Some people have found my stereotyping of NTs in NT Joe: O Catharsis! to be an unreasonable critique of NTs based on how a minority of NTs act. Bec wanted us to think about how we aspies would feel if some cardboard AS Bob stereotype were made.
Bec's response to NT Joe:
Bec wrote:
Let me flip it around... If someone created a character called 'AS Bob' who was a nerd with no friends and no social skills, how would the other people here react to that?
That description of AS Bob hits kind of close to home. I'm a (self-admitted) nerd with no friends (offline) and (almost) no social skills. In the interest of restoring equity, though, I will portray AS Bob, exhibiting his most maladroit idiosyncrisies.AS Bob wrote:
Felicitations, WrongPlanet.net,
My name is AS Bob, and I have the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, fourth edition, text revision, (DSM-IV-TR) diagnosis of Asperger's Disorder. My diagnosis was established last year, December 13, 2004; but I have suspected I have an autistic condition for almost three years now. I feel comfortable finally acknowledging my condition to other people aside from my close family and the diagnostician.
I am greatly interested in mathematics and physics. Every day, after coming home from school, I sit down at my desk and begin working on physics problems that I have created myself or found on the Internet. Sir Isaac Newton does not get the respect he deserves for devising classical mechanics. Quantum mechanics has its place, but classical mechanics describes everyday events quite well. Sir Isaac Newton also invented calculus at approximately the same time as German mathematician Wilhelm Leibniz. I find many analogies between integrals and observable situations. I like to imagine the volume of the space above my desk, in front of my wall, and in front of my eyes as the integration of a function I am still trying to discover.
I also like Spam.