ThinkHard
Former Member
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- Feb 3, 2013
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I agree, that is the popular view. However, I have provided the links that discusses the other aspects . My original question is how is pschopathy manifested in an individual. Autism is inherited through traits handed down by parents. As well, I suspect pschopathy is inherited through traits from the parents. I then extended that thought to Google Search (GS) autism and violent behavior and found something more indepth related to criminal behavior including rape and murder.
The reading is quite easy to take in and so I recommend a more indepth GS of terms related to pschopathy and autism to learn more about how someone like Jesse could appear functional, with educational deficiencies, lack boundaries, demonstrate impulsiveness, and not know when to stop, etc and still have a teddy bear description by his friends.
Yes, their appears to be calculated behaviors, there can be knowledge of good and bad, but we are missing the information about where things break down in his behavior. The behavior that becomes obsessive and repetitive and even how that combines with consumption of alcohol.
Another opportunity to perform GS on the terms pychopathy, alcohol, autism and see what information highlights.
I would like to know what you find.
I understand you have provided links but are those links solely what you are basing your opinion on? Are you familiar first hand with anyone on the spectrum? As someone with ASD, have pretty good insight into the difference btw lack of empathy, and lack of expressive empathy. I often get myself in arguments with people because I latch on to some fact they said being incorrect, and just some compulsion for the need for facts to be accurate....but my approach is often "tactless" because the idea that ones emotions could be involved in something that is just a fact often baffles me. I work very hard to be mindful, but its a concerted effort. However if I have hurt someone's feelings, though it might not always make sense to me why they were so "sensitive", I still feel horribly guilty about causing them any kind of pain.
I also work with children on the spectrum, and children with many many other LD's, developmental disorders, and major behavior disorders and have for over 10 years. Its where my heart is. So not only do I know how I think, but I have lots of experience under my belt with insight into how children with a whole spectrum of struggles think, learn, function, cope, and develop as well.
I would be more inclined to think the link btw diagnosed individuals with ASD who committed violent crimes were either mis-diagnosed...or they have a cluster of conditions and ASD is only a piece of it.
I know you said my view was the "popular" view....but there really is so much more to it then that. Again I'm not sure what knowledge or experience you are framing your opinion on....but the view you are painting of autism is more of an innacurate stereotype that does not help the autistic population be understood better. So if you really would like to understand a more complete picture, I encourage you to be open minded. I can also suggest some books if you'd like. I have read several dozen on the topic, and I keep up on the current research (fyi: Temple Grandin does a particularly good job at explaining the asd brain). I'm not sure a GS will give me an new info I'm not already aware of. I have read research similar to what you are referring too....but I also have a much more complete and comprehensive understanding of ASD to weigh it against.
I was one of the first ones who mentioned a link btw autism and psychopathy...but that link is more in terms of the PARTS of the brain that are effected on a f-mri. But just because the same parts are effected, they are not effected in the same way. However it does explain perhaps some overlay in symptoms.
The "empathy" component in both ASD and psychopathy is neurologically different from a neurotypical person.....true...BUT what I think is being missed, or overlooked....is that though they both differ from the general population....they also differ from each other as well.