Are autistics part Neanderthal?
Really? Just because most "researchers" refuse to look into the obvious?
Parental Abuse May Damage Children's Brain Thomas Idiculla, PhD
http://agapepartners.org/articles/72/1/ ... Page1.html
Mother's stress harms foetus, research shows | Science | The Guardian
http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/2007/ ... eandhealth
Poverty poisons the brain
http://neuroanthropology.net/2008/02/18 ... the-brain/
Not autistic-like, but autistic.
From "DSM Diagnosing for Money and Power, Summary of the Critique of the DSM, offered by Zur Institute for Psychologists, MFTs, SWs"
http://www.zurinstitute.com/dsmcritique.html
The DSM focuses almost exclusively on individual pathology to the dangerous minimization of social and environmental factors such as poverty, racism, sexism, classism, heterosexism, ageism, violence, etc. This limiting focus has serious ramifications:
Therapists, who uncritically follow the DSM medical model, are likely to place undue emphasis on individual emotional problems as causal factors rather than opening to the larger possibility that the individual is symptomatic due to familial, political or societal system dysfunctions.
Social psychologists call such exclusion of social factors and excessive focus on individual pathology the "fundamental attribution error."
The focus on individual pathology leads to individual based treatment, suggesting that the DSM markets the concept of individually and biologically based social discomfort.
The DSM tends to pathologize several groups whose civil rights have historically been marginalized in the culture at large. The bias is clear in regard to race, social class, age, physical disability, gender and sexual orientation. Symptoms are a call for corrected balance. Rather than labeling the symptoms of a sick society, when appropriate, the client is too often diagnosed and medicated to adapt to the disease of the system.
The refrigerator parent theory was far too close to the truth.
Those following the DSM do not, as a rule look for social context. See above.
The Aspie-quiz does a better job of doing so, while the DSM ignores culture's influence and pathologizes.
More likely both and incompetence and brainwashing is causing both missed abuse and identification of non-existent abuse.
Those having to do with autism are missed.
You and researchers ignore a scientific approach to the question: "What causes 'developmental issues associated in brain growth in regressive autism'"? Assuming that social factors are not important is bias, prejudice, incompetence and quackery, not honest scientific medical research.
When you * A S S U M E *, you make an ASS of U and ME.
Finally, we are, as Bush 43 would say, "making progress."
What needs to be done is separate two definitions of "autism", one being a form of complex post-traumatic stress battery that begins at an early age and the neurodiversity stuff. By creating an 11th environmental section, RDOS has done what he can.
Abnormal brain growth is not brain injury. There is a substantial amount of evidence though that non-substance environmental influences can cause brain damage that is associated with autistic-like behaviors, including and beyond the resources you list. I agree with your links, and think it is possible that prenatal stress is associated with regressive autism, but that is not part of the post-natal environmental influences associated with child abuse, that I was addressing, specific to child abuse and abnormal brain growth associated with regressive autism.
Interesting, many of your thoughts about autism reflect some of my thoughts on the issue, but in discussing the same issues with RDOS, in discussions here, his responses were more in alignment with the genetic causation of autism associated with archaic neanderthal DNA, than environmental or cultural ones, of which child abuse is a part of. He associated genetic mutations, related to archaic neanderthal DNA, as the cause for classic autism, if I remember correctly.
While we can separate aspects of Neurodiversity from Autism Spectrum Disorder, the field of psychology defines, and for all practical intents and purposes owns, the term Autism Spectrum Disorder. The term Aspergers may end up as a sub-clinical term for those outside of the the diagnosis of the DSM-5 classification for Autism Spectrum Disorder.
While I agree that the Aspie Quiz does not and cannot completely separate itself from cultural influence, RDOS suggested words to the effect that it was his intention to exclude cultural factors from the quiz to the best of his ability, per discussion here on this website.
If RDOS suspected Classic Autism was not associated with genetics and archaic Neanderthal DNA, there would have been no logical reason to title the theory the Neanderthal theory of Autism.
As I've suggested many times before, considering classic autism is not part of the registration process for the Aspie Quiz, Neurodiversity might have been better nomenclature to stick with than terms defined and owned by the field of psychology.
jamieevren1210
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Although I have 1/8-1/16 Turkic blood, I am Asian. And I've seen plenty of purer east Asians with ASDs. I'm not trying to say that the Neanderthal theory is totally BS, but it contradicts itself according to your description.
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asians share the neanderthal genes with europeans so asd in asians actually supports the theory,
i did find some intresting earlier hominids though from even befor heidelberg,
these fossils shook the world of anthroplogy just by being in the right place but way older then expected.
the homo antecessor was found in spain and expected to be ither neanderthal (23000-40000 years old) or heidelberg
it turned out 1.2 million years old (see wikipedia for information)
homo georgicus (some say homo erectus georgicus) was found in georgia, and turned out to be 1.8 million years old,
some say the two specimens might be from the same species,
this means there was either a earlier wave out of afrika, or different ancestors evolved in different places,
i think that all early hominids mixed and "races" (i hate that word but cant think of a less racist description) are different mixes.
for example it could be (i have no evidence so its a theory) that a chinese is a mix of homo erectus pekinensis with neanderthal and some homo georgicus,or someone from flores island a mix between erectus and even possibly floresiensis.
a european might be neanderthal/ antecessor/ erectus and so on with the slight mix differences making up the different physical appearances.
although some physical traits are adaptive evolution,
No more so than non-autistics. Nearly everyone who is descended from European stock may have as much as 4% of their genome in common with Neanderthal Man.
If a person's Neanderthal ancestry makes them autistic, then every single European alive today would have autism.
I thought Neanderthal was a different species of man that died out and that we evolved from Hominids? As for autism, I think anything can cause it even men over the age of 30 if I'm right and my dad was over 30. Not real sure. Besides my mom being 30 years old, a heavy smoker and drinker when she had my twin brother and I, there were 3 other brothers.
Here is the definition I found about Hominids:
member of primate family including humans
a primate belonging to a family of which the modern human being is the only species still in existence. Family: Hominidae
Last edited by Dirtdigger on 27 Jun 2012, 3:05 pm, edited 1 time in total.
i think it might have something to do with reactivations of acient (neanderthal or other) genes wich make you react in a fight or flight kind of way, with a lot of traits in autism that would have been verry usefull in hunter gatherer tribes. these genes reactivate if the right parents (or lineages) mix
jamieevren1210
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