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Another interesting element:
There is a fourth case history, on Hellmuth L., but this case is only there to demonstrate that brain damage may result in behavioural symptoms that overlap with those of autism, but in fact should be differentiated from the autism diagnosis.
I have run across stuff like "autism is brain damage" from a LOT of online sources, some of them supposedly legitimate. But how does this explain our intelligence and proven abilities? Doesn't "damage" imply something not functioning?
In quite a few cases, media representations of talent and special abilities can be said to have contributed to a harmful divergence between the general image of autism and the clinical reality of the autistic condition.
Oh, heck. YES. Show me something Hollywood got right... I can wait![]()
In quite a few cases, media representations of talent and special abilities can be said to have contributed to a harmful divergence between the general image of autism and the clinical reality of the autistic condition.
Oh, heck. YES. Show me something Hollywood got right... I can wait![]()
And this... this really got me angry:
Sometimes this line of reasoning is taken one step further. In the extras on the DVD of Snow Cake, Sigourney Weaver talks about Linda's character, saying that she is ‘refreshingly frank’, ‘straightforward’, ‘upfront about her feelings about things’ and that she ‘doesn't waste time on social rubbish’. She hints at Linda's moral superiority, even if some would feel that these are behaviours that follow from the condition and that there may not be much of a choice in it. If people do not lie because they can not, they are not on a moral spectrum.
Maybe it will turn out we have a low capacity for denial, but from what we have discussed here, we more logically choose to be of good character. The italicized part annoys me greatly.
Now we're not on the moral spectrum?!?!? What!?!?!?
Way out west?
I don't understand....
It's just the paper talks about autism stereotypes... and then commits one... by saying we are morally incompetent and have no control over it...
Before honesty vs. deception can depend on morality, it depends on ability.
Ah, for me, it is a choice, and it wasn't clear to me that is what the author is saying. Because it was not clear that is what was going on with the character in the movie.