Is DAE a terms that is often uses withing some community or is that something you made to formulate your thinking here?
If it’s a unique term of your for this analysis I’m curious as to why you chose that approach rather than using an existing term, like sociopath/sociopathic which seems to be both more broadly known and applied. (Not just how sure Healthline is in terms of definitional rigor here but https://www.healthline.com/health/mental-health/sociopath#signs) They seem to cover what you include as well as some other aspect.
It’s more specific than sociopathy. Also, terms like sociopath/psychopath are problematic because people have a lot of associations with those terms, not all of them accurate, and so I thought it would be better to be more precise about what I mean and also to avoid terms that people have connations around.
Is DAE a terms that is often uses withing some community or is that something you made to formulate your thinking here?
If it’s a unique term of your for this analysis I’m curious as to why you chose that approach rather than using an existing term, like sociopath/sociopathic which seems to be both more broadly known and applied. (Not just how sure Healthline is in terms of definitional rigor here but https://www.healthline.com/health/mental-health/sociopath#signs) They seem to cover what you include as well as some other aspect.
It’s more specific than sociopathy. Also, terms like sociopath/psychopath are problematic because people have a lot of associations with those terms, not all of them accurate, and so I thought it would be better to be more precise about what I mean and also to avoid terms that people have connations around.
Thanks.
If you click the link where OP introduces the term, it’s the Wikipedia page for psychopathy. Wiki lists 3 primary traits for it, one of which is DAE
Is there a specific reason ‘affective’ was chosen instead of ‘emotional’ in the naming?
Is it also a connotation issue?