Serial killers: Are they born or are they made?

On November 13, 2020, Peter Sutliffee died of the North Durham hospital after refusing treatment for Coddy-19. Known as Yorkshire Ripper, Sutliffe was convicted of killing 13 women and attempted killing seven others between 1975-1980. At any moment, Sutlifaffe did not regret what he had done. What [...]
On November 13, 2020, Peter Sutliffee died of the North Durham hospital after refusing treatment for Coddy-19. Known as Yorkshire Ripper, Sutliffe was convicted of killing 13 women and attempted killing seven others between 1975-1980. At any moment, Sutlifaffe did not regret what he had done.
What made Sutcliffe and others like that people that became?
Ted Bundy counted 30 murders, Pedro Rodriguez Filho, 70 and Louis Garavito, 138 killing children on the street.
Were they born killers or something that changed them along the way and made them?
neuroscientist Jim Fallon has some doubts. He thought psycho killers were born that way, and he believed he had begun to find evidence of it.
It wasn't me. It was my brain.
After an examination of the brain of several killers through a scanner, Fallon was able to see a pattern.
To prove his ideas objectively, he filed a blind trial. His colleagues sent him 70 brain scans: Some were people with a diagnosis, such as schizophrenic or depression, some were from undiagnosed people, and some were convicted murderers.
Fallon successfully identified all <x0) assassin”.
“They all had one” in common, says Fallon. “A loss of function in orbital cortex, above the eyes, which is the circuit that “translates” ethics, morality, conscience, and when this has disappeared, or isn't developed, the person has no moral sense and little control over its impulses.
Anyway, Jim Fallon found himself near an unpleasant surprise.
He had organized brain scans for ten members of his family as checks for a project he was conducting on Alzheimer's disease vulnerability. Seeing these scans one afternoon of October, he was shocked to see one that looked exactly like the worst “body of a serial killer”.
Then he discovered that he was looking at a scan of his brain.
I was studying serial killers and I found out I have a brain that looks like one. ”
Fallon had also examined His family's DNA as part of Alzheimer's project. When he checked them, he found normal, balanced combinations. Except one.
One of the tests had all these high-risk violence elements. And of course, it turned out it was me again. Now it got a little more serious, because it turns out I had brains and genetics in accordance with those of a killer. ”
If Fallan's research was right, and he was sure it was, then how come he wasn't a murderer, a Peter Sutliffee, a Ted Bundy, or a Louis Garavito?
He suggested that while brain abnormality and genes related to aggression and violence were necessary causes of psychosy aggression, they were not enough. There had to be something else. And for Fallon, this “something else” could come from childhood.
Fallo believes that his happy, secure childhood may have protected him.
Maybe the neuron didn't have all the answers after all?
For all my colleagues I was like Mr. Genetic”, Fallon says. I always said that genetics controls everything and that's all the answers, but I admit I was wrong. So I had to study more. ”
So he came to: “Unholy Trinity” Holy Tresh!
For Fallon, there are three necessary components that can produce psycho killers when combined.
The first is one loss of function in orbital cortex!, which may leave people incapable of ethical decision making and also makes them less capable of controlling their impulses.
The second is Next generationAs is genius MAOA, which predisposes a person to aggression and violence.
And third, having a childhood with no loveAnd perfection and care that it cannot protect people from their hidden psychopathology. Peter Sutcliffe, Ted Bundy, Pedro Rodriguez Filho, and Louis Garavito all had troubled or abusive childhoods.
We started by asking if there really are birth killers.
Well, looks like the answer is yes and no.
Better say there are potential/potential birth killers.
If that terrible potential is realized, it depends on environmental impacts and, in particular, love given, or denied, in early childhood.
Source Layer: Psychology Today










