gwynfryn wrote:
The major reason for this confusion is that, like most people, he doesn’t distinguish between “autism” and “autistic”.
Historically, “autistic” came first, long before Leo Kanner coined the term autism,
Leo Kanner didn't coin the term "autism." The latter term "was coined in 1911 by the German psychiatrist Eugen Bleuler to describe a symptom of the most severe cases of schizophrenia, a concept he had also created," according to
How autism became autism by Bonnie Evans,
Hist Human Sci. 2013;26(3):3–31.
gwynfryn wrote:
to describe subjects he apparently considered to be autistic. Most people (as displayed in this thread) now use “autistic” as an adjective of autism, which is plainly wrong; “autistic” being one of those aspects of the psyche which together determine our personalities (everybody has an autistic segment, ranging from very weak to very strong: though mister average in all the other traits, I score from very weak to very strong in the autistic) and thus has an existence in its own right.
Perhaps things are different in the French-speaking world, but, here in the English-speaking world at least, "autistic" has always been the adjective form of "autism" -- whatever the word "autism" happened to mean at any given time, which has varied radically over the past century.
gwynfryn wrote:
Most autistics, if we adhere to the “lower than average IQ” diagnostic, do not have autism; they are separate issues!
What “lower than average IQ” diagnostic? As far as I am aware, “lower than average IQ” was never a diagnostic criterion for autism. Even Kanner, in his famous paper, described some of the boys he studied as being highly intelligent.
gwynfryn wrote:
Researching the prior art should clarify this point for those of you prepared to take the trouble.
Researching the prior art should clarify that the word "autism" has nearly always been coupled with (NOT distinct in meaning from) the word "autistic," BUT has had MANY different meanings over the past century. There is no particular reason to pick any particular one of those past meanings as the one true meaning of the word "autistic." These days, nearly everyone uses the words "autism" and "autistic" to refer to what the DSM 5 calls "Autism Spectrum Disorder." Like it or not, it is what it is.
gwynfryn wrote:
The situation only became more confused when Lorna Wing started misapplying the autism label to another dozen or so disorders (and also Narcissistic Personality Disorder,
I just now tried to find a source confirming your claim here that Lorna Wing tried to include NPD as part of the autism spectrum. I couldn't find anything that would indicate this. Can you? In any case, as far as I can tell, hardly anyone in the psychotherapeutic establishment considers NPD to be part of the autism spectrum.
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