Jarhyn
Wizard
- Joined
- Mar 29, 2010
- Messages
- 15,758
- Gender
- Androgyne; they/them
- Basic Beliefs
- Natural Philosophy, Game Theoretic Ethicist
The most common differences in thought process for autistic people drive towards the schizoid and schitzotypal disorders.Although I am a loner, my social skills aren't too bad. Sometimes I'm better than typical at perceiving another's status or emotions.
I should say: My social skills aren't too bad if I avoid excessive oration. (And avoid politics with Americans or Brits.) Otherwise I'm liable to veer into some useless topic -- Shakespeare authorship anyone? -- then segue consecutively into some other topic in science or history, then politics, then an amusing fact about the Thai language, and so on; the topics all connected mootly. I often wrest myself from this abyss with "What were we talking about?"
Is that a symptom of Autism? Or is it more Attention Deficit Disorder? Schizophrenia?
As I was describing to Barbos, and based on some discussions you and I have had together about how neural nodes interact, and further on the reality of how autistic people are often more "reflected", I would imagine this is caused by the fact that even processes in our own heads can be differentiated as "self" and "other" more readily, and can even have their idea streams mirrored through the Wernicke's area so as to "come off" as external speech, or full blown schitzophrenia.
To the medieval mind, I suppose these might be seen as demons or angels or fairies or whatever the fuck they called them back then, particularly when the separation was driven upon and pushed by ill-informed religious practices.
The point is that all of this is a reflection of "magical thinking", the idea that there are "spiritual" realities in addition to "physical" ones, albeit I typify these as purely mental, neurological phenomena.