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maffa303's review against another edition
3.0
A really interesting and well written book on the characteristics of psychopathy and how psychopaths are different from others. The idea of the psychopathic spectrum is interesting, and the way he talks about the potential benefits of psychopathic tendencies is fascinating. Overall a very good interesting read, although I think it is a better read for those with some background in science as a fair amount of terminology is used.
ethanjarrell's review against another edition
5.0
I loved this book! It was the perfect amount of history, psychology and opinion. It is much more based on psychological studies, facts, figures and research, and is meant to be more of a scientific approach to the subject, rather than a self help book or opinion book. Some might find that approach boring, but if you like the fact driven approach that you can form your own opinions from, this is a great one. I would also recommend the author's follow up book to this, "The good psychopath"
marsius's review against another edition
2.0
Though it starts out brilliantly and with a fantastic premise, The Wisdom of Psychopaths is ultimately disappointing. To begin with, based on its caption and description, one would expect a fascinating review of research, followed by a discussion of the implications of that research, and finally concluding with application of that research and those implications---"self-help" of sorts, but with a backing of footnotes, endnotes, and hard science (indeed, if, like me, you learned about this book and Dr. Dutton based on his interviews, this is the exact impression given). Here, we get the overview of research and some discussion of the implications, but no application. This issue ultimately affects the conclusion, largely in that there really is not a conclusion. We reach the end with little warning and effectively no wrap-up. As a result, "The Wisdom of Psychopaths" fails both as a piece of writing and to achieve its explicit point---what can be learned and applied from research on psychopathy.
Dr. Dutton's writing also frequently fails to be clear. His prose is congenial, easy to read, and seemingly easy to follow. He has a habit, however, of dropping important concepts into your lap with little warning and less fanfare before moving on and not mentioning the concept again for a dozen or more pages, where, with no new introduction of the concept (or, indeed, often of even the acronym), the discussion suddenly centers on the implications of three factors (brushed over with little note in a previous chapter) and their interaction or interoperability with this concept. The result ends up being a frustrating experience of flipping between pages and constant attempts to separate the obiter dictum from the ratio decidendi (though, on the bright side, these frustrations did give me cause to learn a substantial amount about the Kindle Paperwhite's note-taking and page-marking features).
All of these negatives aside, "The Wisdom of Psychopaths" does remain a fascinating read. Though occasionally opaque, Dr. Dutton's prose holds the attention and his passion and interest in his own research marks every paragraph. Likewise, his examples, research, and anecdotes used to illustrate most concepts (though, again, as mentioned above and quite frustratingly, often not those most central to his point) captivated my attention. Beyond anything else, my insight and understanding certainly grew.
The problem, however, is that, despite being a quite interesting book and even one which held my attention, it's not a particularly good book. The flaws of structure and style detract massively from what is otherwise a fascinating read, and what could have been a great book is instead reduced to one which is only "okay."
Dr. Dutton's writing also frequently fails to be clear. His prose is congenial, easy to read, and seemingly easy to follow. He has a habit, however, of dropping important concepts into your lap with little warning and less fanfare before moving on and not mentioning the concept again for a dozen or more pages, where, with no new introduction of the concept (or, indeed, often of even the acronym), the discussion suddenly centers on the implications of three factors (brushed over with little note in a previous chapter) and their interaction or interoperability with this concept. The result ends up being a frustrating experience of flipping between pages and constant attempts to separate the obiter dictum from the ratio decidendi (though, on the bright side, these frustrations did give me cause to learn a substantial amount about the Kindle Paperwhite's note-taking and page-marking features).
All of these negatives aside, "The Wisdom of Psychopaths" does remain a fascinating read. Though occasionally opaque, Dr. Dutton's prose holds the attention and his passion and interest in his own research marks every paragraph. Likewise, his examples, research, and anecdotes used to illustrate most concepts (though, again, as mentioned above and quite frustratingly, often not those most central to his point) captivated my attention. Beyond anything else, my insight and understanding certainly grew.
The problem, however, is that, despite being a quite interesting book and even one which held my attention, it's not a particularly good book. The flaws of structure and style detract massively from what is otherwise a fascinating read, and what could have been a great book is instead reduced to one which is only "okay."
sweetbabylu's review against another edition
3.0
Maybe 3.5 stars. Very interesting book but wasn’t what I expected. Yes there is some “wisdom from psychopaths” in the end but there are a lot of experiments that he details that jump around. I thought it was going to be wisdom from specific psychopaths but it’s more of why psychopaths are the way they are and prove their different stimulus’ through experiment.
nishaand's review against another edition
dark
informative
inspiring
medium-paced
4.25
Very interesting perspective. Psychopathy in a positive light. Would recommend.
medema22's review against another edition
inspiring
reflective
fast-paced
3.0
The title of the book is misleading quite a lot. The simple idea behind the book is that psychopath tend not to rely or be able to feel some emotions and why sometimes this can be good for people which I agree, he tries to put a light on where and when suppressing our emotions can be a good idea.
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If you think this is going to be a book about the actual psychology of real criminals, it’s not.
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If you think this is going to be a book about the actual psychology of real criminals, it’s not.