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by EliRivers
4851 days ago
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I maintain that they are not the same. The principal behaviour of Aspergers is a social inability. The principal behaviour of Grit is passion for a long-term goal. In your original post, I take issue with this in particular: "These two theories describe the exact same behavior -- intense focus and specialization". I disagree. I believe only ONE of them describes intense focus - grit. The other, Asperger's, describes social inability. If they are the same thing, how is it possible that some people who are passionate about a long-term goal are socially adept and gregarious, and some people with Aspergers have no passion for any long-term goals? Grit behaviour - passion for long term goal. Says nothing about social ability. It's very possible to have fantastic passion for a long term goal and be socially adept. Asperger's behaviour - social inability. Says nothing about passion for long term goals. It's very possible to be Aspergic and have no passion for long term goals. These are two different behaviours. You say they are the same behaviour - I completely disagree. |
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I didn't say they were the same, I said they were different. Only the behavior is the same. For a given behavior -- intense focus on a few activities or one activity -- the Grit contingent will celebrate it, and the Asperger contingent will issue a mental illness diagnosis.
> Asperger's behaviour - social inability. Says nothing about passion for long term goals.
First, Aspies achieve more than average people because their focus produces long-term results as an effect of their focus. You're confusing causes and effects.
Being a world-class concert pianist or violinist is not a symptom of ASperger's, it's an effect, an outcome, that springs from intense focus, and intense focus is a symptom of Asperger's.
Second, are you really not getting this? Psychology is driven by opinion, not evidence. For a given behavior, you will get two (or more) assessments from different psychological camps. Albert Einstein, Isaac Newton, Thomas Jefferson, Bill Gates are (a) famous, creative people, and (b) Aspies, based on the same set of behaviors. All that's different is which mental health expert is speaking.
"Famous People with Aspergers Syndrome":
http://www.disabled-world.com/artman/publish/article_2086.sh...
"Famous People with Aspergers Syndrome":
http://www.aspergerssyndromeparent.com/famous-people-with-as...
The Grit theory is an obvious acknowledgment that restricted interests sometimes produces amazing results, but the Asperger's people already knew that, while telling Aspies how mentally ill they are. It is all about how one chooses to interpret the same behavior.
> I believe only ONE of them describes intense focus - grit. The other, Asperger's, describes social inability.
You're mistaken:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asperger_syndrome
Quote: "characterized by significant difficulties in social interaction, alongside restricted and repetitive patterns of behavior and interests."
Note "restricted ... interests" in the above definition of Asperger's.
The Grit contingent emphasizes the achievement of long-term goals, the Asperger contingent emphasizes social ineptitude. Both are describing the same behavior in different ways.
It's not as though this is an original idea -- it's why Asperger's is being abandoned as a diagnosis (too many successful people are being stigmatized with a pointless mental illness diagnosis).
"A Powerful Identity, a Vanishing Diagnosis":
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/11/03/health/03asperger.html?pag...