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  • We all know about the psychopath’s enhanced killer instinct, their finely tuned vulnerability

  • antennaeBut it may surprise you to know that there are some situations in

  • which psychopaths are actually more adept at saving lives than they are at taking them.

  • So let me give you an example of what I mean by thatokay?  Imagine youve got a train

  • and it’s hurtling down a track.  In its path, five people are trapped on the line

  • and cannot escape. Fortunately, you can flick a switch, which

  • diverts the train downfork in that track, away from those five people, but at a priceThere

  • is another person trapped down that fork and the train will kill them instead. Question:

  •  Should you flick the switch?

  • Now, most people have little trouble deciding what to do under those

  • circumstances; though, the thought of flicking the switch isn’t

  • exactly a nice one, the utilitarian choice as it were, killing just

  • the one person instead of the five represents the least worst option,

  • okay.

  • But now let me give you a variation. Youve got a

  • train speeding out of control down a track and it’s gonna plow into

  • five people on the line.  But this time you are standing behind a very

  • large stranger on a footbridge above that track. The only way

  • to save the people is to heave the stranger over.  He will fall to a

  • certain death, but his considerable bulk will block the train, saving

  • five lives.  Question.  Should you flick the switch?

  • Now weve got what we might call a real dilemma on our

  • hands, okay.  While the score in lives is precisely the same as in the

  • first scenario, five to one, one’s choice of action appears far

  • trickier.  Now why should that be?  Well, the reason it turns out, all

  • boils down to temperature, okay?

  • Case one represents what we might call an impersonal

  • dilemma.  It involved those areas of the brain, the prefrontal cortex,

  • the posterior parietal cortex, in particular, the anterior para

  • singular cortex, the temporal pole and the superior temporal sulcus -

  • bit of neuroanatomy for you there - primarily responsible for what we

  • call cold empathy, for reasoning and rational thought.

  • Case two, on the other hand, represents what we might

  • call a personal dilemma.  It involves the emotion center of the brain

  • known as the amygdala, the circuitry of hot empathy.  What we might

  • call the feeling of feeling what another person is feeling.

  • Now, psychopaths, just like most normal members of the

  • population, have no trouble at all with case one.  They flick the

  • switch and the train   diverts accordingly.  Killing just the one person

  • instead of the five.  But, this is where the plot thickens.  Quite

  • unlike normal members of the population, psychopaths also experience

  • little difficulty with case two.

  • Psychopaths, without a moment’s hesitation are perfectly

  • willing to chuck the fat guy over the rails, if that’s what the doctor

  • orders.  Now moreover, this difference in behavior has a distinct

  • neural signature.  The pattern of brain activation in both normal

  • people and psychopaths is identical on the presentation of the

  • impersonal moral dilemma, but radically different when things start to

  • get a bit more personal.

  • Imagine that I were to hook you up to a brain scanner, a

  • functional magnetic resonance imaging machine, and were to present

  • you with those two dilemmas, okay.  What would I observe as you went about

  • trying to solve them?  Well, at the precise moment that the nature of

  • the dilemma switches from impersonal to personal, I would see the

  • emotion center of your brain, your amygdala and related brain

  • circuits, the medial orbital frontal cortex for example, light up like

  • a pinball machine.  I would witness the moment in other words when

  • emotion puts it money in the slot.

  • But in psychopaths, I would see precisely nothing.  And

  • the passage from impersonal to personal would slip by unnoticed.

  • Because that emotion neighborhood of their brains, that emotional zip

  • code has a neural curfew.  And that’s why theyre perfectly happy to

  • chuck that fat guy over the side without even batting an eye.

  • Directed / Produced by Jonathan Fowler & Elizabeth Rodd

We all know about the psychopath’s enhanced killer instinct, their finely tuned vulnerability

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