The Moth: Confessions of a Pro-Social Psychopath - James Fallon

Ғылым және технология

Neuroscientist James Fallon is a self-styled "hobbit scientist." The rules are simple: Don't talk to the press and don't go out of your area of expertise. But when a fascinating new brain scanner enters the lab, Fallon can't resist. He ends up breaking both rules, and learns a lot more about himself than he bargained for.
Scientists, writers, and artists take to the stage to tell stories about their personal relationship to science. The result is a collection of poignant, hilarious and unpredictable tales sure to intrigue and surely hard to forget. Presented in collaboration with The Moth. Watch them all in The Moth at WSF Series.
Original Program Date: June 4, 2011
The World Science Festival gathers great minds in science and the arts to produce live and digital content that allows a broad general audience to engage with scientific discoveries. Our mission is to cultivate a general public informed by science, inspired by its wonder, convinced of its value, and prepared to engage with its implications for the future.
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Пікірлер: 3 000

  • @burtonmoore996
    @burtonmoore996 Жыл бұрын

    I love how he ends it with telling everyone he's just pretending to care.

  • @marijnvandebeek9630

    @marijnvandebeek9630

    Жыл бұрын

    Well... I think that's the big plot twist on this. Because acting/pretending/imagining is the thing a brain cannot see different from reality. I think it is very inspiring that a clinically diagnosed psychopath, who doesn't know, and doesn't show signs of it because of conditioning due to a religious upbringing, is like: I don't want to be a psychopath... So i will act like i care to maybe change my brain... But for all we know he's killing people now 😂

  • @YehudiNimol

    @YehudiNimol

    Жыл бұрын

    To me that's the most generous thing a person like him can do: He's incapable of feeling empathy, yet he's able to put up with it and act like it superficially because it makes the people around him feel comfortable. It shows a special quality to this person, and even if it might be self-serving in certain ways, it's ultimately a selfless act

  • @updownstate

    @updownstate

    Жыл бұрын

    @@YehudiNimol He said that his relatives think he's not a good person to be around, they don't get emotional contact with him. Those with whom he's in contact on a superficial [great guy at a party] or non-social [work and education] level are comfortable with him because they're not trying to make emotional contact with him. This is what I understood him to say.

  • @GROENAASMusic

    @GROENAASMusic

    Жыл бұрын

    It's better than nothing.

  • @YehudiNimol

    @YehudiNimol

    Жыл бұрын

    @@updownstate Which is why he also said he's willing to change it. Hear what he says at the end of the video

  • @hanselmansell7555
    @hanselmansell7555 Жыл бұрын

    I remember gushing to a surgeon once for saving my life, he looked at me like I was something he had just scraped off his shoe, I still love that guy though 🥰

  • @redbear4027

    @redbear4027

    Жыл бұрын

    I have observed psycopathy in surgeon's as well. They have the advantage of not being squeamish while working on people the type of detachment they have is unparalleled. They seem to be well disciplined as well which obviously helps surgeons.

  • @PROTAGONIST_48

    @PROTAGONIST_48

    Жыл бұрын

    @@redbear4027 The overwhelming majority of surgeons are not psychopaths Sir. They are desensitized.

  • @hanselmansell7555

    @hanselmansell7555

    Жыл бұрын

    @@PROTAGONIST_48 that's good to know but I do hope that they are OK, do they train to become desensitised or is it a skill set?

  • @redbear4027

    @redbear4027

    Жыл бұрын

    @@PROTAGONIST_48 Healthcare is pay to play. I have a friend that teaches at a medical school from what I understand less people are going into Healthcare because they care about people and more people are going it into it because their parents force them and because they want to make money that seems Psychopathic to me. I have no desire to argue with you I understand that the percentage of psychopaths is low. But it is very naive to think that there are no Psychopaths. So basically I agree with you have a great day. What do you call it when you try to talk to an oncologist but they tell you you have to come in for an appointment? That's what happened to me and oncologist was so high and mighty they wouldn't talk to me for 5 minutes to assuage some of my concerns so I cured my own cancer. I guess I'm desensitized to the belief that they are gods...😚

  • @redbear4027

    @redbear4027

    Жыл бұрын

    @@PROTAGONIST_48 Also I wonder who is doing all these transgender surgeries because it is my assertion that they are Psychopaths.

  • @sienna.cd33
    @sienna.cd33 Жыл бұрын

    The neurosurgeon who did my surgery was probably incapable of feeling empathy. But wow, what an incredible surgeon.

  • @alexanderdecarvalho3731

    @alexanderdecarvalho3731

    Жыл бұрын

    it's essential to a surgeon to develop some "skills" of psychopaths, such as lack of empathy (while working). There's a real interesting buch about that The Wisdom os Psychopaths by Kevin Dutton.

  • @AmbivalentAlexthymic

    @AmbivalentAlexthymic

    Жыл бұрын

    @@alexanderdecarvalho3731 yes. They may even develop Alexithymia. They have to go on to the next person and pretend like that 2 year old didn't just die in the back.

  • @edwardmason741

    @edwardmason741

    Жыл бұрын

    @@AmbivalentAlexthymic You're both right, it's being able to "Turn it on and off" when needed. You want them to be warm and jovial and joking with you when you're resting in your room watching TV and they come by to see how you're doing and let you know how your blood work looked, and then want them focused with ice water in their veins and being in the clutch when they're holding the scalpel.

  • @user255

    @user255

    Жыл бұрын

    @@edwardmason741 That is not psychopath. They have it permanently "off".

  • @edwardmason741

    @edwardmason741

    Жыл бұрын

    @@user255 I know, but he meant how that trait is good in various circumstances/professions.

  • @williamdejeffrio9701
    @williamdejeffrio9701 Жыл бұрын

    I was at a Mental Health conference back in July where a renown researcher told the story of Mr Fallon. He further estimated that it may not only take the abnormal brain structure of a psychopath to make a destructive person, it also may require bad nurture in childhood. He estimated that Mr Fallon did not become a destructive person because of relatively good nurture in childhood. Amazing to hear his own take.

  • @nathanbellamy3308

    @nathanbellamy3308

    Жыл бұрын

    This makes simple sense but not the only factors involved. Traumatic experiences can set the trigger off. Bad parenting is just one way of setting that trigger off. Head injuries, bad relationships, being bullied and many other experiences are equally as important. It's all to do with brain trauma I believe. Physical or mental. I feel, though have never been tested. That I am a full blown psychopath. But a loving upbringing has help shelter me from my true self. But I am definately not connected. But I do my best to meet people in the middle so to speak.

  • @paddlefar9175

    @paddlefar9175

    Жыл бұрын

    I am no psychologist, but I’ve always been very interested in certain aspects of brain science and psychology. I trained as a research technologist in the Biological Sciences and then when my twins were born, I worked part time with a Positive Parenting Program, as a child care worker and then as a parent facilitator. I’ve worked closely with hundreds of young children, in the newborn to six year old age group, which featured lots of unstructured play time, song, rhyme, art and simple food preparation time, and I have also raised my own twin sons ( with bountiful help from my husband), so I have a little experience with early childhood behaviour. I have always had a firm but fair style of dealing with people including children, and I found that I was very good at helping people and children learn how to act or play fairly and respectfully with one another, but sometimes, with some children, it was real work! I can’t think of too many times ( only one example really) where an oppositional, defiant, young child didn’t come around to consistently trying the tactics that I would model for them and use it successfully. It was generally extremely rewarding work but at times it required real patience and the belief that my system would eventually work, which it usually did, at least in our program setting. The parents were also taught these skills and practices. I have often wondered, as a side thought, if this kind of early, positive type of intervention, in a potential young sociopath or psychopath could possibly have turned them around enough and helped shape them into being more successful and productive people in life and in society, like what has appeared to have happened with Dr. Fallon, due to the excellent parenting that he seems to have received. It makes sense that it could very well do that or at least help to a significant degree, especially if their first teachers ( their parents or main caregiver) were able to bond with them and teach them these valuable, cooperative, social skills.

  • @mrose4132

    @mrose4132

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah, I think that’s been well known considering there are estimated to be numerous people with anti-social disorders in high levels of large corporations and government, presidents even.

  • @pandemicneetbux2110

    @pandemicneetbux2110

    Жыл бұрын

    It definitely depends on partly nurture, because obviously what you're teaching the clinical psychopath is to boil everything down to "winning" and having power and control over others so they don't hurt you when they have power and control over you. I mean there are actually really malignant psychopaths that do come from pretty normal or privileged backgrounds too, it's just the really violent ones do tend coming from backgrounds of violence and/or substance abuse and poverty. Which, to be fair, is the mix that generally creates much more angry violent people in general that are prone to finding difficulty with being happy, normal, friendly, cheerful people in adulthood regardless if they want to anyway even if they have normal brain structures. So it becomes about force multipliers and self awareness. Also you will notice key word "self awareness." People with a general poverty of accurate self-appraisal aren't good at a number of things in life. Scientists by basic definition are trending toward hyper awareness and cold, calm, reflective analysis and curiosity so they probably would tend to be among the absolute best at keeping themselves from being destructive and understanding themselves and their own motivations and therefore crimping any of the worst tendencies.

  • @n-da-bunka2650

    @n-da-bunka2650

    Жыл бұрын

    Explains Donald J Trump PERFECTLY!

  • @kimminer8156
    @kimminer8156 Жыл бұрын

    I remember listening to him lecture about this before, and mentioning a specific instance where he was investigating a deadly virus that he believed was contracted in a bat cave. He didn't tell his brother that they were at risk because he thought it would be fun to spelunk, but didn't tell his brother that the reason no one was visiting the cave and/or there were dead animals nearby was because it carried deadly contagion. He never told his brother that if he touched the floors, that he would contract Marburg virus and die bleeding from all his orifices. They enjoyed the caves. After his brother found out, their relationship changed. He may think he's a good guy based on his religious framework, but there are probably a lot of situations like this one that outline how dangerous he is as a companion. I would love to study this man.

  • @niccwhite

    @niccwhite

    Жыл бұрын

    There are more psychopaths out there then generally believed, you probly know one or two. That guy who's totally oblivious to your reactions to something or your opinion in general without even being conscious of it for instance

  • @-danR

    @-danR

    Жыл бұрын

    I just try to _appreciate_ the fact that if Dr. Fallon didn't rip my head off it's because he wouldn't regard it as a particularly interesting endeavor.

  • @TonyTheTerrible

    @TonyTheTerrible

    Жыл бұрын

    maybe there's something there with that natural attraction towards religion as well

  • @mrjones2721

    @mrjones2721

    Жыл бұрын

    I saw a video where people who knew him called him out on stage for some of his “fun” stories and told the truth behind what happened. They also reminded him of other dangerous and thoughtless things he did with, say, his kids. He had trouble seeing what the problem was. He’s not a good guy. Don’t believe psychopaths’ self-assessments. That’s basic. We all know it, but when we’re faced with a cuddly TED talk, too many people decide to forget.

  • @Adski975

    @Adski975

    11 ай бұрын

    ​@@mrjones2721 You're right, but I wouldn't agree with calling him a bad person. It depends on your definition of bad, of course. If the argument is about semantics without explanation it's pointless, so I'll give my definition. To me, a bad person is someone who commits cruel acts with full knowledge and apprehension of the pain they inflict. However, the concept of good and bad is a human social construct. Nature, nurture and genetics aren't "good or bad" they just "are". They are neutral agents. The brains of psychopaths, such as dr. Fallon's are lacking in the parts that give humans understanding and grasp of the pain they might inflict on others. Fallon doesn't understand other people's feelings because he's not capable of it. As such, he hasn't got a clue of the pain he inflicts, nor does he have personal experience of any pain of that nature. Aside from reading a literal definition of the words, psychopaths are unable to understand cruelty or empathy, and are therefore capable of committing cruel acts without any qualms, such as the cave example. Why wouldn't they? They aren't hindered by empathy, so it's only logical for them to want to maximize their own pleasure. It's certainly not pleasant for neurotypicals to experience, and I'm not saying actions such as Fallon's are morally justified, but in my view it doesn't make him a bad person, it's just how his brain works.

  • @waynemalford3020
    @waynemalford3020 Жыл бұрын

    This man's facial expressions at the reactions of the crowd is priceless. He's telling you he's a psychopath and they're clapping...

  • @sherifmourad79

    @sherifmourad79

    Жыл бұрын

    well you gotta love them psychopaths

  • @xay6361

    @xay6361

    Жыл бұрын

    I mean, it don't mean they hurt folks or even want to. They just mentally don't have the hang ups we do, if that's wut you'd like to call it

  • @mesaboogieman4001

    @mesaboogieman4001

    Жыл бұрын

    Because it's incredibly hard for non sociopaths to relate to what goes on in a sociopaths brain, it's so hard to comprehend.

  • @simonasfaw9450

    @simonasfaw9450

    Жыл бұрын

    I thought it was a standup comedy show

  • @alanshen9138

    @alanshen9138

    Жыл бұрын

    You're laughing. He's telling you he's a psychopath and you're laughing.

  • @Jonathan_Doe_
    @Jonathan_Doe_ Жыл бұрын

    If this guy was born a generation or two earlier in New York with a slightly worse family, he probably would’ve ended up being a mob boss.

  • @friskeysunset

    @friskeysunset

    Жыл бұрын

    A really good one.

  • @madwhitehare3635

    @madwhitehare3635

    Жыл бұрын

    @@friskeysunset …😆

  • @emjaydark2811

    @emjaydark2811

    Жыл бұрын

    He could run for a seat in the Democrat Party.

  • @caralho5237

    @caralho5237

    Жыл бұрын

    Or dead in a gutter by the time he's 21

  • @GazB85

    @GazB85

    Жыл бұрын

    @@emjaydark2811 Now? The mob is very right-wing, they’d be pro-Republican.

  • @Cat-qo2mn
    @Cat-qo2mn Жыл бұрын

    One thing that isn’t often noted about psychopaths is how endearing they can be. Charming, yes, but also they come across as more innocent and endearing than anything usually.

  • @shampoo768

    @shampoo768

    Жыл бұрын

    lmao

  • @starrynight2218

    @starrynight2218

    Жыл бұрын

    I’ve known some like that, they act so sweet and kind and then they can show zero remorse at the drop of a hat.

  • @contraband1543

    @contraband1543

    Жыл бұрын

    @@starrynight2218 That's me. I open doors for people, help elderly when I see them needing it, I let people borrow money if I know they're good for it, I do all kinds of things out of common courtesy and often go above and beyond to help someone out in need. But like Louis c.k. says in one of his standups, "Do you know how common murder would be if it wasnt illegal?" The only thing keeping many of us caged is the fact there are consequences. Our very modern morals are based on a thin sheet of ice that is the last 1000 or so years of slowly brainwashing civilization to a *lawfully* bound moral compass. Beyond that, we're just animals. Lions and gazelles.

  • @jimmorrison9287

    @jimmorrison9287

    Жыл бұрын

    @Contra Band I disagree.. I don't think everyone would start killing each other if murder was not illegal. Also, I don't think you are a psychopath based on what you are saying. You seem to have quite a bit of empathy. Also, empathy doesn't automatically mean sympathy, but a lot of people seem to think it does.

  • @contraband1543

    @contraband1543

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jimmorrison9287 I also can't tell you how many times a day I have have to remind myself "this is modern society, with laws, chill out, you cant do that"

  • @JD-np9ii
    @JD-np9ii Жыл бұрын

    Courageous of this man to step out as he did. Reminds me of the movie “interview with the vampire”, as most narcissists/sociopaths will tend to remain forever unaccountable for their tendencies and lowball actions. As it goes, there is a spectrum within anti social disorders, with many persons able to carry on somewhat “normal” lives. Cudos to this fellow for embracing his situation with humility and sharing his story.

  • @rustykrieger7181

    @rustykrieger7181

    Жыл бұрын

    It’s not courage, he literally “doesn’t care”.

  • @IordanIovkov

    @IordanIovkov

    Жыл бұрын

    As he interviewed his inner circle and realised people already kind of knew, he realised he had nothing to lose if he, say, wrote a book and that book sold really well. Which is what happened. Also, he's clearly had a great upbringing that made him prosocial so he didn't do anything bad and doesn't care about attracting undue attention.

  • @mkyfinn73

    @mkyfinn73

    Жыл бұрын

    read the book

  • @bogdy2craizy

    @bogdy2craizy

    Жыл бұрын

    courageous is such a dumb word to use for a psychopath, they just don't work like that.

  • @mackymintle7806

    @mackymintle7806

    Жыл бұрын

    I haven’t read the book, but I can imagine that this may have been one case where being hyper focused on religion as a child, delays any really obvious negative psychotic acts… sounds Ike he eventually grew into understanding sin differently. 😂😇

  • @peytongorshavitzki6933
    @peytongorshavitzki69334 жыл бұрын

    Welcome to the comment section where everyone is an expert psychiatrist because they watched a couple youtube videos.

  • @MisterEvvvSymphoenix

    @MisterEvvvSymphoenix

    3 жыл бұрын

    HAHAHAHAAA! (Really thinks about what you just said) ... Wait a minute ... Should I really be laughing?

  • @wholesomekeanureeves9466

    @wholesomekeanureeves9466

    3 жыл бұрын

    Welcome to the comment section where this dumbass makes completely satire comments to gain small hits of dopamine over an extended peroid of time because they themselves feel empty and without depth on the inside

  • @Tyrosine0910

    @Tyrosine0910

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@wholesomekeanureeves9466 That's some pretty high-level self-awareness you're showing there

  • @wholesomekeanureeves9466

    @wholesomekeanureeves9466

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@Tyrosine0910 i thought so

  • @soowoo2246

    @soowoo2246

    3 жыл бұрын

    literally lmaooo

  • @PunkerVogt
    @PunkerVogt Жыл бұрын

    He's brave to be able to admit and take ownership of what he discovered about himself.

  • @jadecleveland865

    @jadecleveland865

    Жыл бұрын

    Brave? Bro hes a psychopath, he doesnt care or feel anything. He actually benefitted from admiting hes a psychopath.

  • @PunkerVogt

    @PunkerVogt

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jadecleveland865 yeah, aside from that he admitted it and is taking steps. So he does care.

  • @FFM0594

    @FFM0594

    Жыл бұрын

    He doesn't care, so that makes it easy.

  • @mrblackmamba117

    @mrblackmamba117

    Жыл бұрын

    @@PunkerVogt Nope he doesn't. No disrespect to him but that's the whole point about psychopathy in medical terms. He chose to be a good person because it serves him well. He chose to admit it because it serves him well. Most of the decisions we make are influenced by society or people around us. He is simply incapable of comprehending what we feel.

  • @elonever.2.071

    @elonever.2.071

    Жыл бұрын

    I remember some time after the 2008 housing bubble burst and the resulting Great Recession I watched a documentary called, "I Am Fishhead" narrated by Peter Coyote. The gist of the documentary is that it was discovered that many of the CEOs who ran these companies that went belly up by being overly adventurous with their company's investment risk factors were found to be psychopaths. And I believe half way through it James came onto the screen and told this story, and at the time he attributed his 'normal' business life to being reared by great parents.

  • @a.thiago3842
    @a.thiago3842 Жыл бұрын

    Being a psychopath and being a serial killer are two different things. It depends not only of your genes, but also the enviroment. Maybe he was raised in a good structured family. Besides the story he told, he maybe didn't commited anything worse (like murder itself as he did a lot of harmful things) because of that. He grew up and ended up doing a good job to the society. He locked himself in this job, maybe that brought good emotions to himself, and that kind of pleasure he can still feel. And now i learned one more thing about this kind of brain: They might not always be aware they have this issue. I really didn't know that. That's amazing. I know he doesn't care and he maybe this time wasn't trying to manipulate, but telling his story to the public made him feel awesome. He doesn't have emotional empathy, but i found very interesting that he has the acknowledgment that his relatives thinks he is not a good person to be around.

  • @annastinehammersdottir1290

    @annastinehammersdottir1290

    Жыл бұрын

    He was brought up well and happy. There was a documentary made about this man and others - very interesting.

  • @akumaquik

    @akumaquik

    Жыл бұрын

    After reading this comment i think you are complete confused about the reactions of stimuli tht psychopaths experience and the empathy they attach to others.

  • @a.thiago3842

    @a.thiago3842

    Жыл бұрын

    @@akumaquik Like he said, he don't have emotional empathy, but cognitive empathy. What i said was what i learned. But of course, i would like ro read your thoughts as i'm not a specialist of course.

  • @Nashleyism

    @Nashleyism

    Жыл бұрын

    @@annastinehammersdottir1290 Hi, what's the name of that documentary?

  • @user-mr3ww5gy4j

    @user-mr3ww5gy4j

    Жыл бұрын

    I don't think it is self awareness. He is a scientist, discovered something interesting about himself, didn't feel anything, developed a theory, shared it to promote study, enjoys acknowledgement. ....locked himself in job because he is a zombie with no emotion, good for a person who has a career to stay in their wheelhouse....

  • @friskeysunset
    @friskeysunset Жыл бұрын

    Fascinating. There seem to be so many varied dimensions to the human psyche that we gloss over in our panic to find a "simple answer". Psychopathology is probably a spectrum, and most certainly a basket of sub-components. It would take a huge amount of self-awareness and self-control, but it appears that some psychopaths can control it and adapt to what part of the world they can perceive. I saw an interview of a diagnosed psychopath who was crystal-clear on a few points: he spoke because he had nothing to gain or lose, his perception of the human world was peripheral at most but he did comprehend there were entities (other human beings) "out there", he knew pain and did not wish it on another being, and he understood the pain he could cause would probably be because of inattentiveness or negligence on his part. His answer was to focus, very hard, on the human world at the edges of his comprehension, following what clues he could gather through information sometimes gained second-hand. He was clearly very intelligent, but he described his existence almost like a 'brain in a jar' experience. I couldn't comprehend a lot of what he said, but I'm glad I listened.

  • @Skelterbane69

    @Skelterbane69

    Жыл бұрын

    This is the kind of stuff that I think of often. Do I care, or do I HAVE to care about other people? etc. Sometimes I don't know myself.

  • @nickbagelboy

    @nickbagelboy

    Жыл бұрын

    Do you happen to know what interview that was?

  • @johnstrawb3521

    @johnstrawb3521

    Жыл бұрын

    @friskeysunset I'd be fascinated to listen. Do you have more information, such that allows for a productive search for this interview? Thanks in advance.

  • @johnstrawb3521

    @johnstrawb3521

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Skelterbane69 An excellent guide is simply the awareness that in many ways others are very much like yourself: Averse to pain, interested in pleasure, seeking constructive family relationships, and more completely seeking friendship, love, meaningful work.... The Golden Rule oversimplifies matters but 'treating others as you would like to be treated' has its root in acknowledging how alike humans are, and that we are kin to each other not just genetically but emotionally and morally.

  • @jacobrickett9447

    @jacobrickett9447

    Жыл бұрын

    Are you speaking of Charles Manson?

  • @DeclanMBrennan
    @DeclanMBrennan Жыл бұрын

    I teared up a little with that closing bit. Not compelled or even encouraged by his emotions and yet James Fallon chooses to care. Academics argue endlessly about the reality of free will and whether we are all just a product of nature and nurture, but IMHO this is a practical example.

  • @EnFuego79

    @EnFuego79

    7 ай бұрын

    He doesn't "care". It is strictly an academic exercise to see if it optimizes his relations with people so he can more easily manipulate them as he sees fit. This is the entire basis of psychopathy - there is zero connection inter-personally.

  • @MondoBeno
    @MondoBeno Жыл бұрын

    I knew three boys who may have been psychopaths, when I was growing up. One thing I noticed about them was that they had no real emotions. They never showed anger, impatience, disappointment, disgust, or irritation. They also had a disdain for anyone else being angry, sad, impatient, etc. It seemed that when other people showed emotion it brought out their worst ways.

  • @bonjannon

    @bonjannon

    Жыл бұрын

    Could be aspergers/autism my guy :)

  • @anonnomous6223

    @anonnomous6223

    Жыл бұрын

    That sounds more akin to a sociopath. Are you a bot? A plant? Maybe bamboo?

  • @rickwrites2612

    @rickwrites2612

    Жыл бұрын

    Alot of psychos react that way, they see emotions as ppl trying to manipulate them, because they don't grasp what they actually are.

  • @rembeadgc
    @rembeadgc2 жыл бұрын

    Humanity is way more complex and nuanced than most or any of us realize. Dating and loving someone who was hyper functional who shared that they had been diagnosed with numerous mental health issues really made me put the brakes on being judgmental towards anyone, even myself.

  • @paulduffy4585

    @paulduffy4585

    Жыл бұрын

    So true. Labels are not helpful.

  • @Rino37

    @Rino37

    Жыл бұрын

    @@paulduffy4585actually they’re helpful in some ways. For example, I couldn’t begin getting my life back until I could label what I wanted to understand and overcome.

  • @canobenitez

    @canobenitez

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Rino37 fr, even know it exists in a book (DSM IV I'm looking at you!) and it happens to more people its kinda conforting.

  • @paulduffy4585

    @paulduffy4585

    Жыл бұрын

    @@canobenitez Let me rephrase, definitive statements are usually not helpful. Whereas labels can be helpful at times, even though they run the risk of oversimplifying matters.

  • @flapjackson6077
    @flapjackson60772 жыл бұрын

    As far as psychopaths go, Fallon is a success story. I’ve no doubt he’s fallen short in his interpersonal relationships, and that he doesn’t feel regret, but that’s the very definition of a psychopath. He’s also been governed by the moral code he was taught growing up, and has become a socially normal, responsible, and successful member of society. Demonizing Psychopaths as a group is blaming a person for something they have no control over, AND treating them as irredeemable mutants who aren’t worth the effort and expense to treat, despite evidence that they can function normally when given the proper environment to develop.

  • @andrewhaywood3853

    @andrewhaywood3853

    2 жыл бұрын

    He says himself that every person that knew him, that he asked, said that he wasn’t NORMAL. Holding down a research job and doing TED talks is not a sign of normality, nor does it mean that he hasn’t hurt people. I have narcissistic parents (that’s way lower on the scale than James Fallon) and they are hurtful every time they open their mouths, because every communication is self-centred. This guy has a wife, children, grandchildren and yet he enjoys getting audience laughs out of how selfish he has been. God only knows what he is like as a boss if he has no empathy - I can just hear him saying to his secretary “no you can’t go early because your husband has been in a car crash and is on life support, because how does that help me make my research deadline?” Falling short in interpersonal relationships, as you like to put it, isn’t a mild problem. It is THE problem of human existence, and the one that will probably kill us as a species because we can’t live within nature whilst most countries are ruled by these human mimickers called Psychopaths who might as well be aliens.

  • @orphanrafferty1955

    @orphanrafferty1955

    2 жыл бұрын

    U simply have no idea what a psychopath is

  • @flapjackson6077

    @flapjackson6077

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@andrewhaywood3853 I think it’s fair to say that you’re exceedingly attuned to cluster B behavior regarding your personal experience. But projecting your personal experience on to every psychopath is way too reactionary. I never said the guy is easy to live with. I said psychopaths can, and often do integrate relatively normally into society, despite their affliction. I also have a very good friend, and former brother in law who has NPD. His is the vulnerable type, but it took a toll on my sister and their two sons. Which is why he’s my former brother in law, but still my friend. He’s learned. He’s not “cured” of it, but he’s adopted a very different approach to his life. One which would’ve saved his marriage had he adopted it 20 years ago.

  • @flapjackson6077

    @flapjackson6077

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@orphanrafferty1955 I have no idea what a psychopath is? Don’t make silly statements you can’t back up. You have no idea what I know. You simply assume every psychopath is evil incarnate because of your personal experience. Perhaps all psychopaths should be burned at the stake since they’re so clearly irredeemable in your eyes.

  • @flapjackson6077

    @flapjackson6077

    2 жыл бұрын

    @Madolite Lol. “tactically unwise action…” Exactly! Classical conditioning! Learning behavior is mostly conditioning anyway. A psychopath is slower on the uptake learning proper social conduct because they’re neurologically retarded in that area of comprehension, but they can learn to mimic, and with our increasing understanding of neural plasticity, perhaps can even learn to have feelings more like neurotypical people.

  • @patrickcox8990
    @patrickcox8990 Жыл бұрын

    i love the look he gives at the end when everybody cheers and hes like: " yea, i dont care"

  • @canobenitez

    @canobenitez

    Жыл бұрын

    yea, like "they are clapping,, how surprising, low IQ simpletons ".

  • @CrabbyO

    @CrabbyO

    Жыл бұрын

    Patrick C., I had to watch it again to see what you were talking about. You're totally right! The quick little raise of the eyebrows with the closed-lip grin, and then leaving the stage before the applause even ended its crescendo. He seriously had NO NEED to bask in any of the approbation. But the FIRST time I watched, I was pretty sure he was getting choked up at the end. Like he KNEW the gravity of what he was saying. Even though I fully agree with your assessment, I also think he DOES care deeply about something important, even if it's not words of approval from another human.

  • @floneticgetsam3120

    @floneticgetsam3120

    Жыл бұрын

    He's like, "I played those suckers good."

  • @brianmeen2158

    @brianmeen2158

    Жыл бұрын

    @@CrabbyOof course he cares deeply about sone things .. I honestly think Fallon is full Of shit about 25% of the time.

  • @dirt_xo

    @dirt_xo

    Жыл бұрын

    @@CrabbyO Sociopaths are self-centered. I feel bad for anyone like that because they can't feel empathy naturally. It's a mental disease, sometimes coming from brain-damage even.

  • @JustRideTheVibe
    @JustRideTheVibe Жыл бұрын

    I would love to watch an in-depth conversation between this guy and renowned narcissist and psychologist Sam Vaknin. The nature vs. nurture debate is never-ending, and endlessly fascinating.

  • @sw.7519

    @sw.7519

    Жыл бұрын

    No big surprise heritage and upbriging. The Ratio differs as well.

  • @p0tmuffin69

    @p0tmuffin69

    Жыл бұрын

    Sam Vaknin readily says that ASPD is a physically difference in the brain and think that it should be removed from the cluster B section because of that stark difference

  • @avistryfe4534

    @avistryfe4534

    Жыл бұрын

    Lol. You need to go out more.

  • @powdergate

    @powdergate

    Жыл бұрын

    lol Sam Vaknin isn't renowned, he's an uber cringe old guy trying to seek fame for being weird, just like this guy James Fallon

  • @p0tmuffin69

    @p0tmuffin69

    Жыл бұрын

    @@powdergate I'll take your nonexistent credentials to heart 👍

  • @onewheelatatime2905
    @onewheelatatime2905 Жыл бұрын

    That bit about realising that you are a psychopath and not caring, kinda proved it, really struck a chord with me. I was on a course about autism and realised I’m autistic, so I went home and read everything I could find about autism, which kinda proved it!

  • @rzeznik669
    @rzeznik6695 жыл бұрын

    I've made a mistake of buying his book, thinking it would give me some scientific insights into mind of a psychopath, turns out its few hundred pages of him bragging about some nonsense

  • @sakki8889

    @sakki8889

    4 жыл бұрын

    elaborate?

  • @MrHappy-hx3go

    @MrHappy-hx3go

    4 жыл бұрын

    Proves he's at least narccisitic

  • @phenixevelyphd2149

    @phenixevelyphd2149

    4 жыл бұрын

    LK P 100% correct.

  • @Spoeism

    @Spoeism

    4 жыл бұрын

    Yeah.. he's a psychopath lol

  • @44nk96

    @44nk96

    4 жыл бұрын

    I am listening to the audiobook and wish James voiced it himself, the voice actor was too fast and robotic

  • @sleepydragonzarinthal3533
    @sleepydragonzarinthal3533 Жыл бұрын

    Heres a little rhyme about psychopaths (think James Bond vs the bad guy): Psychopaths are important, but only because psychopaths exist. We have to take care of the ones we see to protect us from those we miss.

  • @yggdrasild755

    @yggdrasild755

    Жыл бұрын

    why would you want to be 'protected from who you miss' ?

  • @sleepydragonzarinthal3533

    @sleepydragonzarinthal3533

    Жыл бұрын

    @@yggdrasild755 undetected psychopaths

  • @yggdrasild755

    @yggdrasild755

    Жыл бұрын

    @@sleepydragonzarinthal3533 why would you miss a psychopath ?

  • @ig100magnaguard

    @ig100magnaguard

    27 күн бұрын

    @@yggdrasild755 Because he´s really bad at shooting.

  • @mattd6200
    @mattd6200 Жыл бұрын

    He was worried about his family's pet scans. He feels empathy.

  • @handcrafted30
    @handcrafted30 Жыл бұрын

    I’ve heard him tell this story before and it was totally different detail about how he found out. It seems lying without compunction is also a feature of psychopathy.

  • @Prawnstar.

    @Prawnstar.

    Жыл бұрын

    Without a doubt! It's their super power.

  • @ettvanligtkonto

    @ettvanligtkonto

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Prawnstar. Well it's a story. He is trying to be entertaning.

  • @Prawnstar.

    @Prawnstar.

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ettvanligtkonto No shade, just pointing out some are more adept at the dramatic art of b.s.

  • @TalynStormcrow

    @TalynStormcrow

    Жыл бұрын

    What was the difference?

  • @unutilisateur4729

    @unutilisateur4729

    Жыл бұрын

    @@TalynStormcrow There was no difference, handcrafted is sus af. It's psychopaths all the way down

  • @justanothermortal1373
    @justanothermortal1373 Жыл бұрын

    Violent or not, psychopaths still terrify me. The amount of manipulation and lack of empathy they embody can make them dangerous and unpredictable. But if they are able to recognise and control it for the greater good of society, like this man, kudos to them.

  • @justanothermortal1373

    @justanothermortal1373

    Жыл бұрын

    @Brown Incel huh...?

  • @critical_unknown

    @critical_unknown

    Жыл бұрын

    @@justanothermortal1373 Just ignore the word salad.

  • @Mylok_

    @Mylok_

    Жыл бұрын

    @@critical_unknown salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad salad

  • @niccwhite

    @niccwhite

    Жыл бұрын

    I wouldn't count on them for environment references though.

  • @presence5426
    @presence5426 Жыл бұрын

    "When people tell you who they are, listen." Some of these sociopathic/narcissistic types like attention so much, or are so shallow that they'll reveal themselves with glee. When they do, take them at their word! Don't think 'well, they're harmless & self-aware." Also, learn to read people and note their actions. Because some of these creeps are too clever to just tell you who they are.

  • @trombone7

    @trombone7

    Жыл бұрын

    Good point. On a tangent, the way I heard it was, "When someone tells you who they are, take it wisely. When someone shows you who they are, believe them."

  • @WinkLinkletter

    @WinkLinkletter

    Жыл бұрын

    My housemate is such a person, and uses his act of "narcissistic-sociopathic-self absorbed" self-awareness to take people unawares, when it really comes down to it. Laughing and smiling with you, he will admit to being this way, and you may be inclined to believe (most are) that since he is just stating it so freely and openly, that he's understanding himself and taking measures to counter-balance these traits. But when you have been hurt by him, it is just "Well, I told you so...", and a smug grin.

  • @ronniesal7436

    @ronniesal7436

    Жыл бұрын

    @@WinkLinkletter why do you still live with him?

  • @smyd23
    @smyd23 Жыл бұрын

    "After I heard all this I didn't care" big respect

  • @JTheTeach

    @JTheTeach

    Жыл бұрын

    lol you trollin bro?

  • @Scott-bh2qb

    @Scott-bh2qb

    Жыл бұрын

    lol u didn't get it.

  • @TheJackster-tl8oi
    @TheJackster-tl8oi Жыл бұрын

    I like how the piano player plays an ominous bundle of notes when he says “I scored a little too high on the psychopath test” 😂

  • @gritskennedy5007
    @gritskennedy5007 Жыл бұрын

    Absolutely we need detached people but we dont need violent or cruel people! This man is funny funny funny! Charming and mesmerizing great speaker easy to losten to probably an excellent author!

  • @NeoStoicism

    @NeoStoicism

    Жыл бұрын

    I would argue society does need a certain class of people capable of violence.

  • @mjz16

    @mjz16

    Жыл бұрын

    I wonder what my PET scan would show. Except for one cool person and one I’m not fully convinced of, everyone else I’ve had a relationship with has been somewhere along the line of psychopathy and/or sociopathy. I wonder what it says about me. Or, is it that there are way more of ‘them’ out there than we know? 🤔

  • @etta5487

    @etta5487

    Жыл бұрын

    @@NeoStoicism Why?

  • @levansegnaro4637

    @levansegnaro4637

    Жыл бұрын

    Without having people capable of violence you won't have anyone to protect you from dangerous threats. It's that simple, we need soldiers, cops, game wardens to be able to be violent to stop invading armies, criminals, wild animals from hurting our society.

  • @goncalovazpinto6261

    @goncalovazpinto6261

    Жыл бұрын

    @@NeoStoicism I agree, some people today seem to think life was always as it is today. In reality our concept of "normality" is just a footnote in the long, long history of our species. It took all kinds to get us where we are and there's no reason to believe that that doesn't apply to the future as well. What worries me is this thirst for "normalization". We must all be the same...

  • @kelb6073
    @kelb6073 Жыл бұрын

    Something I recently realized is that personality disorders are also on a spectrum. I had trouble understanding if a relative was a narcissist until I realized they are probably on a spectrum and just not as bad as some narcs.

  • @Vesta_the_Lesser

    @Vesta_the_Lesser

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes, that's exactly how characteristics like narcissism work, EVERYONE is narcissistic and supposedly men are moreso on average than women, but only people who REALLY have it bad get called "malignant narcissists"

  • @mattmartin8336
    @mattmartin8336 Жыл бұрын

    Half of life is just showing up. Show up with a smile and a positive gesture. It goes along way.

  • @jdoubledisco

    @jdoubledisco

    Жыл бұрын

    True

  • @reidcrosby6241

    @reidcrosby6241

    Жыл бұрын

    True

  • @Hand_Shake

    @Hand_Shake

    Жыл бұрын

    It goes a long way but it doesn’t complete the connection - which is where the important stuff happens.

  • @axelarias2671

    @axelarias2671

    Жыл бұрын

    Exactly, as Paul says. It goes a long way in many casual relationships and fun nights out, traveling etc. But those deep connections miss something, when empathy is not there. It is good to aknowledge how important it is, to both understand the psychopath (what he is missing out on, and how a relationship can be good for him), and in this case his family, who need to understand their dad and what they can get and not get (empathy, interest, humor) from being together with him

  • @axelarias2671

    @axelarias2671

    Жыл бұрын

    And actually, instead of 'missing out on' something, I like to see it as; that we all contribute with something, we all bring something to the world. Instead of comparing each other, we could just say that this man brings humor, joy, casual lifestyle, science ect. - His wife probably brings empathy, and they have found a way to live together, even though he might not understand that empathy on an emotional level. Sorry it got a little long

  • @isaacbernath
    @isaacbernath Жыл бұрын

    Started this video and shared with my friends group.. Kept watching and realized I'm exposing myself a little too much and deleted it from the chat. Damn this hit close to home.. Including diagnosing myself and asking my smartest friends what they thought. This was spot on.. Thank you 😘

  • @bgbg418
    @bgbg4187 жыл бұрын

    this was an hilarious talk. showing that there's more to the psychopathic mindset than [insert popular serial killer] type tendencies. bravo.

  • @bgbg418

    @bgbg418

    7 жыл бұрын

    +Baba Booey he most likely does.

  • @phaedrus7971

    @phaedrus7971

    6 жыл бұрын

    he knows it

  • @Cossaw

    @Cossaw

    6 жыл бұрын

  • @amandabrisbane8716

    @amandabrisbane8716

    5 жыл бұрын

    MammalsShmammals I loved his self deprecating humourous take on his psychopathy. Takes courage to admit this kind of stuff.

  • @arawn10

    @arawn10

    5 жыл бұрын

    +MammalsShmammals Agreed!-- What a Lovely Guy!.. What a Great Psychopath..🙄🤔

  • @MartinMaat
    @MartinMaat Жыл бұрын

    I remember him from a television documentary a long time ago, telling the same story. Here he is, being dead serious, and the audience is perceiving it as standup comedy.

  • @briangandee8149

    @briangandee8149

    Жыл бұрын

    A result, unfortunately, of the populace bring 'dumbed down' by the media, government, etc.. they've been doing that since the beginning days of television.. 🤔

  • @sitcomsTV

    @sitcomsTV

    Жыл бұрын

    I've noticed that too. He was pretending to be fun and the audience swallow it. Psychopaths are charismatic. Fun to be around - has this guy said: when they are strangers. Ted Bundy got notorious for it.

  • @shea5542

    @shea5542

    Жыл бұрын

    😂😂😂😂

  • @Liberty_Freedom_Brotherhood

    @Liberty_Freedom_Brotherhood

    Жыл бұрын

    He proved his point that he’s great with strangers

  • @Felatay

    @Felatay

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah, I found the laughter weird.

  • @ad1108am
    @ad1108am Жыл бұрын

    Very interesting. Though I disagree that we need people with such traits as CEOs or soldiers. I’d rather wager a guess that we have the sort of social problems because people with such traits get a hold of a lot of power. Then of course you will have a mass exploitation and violent conflicts, that’s kind of expected if someone is not able to fully put themselves in another person’a shoes. So while it might be useful sometimes, I disagree that anyone who has it on autopilot should be just left unchecked or worse - praised for what they are doing.

  • @Freekchild

    @Freekchild

    Жыл бұрын

    Exactly. Speaking someone who strongly suspects that she is a psychopath, I wouldn’t trust Fallon’s words when he says the world needs psychopaths. Trying to convince others why they need us is a timeless sociopathic/psychopathic move. It’s self preservation.

  • @ChocolateMilk..

    @ChocolateMilk..

    Жыл бұрын

    Infact, there's not a single field of work or place in this society where these devils are needed. You don't need to be a vicious pos to perform surgery or to have responsibility. I bet those who say psychopaths are beneficial in any way at all are narcissistic, selfish assholes themselves looking for a way to justify their shitty behaviour. It is also a choice. NPD's and ASPD's knows what they're doing and they do the things they do because they love it.

  • @elleinfinitea

    @elleinfinitea

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes “profit over everything” is the cancer that is metastasizing through the world leaving misery and destruction in its wake. One can have a very valid suspicion that successful psychopaths helped created the conditions for this mentality.

  • @alasdairadam3725

    @alasdairadam3725

    Жыл бұрын

    It doesn't take empathy to know what is right and wrong. Psychopaths have less of an ego or a need to sooth with outside things like power. They get bored mostly.

  • @alasdairadam3725

    @alasdairadam3725

    Жыл бұрын

    @@brownincel6018 it's not really. Plenty of people are without even knowing it. I mean if you dont feel guilt why should that stop you from doing the right thing ? If all that stops people from doing the wrong thing is because it makes them feel bad I'd question that persons inner compass

  • @fribersson
    @fribersson Жыл бұрын

    Fascinating. I often get the question about narcissists, why and what can we do. Unless someone wants to change, we can't do much. It can be helpful to consider it's genetic, it can be easier to move on. That helped me close the door on a relationship with a narcissist, when I viewed her as a "psychopath lite" - which was really quite accurate (yes, obsessed with "saving the world" while treating everyone like dirt).

  • @shikeridoo

    @shikeridoo

    Жыл бұрын

    @@adge4579 Seek out hobbies, social ones. Tennis, paddel, take a course in uni, join a dance club, etc. It'll rewire your brain. You're not literally empty, you've just deprived yourself of positive feelings. Do regular sports and regular walks, etc

  • @abelis644

    @abelis644

    Жыл бұрын

    @@adge4579 Seek out professional help. I'm a retired RN, I worked in psychiatry for some times. Your issues seem substantial, I may be wrong but I think that you need to speak to a professional. Good luck to you.

  • @R_Thomp

    @R_Thomp

    Жыл бұрын

    @@adge4579 you have to re-think your relationship with him and possibly need to develop a different type of relationship that will bring basic respect to you & him. From your years of living with him you have been conditioned to believe certain things and to react to things he does or says a certain way. You may need to learn to not react the way he has caused you to react in the past. In order to do this you have to watch out for "tactics" such as re-framing the conversation, arguing hypotheticals, changing the subject of or to hypotheticals, baiting you for a reaction, and "the dog whistle" which is saying something in front of others that sounds normal to those who are unaware of the personality disorder but can trigger you, making you look like the bad one. There's also the givens: deflection, gaslighting, blameshifting, playing the hero (for praise by you or others such as friends, family, neighbors), or the victim, and having a sense of entitlement believing that he should have been chosen for something by someone else that he shouldn't have. Once you can identify these behaviors you can then respond/react accordingly. The main thing you have to do is not give the reaction they are hoping for which is going to take you some time to learn to master, as well as putting space or limited contact in between you and him so you don't have to deal with the abuse or toxicity, all the while being loving, respectful, and available for your father. It takes time to develop the repositioning of yourself in the relationship but once you find the sweet spot you will be better off.

  • @maxineboxer9714

    @maxineboxer9714

    Жыл бұрын

    @@adge4579 Watch the videos by Dr. Les Carter, he has many of them on this subject and they’re excellent. Also can direct you to therapy.

  • @JT0007

    @JT0007

    Жыл бұрын

    @@adge4579 Join the subreddit CPTSD 🇺🇸

  • @TotalRookie_LV
    @TotalRookie_LV2 жыл бұрын

    Until very recently I was not even aware psychopaths may _themselves_ look for help of mental health professionals, yet some of them do, as while it feels fantastic to do whatever you want without sense of guilt, never getting depression due to lack of conscience, being able to play people, having no fear etc, however what pisses them off is how the nice life they seem to finally built for them crumbles again and again, because they fail at building lasting relationships. And failure is not what they wish for themselves. Besides then they discover, that they are insanely shallow emotionally, they do feel joy, anger, and... and... well, that sort of it, besides sensations like hunger, freezing or sweating.

  • @ferguson8143

    @ferguson8143

    2 жыл бұрын

    They can get depressed and he only scored 20 out of 40 on the test since falls under boarder line psychopath

  • @erasmusmusiccentre1387
    @erasmusmusiccentre13872 жыл бұрын

    I've read books that have made a similar case for the utility of psychopaths. I can see the point. If your child is in need of brain surgery, for an extreme example, you want someone with absolutely cold, clinical detachment, a rock steady hand that will never once waver because of on whom they are working. If you've been falsely accused of a crime, you want a defense lawyer who will pursue any line of defence, no matter how distasteful you might find it. And I can see why and how many psychopaths have risen to lead corporations around the world. But, as we move towards more conscious capitalism, where the overriding duty of a CEO is no longer simply to make money for shareholders, I wonder if their time in particular might be over.

  • @roblosh8417

    @roblosh8417

    2 жыл бұрын

    I agree. The perceived super material growth has become trite and proven not as fruitful to anyone other than the psychopaths leading the campaign as we estimated it would be. This was inevitable. The next step for growth and expansion of human kind’s success is clearly a deeper and more communal one, which psychopaths are demonstrably incapable of delivering. You’re right, we let them have the wheel because it seemed beneficial, but in reality they just took the opportunity to gorge themselves, what else would a psychopath do? The whole “but I’m a good, beneficial psychopath!” thing has long worn it’s welcome. It’s time to start growing and evolving towards the true human experience for the collective consciousness.

  • @stapes7344

    @stapes7344

    2 жыл бұрын

    Sounds like wishful thinking. 1 and 100 ppl are walking this earth. Thats a catastrophic amount of cancer

  • @hardboiledfrog

    @hardboiledfrog

    Жыл бұрын

    It's just another brain structure variant. I think it's wrong to call it "damaged" or "missing parts." All of living creatures are just evolved and evolving variants. What is successful, survives. What survives, reproduces and allows further evolution. There is so much variation in non-psychopath brains that to lump them together and call them "normal" is also a mistake.

  • @GrgAProduction

    @GrgAProduction

    Жыл бұрын

    @@stapes7344 Yup. 80Million of them is nothing to really just ignore willynilly hahah

  • @pocket83squared

    @pocket83squared

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@ajasen When you put your life savings into a fund of stocks, your expectations are those of a narrowly selfish and foolishly entitled gambler. The social harm caused by unchecked amorality in the private sector far outpaces the (net) financial benefit conferred upon beneficiaries. As a world ecology, that sort of greed is a _tragedy of the commons,_ and thus, perhaps ironically here, I have no sympathy for such defectors who are willing to try to squeeze out more than they could ever rightfully earn. Go see if you can "make" your own money. Some of us actually think that dolphins have some value. Perhaps that's beyond your conceptual capacity though, if you're governed only by a desire to own more useless stuff.

  • @mommyharris1111
    @mommyharris1111 Жыл бұрын

    Give me a funny scientist to listen to ALL DAY. Loved the talk, we lost my husbands Dad to Alzheimer’s disease. He told me the following morning after an “episode”, he said that he felt like he was having a horrible nightmare and was watching himself act out, but was not able to control himself. I found that very interesting because we had never read or heard anything like that. I think that inflammation is definitely a factor in why he may have developed it.

  • @adrianh332
    @adrianh332 Жыл бұрын

    I believe my aunt's husband was either a pro social psychopath or a sociopath. He was pretty well adjusted, not intentionally unkind and very generous with his time and talents but completely unaffected by others suffering or death, he joked his way through both his parents funerals and didn't shed a tear at his wife's funeral either. He also said he found a friend's depression amusing. He wanted to be a fighter pilot however diabetes stopped that in its tracks but if it hadn't I think he had the potential to be one of the most effective and deadly fighter pilots in the RAF.

  • @MichaelHarrisIreland
    @MichaelHarrisIreland7 жыл бұрын

    This guy is doing a lot of humanity. He's going where no one went before. We are privileged to listen to him, a "psychopath" by scan and his friends opinions, but also a brave pioneer for humanity in my opinion and I hope others.

  • @MrBastilleDay

    @MrBastilleDay

    2 жыл бұрын

    lol

  • @ishtlutz1261

    @ishtlutz1261

    Жыл бұрын

    You’ve got to consider the attention factor. It’s actually very not possible that his initial core incentive on going public was anything sincere; but rather based off the attention, popularity, & exposure he’d receive. Either way you’re right about him being revolutionary in ‘doing for humanity.’

  • @MichaelHarrisIreland

    @MichaelHarrisIreland

    Жыл бұрын

    @Music & Whistle msk I believe you.

  • @ChocolateMilk..

    @ChocolateMilk..

    Жыл бұрын

    @@MichaelHarrisIreland So strong! So couragous!

  • @le_th_

    @le_th_

    Жыл бұрын

    His friends call him a sociopath...and he admits that he is NOT a psychopath, as his score on the PCL-R isn't high enough to qualify him for the diagnosis. These are spectrum disorders, so he's likely more of a narcissistic sociopath who happens to be non-violent, and incapable of caring for anyone close to him. He's more interested in NEW people he can charm and entertain, which is why he was voted Class Clown in high school. He calls himself the life of the party...he's performing for people...like a narcissist, and pathologically self-absorbed with his own party-lifestyle that he doesn't go to the wedding and funerals, because it's all about him being the life of the party. He's more narcissistic than psychopathic.

  • @thomasross4921
    @thomasross4921 Жыл бұрын

    I'm glad he's faking it now. It's his own way to say he cares about you, that he puts on this act for your comfort. I could live with someone who I knew was secretly cold, but rarely showed it, much better than someone who was cold all the time. Plus, the brain is plastic. You can train it. Like a muscle. By faking it until he makes it, he'll maximize whatever small scrap of empathy he has.

  • @paulh2981

    @paulh2981

    Жыл бұрын

    I don't think you can activate areas of the brain that are inactive due to genetic traits by mimicking the kind of behavior you'd exhibit if those areas has normal levels of activity.

  • @keep-ukraine-free528

    @keep-ukraine-free528

    Жыл бұрын

    It seems you don't understand what is wrong with psychopaths. They are emotionally cold, but that's not the worst part of them. They take greater risks, because negative/averse outcomes (e.g getting their finger cut) don't scare them. THUS, they will also put YOUR life in danger, and not care. And so if you die, they'll feel a slight loss, but after some months they'll find someone else.

  • @alessiosandro123

    @alessiosandro123

    Жыл бұрын

    nono, its not his way to say he cares about you... he doesnt care, he cannot do it for that reason, if you think that, you dont get narcisissts

  • @firstylasty9417

    @firstylasty9417

    Жыл бұрын

    @@paulh2981 Well, there is some truth in the value of psychopaths and sociopaths learning how to _emulate_ the emotions of the neuro-typical population -- for functionality's sake. Even better, if they can receive good therapy and learn the _personal benefits_ of fitting into society -- things running more smoothly for themselves and for society at large. They can also learn their differences, and why they behave the way they do. There are some high-functioning neuro-divergents out there.

  • @thomasross4921

    @thomasross4921

    Жыл бұрын

    @@alessiosandro123 I get narcissists just fine. Lord knows I've had enough of them in my life. A psychopathic narcissist like the speaker CAN care. It's just on an intellectual level instead of an emotional one. You sound like YOU don't get them, preferring demonization over understanding. Which is understandable. I'm downright allergic to people with NPD myself. They suck.

  • @DefaultUsername156
    @DefaultUsername156 Жыл бұрын

    " I truly really don't care" I felt that in my soul 😅

  • @leonardodalongisland
    @leonardodalongisland Жыл бұрын

    WOW! This just made me realize that my mother is a Social Psychopath. She's always exhibited the signs he says he has. It makes so much sense. Thanks James.

  • @jamesjackson5020
    @jamesjackson5020 Жыл бұрын

    To show someone care is done because you have been shown care, and you understand how much it meant to have been treated with such care and how it changed you for the better. A sense of care and empathy is not an emotion that can be created, but one that occurs naturally. If do not want ourselves to suffer, and we feel a sense of love for ourselves, naturally that extends to other people, as we do not want to be alone in our feelings of any kind. No matter what someone is feeling, there is a natural desire to find out that others feel similarly or the same as you, because that validates our own experience.

  • @pamelamorrison4086
    @pamelamorrison4086 Жыл бұрын

    I remember this story from about a decade ago. Researchers also said that the brain chemistry plus a head injury and bad parenting all contributed to negative psychopathic behaviour (in several studies).

  • @norawheeler2555
    @norawheeler2555 Жыл бұрын

    So right about the surgeons, etc. I freak out completely if anyone gets hurt, not because I am scared of blood, but just I can't deal with the pain/horror element. My daughter is so calm and collected and is much better in an emergency, even as a teenager.

  • @Musicch-gi8ej
    @Musicch-gi8ej Жыл бұрын

    He is smart and open minded, I like him. He is moral enough to make it work for him

  • @patrickhenry4675

    @patrickhenry4675

    Жыл бұрын

    Think about the same person but without a good moral upbringing and a strong scientific interest to keep him busy. If he was abused when young he could have turned out way different.

  • @hanselmansell7555

    @hanselmansell7555

    Жыл бұрын

    @@patrickhenry4675 yup, and this is why social care matters so much 👍

  • @notallthatbad
    @notallthatbad Жыл бұрын

    Interesting talk, really. I wouldn't trust him on a life raft in the middle of the ocean, to be honest, though.

  • @horenzodipartendo8225

    @horenzodipartendo8225

    Жыл бұрын

    Nice fat joke

  • @praiselifeworshiplifeca4847
    @praiselifeworshiplifeca4847 Жыл бұрын

    A true man doesn't deny he has faults,a Great man accepts his faults and makes an effort to correct them .great speaker and great man.

  • @danielfox3399
    @danielfox3399 Жыл бұрын

    This man is not being "brave" for telling his story being a psychopaths, he just thought it is an interesting story to tell. Interesting dude.

  • @mrezac4790

    @mrezac4790

    Жыл бұрын

    What’s your mental illness?

  • @AllIsntEverything

    @AllIsntEverything

    Жыл бұрын

    Everything is "brave" now. He's so "woke" too.

  • @jpaxonreyes

    @jpaxonreyes

    Жыл бұрын

    you don't know

  • @eternalindifference

    @eternalindifference

    Жыл бұрын

    It's a matter of defining bravery but I have to agree. My fondness for Aristotle and my assumption that he isn't afraid to share his story led me to the same conclusion as you.

  • @avistryfe4534

    @avistryfe4534

    Жыл бұрын

    No one is being brave anywhere. The word has lost all fucking meaning.

  • @littlepookie7976
    @littlepookie7976 Жыл бұрын

    this was very interesting, funny, enlightening, ... best 15 minutes i;ve spent in awhile. Thank you, Mr. Fallon.

  • @kentishtowncowboy
    @kentishtowncowboy8 жыл бұрын

    Well, that was a surprise. Thankfully it was also funny. It does encourage one to learn more. Thanks for posting.

  • @bonniebester606
    @bonniebester6064 жыл бұрын

    LOL! That was a good talk! I would love to meet him at a Party! "Fake it til ya make it" James Fallon!

  • @paulrutkovskis
    @paulrutkovskis2 жыл бұрын

    For me, this man is a hero. In his own way. Because he has had the courage and inner strength to look at his own ugly side, see it for what it is and then make this curse into his blessing and share with the world his lessons that will help the future generations.

  • @ishtlutz1261

    @ishtlutz1261

    Жыл бұрын

    I think you may need to review your ‘101’ in psychopathism then. When a person is fearless by default, what would you say could constitute anything he does as being ‘courageous.’ His actions & decision to go public didn’t manifest out of a build up of achieved inner strength - they were calculations defaulted off nothing more than his own self-interest.

  • @mishi144

    @mishi144

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ishtlutz1261 You are correct. I'm sure his narcissism would really appreciate the ego boost though.

  • @martinbecklen6486
    @martinbecklen6486 Жыл бұрын

    Great ideas at the end. Demonstrates that each one of us are on a continuum of emotional 'normalcy.' Thanks for sharing!!

  • @blindriptide
    @blindriptide9 жыл бұрын

    I really enjoyed watching this video. Very amusing and entertaining. You did a wonderful job Mr. James Fallon.

  • @maggiepearson2598

    @maggiepearson2598

    3 жыл бұрын

    Yes he did❣️

  • @poxleno

    @poxleno

    2 жыл бұрын

    too bad he is full of shit

  • @poxleno

    @poxleno

    2 жыл бұрын

    @KahlosHack nooo, crap is crap, wake up Trump lover.

  • @nathanbellamy3308
    @nathanbellamy3308 Жыл бұрын

    Great speaker, great speech. Very thought provoking. Thanks for uploading.

  • @TomAHawk-lb8wk

    @TomAHawk-lb8wk

    Жыл бұрын

    Really, I found it a tad frustrating at times. Like listening to someone stutter. I do like his comedic misdirection. Caught me off guard even tho I knew it was coming.

  • @nathanbellamy3308

    @nathanbellamy3308

    Жыл бұрын

    @@TomAHawk-lb8wk get up there and share something then sideline critic lol.

  • @TomAHawk-lb8wk

    @TomAHawk-lb8wk

    Жыл бұрын

    @@nathanbellamy3308 That's a false equivalent. Just because someone critiques doesn't make them a professional. Since when are we not allowed to critique???? Oh wait.

  • @nathanbellamy3308

    @nathanbellamy3308

    Жыл бұрын

    @@TomAHawk-lb8wk we could go round and round with your argument. I.e why can't I critique your critique etc ad nauseum. But at the end of the day your a modern day hater and troll under the guise of a genuine critique Get up there and show them how it's done pal.

  • @jacobshirley3457

    @jacobshirley3457

    Жыл бұрын

    @@TomAHawk-lb8wk It reminds me of Louis CK, superficially. Where Louis' delivery feels very rough, off-the-cuff, and "my world is crumbling", yet it's all choreographed.

  • @darkshapedme
    @darkshapedme Жыл бұрын

    His last phrase made me so emotional!!! Great talk!

  • @user-mv1hv5ce3b
    @user-mv1hv5ce3b Жыл бұрын

    This was so interesting! The thing about many mental illnesses or conditions is that genetics "load the gun" by giving you the genetics that could allow you to develop them, but the genes will not manifest unless there are triggers in your environment for it to happen. For example, not everyone with the genes that make them high-risk for schizophrenia will develop schizophrenia. It often happens after a stressful and painful childhood+adolescence or drug abuse that signal to the body to activate those genes for whatever reason.

  • @markfleener9844

    @markfleener9844

    Жыл бұрын

    occult abuse initiates mostly suffer from schizophrenia, it's an esoteric science they keep secret for the sake of trafficking humans.

  • @nenasummers-shanafelt5126
    @nenasummers-shanafelt5126 Жыл бұрын

    I’m a pro-social psychopath, diagnosed. My grandfather was a very successful man, and came from abstract poverty. His mother had 11 children and was a bootlegger and wild in her younger days, escaped from Arkansas and remade her life as an incredibly poor mother and farmers wife. So for generations my family has been reinventing themselves through years of mental health struggles and lack of empathy. I have a hard time keeping a job, but can get literally ANY job I want at the drop of a hat. I’m very social and hear often how kind and personal I am but I am not connected to anyone but my dad and my husband. It’s a complicated relationship with mental health, and definitely genetic.

  • @R_Thomp
    @R_Thomp Жыл бұрын

    This is an incredible story

  • @johnmchakeres
    @johnmchakeres Жыл бұрын

    I believe that the first thing you must do in order to understand yourself and become self aware is to accept the truth. The truth can be painful, and in some cases it may not even matter, but what it can do is open up the path to growth and self understanding. This way you can live your happiest life possible. Granted it may not make you a great person in history, but what it will do is bring you personal happiness and joy. I can tell you first hand that it is the true wealth in life. Acceptance above anything else, hard work to improve, and distance to achieve it; that is what I think this man needs, and I think he has it.

  • @TheAdadadada
    @TheAdadadada Жыл бұрын

    Fabulous presentation! Scratches open the surface of a new cavern to explore! Wish my dear friend Bertram S. Brown was still with us! He loved brain spelunking over rum-runners at the officer's club on Sigsbee Island, Key West! Seems like yesterday! See ya on tha beach!

  • @AdDeRidder
    @AdDeRidder Жыл бұрын

    James is not emotionless, BTW. He loves going to parties, entertaining people etc. Like everyone else, he gets a thrill from making people laugh. Sociopaths are very good at generating emotions in other people. The part that is low is the emotional mirroring - when someone else is sad does it make you sad? It doesn't. That's why he doesn't naturally go to funerals - he is not driven to support someone else's sorrow because the loss doesn't affect him personally. That's also why it did not bother him overly to learn that people think he's cold. That is their emotional state, not his. There are roles where people like this will perform *better* than average : Ironically, I bet that they would be excellent at dealing with people who have deep needs - social worker, surgeon, nurse, vet, animal rescue ... because it is not as big of an emotional burden. It won't give him nightmares. Also, military, esp leadership - not that they don't care about the loss of life, but rather that they do not shrink from hard decisions because of how it will affect someone else. I'm curious if there is a connection between his condition and him being such a good catholic boy. I assume so, but I don't see the cause/effect. I am also curious how James and wife setup their marriage. If my wife does something nice for me, I feel obligated to return the favor. I don't think he would feel that. But he would still realize that she will do it again if he does something nice for her. I *suspect* that's the biggest difference and it relates back to the philosophical question - Do people do charity because it makes them feel good? If so, isn't that a selfish motive? Similarly do you do good in order to get good in return? I'd theorize that was one element of the development of emotional mirroring in early man. I do not think charitable instincts are present / strong in many animals. For example most species don't understand pointing. A monkey won't assume that you are trying to do something good for him by pointing at a treat. It's not something he would do. But it's hard NOT to believe that my dog feels my sadness when he mirrors my sad behavior.

  • @cattycats4

    @cattycats4

    Жыл бұрын

    Emotions exist to stabilize into Empathy. A psychopath will not stabilize into empathy, their emotions will be shallow compared with others, being sociable with a stranger is like escape artistry its shallow , it avoids the real depth of emotions/empathy. To answer your curiosity the psychopath would mirror things but in a way that is shallow and comes across as fake. Animals have just as much empathy as humans, to think that they dont is merely a self admission of lacking it, I used to know someone who believed that cats and dogs dont have feelings they turned out to be a psychopath, being around them dumbs down the whole day because you never get to develop empathy and good things, being around that person also is seriously detrimental socially as they will constantly try to control every situation with a bad method. Animals often show far more empathy and intelligence than humans because the misinformation through language and social conditioning isnt applicable. Just to give you a bit extra "do you do good to get good in return" The good itself is reality, what is real is health, if you interpret reality correctly it is health, if you interpret health correctly it is reality. Everything is memory, everything necessarily has depth to at least 4 dimensions. Any theory that imposes something lesser to be true is a paradox. Theory is the only paradox that ever existed. Everything else is real. Its the counter punch to the naivety that thinks that psychopaths are intelligent, they absolutely are not. Their life is theory imposed onto the real world, the paradox it creates includes damage to what they cannot see. If it wasnt theory there would be no damage, there are many businesses in the world that are intelligent. There are many more that are controlled by psychopaths that constantly damage the world because there is no real intelligence behind it, its all selfish. The counter to selfishness is that it is itself a product of an egotism, egotism only exists to stabilize into a superego, it is a paradox until it becomes a superego. Psychopaths cannot realize the superego, if one does they would break the mental block that defines them as one. The self exists as one, just like a bit of tomato in a soup , the soup is not defined by the piece of tomato, the soup never exists without it being part of an atmosphere, the planet, the universe etc. The greatest way for someone to treat the self is by being selfless because the rest of the world is ALWAYS a part of the self. Selfish behaviour is part of growing up, it should never remain. The realization of the self being part of everything is the opposite process of focus, focus being the knife of thought that cuts thinking into the smallest sharpest pieces, its all worthless unless its put back together, its all theory until its back to reality. Have a good day.

  • @AdDeRidder

    @AdDeRidder

    Жыл бұрын

    @@cattycats4 Very interesting response to see simultaneously a functional, Freudian id/ego/superego view of emotions and psychopathy at the same time as the enlightened view that we are all one tomato soup so doing good for others is a correct view of 'reality' because helping others is helping one's self. I don't share your world view - I guess I'm not as enlightened - but the id/ego/superego methodology is a clever tool for examining normal and aberant behavior through different lenses.

  • @sharpear1031
    @sharpear10314 жыл бұрын

    I was instantly given a social cultural insight listening to Dr. Fallon on the youtube program from the interview in Australia, when he talked about being from a warrior genetic class tracing back to northern Italy (maybe also Sicily) but that he noticed his mother sitting on a three-legged stool and thinking of immigrants, and remembered how loving his family had been to him and how socializing of him they had been. That caused me to see immediately the Italian or Sicilian cliche of the loving and highly social families was a pattern developed to mitigate the warrior genes that may be in the same genetic base. Do Scorsese and the "Godfather" lovers comprehend that the behavior they admire and wish to emulate is really an effort, perhaps unconscious or a little conscious, to disincline psycopathic behavior in the young? Maybe?

  • @jameshite6268

    @jameshite6268

    2 жыл бұрын

    No idea whether or not there's any validity to what you're saying, but I like the way you think. Somebody should do a study.

  • @Misssixty510

    @Misssixty510

    2 жыл бұрын

    I know this is a really old post, but I agree. I also wonder what would happen if a psychopath who was open to intense somatic therapeutic experience utilized this tool to internally place attention to the areas of the brain that are under active, with the intent to cultivate activation. I wonder if that would work. Body energy work has changed so much for me, healed me of organic inherited physiological ailments and trauma. And it didn’t take very long, maybe 2-3 years of brief daily practice. I don’t believe for one second in the imitations of genetic predisposition.

  • @ericbogar9665

    @ericbogar9665

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@Misssixty510 I can already tell you neither as sociopath or psychopath would probably do any of that or feel they would benefit at all from pseudoscience.

  • @siresorb1419

    @siresorb1419

    Жыл бұрын

    Pretty sure that would just embolden the warrior gene since you're giving them something to fight for.

  • @AngDevigne

    @AngDevigne

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Misssixty510 Hi!! I realize your question is 9 months old but if you are still looking for an answer: Yes! In my personal experience somatic and vasovagal exercises helped calm down my episodes ALOT. Before that, I did yoga for 6 years and being in tune with my body was the best thing that ever happened to my brain! Highly recommend Befriending Your Nervous System by Deborah Dana LCSW. As a caveat: I hate violence as a premise and am not generally prone to violence. I have pretty intense PTSD that bleeds over into factor 2 psychopathy, so I end up with social functioning deficits and impulsive violence when thrratened as opposed to calculated violence a la factor 1 or genetic psychopathy. Overall though, between the yoga & other body based therapies along with empathy training my connection with others has gone from 0 as a child to being told regularly that I am a great friend. The other day my son who also has slight psychopathy leanings told me I was a great mom (made me cry lol). Recovery is possible. Someone just has to care about us enough to make it happen.

  • @inkdreams4
    @inkdreams4 Жыл бұрын

    I for one think that empathy is a lost gift these days in many people who are absorbed in a me, me, me world that’s dictated to them by social media. Without empathy, our society will continue to decline. I’d love to hear what his family members have experienced! We as a society have to put our focus back on G0d and not worry about what other humans opinions of us are. We all are flawed and fall short, and realizing this and asking for G0d to help us is the first step. Kudos to him for sharing his story.

  • @sweetpotatofries99
    @sweetpotatofries99 Жыл бұрын

    Sociopath here. I laughed my ass off during this video. I was diagnosed after a childhood incident and do my damnedest to be pro-social, but man, do the urges strike at times. I know there are things I might never feel, but I'm going to keep working to understand them.

  • @shitmandood

    @shitmandood

    Жыл бұрын

    Freak!

  • @sweetpotatofries99

    @sweetpotatofries99

    Жыл бұрын

    @@shitmandood You know it, sweetheart

  • @jonathand5780

    @jonathand5780

    Жыл бұрын

    Do you think in God

  • @sweetpotatofries99

    @sweetpotatofries99

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jonathand5780 Do you think in English?

  • @thelightside77

    @thelightside77

    Жыл бұрын

    What was the incident??

  • @selurusey
    @selurusey4 жыл бұрын

    The kind of conclusion he makes at the end is what made me think hypocrisy may be a virtue if it is done right.

  • @etiennnelacroix4653

    @etiennnelacroix4653

    2 жыл бұрын

    it's what superficial people fall for I would say

  • @debrachambers1304

    @debrachambers1304

    Жыл бұрын

    Howso?

  • @mmmmcheese4850
    @mmmmcheese4850 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you sir. Gets a person thinking.

  • @zacharysherry2910
    @zacharysherry2910 Жыл бұрын

    This is honestly the unfruitful conversational type that I have with my friends. Super important conversation to have or Ted talk (with no one you know ?)

  • @Jb-ky8tb
    @Jb-ky8tb Жыл бұрын

    I find this so fascinating, thank you for this great video👌

  • @RS54321
    @RS54321 Жыл бұрын

    Interesting and chilling how at the end he tried to convince the audience that 'maybe we need people like that' in our society (meaning psychopaths). I certainly don't want one as a doctor or surgeon, thank you.

  • @macstrong1284

    @macstrong1284

    Жыл бұрын

    He’s simply drawing a conclusion to his original question and one that many ask, “Why are there still psychopaths if it’s an inherently ‘evil’ and disadvantageous state of being?”. Also, if you’ve spent any amount of time on an OR table, there’s a chance you’ve already had one. Do with that information as you may

  • @RS54321

    @RS54321

    Жыл бұрын

    @@macstrong1284 Ah, so you're saying he thinks there are psychopaths in society b/c we as a society need them? Interesting take.

  • @ronniesal7436

    @ronniesal7436

    Жыл бұрын

    @@macstrong1284It is a twisted interpretation of evolution. they are advantageous to themselves. Not to society at large. Many people are born and live with different illneses. That does not make their illnesses an adaptation. They are certainly a disadvantage to their families, and except in psychopathy, to themselves. Pdychopaths are the only ones who do not suffer through their pahology. The rest of the world, does suffer it!

  • @ronniesal7436

    @ronniesal7436

    Жыл бұрын

    @@RS54321 he is just twisting the teory of evolution to his advantage, as psychopaths do with everything. He is saying half truths. There exist many illnesses in this world, that does not mean they are advantageous or necessary, just a byproduct of life, and they persist as long as they are not lethal, not because they are useful. Eg. Think about hearth dissease, ADHD, Schizophrenia or Alzheimer's. People who suffer from them would rather not suffer them. Only psychopaths don't feel that way because it is not them who suffer, but the people around them!

  • @ssjwes

    @ssjwes

    Жыл бұрын

    I think you're also missing another point which is you're surrounded by psychopaths and don't even realise it.

  • @Maddolis
    @Maddolis Жыл бұрын

    Good watch! I must say I wouldn't mind some more empathetic CEOs, but there definitely are fields where psychopathy would be an advantage.

  • @daryl9905

    @daryl9905

    Жыл бұрын

    Advantage to society or the self?

  • @Maddolis

    @Maddolis

    Жыл бұрын

    @@daryl9905 Definitely to the self but I could imagine if too many empathetic people were driven out of key jobs, those jobs may suffer and possibly the society as a result. I'd have no idea on the numbers but it'd be interesting to read a study on psychopaths in potentially trauma-inducing careers like paramedics or soldiers etc.

  • @gava6636

    @gava6636

    Жыл бұрын

    Empathy on it's own doesn't make money. CEO's can be empathetic, but only if it generates money, and i don't see problem in that, since economy is not a zero sum game. CEO's becoming rich doesn't make poor people more poor.

  • @Maddolis

    @Maddolis

    Жыл бұрын

    @@gava6636 It has in recent years though, with progressively more jobs becoming automated and the wealth divide growing wider as many of those jobs are no longer available and the majority of the money saved goes to the rich and not into the communities.

  • @daryl9905

    @daryl9905

    Жыл бұрын

    @@gava6636 CEOs without empathy = a lot of people being oppressed, taken advantage of, etc. It does create a wealth gap.

  • @mi2b824
    @mi2b824 Жыл бұрын

    I resemble this, but I cry a lot when feeling empathy for both human and animal suffering. This feeling was new to me when I lost the love of my life, Sheila Grace. We we're together for 32 years, married for nearly 27 and had 6 beautiful children together. I was willingly possessed by her spirit to be better from that day forward. It was for our children, but she is the Mother who gave me the unconditional love and nurturing that I was lacking. So I tell our children that she raised me too in many ways.

  • @caralho5237
    @caralho5237 Жыл бұрын

    I oddly relate to this guy. I do feel empathy but people call me cold because i dont like or care about hugs or compliments or birthdays. Maybe just pretending is the way to go

  • @martyal

    @martyal

    Жыл бұрын

    I understand. I realized several years ago that I don’t feel the depth of emotions that some people have.

  • @randygerman2176
    @randygerman2176 Жыл бұрын

    Holy crap! I’ve been having a very similar conversation with myself about myself. Would love to be tested.

  • @aboemusic

    @aboemusic

    Жыл бұрын

    Search for the Hare Psychopathy Checklist. If memory serves, it's a 22-item survey which scores you out of 40. Anything above 30 is a sign of psychopathy, apparently. In its self-test guise, it should be used only as a guide though, of course. The test can be found on several websites, including psychology-tools.

  • @Johnstone565

    @Johnstone565

    Жыл бұрын

    Costly affair i imagine... I'd like to get tested, too

  • @velveetaslingshot
    @velveetaslingshot Жыл бұрын

    This guy reminds me so much of me. I can get up on stage and make people laugh and they assume that is who I am. Then they discover the dark side which goes with the gift of comedy. "There is no dark side of comedy. Its all dark." -Patton Oswalt

  • @veritasabsoluta4285

    @veritasabsoluta4285

    Жыл бұрын

    Wow you're so cool bro

  • @velveetaslingshot

    @velveetaslingshot

    Жыл бұрын

    @@veritasabsoluta4285 I know right? Thanks for giving me the attention I so deeply crave!

  • @defreshh9961

    @defreshh9961

    Жыл бұрын

    @@velveetaslingshot negative attention . U aren’t too bright.

  • @lodddishwoo6270

    @lodddishwoo6270

    Жыл бұрын

    @@defreshh9961 unnecessarily rude

  • @peterwhitey4992

    @peterwhitey4992

    Жыл бұрын

    @@defreshh9961 - He was being sarcastic. You don't have to be very bright to realize that.

  • @johncharleson8733
    @johncharleson8733 Жыл бұрын

    Needed conversation, and wonderfully hilarious.

  • @AR15andGOD
    @AR15andGOD Жыл бұрын

    I feel like this is similar to me. I have the usual lack of empathy and remorse/guilt but I feel like the self-control circuitry is still intact enough to not do bad things all that often

  • @blackholediscoball
    @blackholediscoball Жыл бұрын

    I am the exact same, i live across the country from most of my family, and not for any ambitious career reasons. When covid happened i was glad i didn't have to fly out to see them for Christmas. But i do actually love them.

  • @Ebvardh

    @Ebvardh

    Жыл бұрын

    What do you mean by love?

  • @aussiejubes

    @aussiejubes

    Жыл бұрын

    Im autistic & the pandemic was a great relief for me. Unburdened me from all the crushing obligation of seeing friends & family. Best time of my life.

  • @ronniesal7436

    @ronniesal7436

    Жыл бұрын

    @@aussiejubes believe me, psychopaths are nothing like autistic people. Although they do impersonate well autism.

  • @aussiejubes

    @aussiejubes

    Жыл бұрын

    @Ronnie Sal I would never have said they're the same. If anything I've found that taking a select few leaves from the book of sociopathy protects autistics from a lot of the using & abusing we accidentally line ourselves for.

  • @ronniesal7436

    @ronniesal7436

    Жыл бұрын

    @@aussiejubes I agree with you in that. Perhaps, sadly we all need to learn something from psychopaths. Since they are the only people who do not suffer their illness but actually make others suffer. I don't mean qe should make others suffer, but also we should not suffer for what we are, while others get away with it!

  • @passionatebraziliangirl.4801
    @passionatebraziliangirl.48017 жыл бұрын

    I love this scholar he is refreshing, I identify with lots of what he saying. I think love is learn we all can become more caring and compassionate by practicing.

  • @JDdr86

    @JDdr86

    3 жыл бұрын

    @Connor Mclean WRONG!

  • @breakfreak3181
    @breakfreak3181 Жыл бұрын

    Ha, how he describes his character is how people have described me behind my back, and to my face. It's also how I *know* I am, but I've never thought I was a sociopath, just slightly self-centred! I also don't care that that is how I am or how people judge me. The acting out how you *think* you should act strikes home to me. I can give and take people easily, even those people I've known for years, but make new friends easily. I'm generally not very empathic. Conversely, I'm super close to my daughter and act very empathically with her. Again, I think I'm just a bit self-centred rather than a sociopath or psychopath. It'd be interesting to have a PET scan and analysis as described.

  • @jobecker4381
    @jobecker4381 Жыл бұрын

    I have a friend who I think is this way too. I'd tell her a news headline like these girls in DC who stole a car and murdered an Uber driver, and she'd express great sympathy for the girls because she thought it was empathetic. It was actually terrifying and she broke up with me in cold blood after calling me needy after I opened up to her about my sexual assault.

  • @TheAlison1456

    @TheAlison1456

    11 ай бұрын

    holy shit... the bullet grazed you glad u are alive

  • @hintarasholtorzic9033
    @hintarasholtorzic9033 Жыл бұрын

    That was awfully interesting. Really. How someone got to know themselves to this level. Still not all the way, but surprising enough.

  • @Mehki227
    @Mehki2273 жыл бұрын

    I'm here because he was on criminal minds [S5E8]. I heard him talking and my ears picked up. I was fascinated right away. I knew he wasn't an actor.

  • @EvadoCouto

    @EvadoCouto

    2 жыл бұрын

    I love how CM does that, especially with Jim Clemente on board the whole time (I think?)

  • @WolfHeathen
    @WolfHeathen Жыл бұрын

    Your average person, if asked to approach a bomb, would get scared, anxious and nervous and tell you "Hell no! That's a BOMB! Are you insane?!", while a bomb squad member with psychopathy would say "Sure. It's a bomb and I need to disarm it or it could kill a bunch of people" because the bomb squad member has a diminished emotional state and would barely feel any fear, anxiety or nervousness. Psychopaths are absolutely essential to society.

  • @kencade6544
    @kencade6544 Жыл бұрын

    I have often felt similar to this in life-just not as overly compassionate, or as easily upset as others around me. I'm great socially with strangers, but not always easy to be with one on one. I'm not out to harm anyone, and I do deeply care for many people in my circle, but I'm wired differently for sure. I wonder if it's got more to do with my upbringing or how my brain works?

  • @TheGuardian163
    @TheGuardian1638 жыл бұрын

    In his other speeches, he said he did his own brain scan so that he could be part of the controls (they were doing brain scans of psycopaths but also needed normal people to do a comparison) Maybe I misunderstood but it sounds to me here that he's telling a different story

  • @Calucifer13

    @Calucifer13

    7 жыл бұрын

    No, he was not part of the controls, if I understand this correctly. He conducted one large psychopath/control brain test, and at the same time, he had his and his family´s brains checked for Alzheimers and psychopathy. Two different tests.

  • @leilaoa

    @leilaoa

    4 жыл бұрын

    I heard the other story too.

  • @xxsamuroxx456

    @xxsamuroxx456

    2 жыл бұрын

    Yeah I think he just wanted to do a scan of his own brain because he knew he was different his entire life and he was trying to find the perfect time to find an excuse to do a scan of his OWN brain. He knew something was off and he knew he needed a scan. Well, now he has a whole story to tell so he doesn't have to own up to the fact that he lied and just wanted to use the scan for himself lol

  • @160p2GHz

    @160p2GHz

    Жыл бұрын

    @@xxsamuroxx456 No it's what Calucifer said-- in an interview with Sci Am I think it's clarified. He was doing the psychopathy scan project, that's what he's describing at the beginning of this. After looking at a lot of these he could pick out the patterns. At the same time was part of a project on Alzheimer's and he and his family were scanned as controls for that study. He was looking at the anonymized scans for that study and realized one of them had the pattern of a psychopath brain. He wanted to know who it was and so un-anonymized them (looked up the codes and junked that data), and learned it was his scan. My guess is people are misunderstanding the story when abridged. It's not like he has much to gain changing that detail or doesn't realize he's being recorded.

  • @krose420

    @krose420

    Жыл бұрын

    EXACTLY I saw/thought the same thing

  • @raymondflavin8708
    @raymondflavin8708 Жыл бұрын

    12:51 after hearing all of this I just didn't care. Literally, perfect.

  • @SnakeAndTurtleQigong
    @SnakeAndTurtleQigong Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for sharing!

  • @gmjsimmons
    @gmjsimmons Жыл бұрын

    This was fascinating. He must have found a source of adventure and stimulation that did not include antisocial acts. Given the poor responses that psychopaths have to current change technologies, he is a study in sculpting a certain temperament type into prosocial endeavors. His retrospective analysis was amazing.

  • @LadyoftheLight
    @LadyoftheLight2 жыл бұрын

    You know what's the most disturbing thing to me about this whole talk? The audience reactions.

  • @timothyfitzgerald7394

    @timothyfitzgerald7394

    2 жыл бұрын

    100%

  • @katpage9378

    @katpage9378

    2 жыл бұрын

    Why

  • @squidward66

    @squidward66

    Жыл бұрын

    I know! One time I stood up in front of a group to tell my life story, was supposed to be serious exchange of backgrounds, I was not trying to be funny.... people were laughing so hard... I was shocked but just rolled with it.

  • @genewickersham4593

    @genewickersham4593

    Жыл бұрын

    It's the nervous laughter of an audience that is beginning to realize that they share their world with sociopaths and psychopaths, who comprise 3 and 1 % of the population. Everybody knows one or more of each type. The good news is that usually they are harmless exactly because of their inability to bond with others. They are usually loners or outsiders. The ones to watch out for are the ones who manage to attain positions in companies, governments and gangs.

  • @heartandmindovercome3214

    @heartandmindovercome3214

    Жыл бұрын

    @@genewickersham4593 good point there Gene. I'm starting to think it's a good idea to learn to just accept it. Not accept bad behavior by any means. It doesn't meant they're all malignant. Some can be pretty manipulative though, and it's good to know the difference between healthy/unhealthy relationships, how to have strong boundaries and how to spot manipulation. Really these are just good skill to obtain in becoming a mature human though.

  • @venkataaraadhya
    @venkataaraadhya Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for giving this talk. It has been very hurtful seeing how everyone, including all mental health professionals, show complete hatred towards psychopaths.

  • @ChocolateMilk..

    @ChocolateMilk..

    Жыл бұрын

    Good

  • @venkataaraadhya

    @venkataaraadhya

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ChocolateMilk.. What does that mean? Does that mean I deserve to be hated by everyone? I try my best to not be an asshole. But I cannot control myself no matter how much i try. Do i still deserve to be hated?

  • @ChocolateMilk..

    @ChocolateMilk..

    Жыл бұрын

    @@venkataaraadhya You reap what you sow.

  • @venkataaraadhya

    @venkataaraadhya

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ChocolateMilk.. Appreciate it bro. Thanks a lot for your support

  • @ChocolateMilk..

    @ChocolateMilk..

    Жыл бұрын

    @@venkataaraadhya You're welcome.

  • @euchiron
    @euchiron Жыл бұрын

    I've heard about this guy. It's fascinating to hear directly from the source!

  • @Mukkuk
    @Mukkuk Жыл бұрын

    Something that feels quite telling to me that there is something emotionally 'off' about this guy is when he makes the off-hand quip about his wife at 5:26. "She thought she was gonna die of something else; she didn't; before she died of Alzheimer's". The way he presents that remark, feels mostly to make people laugh; with zero indication of something like grief, hurt or other neurotypical emotion people feel when talking about such a heavy experience.

  • @aussiejubes

    @aussiejubes

    Жыл бұрын

    We don't know her personality, or this man personally & we don't know the dynamics of their relationship. It's as likely as anything else that her parents were very old qhen they died of alzheimers so she pragmatically made a decision she'd probably die of something else first. Or perhaps she had an illness. Perhaps the family deals with grief by shutting it down or with dark humour. There an incredible amount of presumption in these comments.

  • @connieabraham1722
    @connieabraham1722 Жыл бұрын

    Fascinating to hear but most interesting to watch. All through it he seems to be happy go lucky and fun to be around but at the very end he disconnected? What was that? Shyness? Didn't care what we thought by then? Lost his connection to us? I am rambling now but rather confused by what looked like two different people. I get the idea of lack of empathy but guess I've never seen it like that before. Thank you for sharing your self with us Mr Fallon.

  • @anotheratreyu742

    @anotheratreyu742

    Жыл бұрын

    The first was a man pretending to care.

  • @Hand_Shake

    @Hand_Shake

    Жыл бұрын

    I’d guess the first guy was the narcissist high on being the center of attention, and what happened at the end was him feeling the loss of the “drug.” The audience was only important to him as long as he was bathed in their attention, admiration, laughter,…

  • @williambender5714
    @williambender5714 Жыл бұрын

    Good place to start. If you are not naturally endowed or talented at something, you improve your competence by PRACTICING.

  • @l0gaRythm

    @l0gaRythm

    Жыл бұрын

    You ALWAYS improve your competence by practicing, there is now way around it, even if you are talented. (:

  • @MrCguzma3
    @MrCguzma3 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for sharing James. You are a good man in my book.

  • @papaspears5035
    @papaspears5035 Жыл бұрын

    Sounds like a Louie CK sketch lol. Brilliant. Not sure I'd attend a party at his house if invited 😆

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