physicsdude30 said:
Einstein and Newton had intense interests in specific limited areas consistent with someone with Asperger's. They had trouble reacting appropriately in social situations and difficulties communicating (remember, in the post above they're not talking about the same thing as “written communication”). Newton spoke little and was bad-tempered with the few friends he did happen to have. If no one was at his lectures he just spoke to an empty room.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/health/2988647.stm
This is interesting for me in two ways.
One: Why can't you diagnose the dead? I mean, autopsies are common right? A doctor should be able to determine if I died from a heart attack or from hanging myself, a doctor should also be able to determine if I drank too much during my life from the state of my liver. I mean, autism has some vague guidelines for diagnoses, if one can diagnose the living by those, surely also the dead? There are enough videos and letters available in which Einstein spoke about himself and his life, why not then? I'm not saying that diagnosing the dead with autism makes any sense, I'm just saying it makes no less sense than 'diagnosing' the living with it. I just think that the term 'diagnosis' is praetentious in this context, I would call praefer to substitute 'diagnosed with autism' as 'Psychiatrist John Friedman, M.D. find that in his perception I behave within the paramatres of how the autist behaves.' Which means the same as 'Kajahtava thinks I'm a cat person.', I don't think psychiatrists at better at determining personality than any random person by the way, I haven't seen any indication of it, and a lot of indications, documented, to that they are just as susceptible to the power of suggestion and the stickiness of labels.
Two: I said before that I was 'misdiagnosed' (read: later psychiatrists had different opinions) as 'asperger' for a couple of years. In those years psychiatrists seemed to believe that I had confined interests, despite being the antithesis of that, I would say that I have 'no interest' and I simply swallow up information for the sake of it being information and find reading of about anything a nice activity. I do have some hobbies but they are as variant as making music, painting, computer games, solving mathematical puzzles, having sex, watching comedies and walking outside. But in those years, psychiatrists all seemed to for the most part treat me as a person who does nothing but mathematics, though some seemed to treat me as a person who has no interest except high art. You sit there and suddenly they find out that I play the piano, and then they just put in their report, without even asking me, without a single indication thereof that I approach music 'mathematically'...? I do anything but... my compositions violate all the rules and guidelines of musical theory, I learned it, I know it, but I wish I never did and try to forget it when I compose. But they always treated me as if I either was only interested in mathematics, or only in high art, and only now do I realize why after I saw that here. I never knew that was a property of 'autism'. Which pretty much summs up why I think stuff like 'autism' should be dropped in favour of 'socially impaired'. I wasn't even socially impaired, I was just socially not motivated, I made little contact because I had, and still am, introverted and praefer except a close circle of friends whom I know very well to just keep to myself. Then misinterpreted that as 'socially impaired', then stuck 'autism' on it and suddenly began to see all the other criteria of autism which I never had, like not being able to stand loud noises, taking things literally despite
simultaneously trying to help me with my strange speech pattern that used strange neologisms like 'dampened mindscreams' instead of 'sadness' simply because I found it to better communicate the concept than 'sadness', as at that time I was myself not yet aware that most people take words more literal than I.
As I said, autism supposedly includes:
A: troubles reading facial expressions
B: taking things literally
C: unable to cope with loud noises
D: confined interests
E: troubles feeling what others feel
There is no indication that A,B,C,D,E all come from a common cause, in fact, if you look at it that way, they aren't remotely related. They just were by convention, by this dude called Hans Asperger grouped together because he studied a pack of children which all, probably by sheer coincidence, displayed these, and it got on. So on, that if you only satisfy three of those nowadays, people will try to see for themselves the other two. The absurdest thing is, that I, and two people I know, have and had none of those but we were all misdiagnosed because some professional mistook introversion for some combination of A and E, and from that extrapolated the rest. I mean, this girl I know, eighteen, creative sense of verbal humour, no trouble sensing what you feel, all sorts of diverse interests from absurd Chinese action films to Kafka to, slavonic linguistics to Vladimir Putin, goes to concerts all the time. But guess what, she's also really shy so she doesn't like it to look people in the eyes hmm? Only a year back did they drop the diagnosis she had for 11 years long. She doesn't look to the ground because she doesn't appreciate the value of eye contact, she appreciates it all too well and the intimacy of it scares her... and in her case too, psychiatrists extrapolated, wrongly, the rest from that.
Edit: Let's build on this particular girl for my arguments. Yes, she's impaired, her shyness and lack of confidence border into the obsessive to find all things that are wrong with herself, understanding what she says is an art on its own because it's so soft and mumbly, she's also unable to talk to strangers, not because of any lack of social understanding, but insecurity, fear that they will be angry at her. So, she needs help right?
Well, she was diagnosed with autism, psychiatrists aren't that able to see the difference between shyness and lack of social understanding, they see a girl making no eye contact, they conclude the latter. So, she gets social skill training, which is something she doesn't need, because though the
symptom is the same, she can't talk to strangers, the
cause is different, it's not that she doesn't know what she has to do, it's an irrational fear that the strangers will become angry at her for bothering them. So, social skill training not only doesn't work, it works
counter-effective, each and every time you put her there, you remind her subconscious mind that she is supposedly socially weak, which will make her all the more afraid of offending strangers as now you've given her another thing, you've planted the possibility in her mind that she doesn't notice when she offends strangers, which is a sign of autism, making her see offended people when they are
not offended.
This sounds quite believable right? Well, this happens a lot of times in a lot of different ways, and often psychiatrists themselves fail to realize what's going on. I've seen them talking to people, it's just scary, I can already see it, she would be sitting at that training, the psychologist telling her 'what would you do in this situation', she being afraid to answer because she's afraid of being wrong and confirming her own fears, the psychologist concluding from that that she doesn't know how to handle the situation, patronizing her and in that driving her deeper and deeper into her shell with each single session.
Also, take this as an argument, Einstein survived didn't he, so did Newton, in fact, people whom we retroactively put 'autism' on all survived, in fact, before autism was invented these kids just had some difficulties but managed. But now that the label is on it, suddenly these children are having amazing difficulties in the popular appeal, I see three possible conclusions.
A: These amazing difficulties are in fact cause by psychiatry. Indeed, many people who were diagnosed with autism later on, really managed quite well in their lives, some problems, but still, they managed, they as hell hadn't all the problems many people seem to have who are diagnosed at a younger age.
B: Because of the power of suggestion, people see problems that aren't actually there. Same thing as the above applies.
C: There is more attention to the problems now that went unnoticed before.
A and B, naturally I don't like, C is good, but I honestly doubt it's C after having read countless reproducible tests that all show the same thing:
1: psychiatrsts give completely different evaluations on the same patient if they are told they are the first to evaluate that patient.
2: psychiatrists keep to the evaluation of a former psychiatrist and see confirmation of that in the patient, even if the former evaluation has been purposefully made wrong and the patient is in fact an actor told to act out a normal person.
With this in countless literature, it seems a done deal to me, studying psychiatry is not enough a mental conditioning to overcome the basic human flaws of naïve realism and the power of suggestion.