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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsDoes our society encourage sociopaths?
This thread http://www.democraticunderground.com/?com=view_post&forum=1002&pid=678643 got me interested in sociopaths and I've been reading Martha Stout's excellent book "The Sociopath Next Door" and in it she says something rather interesting. She says that the American culture of individualism can foster sociopathic behavior that isn't as tolerated in more group-oriented societies such as in Asia. She quotes for a study by psychologist Robert Hare who wrote that: "our society is moving in the direction of permitting, reinforcing, and in some instances actually valuing some of the traits listing in the Psychopathy Checklist- traits such as impulsivity, irresponsibility, lack of remorse."
I'm now going to quote from another section of her book where she discusses cultures which place an emphasis on interrelatedness as opposed to individualism. " This value( interrelatedness) is also the basis for conscience, which is an intervening sense of obligation rotted in a sense of connectedness. If an individual does not, or if neurologically he cannot, experience his connection to others in an emotional way, perhaps a culture that insists on connectedness as a matter of belief can instill a strictly cognitive understanding of interpersonal obligation."
She does stress that this intellectual grasp of a person's duty to others is not the same or as powerful as the emotion that we call conscience, but that it might be able to draw out some prosocial behavior from at least some individuals who would not display such traits if they lived in a society that stressed individualism.
So what do you all think, does our society encourage some sociopathic behavior?
TBF
(32,118 posts)and as usual you can trace it back to the capitalism. When your economic system rewards you for stepping on others that is the behavior you're likely to see. Change the rewards and there will likely be a corresponding change in behavior. The other way to ask the question is "who benefits from this?". The very wealthy are skilled at keeping the masses fighting with each other while they rob us all blind.
It's not a far stretch to see that this behavior in our economic interactions would cross over to other areas of our lives.
LadyHawkAZ
(6,199 posts)and encouraging some of what might be termed "sociopathic" behavior, by which I assume you mean Ayn Rand behavior that stresses the individual's desires and lacks empathy for other people.
I think the answer is yes to both, though, in a lot of ways.