JSBACHlover wrote:
When Thomas Aquinas said, hominem unius libri timeo he was referring to the man who has only read one book, not of the man who had written it.
Yes, and I don't want to be that man, for any topic or any book. (And anyway, Attwood wrote a few books, not just one.) It is just that I constantly run into people who read one book (good or bad) about something, liked it, and try to fit and explain
everything with whatever they read in it. I hate that ; It is especially bad for subjects like psychology and politics.
JSBACHlover wrote:
Dr. Attwood is to Asperger's what Francis Crick is to DNA. He's the preeminent authority
Mmh. Pardon me if I'm hair-splitting, but Crick discovered the structure of DNA. When I tried to have an understanding of the history of AS research, here is the picture I got: Hans Asperger wrote his papers in German in the 40s and nobody cared^W^W they were not widely noticed. In the 80s, Lorna Wing published some English papers on Asperger's work and popularized it, as well as the term "Asperger's syndrome". Then in the 90s Uta Frith translated Asperger's original work, did much for the recognition of AS as a diagnosis, and had students such as Tony Attwood and Simon Baron-Cohen, who in turn became top Asperger and ASDs specialists. I agree Attwood can be considered the current preeminent authority, but as far as I know he did not make the kind of breakthrough Watson and Crick did ; if someone has that honor in AS research it seems to me that it would more be Hans Asperger himself or maybe Lorna Wing. (Besides, Crick is dead and I don't think he was the preeminent authority on DNA any more just before that. Some younger scientist were probably more knowledgeable about the latest theories. Inventing or discovering something, or making a breakthrough, doesn't mean you automatically remain the unquestioned expert on it forever.)
JSBACHlover wrote:
But we must give credit where credit is due, and we owe a world of thanks to Dr. Attwood.
I would never disagree with that
Even with my incomplete knowledge I can see what he did and still does both to help people and to educate the general public and the health professionals towards a progressive view of AS.
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ouroboros
A bit obsessed with vocabulary, semantics and using the right words. Sorry if it is a concern. It's the way I think, I am not hair-splitting or attacking you.