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hauchvonstaub@nrw.socialH

hauchvonstaub@nrw.social

@hauchvonstaub@nrw.social
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  • Most autistic people, despite everything, actually like being autistic.
    hauchvonstaub@nrw.socialH hauchvonstaub@nrw.social

    @KatyElphinstone
    If you could "change your neurotype", people like that could become the equivalent of people who become addicted to plastic surgery, because it's never enough and the problem lies somewhere else (at least until they could change the part of their brain that makes them lack self-awareness and makes them narrow minded).

    But it is this lack of self-awareness, that makes a productive discussion impossible, so I usually don't try to change their view on the matter.

    3/3

    Uncategorized neurodivergent actuallyautisti autism

  • Most autistic people, despite everything, actually like being autistic.
    hauchvonstaub@nrw.socialH hauchvonstaub@nrw.social

    @KatyElphinstone
    Complaining about how allistic people act, but then wishing to become one of them means wanting to just be on the other side of mistreatment and opression.
    Just wanting to be the perpetrator instead of the victim.

    It's likely partially that lack of self-awareness, that makes people like this so "unpopular" and to many unlikable, not just the autism.

    People like that would probably still be miserable and self-hating, if they could become allistic.

    2/

    Uncategorized neurodivergent actuallyautisti autism

  • Most autistic people, despite everything, actually like being autistic.
    hauchvonstaub@nrw.socialH hauchvonstaub@nrw.social

    @KatyElphinstone
    I've never heard from to an autistic person who wanted a "cure" who didn't seem to lack self-awareness or at least a nuanced view on autism.

    It's one thing to suffere from a sensory experience so much, that you'd rather be a different person than to continue suffering, the same goes for loneliness, but some people act, like between autistic and allistic, there is a secret third option, or worse, they'd rather be the kind of person they complain about for others.

    1/

    Uncategorized neurodivergent actuallyautisti autism

  • Layperson infantalisation and anti-expertise sentiment are two sides of the same coin.
    hauchvonstaub@nrw.socialH hauchvonstaub@nrw.social

    Anti-intellectualism isn't only attacking the concept of expert knowledge and people who have it, but also attacking and dismissing the people who could, even if in many cases only partially, have and understand that knowledge in the future.

    "A little knowledge is a dangerous thing", but having less of it just leaves more room for belief, speculation and resentment and therfore makes it more dangerous.

    6/6

    #ActuallyAutistic #ADHD #AntiIntellectualism #Autism #Education #Expertise #Learning

    Uncategorized

  • Layperson infantalisation and anti-expertise sentiment are two sides of the same coin.
    hauchvonstaub@nrw.socialH hauchvonstaub@nrw.social

    So an "expert" might be a person who vagely half-remembers something that could have been already "out of date", when they learned it and now tries to defend their position of perceived authority with thought terminating clishés.

    And in my experience, you can often even see that insecurity in their behavior, even hear it in their voice, so they're not only sending the message, that they think you're unable to understand what they know, but also, that they can't "back it up".

    5/

    Uncategorized

  • Layperson infantalisation and anti-expertise sentiment are two sides of the same coin.
    hauchvonstaub@nrw.socialH hauchvonstaub@nrw.social

    I used to regularly see this, when I spent time learning about autism and ADHD in the past, to just name two examples.
    It's even more extreme in fields, where knowledge is based more on authority, observations and interpretations of those observations than provable facts.

    A lot of what's accepted as "knowledge" today, could mostly only be accepted as "belief" tomorrow.
    Like "you can't have ADHD, because you can focus on video game", to use an example of slow propagation of knowledge.

    4/

    Uncategorized

  • Layperson infantalisation and anti-expertise sentiment are two sides of the same coin.
    hauchvonstaub@nrw.socialH hauchvonstaub@nrw.social

    I think one of the main reasons for "intellectual elitism", usually based on certificates, is based on insecurity, not only on an unwillingness to spend time and energy on a futile attempt to explain something.

    Many "experts" are not nearly as knowlegable, as they present themself and there is a big difference between vaguely remembering, that you learned something in the past and having that knowledge present.
    But admitting that could challenge your authority as an expert.

    3/

    Uncategorized

  • Layperson infantalisation and anti-expertise sentiment are two sides of the same coin.
    hauchvonstaub@nrw.socialH hauchvonstaub@nrw.social

    Of course there are people who obviously don't want to know and just want to "win a debate".
    Some of those people don't even seem aware that this is what they're trying to do (an obvious example would be many antivaxxers), but even if you couldn't convince many people, the situation could at least be somewhat diffused in many cases.

    This doesn't have to mean spending your own time arguing with someone, but not telling people the equivalent of "you're too stupid to get it anyway" would help.

    2/

    Uncategorized

  • Layperson infantalisation and anti-expertise sentiment are two sides of the same coin.
    hauchvonstaub@nrw.socialH hauchvonstaub@nrw.social

    Layperson infantalisation and anti-expertise sentiment are two sides of the same coin.

    Both are anti-intellectualism.

    If you treat people like children that should be content with the answer "because I say so", you shouldn't be surprised if adults, who are in a position to retaliate, don't just take it.

    "You didn't spend X years studying this" might be true, but not even trying to explain something doesn't even give the other person the chance to realise, they lack knowledge.

    1/

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