Is CEO the profession with the most psychopaths? Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara Planned maintenance scheduled April 17/18, 2019 at 00:00UTC (8:00pm US/Eastern)Did most sex workers experience abuse as a child?Do most economists consider lump of labor to be a fallacy?Do Psychopaths act all (or most) of the time?Are psychopaths more intelligent than people in general?Are there fewer Americans in the labor force than in 1979?Are Soldiers Overdiagnosed with PTSD in the US Military?Is profanity correlated with trustworthiness and honesty?Is the “Most people are sheep” video genuine?Do men prefer women with long hair?“Women rate the strongest men as the most attractive” …or is it always so?

Multi tool use
Multi tool use

Is it ethical to give a final exam after the professor has quit before teaching the remaining chapters of the course?

Using audio cues to encourage good posture

Why are the trig functions versine, haversine, exsecant, etc, rarely used in modern mathematics?

Around usage results

Can a party unilaterally change candidates in preparation for a General election?

Can melee weapons be used to deliver Contact Poisons?

How does the math work when buying airline miles?

Where are Serre’s lectures at Collège de France to be found?

Wu formula for manifolds with boundary

How to react to hostile behavior from a senior developer?

Is it common practice to audition new musicians 1-2-1 before rehearsing with the entire band?

First console to have temporary backward compatibility

What causes the direction of lightning flashes?

Why does the resolve message appear first?

What do you call a floor made of glass so you can see through the floor?

How to answer "Have you ever been terminated?"

Using et al. for a last / senior author rather than for a first author

Did MS DOS itself ever use blinking text?

How could we fake a moon landing now?

When a candle burns, why does the top of wick glow if bottom of flame is hottest?

Why wasn't DOSKEY integrated with COMMAND.COM?

Why are both D and D# fitting into my E minor key?

Trademark violation for app?

Amount of permutations on an NxNxN Rubik's Cube



Is CEO the profession with the most psychopaths?



Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara
Planned maintenance scheduled April 17/18, 2019 at 00:00UTC (8:00pm US/Eastern)Did most sex workers experience abuse as a child?Do most economists consider lump of labor to be a fallacy?Do Psychopaths act all (or most) of the time?Are psychopaths more intelligent than people in general?Are there fewer Americans in the labor force than in 1979?Are Soldiers Overdiagnosed with PTSD in the US Military?Is profanity correlated with trustworthiness and honesty?Is the “Most people are sheep” video genuine?Do men prefer women with long hair?“Women rate the strongest men as the most attractive” …or is it always so?










4















An opinion article in Time has this subheading:




CEO is the profession with the most psychopaths.




This may have been added by a headline editor though, because the article body doesn't flesh out the fact that well, besides this (ordered?) list



enter image description here



It's not impossible that the book cited may have made that claim too though (I didn't check.) Anyway, is there high quality empirical to back up this claim that CEOs have the most (or at least a large number) of psychopaths compared to other occupations?



(I do note that Time marked the article as opinion, perhaps to distance itself from the claims therein. Nevertheless, the claim in question is stated as a bare fact therein.)










share|improve this question
























  • I have seen credible accounts from several respected psychologists and psycho-scientists that strongly associate psychopathy and related disorders with CEOism. I've never seen any sort of rigorous survey of this, however.

    – Daniel R Hicks
    1 min ago















4















An opinion article in Time has this subheading:




CEO is the profession with the most psychopaths.




This may have been added by a headline editor though, because the article body doesn't flesh out the fact that well, besides this (ordered?) list



enter image description here



It's not impossible that the book cited may have made that claim too though (I didn't check.) Anyway, is there high quality empirical to back up this claim that CEOs have the most (or at least a large number) of psychopaths compared to other occupations?



(I do note that Time marked the article as opinion, perhaps to distance itself from the claims therein. Nevertheless, the claim in question is stated as a bare fact therein.)










share|improve this question
























  • I have seen credible accounts from several respected psychologists and psycho-scientists that strongly associate psychopathy and related disorders with CEOism. I've never seen any sort of rigorous survey of this, however.

    – Daniel R Hicks
    1 min ago













4












4








4








An opinion article in Time has this subheading:




CEO is the profession with the most psychopaths.




This may have been added by a headline editor though, because the article body doesn't flesh out the fact that well, besides this (ordered?) list



enter image description here



It's not impossible that the book cited may have made that claim too though (I didn't check.) Anyway, is there high quality empirical to back up this claim that CEOs have the most (or at least a large number) of psychopaths compared to other occupations?



(I do note that Time marked the article as opinion, perhaps to distance itself from the claims therein. Nevertheless, the claim in question is stated as a bare fact therein.)










share|improve this question
















An opinion article in Time has this subheading:




CEO is the profession with the most psychopaths.




This may have been added by a headline editor though, because the article body doesn't flesh out the fact that well, besides this (ordered?) list



enter image description here



It's not impossible that the book cited may have made that claim too though (I didn't check.) Anyway, is there high quality empirical to back up this claim that CEOs have the most (or at least a large number) of psychopaths compared to other occupations?



(I do note that Time marked the article as opinion, perhaps to distance itself from the claims therein. Nevertheless, the claim in question is stated as a bare fact therein.)







psychology labor






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 7 hours ago







Fizz

















asked 7 hours ago









FizzFizz

10k13780




10k13780












  • I have seen credible accounts from several respected psychologists and psycho-scientists that strongly associate psychopathy and related disorders with CEOism. I've never seen any sort of rigorous survey of this, however.

    – Daniel R Hicks
    1 min ago

















  • I have seen credible accounts from several respected psychologists and psycho-scientists that strongly associate psychopathy and related disorders with CEOism. I've never seen any sort of rigorous survey of this, however.

    – Daniel R Hicks
    1 min ago
















I have seen credible accounts from several respected psychologists and psycho-scientists that strongly associate psychopathy and related disorders with CEOism. I've never seen any sort of rigorous survey of this, however.

– Daniel R Hicks
1 min ago





I have seen credible accounts from several respected psychologists and psycho-scientists that strongly associate psychopathy and related disorders with CEOism. I've never seen any sort of rigorous survey of this, however.

– Daniel R Hicks
1 min ago










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















7














The table provided is directly copied from Page 173 of The Wisdom of Psychopaths.



It explains the source is The Great British Psychopath Study, where self-selected people submit their own Levenson Self-Report Psychopathy Scale, and categorise themselves according to a list of a hundred or so occupations.



The occupations listed notably do not include "manager" or "CEO", but do include "Chairman/President of company" and "Managing Director".



Given the self-selection and the lack of validation of the data (e.g. people might deliberately skew the results with fake data), the results should be treated with some skepticism.






share|improve this answer























  • One has to wonder how many CEOs have had the time and interest to fill that form...

    – Fizz
    4 mins ago



















1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









7














The table provided is directly copied from Page 173 of The Wisdom of Psychopaths.



It explains the source is The Great British Psychopath Study, where self-selected people submit their own Levenson Self-Report Psychopathy Scale, and categorise themselves according to a list of a hundred or so occupations.



The occupations listed notably do not include "manager" or "CEO", but do include "Chairman/President of company" and "Managing Director".



Given the self-selection and the lack of validation of the data (e.g. people might deliberately skew the results with fake data), the results should be treated with some skepticism.






share|improve this answer























  • One has to wonder how many CEOs have had the time and interest to fill that form...

    – Fizz
    4 mins ago
















7














The table provided is directly copied from Page 173 of The Wisdom of Psychopaths.



It explains the source is The Great British Psychopath Study, where self-selected people submit their own Levenson Self-Report Psychopathy Scale, and categorise themselves according to a list of a hundred or so occupations.



The occupations listed notably do not include "manager" or "CEO", but do include "Chairman/President of company" and "Managing Director".



Given the self-selection and the lack of validation of the data (e.g. people might deliberately skew the results with fake data), the results should be treated with some skepticism.






share|improve this answer























  • One has to wonder how many CEOs have had the time and interest to fill that form...

    – Fizz
    4 mins ago














7












7








7







The table provided is directly copied from Page 173 of The Wisdom of Psychopaths.



It explains the source is The Great British Psychopath Study, where self-selected people submit their own Levenson Self-Report Psychopathy Scale, and categorise themselves according to a list of a hundred or so occupations.



The occupations listed notably do not include "manager" or "CEO", but do include "Chairman/President of company" and "Managing Director".



Given the self-selection and the lack of validation of the data (e.g. people might deliberately skew the results with fake data), the results should be treated with some skepticism.






share|improve this answer













The table provided is directly copied from Page 173 of The Wisdom of Psychopaths.



It explains the source is The Great British Psychopath Study, where self-selected people submit their own Levenson Self-Report Psychopathy Scale, and categorise themselves according to a list of a hundred or so occupations.



The occupations listed notably do not include "manager" or "CEO", but do include "Chairman/President of company" and "Managing Director".



Given the self-selection and the lack of validation of the data (e.g. people might deliberately skew the results with fake data), the results should be treated with some skepticism.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered 3 hours ago









OddthinkingOddthinking

102k31427531




102k31427531












  • One has to wonder how many CEOs have had the time and interest to fill that form...

    – Fizz
    4 mins ago


















  • One has to wonder how many CEOs have had the time and interest to fill that form...

    – Fizz
    4 mins ago

















One has to wonder how many CEOs have had the time and interest to fill that form...

– Fizz
4 mins ago






One has to wonder how many CEOs have had the time and interest to fill that form...

– Fizz
4 mins ago




clPBiLmSk4LMT6La37U1mJ j2dlp Mw qQif9VRPDHb2Xrcjj X4H8S6gAu4 jFVuSt
gUlxGc99OHm39

Popular posts from this blog

Creating centerline of river in QGIS? The 2019 Stack Overflow Developer Survey Results Are In Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara Planned maintenance scheduled April 17/18, 2019 at 00:00UTC (8:00pm US/Eastern)Finding centrelines from polygons in QGIS?Splitting line into two lines with GRASS GIS?Centroid of the equator and a pointpostgis: problems creating flow direction polyline; not all needed connections are drawnhow to make decent sense from scattered river depth measurementsQGIS Interpolation on Curved Grid (River DEMs)How to create automatic parking baysShortest path creation between two linesclipping layer using query builder in QGISFinding which side of closest polyline point lies on in QGIS?Create centerline from multi-digitized roadway lines Qgis 2.18Getting bathymetric contours confined only within river banks using QGIS?

What is the result of assigning to std::vector::begin()? The Next CEO of Stack OverflowWhat are the differences between a pointer variable and a reference variable in C++?What does the explicit keyword mean?Concatenating two std::vectorsHow to find out if an item is present in a std::vector?Why is “using namespace std” considered bad practice?What is the “-->” operator in C++?What is the easiest way to initialize a std::vector with hardcoded elements?What is The Rule of Three?What are the basic rules and idioms for operator overloading?Why are std::begin and std::end “not memory safe”?