The not-killing credo suggests not.
Well, then my point stands untouched.
Also he seems to have some empathy with his charges.
Hmm. You're reading different books from me. He may be concerned with their well-being, but empathy seems rather a stretch.
So ita can say he's a psycho, but she can't say he's psycho.
Psycho has detached and become free-floating crazy. It would probably be more fun to analyze what kind of official mental disorders Bats really does have.
He may be concerned with their well-being, but empathy seems rather a stretch.
Taking in Dick in the first place seems pretty empathetically driven. He knows how Dick feels after losing his parents.
hayden, I liked Graham Greene in Dances with Wolves but the rest of it gave me a big puh-leeeze charliehorse. I shudder to think of it being considered 'classic'.
Taking in Dick in the first place seems pretty empathetically driven.
I think we'll continue to differ. Not only do I think there are other interpretations you can put on that, the charge-empathy is not a notable characteristic of his interactions I've read since then.
A psychologist comic-freak friend of mine told me that insasmuch as you could diagnose a comic book character, Bats is psychotic. But I suppose forcing the meta through is more dependent on the person doing it than anything else.
Taking in Dick in the first place seems pretty empathetically driven. He knows how Dick feels after losing his parents.
You could argue that he took in Dick to... fulfill certain needs.
(I only wrote the above because it sounds super-porny.)
Taking in Dick in the first place seems pretty empathetically driven. He knows how Dick feels after losing his parents.
A lack of demonstrated empathy for the feelings of the various members of the Batfamily once they're established has been a leitmotiv in the books for a dog's age. For whatever that's worth.
Also, The Third Man should have been higher on that list.
once they're established
Which makes it sound like a choice rather than an incapacity. But I'm not invested in the notion of Batman's empathy. I think he's capable of it - perhaps even driven by it in such a broad manner that it's shut down his ability to relate to individuals. Or it could be completely narcissistic. All kinds of possibilities. My take on sociopaths though is that they're a different kind of fucked up than Batman.
My take on sociopaths though is that they're a different kind of fucked up than Batman.
Well, true.
(However, he has had episodes dating back to early childhood that could be interpreted as psychotic. See: a couple of the Batman Black & Whites, Batman: Ego, blah blah blah.)
In Batgirl: Year One, Alfred, in conversation with Bruce, refers to Bruce's psychoses. (I have it next to me and just checked. The line is: "Oh, I see. We can now add voyeurism to the roster of personal psychoses you refuse to address.")
I love GWTW, for all its excesses.