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The Antisocial Personalities (Paperback)
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The Antisocial Personalities (Paperback)
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This volume presents a scholarly analysis of psychopathic and
sociopathic personalities and the conditions that give rise to
them. In so doing, it offers a coherent theoretical and
developmental analysis of socialization and its vicissitudes, and
of the role played in socialization by the crime-relevant genetic
traits of the child and the skills and limitations of the primary
socializing agents, the parents.
This volume also describes how American psychiatry's (DSM-IV)
category of "Antisocial Personality Disorder" is heterogeneous and
fails to document some of the more interesting and notorious
psychopaths of our era. The author also shows why the antinomic
formula "Nature "vs." Nurture" should be revised to "Nature "via"
Nurture" and reviews the evidence for the heritability of
crime-relevant traits. One of these traits -- fearlessness -- seems
to be one basis for the primary psychopathy and the author argues
that the primary psychopath and the hero may be twigs on the same
genetic branch.
But crime -- the failure of socialization -- is rare among
traditional peoples still living in the extended-family environment
in which our common ancestors lived and to which our species is
evolutionarily adapted. The author demonstrates that the sharp rise
in crime and violence in the United States since the 1960s can be
attributed to the coeval increase in divorce and illegitimacy which
has left millions of fatherless children to be reared by
over-burdened, often immature or sociopathic single mothers. The
genus "sociopathic personality" includes those persons whose
failure of socialization can be attributed largely to incompetent
or indifferent rearing.
Two generalizations supported by modern behavior genetic research
are that most psychological traits have strong genetic roots "and"
show little lasting influence of the rearing environment. This book
demonstrates that the important trait of socialization is an
exception. Although traits that obstruct or facilitate
socialization tend to obey these rules, socialization itself is
only weakly heritable; this is because modern American society
displays such enormous variance in the relevant environmental
factors, mainly in parental competence. Moreover, parental
incompetence that produces sociopathy in one child is likely to
have the same result with any siblings. This book argues that
sociopathy contributes far more to crime and violence than
psychopathy because sociopaths are much more numerous and because
sociopathy is a familial trait for both genetic and environmental
reasons. With a provocative thesis and an engaging style, this book
will be of principal interest to clinical, personality, forensic,
and developmental psychologists and their students, as well as to
psychiatrists and criminologists.
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