SilasBarta comments on On Enjoying Disagreeable Company - Less Wrong

49 Post author: Alicorn 26 May 2010 01:47AM

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Comment author: SilasBarta 26 May 2010 06:14:13PM *  -2 points [-]

Whoa, when was evidence a pre-requisite for you to post strongly about something? Since two minutes ago?

I'm going to go out on a limb and guess that you put full credence in Alicorn's self-serving, unverifiable claim to having been diagnosed with Asberger's, despite her infamous, "Why not just meet women on the internet?" line ... am I right?

And yet the very basis for your criticism of me was that I'm making a non-NT-characteristic mistake in interpreting a social situation? Did your arguments come before or after your conclusion?

Comment author: LucasSloan 26 May 2010 06:34:26PM *  10 points [-]

unverifiable claim to having been diagnosed with Asperger's

I, Lucas Sloan, do solemnly swear that Alicorn is not neurotypical, and very probably has Asperger's. I further attest that the information this comment is based on is the result of having physically interacted with her.

Comment author: Airedale 26 May 2010 08:33:27PM *  4 points [-]

I'm not familiar with this “infamous” remark and I'm not sure what you're suggesting it proves or even implies. I recently read the book Born on a Blue Day, which was written by Daniel Tammet, a man with Asperger's. He writes at one point:

There is something exciting and reassuring for individuals on the autistic spectrum about communicating with other people over the Internet. For one thing, talking in chat rooms or by email does not require you to know how to initiate a conversation or when to smile or the numerous intricacies of body language, as in other social situations. The use of “emoticons” . . . also makes it easier to know how the other person is feeling because he or she tells you in a simple, visual method.

Tammet met his partner on the Internet. His reasoning makes sense to me. Is there something ridiculous that I am missing about the suggestion that people, especially those with autism spectrum diagnoses, meet other people on the Internet, as opposed to real life?

Comment author: SilasBarta 26 May 2010 08:42:56PM -1 points [-]

Of course. Just check out HughRistik's detailed explanation of how such a suggestion, like "let them eat cake" completely misunderstands the state of an AS male.

Yes, in some time and place it was possible for these internet chats to easily translate into dating for aspies, but apparently, everyone on the site seemed to disagree with Alicorn's assessment.

Comment author: Airedale 26 May 2010 08:50:42PM 4 points [-]

But taking it as a given that Alicorn's comment completely misunderstood the state of an AS male, how does it show that she also completely misunderstands the state of an AS female, and how does the comment therefore provide support for your suggestion that Alicorn's AS is in doubt because she made that comment?