Psychopathy and Sociopathy
are anti-social personality disorders. While both these disorders are the
result of an interaction between genetic predispositions and environmental
factors, psychopathy is used when the underlying cause leans towards the
hereditary. Sociopath is the term used when the antisocial behavior is a
result of a brain injury or belief system and upbringing. In recent years, the
term psychopath has acquired a specific meaning and the condition is now
more widely understood.
Psychopaths are born with temperamental differences
such as impulsiveness, cortical under-arousal, and fearlessness that lead them
to risk-seeking behavior and an inability to internalize social norms. On the
other hand, sociopaths have relatively normal temperaments; their
personality disorder being more an effect of negative sociological factors like
parental neglect, delinquent peers, poverty, and extremely low or extremely
high intelligence.
Anti-social personality disorder results in extremely
violent acts. Though psychiatrists often consider and treat sociopaths and
psychopaths as the same, criminologists treat them as different because of the
difference in their outward behavior.
Psychopath:
Suffers from: Antisocial
personality disorder (ASPD); lack of empathy or conscience, delusional.
Origin of illness:
Psychologists generally use the term psychopathy to imply an innate condition
of the individual. It's derived from the nature part of the nature vs. nurture
debate.
Predisposition to Violence: High
Impulsivity: Varies; generally low
Behavior:
Controlled
Criminal behavior: Tendency
to participate in schemes and take calculated risks to minimize evidence or
exposure.
Criminal
Predispositions: Tendency for premeditated crimes with controllable risks,
criminal opportunism, fraud, calculated or opportunistic violence.
Social relationships:
Unable to maintain normal relationships. Values relationships that benefit
themselves. May hurt family and friends without feeling guilty.
Sociopath:
Suffers from: Antisocial
personality disorder (ASPD).
Origin of illness: The term sociopathy generally implies that
environmental factors, such as upbringing, have played a role in the
development of the ASPD.
Predisposition to
Violence: Varied
Impulsivity: High
Behavior: Erratic
Criminal behavior: Tendency to leave clues and act on
impulse.
Predispositions: Tendency
for impulsive or opportunistic criminal
behavior, excessive risk taking, impulsive or opportunistic violence
Social relationships:
Tendency to appear superficially normal in social relationships, often social
predators. Can empathize with close friends or family; will feel guilty if they
hurt people close to them.
In the eyes of the Courts there is no difference - Birdy
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