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The Journal of Psychology
Interdisciplinary and Applied
Volume 149, 2015 - Issue 6
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Original Articles

Evidence for an Evolutionary Cheater Strategy—Relationships Between Primary and Secondary Psychopathy, Parenting, and Shame and Guilt

Pages 570-581 | Received 27 Jan 2014, Accepted 14 May 2014, Published online: 11 Jun 2014
 

ABSTRACT

In the present study, shame and guilt proneness were investigated in relation to primary and secondary psychopathy, looking at parental care as a possible mediator. A sample of 388 volunteers participated in an on-line study, completing several self-report measurements. Primary psychopathy, robust to parental care and sex of the participant, was associated with lower guilt proneness after a private transgression and lower negative self-evaluations after a public transgression. Secondary psychopathy was not associated with guilt or shame proneness. Paternal care played a mediating role between primary psychopathy and guilt, but only in male participants. High paternal care was associated with lower guilt repair in high psychopathy males, suggesting that a positive father-son relationship might be essential for development of exploitive strategies in primary psychopathy. The results highlight the fundamental differences between primary and secondary psychopathy, and provide support for the idea that primary psychopathy is an evolutionary cheater-strategy.

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