Character Disorders among Autocratic World Leaders and the Impact on Health Security, Human Rights, and Humanitarian Care | Prehospital and Disaster Medicine | Cambridge Core
Character Disorders among Autocratic World Leaders and the Impact on Health Security, Human Rights, and Humanitarian Care | Prehospital and Disaster Medicine | Cambridge Core

Character Disorders among Autocratic World Leaders and the Impact on Health Security, Human Rights, and Humanitarian Care | Prehospital and Disaster Medicine | Cambridge Core

These shared character traits stem from a cognitive and emotional developmental arrest in both childhood and adolescence resulting in fixed, life-long, concrete thinking patterns. They fail to attain the last stage of mental and emotional development, that of abstract thinking, which is necessary for critical reasoning that allows one to consider the broader significance of ideas and information rather than depend on concrete details and impulses alone. These autocratic leaders have limited capacity for empathy, love, guilt, or anxiety that become developmentally permanent and guide everyday decision making. Character or personality traits that perpetuate the lives of autocratic leaders are further distinguished by sociopathic and narcissistic behaviors that self-serve to cover their constant fear of insecurity and the insatiable need for power.