The intersection between the set of sociopaths and the set of university professors is not necessarily empty. However, claiming that this behavior is normal among males is outright sexist defamation. It’s like, after sharing a story of being robbed by a black person you said: “You might think my robber was an antisocial person, but no—they are a normal black person”
Over 20% of women in the U.S. experience domestic violence. The incidence of sociopathy is at or below 5% so it’s more likely that an abusive male in a relationship is not a sociopath. In India it actually is the “normal male” who is abusive, with the domestic violence rate against women at 50%, although I didn’t see any analysis of whether it is a flat 50% of head-of-household males engaged in violence or a higher level of violence perpetrated by a few male family members in extended families.
This isn’t directly related, but according to one study, at least 5% of male college students are rapists, with an average of 5 attempted rapes each. And it’s plausible that the study detects most rapists. This doesn’t necessarily mean that most rapists are sociopaths, though.
Over 20% of women in the U.S. experience domestic violence. The incidence of sociopathy is at or below 5% so it’s more likely that an abusive male in a relationship is not a sociopath.
That isn’t logically valid. It’s possible for a single person to abuse more than one woman. Therefore, the percentage of abusers in the population is likely lower than the percentage of abused. I don’t know how much lower that is, but “less than 10%” is entirely plausible.
It’s also possible for the same person (e.g. a child or teenager) to receive abuse from more than one person (e.g. both parents). This may counterbalance the above somewhat.
(On the other hand, it seems rather certain that the proportion of rape victims is higher than the proportion of rapists, since IIRC almost all rapists are repeat offenders.)
I’d argue that being a repeat offender is, for any crime and especially those with low conviction rates, more likely than being a repeat victim, by simple logic of “an offender chooses, a victim does not.” You are right, though, in that I should have mentioned the possibility.
That isn’t logically valid. It’s possible for a single person to abuse more than one woman. Therefore, the percentage of abusers in the population is likely lower than the percentage of abused. I don’t know how much lower that is, but “less than 10%” is entirely plausible.
There’s also a potential confounding effect if a higher percentage of abusers and abused remain in the same set of relationships, e.g. an abused person moves from one abuser to the next. It looks like sociopathy/psychopathy has a higher prevalence in the abuser population, about 15% to 30% for “batterers”, from Domestic violence and psychopathic traits: distinguishing the antisocial batterer from other antisocial offenders., with a non-paywall version here. Most of the studies those results are based on seem to be relatively small (N < 100) and essentially self-selected, but I couldn’t find anything better.
Over 20% of women in the U.S. experience domestic violence.
The Wikipedia article you linked doesn’t reference the source of that claim. Anyway, IIUC a large part of abuse comes from relatively few perpetrators.
Over 20% of women in the U.S. experience domestic violence. The incidence of sociopathy is at or below 5% so it’s more likely that an abusive male in a relationship is not a sociopath. In India it actually is the “normal male” who is abusive, with the domestic violence rate against women at 50%, although I didn’t see any analysis of whether it is a flat 50% of head-of-household males engaged in violence or a higher level of violence perpetrated by a few male family members in extended families.
This isn’t directly related, but according to one study, at least 5% of male college students are rapists, with an average of 5 attempted rapes each. And it’s plausible that the study detects most rapists. This doesn’t necessarily mean that most rapists are sociopaths, though.
The study also shows that most of the recidive rapists also commit other forms of abuse, which is consistent with a sociopathic personality.
That isn’t logically valid. It’s possible for a single person to abuse more than one woman. Therefore, the percentage of abusers in the population is likely lower than the percentage of abused. I don’t know how much lower that is, but “less than 10%” is entirely plausible.
It’s also possible for the same person (e.g. a child or teenager) to receive abuse from more than one person (e.g. both parents). This may counterbalance the above somewhat.
(On the other hand, it seems rather certain that the proportion of rape victims is higher than the proportion of rapists, since IIRC almost all rapists are repeat offenders.)
I’d argue that being a repeat offender is, for any crime and especially those with low conviction rates, more likely than being a repeat victim, by simple logic of “an offender chooses, a victim does not.” You are right, though, in that I should have mentioned the possibility.
Don’t suppose anyone has a source for this? I can see how it could come about, but it would be nice to have something solid.
Good catch. The Harvard rape study (Lisak & Miller 2002) claims 63%, which my brain had apparently rounded up to “almost all”. Sigh. Silly brain.
There’s also a potential confounding effect if a higher percentage of abusers and abused remain in the same set of relationships, e.g. an abused person moves from one abuser to the next. It looks like sociopathy/psychopathy has a higher prevalence in the abuser population, about 15% to 30% for “batterers”, from Domestic violence and psychopathic traits: distinguishing the antisocial batterer from other antisocial offenders., with a non-paywall version here. Most of the studies those results are based on seem to be relatively small (N < 100) and essentially self-selected, but I couldn’t find anything better.
The Wikipedia article you linked doesn’t reference the source of that claim. Anyway, IIUC a large part of abuse comes from relatively few perpetrators.