what is autism (where's my spelling checker)
#1
Posted 10 August 2005 - 03:32 PM
does anyone hear know about autism?
i hear tell of an exspiramental cure, has anyone else?
do people with this decease exist in a separate reallity? mentally i mean.
what is your facts or thoughts on this?
#2
Posted 10 August 2005 - 03:52 PM
goku said:
does anyone hear know about autism?
i hear tell of an exspiramental cure, has anyone else?
do people with this decease exist in a separate reallity? mentally i mean.
what is your facts or thoughts on this?
Autism is a disorder, not a disease. I'll check back for what the symptoms are tomorrow if nobody has by then
Hypography Science Forums
Never argue with an idiot. They'll drag you down to their level and beat you with experience.
-Unknown
#3
Posted 10 August 2005 - 04:34 PM
lack of comunication
#4
Posted 10 August 2005 - 04:42 PM
Dictionary said:
Hypography Science Forums
Never argue with an idiot. They'll drag you down to their level and beat you with experience.
-Unknown
#5
Posted 10 August 2005 - 04:46 PM
goku said:
does anyone here know about autism?
I hear tell of an experimental cure, has anyone else?
do people with this disease (but it's a disorder) exist in a separate reality? mentally I mean.
what is your facts or thoughts on this?
Hypography Science Forums
Never argue with an idiot. They'll drag you down to their level and beat you with experience.
-Unknown
#6
Posted 10 August 2005 - 05:26 PM
It also comes in a variety of lesser forms such as Asperger's syndrome.
-Will
#7
Posted 10 August 2005 - 07:07 PM
a person who is autistic generally is extremely introverted, can have fixations on certain things, trains, toys, stories, etc.
autistic children sometimes express artistic gifts, and gifts of other sorts, mainly the gift of focus. where they can focus their limitless attention on only one thing.
i also have a cousin who was clinically labelled autistic.
i sometimes think i may be autistic. but i think erasmus hit the nail, i could suffer from aspergers. with a strict abhoration for close personal contact. which i've grown out of, but it was pretty severe, to the point where the term hypochondriac was thrown around. (much to my amusement)
one of the things they say about those kinds of people is that they are able to conjure up and live in vibrant fantasy worlds which normal people would have trouble grasping even when the autistic person attempts to explain the very deep and intricate inner worlds they create.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Autism
depending on how severe the lack of social adjustment the autistic person has, they may be able to be trained to live in society and care for themselves. it seems that although on of the staple labels attributed to the autistic person, helpless, may not be applicable to all who are forced to wear the hat. some people who exhibit signs of being autistic may well be able to care for themselves and families of their own.
it may not be a disease but apparently it is "curable" or "reversable". as if it is a stage in development most people grow out of but these people seem to be stuck in until they are awakened into full adulthood.
its in my initials, an anagram.. seriously!
#8
Posted 11 August 2005 - 06:21 AM
Thalidomide babies with phocomelia won't become sports stars no matter what. No acute or chronic monetary expenditure, no amount of tme, no battalion of the|rapists, no drugging will change that. If you have phocomelia you do other things, tihings at which you can succeed with rational expectation.
Autism is often accompanied by one or more eldritch talents at the desirable extremes of human capability. Support them for what they are, allowing them to bloom like exotic flowers, and stop torturing them for what they can never be. A society that does not hesitate to dump $millions on a worthless super-premature baby to obtain a 70 IQ adult will not lend support to its most brilliant (if eccentric) minds. That is called compassion. Evolution evinces a remarkable enthusiasm for crushing the compassionate.
http://www.mazepath.com/uncleal/
(Toxic URL! Unsafe for children and most mammals)
http://www.mazepath....uncleal/qz4.htm
#9
Posted 11 August 2005 - 12:11 PM
/home/God/projects/universe $ make
/home/physicist $ cat /home/God/projects/universe/main.c
ksh: /home/God/projects/universe/main.c: Permission Denied.
#10
Posted 11 August 2005 - 04:35 PM
the experimental cure that i mentioned:
if the child becomes ill with a rare stomic virus, a certian medicine is given then the kid wakes up.
the doctors said my cousin would never walk, when she was born, she did learn to walk and is now over 16 yrs. old.
she is very dependant upon her family, who loves her and cares for her extremly well.
you can see her mother or father holding onto her during church, if they let her go she runs.
i don't think she has ever been sick.
she eats like a horse, but she's skinny.
#11
Posted 11 August 2005 - 04:47 PM
Albert Camus
#12
Posted 13 March 2006 - 02:30 PM
Autism is often categorized as a disorder by which the individual cannot tune out the stimuli of the world. It's a terrifying and overwhelming, as well as constant, surge of incoming data. They struggle to block out the the less necessary things.
"Yeah... gotta go to K-mart. Buy underwear. Yeah." I love that movie, but it is based on a true story... the character whom Dustin Hoffman shadowed to learn the role was also featured on the Brainman special...
Anyway, some folks at work a few feet away from me were discussing it and I realized that I'd enjoy hearing what anyone here has to offer about it too.
Cheers.
"We succeeded in taking that picture [from deep space], and, if you look at it, you see a dot. That's here. That's home. That's us." - YouTube: Pale Blue Dot
(Photo of Earth, February 1990 - Voyager 1: Distance of Pluto)
[SIGPIC][/SIGPIC]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
InfiniteNow
#13
Posted 13 March 2006 - 09:25 PM
Lots of people believe autistic kids to be less intelligent than "normal" humans. But my cousin is incredibly intelligent, from what I can tell. Not in any "normal" sense of the word. But he seems to be pretty sharp when it comes to creativity and imagination.
I'm convinced that I am partially autistic. It would definately explain the social problems that I've had my entire life.
#14
Posted 15 March 2006 - 07:57 PM
Drip Curl Magic said:
Quote
#15
Posted 03 November 2006 - 07:18 PM

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