Psychopathology

Psychopathy (i.e. “without a soul,” where the soul is a sense of one’s own and human dignity, a sense of the significance and value of one’s personality, as well as its vulnerability and suffering) manifests itself in a person in a complex of character traits, which in turn make up the “Kernighan triad” : superficial, unstable mood, hypersocial behavior (the tendency to act in such a way that one’s actions will bring approval from others), thinking (persistent lies, a pronounced lack of guilt and cynicism), which leads to social maladjustment (“hostile adaptive behavior towards society and others his people"). A psychopathic personality has characteristic pathocharacterological signs that are found: - in those people who are congenitally predisposed to this type; - this type initially manifests itself as an extreme variant of the norm; - arise immediately after birth and are subsequently formed under the influence of mechanisms of biological and social (social) decomposition of behavior. In other words, society influences the development of the individual as a bearer of certain typical mental states and modes of behavior, that is, qualities that manifest themselves in the context of motives and goals that are formed as the individual grows. The social environment (the life of society) forms the genetically determined natural properties of the individual and at the same time determines the entire set of mental phenomena, including character. As a result, there is a mutual influence of the socialization process (the formation of personal structure and properties in