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Did Einstein have autism?

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By Apoorva Mandavilli
26 February 2008

Obsessive detail to certain topics, trouble communicating clearly, and poor social skills.

Very broadly speaking, that sounds like many scientists I've encountered over the years.

But a British psychiatrist is now saying that some of the best-known scientists of all time had Asperger syndrome, a high-functioning disorder on the autism spectrum, which is characterized by similar symptoms.

According to Michael Fitzgerald, professor of psychiatry at Trinity College in Dublin, a long list of 'geniuses' ― including Albert Einstein, Isaac Newton, George Orwell, H. G. Wells Ludwig Wittgenstein, Beethoven, Mozart, Hans Christian Andersen and Immanuel Kant ― all had Asperger syndrome.

"I'm arguing the genes for autism/Asperger's, and creativity are essentially the same," Fitzgerald apparently told a conference in London.

Fitzgerald's proof of this claim is accounts of these geniuses that describe them as loners, difficult, highly focused for decades on a single problem without paying attention to others' views (never mind Einstein's sense of humor, seldom seen in Asperger syndrome).

Hmmm. Maybe they were just really intelligent and fascinated with the problems they were working on ― sort of like, as I said before, most scientists.

Comments

Name: Eric Ogletree
3 April 2009 - 12:40PM

I find that this article is a bit short, but informative.

Just one comment that needs to be made though. Although I can't speak for all aspies, but I feel like as though alot of aspies have various levels of humour. I even know one aspy who laughs at everything to the point of being socially inappropriate.

Also, I don't view myself as a genius, but it's nice to know that I fall within the same group of people who have extremely high intelligence.

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