http://www.perlmonks.org?node_id=132542

This was linked off slashdot this morning. I find it to be more relevant to this community. I also found it rather alarming, and wanted to make sure the perl geeks here saw it. The full text can be found at wired. Sorry for the off-topic post.

Brother deprecated.

--
Laziness, Impatience, Hubris, and Generosity.

  • Comment on (offtopic) Geekery may lead to autistic children

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Re: (offtopic) Geekery may lead to autistic children
by cacharbe (Curate) on Dec 17, 2001 at 21:19 UTC
    I actually made a couple copies of that article, and sent out links to it last week when I got my issue. It's a fascinating topic.

    Look at people like John Nash (another good link, here) (A Beautiful Mind - His book is worth a read, as are some of his papers...WOW). The deeper into mathematics he went, the more paranoid-schizoprehnic he became. He says that some of his greatest ideas came during some of his lowest mental moments.

    It has always been said that there is a fine line between genious and insanity, and perhaps Asperger's is a beginning to defining that line, or at least helping us to understand it.

    C-.

Re (tilly) 1: (offtopic) Geekery may lead to autistic children
by tilly (Archbishop) on Dec 17, 2001 at 21:51 UTC
    Thanks for the interesting link. My favorite line, though, was this piece of unintentional humor:
    Mrs. Smith, here are the results of your amnio. There's a 1 in 10 chance that you'll have an autistic child, or the next Bill Gates. Would you like to have an abortion?
    Was one of those options supposed to be good? :-)
Re: (offtopic) Geekery may lead to autistic children
by Anonymous Monk on Dec 17, 2001 at 21:54 UTC
    I saw this article on Slashdot too. I think maybe my dad - who worked in IT (it was DP then of course) - has Asberger's. He thinks it's a possibility too, although he's never been diagnosed as such. But he shows some of the symptoms.

    We've talked about it - in an intellectual way, naturally! I'm sure I don't (have it), but then my mum's completely different to my dad. Luckily my girlfriend's personality also shows no tendency towards Asberger's.

    Asberger's Syndrome, by Tony Attwood, is good.

Re: (offtopic) Geekery may lead to autistic children
by kko (Scribe) on Aug 03, 2003 at 02:50 UTC
    After reading this article on /., I decided to pay a couple of visits to a psychologist who is a friend of my mother's. She has not given me a definite diagnosis yet, and she says I might have to go through more ['sessions', 'tests', 'doctors'] before I get a final diagnosis. But she says that from what she has seen, I'm quite "aspergerish".
    That would explain a lot of things about me, and though it's only been a short trip, it's been an interesting one, and it's only going to get more interesting. It would explain why I was reading books on the evolution of the human species from tiny hominids at age 4, fooling around with BASIC at age 7 (on an osborne, mind you), yet still completely socially inept even now at age 22.
    It would explain why I can lose myself and lose track of time when I sit down to program (my workday feels like a mere 5 minutes) yet I can't manage a simple conversation with anybody without the other end of the conversation managing some sort of gross misunderstanding or somehow feeling offended by something I said because of my poor nonverbal communication skills and lack of tact.
    It would explain why I always carried the "stigma" of being very, veeeery "different" from everybody else in ['school', 'college', 'whatever'].
    I used to think that I was just an idiot, but now it kind of makes me feel nice knowing there's a medical term for my kind of idiocy.