The 10 professions with the most psychopaths
I get that you read one book on the subject, but that hardly makes you an expert. As you can see, understanding of the subject has gone a long ways in the past 15 years.
... I think I already indicated earlier that it has, a little. So, don't make me out like I'm 'behind the times.'
It should be needless to say, but psychopaths are in all sorts different professions. Some of these are even beneficial where quick decisions and lack of empathy are a benefit.
In short...you're wrong. There's a high prevalence of them amongst surgeons. There's no reason to believe they cannot follow an ethical code.
...yeah, that's always good to know, especially the next time "they" want to do brain surgery on me, ay?
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And now, back to our original programming ...
When are you going to figure out that this thread ISN'T about sociopaths. It's actually about the processes that go into our acts of differentiating moral potential and behavior from immoral potential and behavior, between differentiating between the extremes of utter moral relativism on one hand and sheer absolutism on the other hand, with a consideration to the varying understandings we have of Subjectivity and Objectivity as they play a role in our moral deliberations (whatever those are and would be within the realm of 'doing ethics' and being moral).
Does this make sense? (I think it does ... and it should to you, too!)
So, thanks for the 'business insider' article, for whatever generalistic 'stuff' it may be worth, but my focus and beginning point, as it is tied into my OP, is more on things like the following items for the purposes of this thread:
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Korkut, Yesim, and Carole Sinclair. "Integrating emotion and other nonrational factors into ethics education and training in professional psychology." Ethics & Behavior (2020): 1-15.
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Leach, Mark M., and Elizabeth Reynolds Welfel, eds. The Cambridge Handbook of Applied Psychological Ethics. Cambridge University Press, 2018.
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McCutcheon, Jeni L. "Emerging ethical issues in police and public safety psychology: Reflections on mandatory vs. aspirational ethics." In Police psychology and its growing impact on modern law enforcement, pp. 314-334. IGI Global, 2017.
Meyers, Chris D. "Defending moral realism from empirical evidence of disagreement." Social theory and practice 39, no. 3 (2013): 373-396.
Monroe, K. R. (2017). Biology, Psychology, Ethics, and Politics: An Innate Moral Sense?. In On Human Nature (pp. 757-770). Academic Press.
Merkur, Dan. Jung's Ethics: Moral Psychology and His Cure of Souls. Taylor & Francis, 2017.
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Hagenaars, P. (2016). Towards a human rights based and oriented psychology. Psychology and Developing Societies, 28(2), 183-202.
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Pope, Kenneth S., and Melba JT Vasquez. Ethics in psychotherapy and counseling: A practical guide. John Wiley & Sons, 2016.
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Parsonson, Karen L. "Is Teaching International Ethics Codes Important for Psychology Graduate Students?." Ethical Human Psychology and Psychiatry (2020).
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Sauer, Hanno. "Between Facts and Norms: Ethics and Empirical Moral Psychology." In Moral Psychology, pp. 5-27. Springer, Cham, 2017.
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Sauer, Hanno. "It’s the Knobe effect, stupid!." Review of Philosophy and Psychology 5, no. 4 (2014): 485-503.
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Sutton, M. (2017). Summary Notes on Nietzsche's Ethics.
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Yona, Sergio. Epicurean Ethics in Horace: The Psychology of Satire. Oxford University Press, 2018.
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... and so on, and so on, and so on, and so forth!