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Put simply:
No there isn't a link.
Autism is present from birth until death. It's not caused by the environment you grew up in nor can it be "cured". It is not possible to "become" autistic.
Without doubt, the environment we grow up in has a direct influence on our personalities, but it cannot make a person autistic. Autism is far more than a series of personality traits.
There have been countless studies over decades which support this. If you want to learn more I would strongly recommend getting hold of the book
"Neurotribes" by Steve Silberman. You'll learn a great deal about how autism presents and the story behind the science that led to it's identification.
Well AND/OR, not exclusively AND.Eh?
I thought ASC is caused by genetic and environmental factors.
Autism is genetic. The more extreme cases (ASD2/3) are not more autistic. They just have more aggravated co-morbid conditions, which ARE the product of [physiological] environment. Absent said co-morbids, we are just an alternative neurology; functional, if in the minority.I thought ASC is caused by genetic and environmental factors.
Autism is genetic. The more extreme cases (ASD2/3) are not more autistic. They just have more aggravated co-morbid conditions, which ARE the product of [physiological] environment. Absent said co-morbids, we are just an alternative neurology; functional, if in the minority.
The hypothesis of "developmentally repressive formative environments" was first proposed by Leo Kanner and has, since, been thoroughly disproven.
The key to your misconception is interpreting autism as "behaviours" or personality traits. Autism goes far, far deeper than that. Our minds work differently to the "neuro typical" minds of the majority because our brains are wired differently. We are born this way, not made.
True there are some conditions which overlap with autism in their presentation, but they are separate. We are not "damaged goods" who have been repressed or terrorised into being the way we are - we would be autistic wherever we grew up and whatever our backgrounds. We can be male, female, NB, trans, gay, straight, black, white, brown, Christian, Muslim, atheist, right wing, left wing, geniuses or intellectually disabled. The thing we all have in common is brains which function differently from the majority.
Our upbringing may shape our beliefs, our opinions and our personalities, but it doesn't create the differences in perception or neural processing that characterise autism.
Plenty of autistics are Born-Again Christians and find it to be freeing rather than repressive.
There are common traits however, such as issues with socialisation and intensely focused interests or "obsessions".
I can think of about 7 or 8 off the top of my head related to my mum.
I think, put simpler, what Autistamatic is trying to say is that you are born with the genes of autism or not, Religion has not changed your genetic make up.
Epigenetics?
Epigenetics is the study of heritable phenotype changes that do not involve alterations in the DNA sequence.[1] The Greek prefix epi- (ἐπι- "over, outside of, around") in epigenetics implies features that are "on top of" or "in addition to" the traditional genetic basis for inheritance.[2] Epigenetics most often denotes changes that affect gene activity and expression, but can also be used to describe any heritable phenotypic change. Such effects on cellular and physiological phenotypic traits may result from external or environmental factors, or be part of normal development. The standard definition of epigenetics requires these alterations to be heritable,[3][4] in the progeny of either cells or organisms.Welcome SpecG