Cannabis makes me paranoid and psychotic, walking by someone smoking it makes me “high”. I doubt I’m the only one who feels this way, therefore it’s harmful to others and should be forbidden. Consumtion in any other way should be legalized.
Cannabis makes me paranoid and psychotic, walking by someone smoking it makes me “high”. I doubt I’m the only one who feels this way, therefore it’s harmful to others and should be forbidden. Consumtion in any other way should be legalized.
Thanks for taking the time to share. Was a very interesting thing to read.
Speaking of autism, this is in the realm of psychology, which is still in its infancy. The terms and theories are far from stable, so you can expect everything to change within the next century. I’m pretty sure the term autism will eventually be divided into a number of distinct phenomena with overlapping symptoms.
Current psychology doesn’t really have the analysis methods that would allow us to formulate and test more proper theories. Currently psychology is largely based on observations, symptoms and opinions, which isn’t really the kind of foundation you would want for a serious science that makes serious predictions.
As a result, anything you read about psychology should be taken with a grain of salt. It’s a work in progress, so the results are only qualitative at best and completely wrong at worst.
Oh yes lol, I am well aware that psychology is… fairly far from a ‘hard’, empirically based science.
It is slowly taking baby steps toward that, but uh yeah… as you say, there is a lack of rigorous analysis methods, and definitions are changing all the time.
I remember a psych. telling me that DSM V was gonna be the last one, the final one…
… and then a massive revision for it came out 10 years later, so basically that’s Windows 10 is gonna be the last Windows, oops here’s Windows 11 / DSM-V-TR (cough DSM-6 cough).
I am glad you concur that ‘Autism’ is likely to be reconfigured as a kind of family of more distinct, overlappable subclasses…
I have certainly met Autistic people with say, basically 0 impulse control and no capacity for emotional regulation… and while I do have some other ‘abnormal’ behavioral patterns and ways of thinking in common with those people…
I am not like that, I am, or was called at one point, a ‘high functioning autistic’… but that was back when Aspergers was… still a distinct thing.
Ironically, this lack of consistent and coherent classification… well, this bothers me greatly, as I very much like ideas that are consistent and coherent, lol.
Oh well, back to making and modifying video game mods for me, hahaha!
Approximately 300 years ago, chemistry was still in a phase that resembles modern psychology. Instead of talking about electrons and atoms, chemists spoke about the affinity two compounds have for each other. Chemists observed reactions and made an affinity table of the results. Have a look at that picture, and you’ll see how messy it was back then.
They didn’t know what their materials were really made of or why they reacted. They were just observing the results, just like psychologists are still doing these days. Sure, there were interpretations and opinions, but most of them went out the window as soon as it became possible to analyze the elemental composition of the materials.
Since autism is defined based on its symptoms, the definition is inherently very nebulous. In medicine, you don’t clump every headache into the same category, because there are a million things that cause the same thing and in many cases you can find the root cause. You just need a few samples and long list of biochemical analyses to find most of them.
Psychology isn’t so lucky. Who knows how many different things got lumped into one big pile we call autism. Same goes for all the disorders too. I would argue that terms like depression and anxiety are about as useful as those 300 year old affinity tables.