Author: | Christopher S. Hyatt, Nicholas Tharcher | ISBN: | 9781618693211 |
Publisher: | The Original Falcon Press | Publication: | June 6, 2013 |
Imprint: | Language: | English |
Author: | Christopher S. Hyatt, Nicholas Tharcher |
ISBN: | 9781618693211 |
Publisher: | The Original Falcon Press |
Publication: | June 6, 2013 |
Imprint: | |
Language: | English |
In the most of the world, psychopaths have gotten a bad rap. That, of course, is quite understandable since almost all of the world's religious and social philosophies have little use for the individual except as a tool to be placed in service to their notion of something else: 'God,' or the 'collective,' or the 'higher good' or some other equally undefinable term. Only rarely, such as in Zen; in Ayn Rand's philosophy of Objectivism; in some aspects of Tibetan Buddhism and Hinduism; and in some schools of Existentialism, is the individual considered primal. Here, finally, is a book which celebrates, encourages and educates the best part of ourselves --- The Psychopath.
This second revised edition includes over 100 pages of new 'workbook' material including exercises, 'tests' and techniques.
In the most of the world, psychopaths have gotten a bad rap. That, of course, is quite understandable since almost all of the world's religious and social philosophies have little use for the individual except as a tool to be placed in service to their notion of something else: 'God,' or the 'collective,' or the 'higher good' or some other equally undefinable term. Only rarely, such as in Zen; in Ayn Rand's philosophy of Objectivism; in some aspects of Tibetan Buddhism and Hinduism; and in some schools of Existentialism, is the individual considered primal. Here, finally, is a book which celebrates, encourages and educates the best part of ourselves --- The Psychopath.
This second revised edition includes over 100 pages of new 'workbook' material including exercises, 'tests' and techniques.