In the book Base Instincts: What Makes Killers Kill, Neurologist Jonathan H. Pincus studies and researches extensively the characteristics and behaviors of serial killers and murderers. He gathers information from a broad variety of people, varying in gender, age, income level and social status. Pincus’s study was thorough and un-biased. He interviewed the killers’ families, acquaintances, the killers themselves, and the families of victims. In his book, Pincus is clearly quite experienced in this area and had plenty of evidence to prove his overall hypothesis of what makes killers kill.
Pincus’s information was well-organized, albeit often gruesome. His depictions of the lives of the killers were proven accurate each time through his complete investigation. With each case, he further proved his theory of what truly makes killers kill. Pincus’s writing met my expectations because he was clear and concise. Pincus proves that the violent instinct that prompted the killers stemmed largely from severe physical abuse and emotional abuse beginning at a young age, brain damage, and mental illness. In each chapter, he introduced a killer and explained their crime. He then dug into their past, evaluating their home life, past criminal records, and searched for signs of mental illness and brain damage. Although this book was, at times, a painful read, it opened my eyes to a treacherous reality; I believe it’s a worthwhile read for adults everywhere. Pincus shows how to prevent potentially dangerous behavior, how to recognize at-risk individuals, and through this, we can better the lives of people trapped in dangerous homes.
Pincus explained that while not all children who are abused will grow up to abuse, the majority of abusers were in fact abused. Pincus’s example of how this happens made sense and was accurate. He explained that as a child, his father used a specific phrase with him when he did something wrong. He said this phrase never actually stopped him from misbehaving, yet he found himself using the very same phrase with his son and later his son used the phrase on his own son. This shows that even though the abused know what it is like is to be abused and would swear against it, they know nothing else. Being raised in this way creates a vicious circle. They learned through physical and emotional pain and don’t know any other way to teach.
Pincus also incorporated the fact that the killers who had brain damage had it as a result of physical abuse as children or fetal alcohol syndrome. While a child can possibly be taken out of physically abusive care with enough evidence, fetal alcohol syndrome is beyond the control of anyone but the mother. Fetal alcohol syndrome affects the area of the brain that makes judgment calls. With this as a factor, Pincus shows that at times, the behavior of the killers may have been unpreventable.
Pincus’s writing is especially unbiased in where the blame can be placed. Rather than painting the killers as horrendous villains, he tells their stories. The backgrounds of these killers are unbelievable. The homes they came from are horribly abusive and reading about them forces one to reevaluate every day interactions.