыл бұрын
​@@impooping69"everything is the fault of capitalism"
@andrewsammons9643
@andrewsammons9643 Жыл бұрын
Kevin, this video is amazing and phenomenally well made and researched and considered. You always have a way of presenting facts uncontroversially and emphasizing details without sensationalizing. Thank you for all the work you and the Vsauce family do and for producing incredible content!
@hepta5040
@hepta5040 Жыл бұрын
​​@guitarszenhe didn't say that. The quote was so horrible that the viewer must assume he doesn't agree with it. Always give people the benefit of the doubt anyways
@aether222
@aether222 Жыл бұрын
You are just psychopathically sucking up!
@scottlemay3386
@scottlemay3386 10 ай бұрын
I'm not an expert and dont claim to be... im taking psychology in University and just doing some thought experiments...Something I dont understand with psychopath tests is that they always seam to make the situations "under stress", or "in order to save someone"... but as mentioned before, psychopoths wouldnt really feel the fear or stress or really care to save others... wouldnt it be easier to just say "there's a puppy, a middle aged man, an elderly woman, a baby, a child, and a middle aged woman who do you kill. Why?" ..."what if you could only save 1?".... "ok now you are stranded on an island. The puppy sleeps near you and keeps you warm, the middle aged man is sick, the elderly woman is a doctor, the baby is loud and lost its biological mother, the child is your niece, and the middle aged woman is nice to your niece, but doesnt like you. Who do you kill?" .... "again what if you could only save one?"...the test could go on a few times adding to the situation to increase fear or stress. A true psychopath wouldnt care about the changes and might get upset by them interfering with their logic... but they could change things and hyper focus on only what benifits or has direct impact on them. But the real test would be how fast they answer: do they think and try to solve the riddle? do they just choose at random? What is their reasoning? Did they bother to ask why? 🤔 when saving someone was it: to benifit them? was it nonchalantly chosen? Was it because of the "relitive status"? ... I think a lot of people doing the train test feel morally obligated to do something to help people on the tracks and feel a sense of panic... i remember playing a version on line with a timer and you had to pull the lever... i derailed the train and killed the most people... but out of anxiety and stress... i made a terrible decision... in fact most of us do... psychopaths dont make terrible decisions under presser... they make the same decisions under pressure as they would without the pressure. So I dont really understand those tests. 😅
@andrewn.7353
@andrewn.7353 Ай бұрын
its not just pressure or stress to a situation. I feel like if a psychopath was stranded on the island, they would kill the person/creature that would benefit them the best or hinder someone else. puppy provides body warmth to keep myself alive. sick man can cause illness, the doctor has limited supplies on the island and would be better to treat you if you got sick... i have a hard time thinking that a psychopath wouldn't be able to understand advantage
@JoshuaGold1
@JoshuaGold1 Жыл бұрын
As a premed student, I see this quite often. I've worked with doctors and nurses who seem to have no care that someone is sitting there injured. If it's their lunch break, then who cares? But I get where they're coming from, after a few times you get used to it. So they might not be psychopaths.
@pilotracoon80
@pilotracoon80 Жыл бұрын
This can be a survival response. Caring a lot about people all the time is exhausting, they must have built a wall to protect themselves. Some of them might be psychos, yes, but I would wager it's the minority
@louithrottler
@louithrottler Жыл бұрын
At first I was thinking 'what does premed mean? some derivative term for cleaning ones ruffled feathers? Oh what a difference a hyphen makes. :D
@RPcropland
@RPcropland Жыл бұрын
And how do you know they didn't already skip their break? Or would you rather they be tired and make a catastrophic mistake? Why are you so casual about making an assumption that if incorrect is kinda a harsh accusation while also expecting they never take a break? If you care so much why are you not a nurse? Might you be a psychopath?
@nerdysister
@nerdysister Жыл бұрын
my sister is an OR nurse. compassion fatigue. but I think it's literally warped her brain over the decades. she's not the same person she was in her early 20s. not at all...
@daisyviluck7932
@daisyviluck7932 Жыл бұрын
The sick and injured keep arriving and arriving. You’re not a robot or a saint. If you don’t take your lunch breaks, *you* will be the one sick and injured.
@Noowai
@Noowai Жыл бұрын
Lured me into watching first 30 seconds? How about the whole 55+ minutes! Thank you, that was really insightful.
@AlkisGD
@AlkisGD Жыл бұрын
54:45 - What about sampling bias? The implicit assumption here is that psychopaths are no more and no less likely to be interested in Vsauce2 than the average person.
@Lilliathi
@Lilliathi 6 ай бұрын
I'd say psychopaths would be extra interested in a video about psychopaths.
@valelelentin
@valelelentin Жыл бұрын
To be fair, Vsauce 2 has become one of the best documentary channels on youtube in my opinion
@DisasterpieceGER
@DisasterpieceGER Жыл бұрын
This is absolutely amazing. I'd love to hear more about other personality disorders in this format!
@hhhhh-mw5zx
@hhhhh-mw5zx Жыл бұрын
Sameeeee
@Nooticus
@Nooticus Жыл бұрын
agreed!
@VeganSemihCyprus33
@VeganSemihCyprus33 Жыл бұрын
Speaking of psychopathy, this is the story of your enslavement, the "elite" exposed 👉 The Connections (2021) [short documentary] 💖
@thefamily512
@thefamily512 Жыл бұрын
Psychopath = Basically Every Female
@i_smoke_ghosts
@i_smoke_ghosts Жыл бұрын
format yay!
@Ciurk
@Ciurk Жыл бұрын
wait till the carpenter walks in and ranks the table #1
@physicsisawesome696
@physicsisawesome696 27 күн бұрын
Wait till the cop walks in and ranks the parking ticket #1
@michaelatorn8380
@michaelatorn8380 Жыл бұрын
Him: "It shows the difference between psychopaths and us... " Me: "us?"
@gusfring6887
@gusfring6887 11 ай бұрын
Exactly
@rdallas81
@rdallas81 7 ай бұрын
Me
@TheUnseenKrab
@TheUnseenKrab 6 ай бұрын
Then the 'we' as well. Like what?
@molnarboglarka9062
@molnarboglarka9062 8 ай бұрын
We don't need dangerous people. People that made life simply better, weren't psychopaths. Don't give them glory.
@1tubax
@1tubax 8 ай бұрын
Uh oh, someone is delulu and misinformed. Psychopaths have been a central core to many of history's greatest advancements. Is a sharp knife dangerous? You can use it to feed a hungry crowd, or use it to commit a crime. Psychopaths are exactly the same
@cuttinaboot
@cuttinaboot Жыл бұрын
I think a older kid I used to know would have ranked pretty high but he was a good guy, had a very strange moral compass, if he met a brand new person for the first time and they said someone had wronged them he would physically attack the person in a way most people would only do for they’re friends or family ( even if it was someone that wasn’t even friend of a friend ) just a random person and he was ready to fight anyone for you, some people might say he was just looking for a fight but although that may be true he only attacked people that had hit or abused or ripped or something so I feel like he liked fighting but thought he needed to use it for good
@jordanpaulin
@jordanpaulin Жыл бұрын
What was his name?
@ChocolateMilk..
@ChocolateMilk.. Жыл бұрын
@@Skyblue_2049 You're mistaking self-righteousness with righteousness.
@nshkurkin
@nshkurkin Жыл бұрын
I really like the VSauce long-form video format. I know they are a lot of work but this is the kind of content I love on the VSauce network. Great exploration of the topic and am looking forward to the next deep dive.
@LiamStojanovic
@LiamStojanovic Жыл бұрын
55 minutes just flew by. Amazing storytelling, presentation, and attention to detail. Well done Kevin, kudos to you and your team!
@Suedetussy
@Suedetussy Жыл бұрын
OMG,i seriously believed it were 30 min, until i saw your comment!
@PrimataFalante
@PrimataFalante 10 ай бұрын
I don't think CEO is a good example of careers where psychopaths should be desirable for a healthy society. Sure, it's an alluring position for the psychopathic personality, and it's perfect for the dubious goals of shady investors and trust funds, but it's not a position where ruthlessness is needed or brings positive results for people and society in general. It's good to have a surgeon who will be more precise and save lives by being indifferent; the same is not true about mass layoffs, mental health on the workplace, prioritization of ethical considerations about company culture and business strategies, guidelines for people management and everything else involved on a CEO position. Again, it's a position where ruthlessness can bring personal glory, but the results for the society around and the people beneath these CEOs have been devastating for a long long time. It's not a place where we should want psychopaths, but unfortunately it is a magnet for them. The same is true for almost every position of political power.
@brettmmontague
@brettmmontague 3 ай бұрын
100% agree
@caringheart34
@caringheart34 Ай бұрын
Unfortunately, almost every CEO needs to be a sub-clinical psychopath to be able to main mental fortitude and planning. ...did I mention the Rothschilds?
@corrinflakes9659
@corrinflakes9659 Жыл бұрын
The ironic part about the Berserk reference is that it’s still about the indomitable human spirit, which is almost like seinen’s equivalent of “power of friendship” at this point.
@Delmworks
@Delmworks Жыл бұрын
To be honest, shonen’s interpretation is an aspects of the same thing IMO
@TotoLakay
@TotoLakay Жыл бұрын
Fun fact: psychopaths don't like psychedelic shrooms. It always gives them a massive panic attack. One I knew, told me he felt things that horrified him.
@mnemosyne1337
@mnemosyne1337 Жыл бұрын
Idk why but that’s hilarious
@Tentegen
@Tentegen Жыл бұрын
He felt. That scared the shit outta him. 😆
@arturoharo8859
@arturoharo8859 Жыл бұрын
Me too, the first time it was euphoric and I felt really close to everyone, then it was too close, felt as if everyone knew what I was thinking
@NVsionbeatz
@NVsionbeatz Жыл бұрын
ego death: the narcissists nightmare
@louithrottler
@louithrottler Жыл бұрын
And running somewhere along those lines, I did a medication that calms Schizo's down and stops them hallucinating around 30 or 40 years ago: result - what schizo's experience. Although not super terrifying, I'd rather stick my penis in acid than try it again. (artane)
@mauriciogerhardt3209
@mauriciogerhardt3209 Жыл бұрын
The deuteronomy passage shows psychopathy in more than one way. If a mother and father don't want their children, they can get rid of them by lying to the city, so the kid will be killed. Or, if they want to force the child to do something, they can intimidate the kid telling them they will lie to the city to get them killed if they don't clean their room, or worse reasons.
@hufficag
@hufficag Жыл бұрын
I never thought of lying as a possibility. But then again I'm on the autistic spectrum, I always just dump whatever is in my mind. I can't understand why others don't do the same, just be honest and transparent. And if people hurt you as a consequence and take advantage of your honesty, just go berserker on them, they deserve it for being manipulative psychopaths. I'm not one for diplomatic delicacies. I think the deuteronomy passage is a pretty good idea for keeping a low psychopath population in your society, because they destabilize the society and make everyone worse off with their selfish manipulation.
@HarryNeelam
@HarryNeelam Жыл бұрын
This was a most fascinating presentation! I watched to the last second and could have watched another hour of it. Brilliantly done! Thank you for the research, scripting and production. Loved it.
@zeramino
@zeramino Жыл бұрын
You had me for 55 minutes! I love this unrushed format of content, it's very relaxing and insightful.
@honeybadger036
@honeybadger036 Жыл бұрын
Man, a Psychopath is someone who can't process emotions. Like practically all those checklist questions are as a result of or take a more complex form of this most basic and fundamental principle. It was clear from the outset that Ted was not a Psychopath but Jeff was. The major giveaways were Jeffs charm, an over compensation of "feelings" because he could never truly feel them for himself. Ted lived in a cabin away from society, this in and of itself is a massive sign of emotional processing. He lived as a social hermit because of his emotional response to a society that he did not agree with.
@buchelaruzit
@buchelaruzit Жыл бұрын
interesting. i agree
@N8Dulcimer
@N8Dulcimer Жыл бұрын
That is a really comforting point. I think I've seen and experienced enough very negative things that as a coping mechanism I can prevent myself from processing negative emotions, however I am still very empathetic and care a lot about people. I think I can process emotions but often it is easier not to, and for that reason I scored fairly high on the test. I was relieved when he said less than 30 is not a psycho, but when he said an average score is 4, I got REALLY worried. I wonder if there is a clinical distinction between someone who cannot feel emotions vs someone like me who can more or less turn them off when theyre too upsetting.
@N8Dulcimer
@N8Dulcimer Жыл бұрын
@guitarszen that part made me laugh. I thought the narrator was talking about stoning a disobedient son as an example of the towns people being the psychopaths xD Caught me off guard when he implied the child getting brutally murdered by a mob was the actual psycho.
@kindauncool
@kindauncool Жыл бұрын
Lol bless your introverted intuition
@kindauncool
@kindauncool Жыл бұрын
+@@N8Dulcimer that's so funny because that's really how diagnosis is. It's insane people calling someone they don't like insane because of the behaviours they share.
@CamperNQQB
@CamperNQQB Жыл бұрын
Once again a fantastically informative video! Psychology is an incredibly fascinating subject I can never get enough of. Keep up the great work!
@vladislavshevchenko634
@vladislavshevchenko634 29 күн бұрын
1:06 How did Joseph Stalin ended up on a listof criminals, if he's not a criminal?
@Hermamorra
@Hermamorra 16 күн бұрын
Stalin was a bank robber, extortionist and a recidivist. He robbed banks to support the “cause”, then got sent to prison siberia for it and later when the reds came, he was released and rewarded a party place.
@IssaqAl-Ahmed
@IssaqAl-Ahmed Жыл бұрын
You've been cranking out some of the most timely and thought provoking videos this year. Great work Kevin and crew.
@lastofthebest5102
@lastofthebest5102 Жыл бұрын
This seems hardly thought provoking at all, more like a vehicle to label people who are just different as some sort of psychopath. Dont walk the straight and narrow...you are a psychopath. Have any thoughts that the dizzy public doesnt approve of...psychopath. Being different in any way that what is allowed...psychopath. Seems to me like those who took an experimental drug with proven deadly consequences without any foreknowledge of its effects or detriment is psychotic. Its all perspective really.
@Poldovico
@Poldovico Жыл бұрын
If they're in line with this video in terms of sensationalism, I'm worried they're provoking some meaningfully misinformed thoughts, unfortunately.
@CaptainHooch
@CaptainHooch Жыл бұрын
took the test out of curiosity, 8.5% more psychopathic than the average person but still hilariously below the standard. This was actually really fascinating, please do more vids like these on other mental illnesses and such.
@user-vn1di4oq4w
@user-vn1di4oq4w Жыл бұрын
I took the test as well and scored 99%. Was confirmed fairly recently and had plenty of ignored signs as a kid and throughout life in general. If u have kids...dont ignore red flags i suppose.
@otdeSai
@otdeSai Жыл бұрын
@@user-vn1di4oq4w Yeah right
@otdeSai
@otdeSai Жыл бұрын
@@user-vn1di4oq4w Also you're probably still a kid
@Trizzer89
@Trizzer89 Жыл бұрын
You don't need to be a psychopath to detach emotionally from surgery
@frogz
@frogz Жыл бұрын
you kinda do, you perform a task that would, under most circumstances be considered dangerous and immoral and then go and wash up and wait for the next one
@vibaj16
@vibaj16 Жыл бұрын
@@frogz How is surgery immoral?
@Dave_of_Mordor
@Dave_of_Mordor Жыл бұрын
@@vibaj16 he doesn't know what he is talking about, but i don't agree with trizzer89 either. you can't be a regular person and detach emotionally from anything. that is just not possible
@erinys2
@erinys2 Жыл бұрын
@@frogz you dont lmao not every successfull surgeon is a psychopath detachment needs practice
@netmediocre
@netmediocre Жыл бұрын
Yeah I was relieved when the test slowly shifted into "random deliquency" and "blaming others"
@RowdyPumper
@RowdyPumper 11 ай бұрын
The the best video I’ve watched today. Unusually good sources. Straightforward with welcome preparation of what you were going to say. Clear delivery and visuals. Thank you for your effort
@crimsomnia1415
@crimsomnia1415 Жыл бұрын
That danger-induced focus and relaxation is actually a very euphoric state of being, and is elusive in the domesticated modern-day environment. Thus, pursuing a career in trauma surgery was the most natural path I could come up with in order to harness my mental faculties to their fullest potential whilst enjoying what I do.
@i_smoke_ghosts
@i_smoke_ghosts Жыл бұрын
i like pies
@infodump9343
@infodump9343 Жыл бұрын
For me, "Laughter" depends on the context, while it's largely positive, as a life long dorky kid, it could be more sinister. That might also be my neurodivergence being awkward and always wanting more context!
@LucyTheBox
@LucyTheBox Жыл бұрын
That's also the thought I had! My mind wouldn't ever put "Puppy" in a negative context, it's always cute, but it's not uncommon for Laughter to be at the expense of someone.
@psychopompous489
@psychopompous489 Жыл бұрын
@@LucyTheBox Dead puppy.
@Talguy21
@Talguy21 Жыл бұрын
@@LucyTheBox The puppy is really cute and happy until it poops and pees on the carpet and you're the one to have to clean it up. That's a negative context, they're a handful to care for. It's worth it, obviously, and there's balancing out, but it's not ENTIRELY positive.
@symix.
@symix. Жыл бұрын
​@@Talguy21of course, I was thinking the same, but tbh, the real first instinct is that puppy is more positive thing. Even though I do not really like puppies, I still connect it to positivity. Thats though only my opinion.
@mikicerise6250
@mikicerise6250 Жыл бұрын
Did anyone rank the table first? 🤣
@MikeFoxWoW
@MikeFoxWoW Жыл бұрын
The last episode of MASH recognized the problem of the baby crying, it drove Hawkeye insane enough that originally he thought it was a chicken. Very eye-eopening.
@thedhirajkushwaha
@thedhirajkushwaha Ай бұрын
6:37 Such a society seems more Psychopathic than the kid itself.
@BlueScreenCorp
@BlueScreenCorp Жыл бұрын
You can train yourself to manage your emotions in strenuous situations, you still experience them, are aware of them and can express them but they can be channeled in a healthy way. You don't have to be a psycho path to do that you just have to be emotionally intelligent, most people try to bury negative emotions instead of embracing them and flowing with them. The better you understand your own emotions the more easily you can handle the negative feelings of others.
@HappyBeezerStudios
@HappyBeezerStudios Жыл бұрын
Totally agree. The strengths that come from psycopathy and sociopathy are super helpful for a successful career. And the majority of psychopaths aren't criminals. Because with that neurodivergence doesn't come a tendency to violence. The majority of psychopaths are just super successful businessmen. And with their ability to manipulate, control and create a facade, they tend to be unnoticed.
@idnintel
@idnintel Жыл бұрын
wanna go hunt some psychopaths with me?
@yuionanodesuyo
@yuionanodesuyo Жыл бұрын
psychopathy is not a neurodivergence, it's a neuropsychiatric disorder. it's extremely counterproductive to mix it with the neurodiversity movement, and harmul to the original community.
@jerryrikki9466
@jerryrikki9466 Жыл бұрын
They aren't labeled as criminals but they certainly commit crimes. Hell I guess most if not all of us do on occasion
@Repetoire
@Repetoire Жыл бұрын
@@idnintel hunting psychopaths isn't the point. What is and isn't a psychopath is subjective. They have to commit a crime before you'd even know. Go hunt pedophiles, or capitalists.
@dayoonman3264
@dayoonman3264 Жыл бұрын
@@jerryrikki9466 no jerryrikki most of us do not commit crimes...not even on occasion
@YTT718
@YTT718 Жыл бұрын
Damn I'm a psychopath it wouldn't even have to be a life threatening situation for me to take out that crying baby I keep a trash bag in my poket.
@1tubax
@1tubax 8 ай бұрын
😂😂 fr bro I'll let god know that his design of having a built in alarm box into babies didn't exactly suit my fancy
@maryfreebed9886
@maryfreebed9886 4 ай бұрын
On one hand, it's lucrative not to have a conscience. On the other hand, there is the endlessly engaging inner life available to those who aren't.
@shaider1982
@shaider1982 Жыл бұрын
42:19 it's like in the anime Psycho pass where a system to detect psychopaths cannot detect violent people that are termed asymptomatics. 47:09 as an example of perhaps a psychopathic action, he ordered a French fleet be destroyed rather than be taken and used by the Germans.
@Admiral_Jezza
@Admiral_Jezza Жыл бұрын
Funny how the pregnant women in start were seen as "vulnerable" and not psychopaths themselves for harming their own flesh and blood, literally.
@darkstarr984
@darkstarr984 Жыл бұрын
They’re often addicted to these substances. It’s not usually a rational decision.
@futurew0782
@futurew0782 10 ай бұрын
@@darkstarr984Quitting nicotine is not very hard, so addiction is not a great excuse
@andrewn.7353
@andrewn.7353 Ай бұрын
@@futurew0782 depends who you are really, how long you've been using, and how much
@DikteonTemple
@DikteonTemple Жыл бұрын
Dr. Kevin Sutton's work with SAS commando Andy MacNab is really interesting. He found that by using transcranial magnetic stimulation you can actually temporarily shut down the sections of the brain that are dark in a psychopaths brain and make them have the same thought processes of a psychopath. It's really fascinating how fast the body fixes itself afterwards as well. Made a video on that since neuroscience gets scary as hell.
@ChocolateMilk..
@ChocolateMilk.. Жыл бұрын
So he made psychopaths think like a psychopath. How groundbreaking!
@shaunh1725
@shaunh1725 10 ай бұрын
That bit at the end about surgeons and disconnect from emotions reminds me of a quote made by a guy on a bomb refusal squad. When asked if he gets worried when defusing, he replies, “I’m either correct, or it’s not my problem anymore.”
@TPD
@TPD Жыл бұрын
kevin you're a great presenter. wishing you continued success!
@bentoth9555
@bentoth9555 Жыл бұрын
I've seen that scenario with the family in hiding and the baby crying. Hawkeye remembers it as a rooster due to PTSD and repressing the true memory.
@BRBS360
@BRBS360 Жыл бұрын
I have probably watched every single video of yours. This one is, without a doubt, one if not the best you have produced. Thank you.
@Roger-r7s
@Roger-r7s 9 ай бұрын
Being an obsessive compulsive probably a workaholic and having a pathological need to impose order and control things, people and events or also being extremely selfish, greedy and egocentric doesn't make you a psychopath although many psychopaths have those characteristics. Probably the most defining characteristic is a total absence of any kind of moral conscience. Many people have a false idea about psychopathy as being like the kind of psychosis where someone is so completely out of touch with reality as to be unable to function in the world and society. Psychopaths can in fact not only be highly functional but even highly successful. In fact the ruthless and amoral but highly strategic calculating gamesmanship of psychopaths may actually confer a selection advantage under the unjust, unequal, zero sum game conditions of the modern world, especially when the system is a hyper capitalistic one.
@Baptized_in_Fire.
@Baptized_in_Fire. 6 ай бұрын
We don't have capitalism. We have corporatism, but yeah.
@ShadowPhoenix82
@ShadowPhoenix82 Жыл бұрын
Damn. "It is what it is" has been a motto of mine for years, and something I often told others for encouragement to overcome being overwhelmed by a problem. But I never considered it being used in this context. Oof.
@erasmus9511
@erasmus9511 Жыл бұрын
These great people’s qualities aren’t exclusive to psychopaths. Psychopaths will always be destructive to themselves/others around them. The scale can range but it’s always destructive. Even in the very VERY rare case of them being able to become a productive member of the society, there are other aspects of their lives that are in shambles. It’s simply contradictive to their own diagnosis for them to be this great misunderstood superhero. Anyone who thinks they want to be a psychopath, they only want some aspects of being a psychopath because it’s cool and it protects them from guilt and emotional pain. But they don’t truly know how lifeless it is to be one.
@mkultraizzy
@mkultraizzy Жыл бұрын
I think what he’s saying is that a lot of the personality traits of psychopathy are actually beneficial for the every day things we appreciate in society like technology, medical practitioners, people who save us from danger etc. Separate from the diagnosis of Clinical Psychopathy are valuable personality traits that benefit us every day. But full blown clinical psychopathy as you’ve described is definitely nothing to be desired and attempting to emulate the lifestyle of somebody with this condition is absurd.
@Chancelot
@Chancelot Жыл бұрын
But life has become to worthless anyway It's just school-work-work-die How much time do I have with my family anymore,,, I don't know
@vakusdrake3224
@vakusdrake3224 Жыл бұрын
I seems like you really should have mentioned that none of those positive qualities psychopaths have are limited to them, so the the downsides of not having psychopaths was greatly overstated. It's a massive oversight to not make mention of how those minority of psychopaths who become highly successful may in many ways end up being *far* worse for society than the one's who got locked up before ever getting too much power. He doesn't draw a distinction between someone being good at performing a job, and being responsible enough you should trust actually trust someone with that power. It's not clear that training psychopaths more functional is a good thing, if that means they have the same lack of a moral compass, but are now much more able to get themselves into positions of power. You might just be taking the people least trustworthy to hold power, and ensuring that now 5x as many CEO's and politicians will be psychopaths.
@justanordinaryfly7024
@justanordinaryfly7024 Жыл бұрын
Wanted to say something like this myself! There's seems precious little evidence that psychopathy is beneficial to society, and mountains of evidence to the contrary -- which is why I take great issue with authors like Kevin Dutton trying to make a positive case for psychopathy. Having an innate lack of empathy and remorse may make it easier to conduct brain surgery or defend criminals in court, but it is certainly not a necessary prerequisite. And always remember: every functional psychopath is, at heart, an amoral opportunist who would casually commit genocide without a second thought if they reasoned it would benefit them somehow -- something no sensible person should be willing to tolerate in civilized society.
@_BangDroid_
@_BangDroid_ Жыл бұрын
It's the lack of morality that produces the worst traits of capitalism. Amazon workers, for example, are treated like garbage all so the CEO's and investors can make even more billions while the people doing the hard work full time hours are bordering poverty.
@youtubedeletedmynamewhybother
@youtubedeletedmynamewhybother Жыл бұрын
@@justanordinaryfly7024 As long as we are a capitalistic society then psychopaths ARE beneficial. Its just not beneficial to US. The peasant fu ck wits who have to wear everything thats passed down the line. In order to run a billion dollar company, you basically HAVE to be a psychopath. You WILL destroy lives on the path to being a billionaire. Its not IF its HOW MANY. And unless you lack empathy, you will never be able to push into those positions. Thats before considering environmental impacts of large scale business.
@chdata
@chdata Жыл бұрын
WoOoOoOo I'm a scary psychophant!
@Dash62g
@Dash62g Жыл бұрын
Glossing over CEOs rubbed me the wrong way. I certainly am not rooting for a billionaire for making another hundred thousand dollars each day. Especially so with the idea they're actually devoid of morals and are openly just putting on their best PR face.
@Eleanorotica
@Eleanorotica 10 ай бұрын
Selling cigarettes to pregnant women is the kind of psychotic efficiency I admire. Didn't even think of it. Pure evil genius.
@roallposselt4527
@roallposselt4527 Жыл бұрын
At the start when he talked about smugling cigarettes, i thought was going to say that the psycopath was going to manipulate people to become smokers and sell to them, Like manipulate small kids to begin smoking and make sure that they would be so ashamed of it that they only asked him, or that he did that to women who are likely to have children.
@jesse2535
@jesse2535 Жыл бұрын
As a person with autism I feel terrible whenever my words or actions hurt anyone. But can barely notice when it happens, as I have no clue what is going on on someone's head just by looking at them. They have to physically say it to me, but most people are not straight forward or literal in their speech. They speak in riddles and abstract metaphors that sound nonsensical to me, yet when they attempt at explaining such expressions, I can only understand what to use them for but not why it is. Nether can them, as they seem to understand it in a lateral level as much as I do. Tho they can catch those off of someone sentence like nothing. It is natural to regular people. I identify a lot with the marvel hero Drax for his completely literal brain. As a kid I would be branded dumb or stupid for not understanding the most basic social interaction or metaphor or poem but could do highly complex calculations in my head, understand quantum physics at a base level at age 10, learn programming an English by my self with no course. Yet for how rational I am, if I see gore or violence in a video game or movie, it barely affects me at all. But if I hear of real human suffering in real life it hurts me a lot and I struggle to forget it. Autists don't necessarily have a lack of empathy but a severely demined ability to notice other's feelings towards their words or actions without expressive literal feedback.
@boldCactuslad
@boldCactuslad Жыл бұрын
This is very true for many aspies. They internalize emotions the same as everyone else, including the emotions of others, but can have difficulties expressing it non-verbally. All the effects are there, inside, but the traditional external signs of this shared understanding are subdued.
@Teilnehmer
@Teilnehmer Жыл бұрын
Autistic people have trouble processing and integrating the emotional, regulative and cognitive aspects of social interaction. New research actually suggests that it might be because there is TOO much unregulated emotional information and compassion (which is where the guilt is coming from). The harshness of autistic people often comes from misunderstood and maladaptive alexithymia because alexithymia sort of works "perfectly" in young ages to protect against overwhelming emotions. Looking into peoples faces and having second-to-second feedback of their emotions (through their facial gestures) while simultaneously thinking the other person is experiencing emotions to the same degree as oneself is understandably highly overwhelming. Better to shut off emotions entirely by pretending they don't exist - or at least that's what an autistic child often intuitively, but maladaptively does.
@upinarms79
@upinarms79 Жыл бұрын
Actually, when I hear the word "psychopath", I usually think of CEOs, politicians, and media personalities.
@danacoleman4007
@danacoleman4007 9 ай бұрын
A table is not even close to neutral. It is the gathering place for the most wonderful communally shared things in life. Meals, board games, role-playing games. It definitely ranks second after laughter. As a bonus, you don't have to clean up it's crap or feed it. And it never barks or whines. No doctor bills either.
@FluffyFractalshard
@FluffyFractalshard Жыл бұрын
why is the rebellious kid considered a psychopath and not the people who want to stone it to death?
@GideonBotes
@GideonBotes Жыл бұрын
I love your latest videos Kevin. They seem to be making a return to in depth studies of the human condition, and less about mathematical oddities. This is the Vsauce that I enjoy. Haven't had this much fun with your videos since your 'Blue' video. Keep it up.
@dan_11
@dan_11 Жыл бұрын
35:02 She is most likely referring to MKUltra as Ted Kaczynski was a victim of that program
@ShaaRhee
@ShaaRhee 9 ай бұрын
There's a difference between narcissistic psychopaths and regular ones, the distinction wasn't made in this video
@Aerox90
@Aerox90 Жыл бұрын
I have ADHD and I managed to stay focused throughout this whole video (without meds)! Great work! This was really interesting 🙂
@CubeItself
@CubeItself Жыл бұрын
you have achieved great power, i hope youre most proud
@muhammadfazlurrahman4929
@muhammadfazlurrahman4929 Жыл бұрын
i don't think you are that much of an ADHD y'know, most of diagnosis are usually farfetched, like a lot, so instead of go the hard route, they just give drug instead
@hogandromgool2062
@hogandromgool2062 Жыл бұрын
@@muhammadfazlurrahman4929 These days they don't. In my country it's all behavioural therapy, ritallin or concerta is rarely used now. I believe that's worldwide
@keithwinget6521
@keithwinget6521 Жыл бұрын
Don't listen to anyone who's not a professional expert or at least a doctor when it comes to this if they are speaking from a presumed position of certainty. Including anyone here in the comments. It's just advice, and the following is definitely not me being certain about any of this. I just take it very seriously. Get an actual diagnosis properly, if you haven't, and try not to suggest anything to whoever is doing the diagnosis. Just answer honestly, so there's less chance of introducing a bias into the diagnosis. Doctors are generally going to be trained to filter that out, but there's no reason to make their job any harder than it already is. Here's a few of my own thoughts and insights in case you might find them useful: It's not beneficial to take drugs for something you don't have...usually. Maybe don't try to find out for yourself which ones are okay to do this with. I'm talking about prescription strength medication. I'm not telling you what to do with alcohol or...some other substances people may be fond of... That said, there is a lot of nonsense going around about ADHD being over-diagnosed... Having looked into it, I believe the more true statement is that it has been vaguely diagnosed...which is to say, ADHD does not present exactly the same in every person. It's nuanced. There are key factors that experts can use to correctly identify the disorder, but the specific presentation of it (in addition to sometimes other disorders presenting as well) can be more difficult for doctors/specialists to ascertain. It can take a fair amount of time and a number of observational periods and inquiries. If you have been diagnosed, but haven't seen a doctor about it many years (sadly this is somewhat common for people with ADHD...big surprise), get yourself seen. There's more knowledge about the disorder than there was ten years ago. It's science: by it's very nature it gets updated to be more and more accurate with new data and examination. Be wary, too, of those who want to believe (and seem to feel the near constant urge to tell you) everything is just a whole lot simpler than them fancy science folks say it is, either. If you have it, you have it. It's much more rare now for the diagnosis to be missed. It turns out it has degrees, it's not just something that is all-out disorder level for everyone who has it. Still, if you have it, it is quite unlikely for a doctor who has kept up on the disorder at all to miss it, much less a specialist. Also, it's entirely possible your ADHD actually prevented you from losing focus. If you've been diagnosed and haven't already asked, ask about hyperfocus. There's a lot of myth surrounding it, so I don't necessarily recommend believing everything you read or hear about it online, but there are some reliable resources. When it comes to doctors prescribing meds, you may already know this, but they don't always work. They almost always have a net positive effect if you've actually got the disorder, however. Sometimes it's not nearly enough, though. In my case, when I was first diagnosed, the only thing they were prescribing for ADHD was ritalin, and that just turned me into a human zombie (though I have little recall of this, myself, and am going by what others remember...so take this with a grain of salt). More recent drugs are supposed to work much better. I don't exactly have my life in great order, but I'm doing better in a number of ways just by constantly putting stuff in-my-way so I will be forced to notice it. I even put notes on my computer keyboard (I forget to all the time, but it does help when I remember to, so it's worth doing and maybe I'll eventual build habit). I should go in for a checkup myself, but I have put it off for a very long time. That's a pretty classic ADHD move, but it's not doing me any good. External consequences are the only effective motivator sometimes. Funnily enough, some of the same people who may chide you (I don't know if you have these people in your life, but I sure do) for believing you have ADHD and not cut you slack actually do you a favor if they impose some consequences for you. It's not ideal, and it's not particularly helpful in the long run. However, for just day-to-day getting things done, it's probably the most effective thing they can do aside from making sure you take your prescribed meds (even if they think you don't really need them). I've done a lot of my own deep-diving on this subject, but by no means should you take my word on any of this. I could be misremembering any of what I read, right now. It happens. I just believe in taking this thing seriously. I also believe actively working to improve our lives is always a good thing, and if I can help someone who shares a similar problem as myself, I may improve in the process as well. Plus it just feels good to help. Hope you could read this wall of text...It is most definitely the product of hyperfocus, in my very amateur and untrained opinion. ;)
@Aerox90
@Aerox90 Жыл бұрын
@@keithwinget6521 I do have severe ADHD. I got my diagnosis in 2018 after I had been misdiagnosed with bipolar disorder since 2011. I was on Ritalin (80mg capsules + one 10mg fast acting pill) for years before I ended up getting the psychosis side effect and had to stop using them. I have had multiple doctors confirming my disgnosis. And I have social workers coming to my home to help reminding me about everyday tasks, like eating, cleaning etc.
@RedstonerD
@RedstonerD Жыл бұрын
Just a small correction, at 34:25 you call Ted an incel, but he was voluntarily celebate as he didn't care about that. Apart from that its perfect so far :) Edit: nevermind!
@Apeiron242
@Apeiron242 Жыл бұрын
Also, it's impossible to involuntarily celebate, celibacy is a choice.
@MovingPessimisim08
@MovingPessimisim08 7 ай бұрын
​@@Apeiron242tell that to ugly and or mentally deficient people. Some people are undesired due to factors out of their control.
@MovingPessimisim08
@MovingPessimisim08 7 ай бұрын
​@@Apeiron242Tell that to the unattractive, mentally deficient, and those with low emotional intelligence. Some people are undesired from things out of their control.
@DarkShaman667
@DarkShaman667 Жыл бұрын
I am a somewhat coldhearted, parasite with no clear ambitions. The first few minutes of the video describing psychopaths made me feel sick, as Kevin described essentially me. But then I realized I felt something. I may be abnormal, but I am definitely NOT a psychopath. Thanks.~
@seancleary5875
@seancleary5875 Жыл бұрын
Highly psychopathic individuals have smaller and less active insulas, the part of the brain associated with disgust sensitivity. So the first few minutes of the video would have never made you feel sick if you were highly psychopathic. So yeah, you are chilling lol
@Maverick_Mad_Moiselle
@Maverick_Mad_Moiselle Жыл бұрын
Just go to a psychiatrist if you think you may be depressed. This video is terrible and isn't worth the watch tbh.
@samuelrodrigues8535
@samuelrodrigues8535 Жыл бұрын
relatable tbh
@idolevin8795
@idolevin8795 Жыл бұрын
I don't believe you
@burnban3047
@burnban3047 Жыл бұрын
@@seancleary5875 it didn't make me feel sick, made feel feel. yeah that's me... what do i do
@ConnorHealy
@ConnorHealy 11 ай бұрын
The overrepresentation of psychopaths in positions of power does not mean that one must be a psychopath to be successful/powerful. It could certainly help, but it's just as likely that psychopaths are overrepresented in those positions because they were willing to do unethical things in order to get into those positions.
@joshyoung1440
@joshyoung1440 Жыл бұрын
16:05 pretty sure the translation is "mania without delirium," at least I think so; when diagnosing me with manic episodes, my psychiatrist asked me a LOT of questions that lined up with these types of symptoms. So it would make sense if the two were originally connected
@chasseurdetigrou
@chasseurdetigrou Жыл бұрын
French speaking person here, that would be correct, that got me confused for a moment
@jpleveille
@jpleveille Жыл бұрын
Moreover the description given actually matches "mania without delirium", you're right.
@jemborg
@jemborg Жыл бұрын
It's not a lack of emotions or moral code... it's a lack of empathy. A conscience can hurt. And they don't have to deal with that pain so they feel there is nothing wrong with them... but a smart one can feign it.
@Smashine
@Smashine Жыл бұрын
That sounds good tho
@DebNKY
@DebNKY 9 ай бұрын
Feign?
@r_t_m
@r_t_m 8 ай бұрын
​@@jemborghe knew what you meant. You spelled it "freign"
@jemborg
@jemborg 8 ай бұрын
@@r_t_m OK, fixed.
@Abdou_the_honored_one
@Abdou_the_honored_one 2 ай бұрын
Your righ
@sebastiencote1565
@sebastiencote1565 Жыл бұрын
Wow! Loved this content. Thank you so much for this nice hour. It must have been a lot of work, but knows that it educates a lot of people !
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