Mw99 wrote:
Asperger's Syndrome doesn't make people smart. It makes them maniacally obsessed with one area of knowledge. Actually, all the Asperger's people I met academically are really really full of themselves, and packed full of the driest, most pedantic thought. They know a lot of facts from obsessively reading an endless series of books, but aren't really able to synthesize things in exactly the way a really good intellect can do.
Someone posted that comment in another forum.
Well, it is entirely possible that the inclinations of people with AS could give them the superficial appearance of being smarter than they are - even someone of moderate intelligence would be highly specialized and versed in a field even if there brain isn't exactly up to par with the NTs in that field of a similar knowledge. Thus, we would have this sort of odd shifting of people who aren't as bright into intellectual realms predominantly occupied by people who are smarter than that. Thus, people with AS would tend to appear pedantic and not deeply intelligent in a higher ratio than NTs (who, when they aren't smart, wear it on their sleeve, so to speak)
One characteristic associate with AS is "more rote than understanding" - this may have a degree of validity. The rote ability for facts may outweigh a person with AS' ability to actually creatively use this knowledge. But this may not indicate anything about the actual average ability to think creatively as it relates to the population at large.
I personally wonder weather the "parrot stuff" effect might have less to do with a lack of understanding and more to do with a superior capacity to acquire information paired with an otherwise normal intellect. Though I'm just thinking out loud here...
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