RE: Do we have psychopaths in out mist?
December 11, 2013 at 8:22 pm
(This post was last modified: December 11, 2013 at 8:25 pm by StrongWaters.)
(December 11, 2013 at 3:43 pm)Lemonvariable72 Wrote: I have been reading posts from certain users and I can not but think they are psychopaths, does anyone else see this?
I agree. Most Atheists exhibit this behavior. Lack of social controls come from rebellion against the natural laws engaged in nature and an unwillingness to value authority. The symmetry and beauty nature displays is directly inverse to the invariant and translational symmetries governing the Proton and Neutron (Strong Nuclear Force). The strong forces heels (authority over) the weak. This is why a Christian can remain patient under adversity. Turning the other cheek is an out-flowing of the Spirit within. What's in the well comes up in the bucket. Patience is a person's threshold of restraint before going negative.
The laws of nature are invariant, just as a platonic solid is the same no matter how you rotate it. Goodness, as mirrored by wickedness, is a condition of the heart that comes out clearly when ad hominem attacks manifest from inside to outside. I will offer proof of this later in this thread as we measure patience and kind words from those who respond. For now, read the definition of psychopathic behavior. Judge for yourself. I am a Christian with a wide understanding of what it means to have patience, gentleness, goodness and kindness. It's something I work on each day.
I look forward to good conversation centered on goodness and heartfelt answers. I have come to expect brotherly love from you guys.
"Psychopathy (/saɪˈkɒpəθi/) (or sociopathy (/ˈsoʊsiəˌpæθi/)) is defined as either an aspect of personality or as a personality disorder, characterized by enduring dissocial or antisocial behavior, a diminished capacity for empathy or remorse, and poor behavioral controls or fearless dominance. There are various definitions which are only partly overlapping and sometimes appear contradictory." Wikipedia