anathegram wrote:OP, you seem to be very confused about the characteristics of psychopathy, the diagnosis of SPD, and the function of serotonin and other neurotransmitters. If you are interested in learning more about any of those topics I'd be happy to find you some informational resources.
Ah, I see that you- one of the people who just participated in the group behavior of disruptively de-railing an informative internet forum thread (this one) by posting about trivial off-topic matters therein, are now exhibiting the psychopathic disruptive behavior of falsely portraying someone as having characteristics that are the polar opposite of what they have demonstrated, for the purpose of discreditting important information that is against the interests of psychopaths. Your particular acts of false portrayal are especially hilarious because the subjects that you mention are, and have been, some of my top areas of research, both academically/professionally and privately, throughout the many years of my adult life, and I am involved in cutting-edge research therein.
False-portrayal behaviors, which come in many varieties (which are distinguished by both the thing that they are falsely portraying, and their method of deception; for example, use of second-person wording to deceive third parties), are the single most characteristic symptom of high-functioning psychopaths. False-portrayal behaviors, like the other characteristic behaviors of high-functioning psychopaths, are caused by sensations of disruptive self-blinding/self-deluding focus and intent. Those sensations are caused by serotonin and nonapeptides binding to particular receptors thereof, the quantity of which are in turn caused mostly by genetics. The psychopathic affinity for opposites- that is to say, their inclination to falsely portray things as their polar opposite, derives from the fact that such false portrayal disrupts the truth as much as possible, and therefore gives the psychopath as much satisfaction as possible.