benaspiringwriter
Member
This is a very interesting thread. Proust once said about literature; 'it is more real than reality'. The perfect riposte to my nagging mum saying 'get your nose out of that book!'. What's more, there is a youtube documentary on William Golding where Golding argues that, pace the reason-worshipping tradition flowing back to the eighteenth century enlightenment, human consciousness is always conditioned by the imagination. Elsewhere, during the book Becoming Dickens: the invention of a novelist, Oscar Wilde is quoted as saying 'one's real life is the one one doesn't lead'. I will probably never achieve my dream of becoming a professional, published writer, however keeping the dream alive is often fun and fulfilling despite the frequent disappointment! Or, as Aristotle once said 'do things not for the applause to be gained by them, but for the worth of the things themselves' . Do some of you feel such pride and pleasure through acting with autistic naturalness in obscurity, I wonder?
Lastly, what do people think about Hans Asperger's idea that often in autism 'the language is nearly always unnatural' in so far as this has implications for how autistic people use their imaginations? Do we use language in a mechanical, un-subtle way, and therefore loose some of it's nuances? Therefore are autistic imaginations often mechanical, un-subtle, also? However, perhaps, the long list of great autistic science fiction writers suggests that the autistic imagination is perfectly capable of being both mechanical and subtle? i.e On the one hand, in her 1995 book Thinking in pictures Temple Grandin argues that Einstein--- although not a science fiction writer, certainly a scientist, and so germane to the former topic--- was attracted to science for the perhaps initially slightly counter intuitive reasons of it's seeming sensuous characteristics; (thus the subtle imagination of the autistic scientist Einstein); and on the other hand, other autism books such as 2015’s Neurotribes argue that some classical science fiction writers, also emerging in the 20th century, were sometimes ‘guilty’ of producing plots that were transparent and implausible, and were only really fashioned into existence so as to parade various scientific objects and concepts. (thus examples of the autistic and science-related imagination being 'mechanical’, also')
Again, what do people think?
Lastly, what do people think about Hans Asperger's idea that often in autism 'the language is nearly always unnatural' in so far as this has implications for how autistic people use their imaginations? Do we use language in a mechanical, un-subtle way, and therefore loose some of it's nuances? Therefore are autistic imaginations often mechanical, un-subtle, also? However, perhaps, the long list of great autistic science fiction writers suggests that the autistic imagination is perfectly capable of being both mechanical and subtle? i.e On the one hand, in her 1995 book Thinking in pictures Temple Grandin argues that Einstein--- although not a science fiction writer, certainly a scientist, and so germane to the former topic--- was attracted to science for the perhaps initially slightly counter intuitive reasons of it's seeming sensuous characteristics; (thus the subtle imagination of the autistic scientist Einstein); and on the other hand, other autism books such as 2015’s Neurotribes argue that some classical science fiction writers, also emerging in the 20th century, were sometimes ‘guilty’ of producing plots that were transparent and implausible, and were only really fashioned into existence so as to parade various scientific objects and concepts. (thus examples of the autistic and science-related imagination being 'mechanical’, also')
Again, what do people think?