It's a fascinating paradox that those who focus the most on themselves tend to report the greatest confusion over who they really are, whereas it's those who get outside themselves— who focus on contributing to the good society— who tend to report the strongest sense of self.
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Here's our paper showing that those with the highest narcissism scores tended to score the highest on measures of inauthenticity and loss of sense of self: https://scottbarrykaufman.com///wp-content/uploads/2018/09/Kaufman-Weiss-Miller-Campbell-2018-Clinical-Correlates-of-Vulnerable-and-Grandiose-Narcissism-A-Personality-Perspective.pdf …
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Replying to @sbkaufman
@ScottAdamsSays should read this. But he wouldn’t because that is what ignorant people do. They’re not comfortable with getting their beliefs challenged. For them, what they believe is the only truth.3 replies 0 retweets 1 like -
Replying to @GurmeherJ @sbkaufman
First time you've seen me dismantle a field in which I was not an expert? After the fifth time you see it, your perspective might evolve.
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Replying to @ScottAdamsSays @sbkaufman
Ever considered that your perspectives could also change? Be open to that as well.
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Replying to @GurmeherJ @sbkaufman
The Observer Problem. Your missing my point became a mental illness on my part.
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Replying to @ScottAdamsSays @sbkaufman
No of course not. It was meant to denote arrogance. Not narcissistic personality disorder.
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Your inability to know as much about me as I know about myself looks like arrogance to you? That's the Observer Problem.
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