On The Ontological Status Of Autism And Double Empathy


The double empathy/cross-neurological hypotheses of Milton and Beardon can be summarised as follows:
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(1) non-autistic people appear to have as much difficulty in understanding autistic minds as vice versa;
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(2) autistic people often develop a greater understanding of society than non-autistic people develop of autism; and
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(3) autistic people have a similar ability to empathise with other autistic people as non-autistic people have with their peers.
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Milton does not suggest that non-autistic people are less capable of developing an understanding of autism than vice versa; as he points out, it is simply that autistic people have no choice but to try to develop an understanding of society if they are to ‘survive and potentially thrive’ whereas no such imperative applies in the opposite direction (Milton 2012).
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  • Milton does not suggest that non-autistic people are less capable of developing an understanding of autism than vice versa; as he points out, it is simply that autistic people have no choice but to try to develop an understanding of society if they are to ‘survive and potentially thrive’ whereas no such imperative applies in the opposite direction (Milton 2012).

    The thing that makes me smile here, is Milton's and other's hypothesis that there is no imperative for non-autistic people to use an Autistic Theory-of-Mind (or AToM) ~ with my amusement arising from the fact that non-autistic and autistic parents have been having and raising autistic children for thousands of years now, and the use of an AToM or a Divergent Theory of Mind (DToM) has remained historically concurrent in all cultures and societies, therefore.

    Also, societal ToM models that involve 'surviving and potentially thriving' ideologies featuring 'imperatives' are proving currently to be more and more unreliable, whereas when we live as we actually are ~ we thereby facilitate our life as it actually is in the dependable and reliable sense.


  • Don’t you find it a very blunt instrument of judgement though?


  • Don’t you find it a very blunt instrument of judgement though?

    If judgement is employed the blunt instrument factor can very much become the case, yes. How do you imagine its application to be like a blunt instrument in the above respect?


  • So....not quite yin and yang......it is just a matter of it you have an “inny ” or an “outy” mind! 

    Nicely expressed DeepThought...but again my worry is that these definitions we find so lovely because they are so neat and succinct....is life really like that?....maybe it is....it is just that I keep mucking it up! Lol


  • So what is there understanding and what is ours? 

    Our understanding and theirs is the same, it is the comprehension of our shared understanding that differs.

    Autistic people are more self-centric (internally centred) and their genetic and linguistic architectures are more functionally specialised, and concretely receptive.

    Whilst non autistic people are more ego-centric (externally centred) and their genetic and linguistic architectures are more functionally generalised, and abstractly receptive.



  • As a fan of Rousseau....surely we were all born equal and questioning the world and our place in it or equal footing....but I feel uncomfortable with categorisation of ND and NT and not just people......said the self diagnosed freak on the NAS forum! Lol

    I use the terms NT and ND etcetera as functional descriptives, or behavioural references, rather than as references involving lesser or greater values of worth.


    whose judgement of the world is more real or valid?

    In the legal sense, a judgement can only be made once all the evidence has been accumulated, addressed and excluding cataclysms ~ the world has a fair few million years left on the clock yet! ;-)


    ...it is the variation of interpretation that gives us our humanity.

    Or perhaps it is our humanity that gives us our interpretative variations? ~ Cause preceding effect and so fourth?


  • And to profess our own ignorance is one of the most important things we can do. ,.and then act upon it with an open mind

  • Which was either Socrates or Plato, I can't remember which - and I'm not going to check on the internet, but just profess my ignorance! Slight smile

  • An unexamined life is not worth living......

  • One of the ironies of the wider availability of information that the internet has brought us is that it has, in many ways, led people into even more entrenched and polarised positions than might have been the case before.  I can understand this to some extent.  My natural tendency is to be attracted to people and causes that accord with my own beliefs and world-view.  It gives me a sense of security and common purpose - and it bolsters my already very fragile ego.  Perhaps that's the same for everyone.  But when you combine that with the factor of social distance that is inherent in internet exchanges, it makes it much easier for people to eschew 'rational discussion' in favour of indignant ranting and abuse.  I've been guilty of it myself.  It's the same thing as when you're in a car and someone cuts you up in traffic.  What happens?  You shout and swear, maybe shake your fists at them.  Because you're safe in your car, and they can't touch you.  If you were to get out of the car and face them, however, you'd probably be far more moderate in your tone.  Okay... maybe not!  But you see what I mean.  I think this entrenchment is a very bad thing.  We only progress through discussion, acknowledgement, compromise, understanding.... and eventual acceptance.  That's the essence of humanity and civilisation.  Unfortunately, I see more and more people taken the other option - because it's safer and easier.  It also reflects, I think, in the way that certain institutions of higher education - supposed bastions of enquiry and discussion - will ban certain speakers for fear of 'upsetting' some students.

  • Agreed......I am also fully aware of all my many imperfections and the closed door of other minds...do those other minds need to be open to be read first!?

  • open mindedness is also another trait that is difficult to find.....

    Yes.  And whilst I have a quote from Spinoza on my desk which speaks of my intentions - 'I have striven not to laugh at human actions, not to weep at them, nor to hate them, but to understand them' - I struggle with that 'understanding' all the time on my bumpy road to enlightenment!  I find certain political and spiritual positions very hard to comprehend, no matter how much I might take into consideration variations in people's genetic make-up, developmental environment and life experiences.  One person born into straitened circumstances, and who benefits from the collective welfare of society, may grow up holding fast to certain political principles.  Another person, similarly raised, may reject those principles altogether.  On the other hand, someone born into affluence and privilege may renounce those entirely - or may be forgiven, perhaps, for not being able to understand the experiences of someone from the other end of the scale.  So many variables!  I do try hard to keep my mind open in that sense.  But it isn't easy.  I suppose, at least, I'm aware of this imperfection.  Perhaps, as Socrates said (or was it Plato?), a wise man is one who knows that he knows nothing!

  • So what is their understanding and what is ours?  It could be anything and you can only try to gain an understanding by questioning the assumptions you have and asking someone what their understanding is.

    But what questions do you ask....and you have to be receptive to others first.....open mindedness is also another trait that is difficult to find.....

    your points are very true and valid...

  • This is why IQ tests are questionable, I think, in the sense of cultural specificity and educational background.  I'm not sure that these tests can ever be truly neutral.  When I took a Mensa IQ test, there were some mathematical questions that required more than either commonsense, logical reasoning or lateral thinking.  With a body of mathematical knowledge that I didn't then possess, I would have scored higher.

  • I think it differs depending on the person and the only way you can really know is to question what someone means.  That's not always welcome and may not always be practical, but just understanding that someone else may have a different interpretation of something can be sufficient in some cases.

    I don't feel that I understand the complexities of the theory of mind stuff.  I saw the basic Sally Anne test to determine theory of mind and I can't get my head around how that test then demonstrates that someone cannot then understand that other people have different thoughts and perceptions.  It seems a leap to me.  There is an underlying perception with the test that if you give one answer it means this, and you give another answer it means that.  The idea that there are only two possible outcomes to the test seems fundamentally flawed to me and relies on the person who designed the tests' perception of the world as being the one true perception of the world.  If that perception is not universal then surely it is a flawed test because the assumptions cannot be stated as being categorically true.

    So what is their understanding and what is ours?  It could be anything and you can only try to gain an understanding by questioning the assumptions you have and asking someone what their understanding is.

  • Most of the time my speech is 'normal', but occasionally I speak in a roundabout way, the opposite of what I mean and play the devil's advocate and other people just don't get me. I am sober while I speak like this.   They consider me a weirdo and avoid me.

  • I still do that, though less frequently than of yore.  My way of speaking to them is inappropriate to them.  So be it.  They can think what they like, because they certainly seem to like what they think.

    Alcohol provides that conduit.  It enables me to say what I couldn't otherwise say.  And it can be cathartic more times than it can be embarrassing.  If people take offence... it's up to them.  I don't deliberately set out to offend.  I simply speak my mind.  The day will come when I'll have the confidence to do that sober... but not just yet.

  • Haven't touched alcohol since Feb 2016, when I fell out with the few people I socialised with in club.

    My inappropriate/unusual/autistic way of speaking alienated them.

  • And, in my case, consuming several whiskies...

  • Similar here.  Only human contact in last three days has been, a couple of text messages,  some tweets, cashiers in shops.

    Otherwise internet 'social' sites,. This one, photography and trip advisor.

    Rest of time spent watching tv, Buffy DVDs and filling out forms.

  • I'll define myself by my diagnosis if I need to - and I seem to need to an awful lot.  I'm sick and tired of being told 'That's not autism... we all do that', when, for instance, I'm talking about my preference for lone activities.  People generally find that their conception of lone activities (a few hours by themselves watching the football) is far removed from my conception: a whole weekend indoors, alone, with no human contact except via the internet.  I find myself increasingly having less and less in common with NTs.   The older I get, the more I see, the more at odds with society I feel.  And then I get told 'it's a generational thing.'  Okay.  Always got to be a reason that accords with NT perspectives...

  • So what is there understanding and what is ours? 

  • but I feel uncomfortable with categorisation of ND and NT and not just people......said the self diagnosed freak on the NAS forum!

    Yep, me too. Diagnosis or not, think I still have plenty in common with "NT" people - two ears, ten fingers... Well, other stuff too. I'm also not keen to define myself via a diagnosis, I'd rather tell people what I'm good at and where they need to help me a bit or be a bit more patient. The only problem is that they then say that's just normal and everybody needs/is like that, until it actually comes to the situation and suddenly it's not seen as quite so normal anymore.

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  • but I feel uncomfortable with categorisation of ND and NT and not just people......said the self diagnosed freak on the NAS forum!

    Yep, me too. Diagnosis or not, think I still have plenty in common with "NT" people - two ears, ten fingers... Well, other stuff too. I'm also not keen to define myself via a diagnosis, I'd rather tell people what I'm good at and where they need to help me a bit or be a bit more patient. The only problem is that they then say that's just normal and everybody needs/is like that, until it actually comes to the situation and suddenly it's not seen as quite so normal anymore.

Children
  • Most of the time my speech is 'normal', but occasionally I speak in a roundabout way, the opposite of what I mean and play the devil's advocate and other people just don't get me. I am sober while I speak like this.   They consider me a weirdo and avoid me.

  • I still do that, though less frequently than of yore.  My way of speaking to them is inappropriate to them.  So be it.  They can think what they like, because they certainly seem to like what they think.

    Alcohol provides that conduit.  It enables me to say what I couldn't otherwise say.  And it can be cathartic more times than it can be embarrassing.  If people take offence... it's up to them.  I don't deliberately set out to offend.  I simply speak my mind.  The day will come when I'll have the confidence to do that sober... but not just yet.

  • Haven't touched alcohol since Feb 2016, when I fell out with the few people I socialised with in club.

    My inappropriate/unusual/autistic way of speaking alienated them.

  • And, in my case, consuming several whiskies...

  • Similar here.  Only human contact in last three days has been, a couple of text messages,  some tweets, cashiers in shops.

    Otherwise internet 'social' sites,. This one, photography and trip advisor.

    Rest of time spent watching tv, Buffy DVDs and filling out forms.

  • I'll define myself by my diagnosis if I need to - and I seem to need to an awful lot.  I'm sick and tired of being told 'That's not autism... we all do that', when, for instance, I'm talking about my preference for lone activities.  People generally find that their conception of lone activities (a few hours by themselves watching the football) is far removed from my conception: a whole weekend indoors, alone, with no human contact except via the internet.  I find myself increasingly having less and less in common with NTs.   The older I get, the more I see, the more at odds with society I feel.  And then I get told 'it's a generational thing.'  Okay.  Always got to be a reason that accords with NT perspectives...