#119 Sí, que conste que aquí estamos en plan barra de bar desde el principio, al menos yo eh! Lo de la psicopatía tiene mucha tela y hay muchas opiniones que a priori parecen encontradas.
Neurologists have discovered that people with this cluster of traits also had distinctly different brain scans than the average person. This added a new and deeper dimension to the whole understanding of what Thomas Sheridan has called Puzzling People.
Recently, Dr. Hare has stated that psychopaths are “not disordered but only different.” With the absence of “psychopathy” in the DSM, another entirely different understanding of the phenomena emerges. The concept of “successful psychopath” points up the fact that people with clearly psychopathic traits are sometimes financial and social stars, inhabiting the higher rungs of the social and economic ladder. Political leaders and CEOs have been cited as being “psychopaths” as well as those who have gained notoriety as criminals. Between the pinnacles of success and the netherworld of crime, there are psychopaths who function very well in fields as diverse as surgeon, fireman, soldier or even religious leader. Kevin Dutton’s book The Wisdom of Psychopaths has challenged the view that psychopaths are merely disordered misfits.
Es un tema complejo, para mí no son enfermos mentales, no lo son ni de lejos. Pero te lo digo con una caña en la mano, como he dicho antes xD
#120 Tienes razón, el término correcto es trastorno de personalidad antisocial según el DSM, pero que viene a ser lo mismo, si no me equivoco.