Dogma Surrounding Autism

As I’ve come across more people claiming autistic people are a problem it’s made me realise there’s a lot of dogmatic assumptions and beliefs about autism.

The main example is the assumption autism is a social problem because we don’t fit social norms and that social norms are inherently good. When we look to the past we can see “social norms” are actually inherently bad, social norms by their nature are discriminatory and are in direct violation of human rights such as autonomy. Less than a century ago treating women like they’re something less and have fewer rights than men was the social norm. In the 19th century slavery was part of the social norm. Each time we look at a social norm from any time period today’s people frown on it, it must of been someone with a “social problem” to want to deviate and change the social norm. I wonder if any of them were autistic!

Another example is the dogmatic assumption autistic people have a difficulty making friends. Autistic people do all that’s needed to be done to become friends, the reason things don’t work out is because the nonautistic people have a difficulty accepting people who don’t fit the standard norm. Nonautistic people are simply blaming their difficulties on autistic people, friendships are a two way street after all, not the autistic one is responsible for everything. 

I won’t list all the dogmatic assumptions that came to my mind but as one last example, the assumption autistic people have nothing good to offer society which is why they find the idea of a cure beneficial. I can believe that numerous of the greatest scientists throughout history were autistic because “autism traits” are the precise behaviours required to make new discoveries. Narrow interests, detail orientation, intensely focused, can detach themselves from people and spend more time on their work, better at recognising systems and patterns. I would say all these autism traits are of high value if the autistic person is given the opportunity to use them, and that they should be on the “Human Ability Spectrum” instead of defined as “deficits”.

I see a lot of dogma surrounding autism and hypocrisy by people failing to evaluate today’s social norms that people fail to recognise they have the very same difficulties.

Parents
  • A very interesting post. You are very right autistic people through out history has contributed a lot! I will say one thing though…. It is human nature to fear what it does not understand. We are different and yes give us an opportunity and we can be great workers and friends. The down side will always be that we just do not fit in the box. In the autistic community we are all the same from the outside (hard work, time consuming to name two) but we all know that we are the same but different. Dogma I am sorry to say is just people who are scared of us. Dare I say that they are jealous of us because of the results we can achieve when we are given a chance and put our minds too it?  

  • I agree that they are envious of our abilities. When we look at autism through evolutionary psychology it can be strongly suspected autistic people are the ones driving our world forward by being out of the box, having the will to reach further and think from untraditional perspectives.

  • Yes I definitely agree. Society needs our neurodivergent minds to evolve and question the status quo. 

    Commonly, non autistic people are polytropic which means they engage in lots of different interests with much less depth than us autistics. Therefore non autistic people probably are envious of the abilities that stem from our autistic monotropic mind.

    https://monotropism.org/

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