skar wrote:
About Doctor House and aspergers:
"Wilson talks to Cuddy to try and resolve the problem with the carpet, "I'm going to read you something. 'Asperger's syndrome is a mild and rare form of autism. It is typically characterized by difficulty establishing friendships and playing with peers, trouble accepting conventional social rules, and they dislike any change in setting or routine'... or broadloom. Doesn't say that last part but you get my point.
Cuddy isn't buying it, "House doesn't have Asperger's, diagnosis is much simpler; he's a jerk."
"Why do you think he took this case? Because he believes these parents? Because he wants to help a young boy? He sees himself in this kid and he's trying to help himself. He doesn't want this, he needs it."
Later Wilson tells House, "You're not autistic; you don't even have Asperger's. You wish you did, it would exempt you from the rules, give you freedom, absolve you of responsibility, let you date 17-yr-olds. But most important it would mean that you're not just a jerk."
House wants Wilson to shut up, "At what point does a person endlessly lecturing someone make him a jerk?"
"Lines in the Sand" is one of my favorite episodes, mostly because it made people think that maybe House WASN'T just a jerk...
I would say House has AS, but the show didn't really resolve the debate, merely provided some "official" credence to both sides of the argument. I tend to go with yes, House does have AS and Wilson was just doing that silly "friend" thing where you joke around with an issue because you don't want to address it. I think that is something called subtext, but I could be wrong. House has something to say about that, too, when he's on his date with Cameron.
"I don't know how to have casual conversation. You think you're talking about one thing, and either you are and it's incredibly boring, or you're not because it's subtext and you need a decoder ring."
Not quite sure I agree with Jack Bauer, though.
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Superman wears Jack Bauer pajamas.