Asperger Syndrome Blog- Social interaction -Part 3- Copyright Robert Fullarton
The study of genius, is a study of an obsessional life that wreaks its havoc on every corner of a conventional existence, it brings colour to the prosaic nature of society and fashion, that breaks the old inhibitions that come with popular culture and opinion.
So many recent studies, as I stated earlier in my book, have thrown light and interest into the probability that many people from this brand of genius –which I just mentioned- most likely had Aspergers Syndrome Disorder and many have been speculated to have from recent studies, to have had a mental illness to accompany their Asperger Syndrome.
None were diagnosed, but each account, study, biography and piece of evidence of the character, the livelihood and eccentricities of these geniuses reflect and corroborate with the modern and diagnostic approach made today by many child psychologists and paediatricians. The Aspie and -from what we can safely assume- the world of the genius oven very closely overlap into an inward realm of logical undertakings, assessments and contemplations that reflect the specific rather than the generic life of the NT. Again I state the world of facts, chemicals, words, logic, equations and calculations interest such men much more than the world of people, the perverse gambles taken to delve into the ordinary, the mundane, the simple and yet still for these men it can even be called the technical.
For socialising itself is more alien and technical to an Aspie than they’re own specified interest.
Some could liken the mind of an Aspie to that of a child that never loses much of its imaginative, hyper functional capacity to think, question, wonder, fantasise and search, in both a random and confined spectrum. A childlike obsession for a subject remains almost like a romance that never died out previously before.
As many pass a mountain scene on a daily basis and they ignore or simply watch the beauty with a distance, the Aspie often notices something extraordinary- the very faint details and the cracks of something minute- and with this analogy I express the fact that the Aspie has the attention to detail, to minimize, specialise and focus on a particular fact or set of facts that he becomes intrigued with. Such abilities to hone in on minute details and subjects, has given the world many philosophers, of a brilliant cognitive capacity. Neurology itself is still in its infancy when it comes to the behavioural and cognitive capacities of different people, the mass psychology and the privation of individual capacities exposed in the genetic makeup of those on the autistic spectrum.
Labels: Non-Fiction
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