Originally posted by corey123
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firstly i cannot understand what your sources are for 'narcissism' or which definition you are using. im assuming you refer to a narcissistic personality disorder (path. narcissism), rather than being a narcissist or being narcissistic (personality trait), although i have not seen anything resembling diagnostic criteria in your theory yet.
having said that virtually all serial killers, especially those who do not get caught or go to lengths to avoid being detected would of course have elements of narcissism in their personality, as do the vast majority of people to varying degrees, as the very act of the murder gives them of power over someone else - indeed its hard to think of anything which would give someone else a more powerful feeling than that of life or death over someone else.
whether or not this element of their psychology would explain the killings is hard to tell, as the very motives themselves are still conjecture, regardless of ho sure we feel about them (e.g. sexual killer, misogynistic, psychotic episodes, etc), assuming a lone killer, as there is a distinct lack of any real forensic evidence, or for that matter even solid witness testimony of the crimes.
based on the scant evidence available this would not be simple for a psychiatrist or psychologist to declare with a good degree of certainty. i would like to know which parts of the evidence are 'scientific' enough for your psychological profile to hold weight? it does seem more like supposition, and then building up a profile around a supposed diagnosis.
im familiar with narcissism and have a very good working knowledge of ocd, yet i cannot see any evidence for the latter, save the 'double-event'. this is of course if both killings were by the same hand; i.e. that an anxiety state could exist unless he fulfilled his 'ritual', although the murders are anything but diagnostic of this. i cannot really see what pointers you are using for odc in this instance. not that i am saying the killer did not have ocd, just a cannot see what pointers led you there.
i think a breakdown of specific points in the evidence and how they relate to the diagnostic criteria would be more helpful than simply claiming the science points towards it. any useful indicators of the psychological make-up of the killer are long gone, leaving only some anecdotal evidence, which sometimes does not tie up particularly well, from one view to the next.
it seems more as if you have started with a quick diagnosis and then looked for evidence for it rather than deducing the diagnosis from the evidence itself.
hey... i pick holes, its pretty much all i can do
joel
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