This article picks apart a bunch of biases by the researchers of a given paper. The object of study was the differences in behavior between a group of autistic people and a group of non-autistic people when choosing between prioritizing value for oneself or value for the community.

I recommend reading the paper itself too. If that is, understandably, too much for you, I suggest you go for the introduction, the conclusion, and the segments mentioned in the article.

19 points

I care so much it makes me ill

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45 points
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This is very interesting. I’m not diagnosed but strongly suspect I’m on the spectrum and the article rings true for me.

I generally avoid confrontation but I will gladly ruin a whole conversation if I feel like someone else believes something I find immoral or unethical

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25 points
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I feel the same and am on the spectrum myself. I feel that if I don’t say anything when something immoral is said, by not acknowledging it as immoral I’m tacitly supporting it. After all, if it bothered me, why didn’t I say anything?

Of course, there’s some nuance to when and how to have an argument. But I feel there’s a much larger desire to keep the peace among my other family members. Even though some of those family members are really shitty people.

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31 points

There are twelve people having dinner at the table. One of them is a nazi, and openly argues for the extermination of the one minority he hates. No one pushes back against him. There are now twelve nazis having dinner at the table.

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58 points

In my personal opinion as an autistic person, I would argue that the non-autistic participants underestimated the negative consequences of their actions, and simply chose individual benefit over their principles.

I may not be autistic, but I strongly agree with this statement.

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17 points

You may very well be autistic if you agree with this statement. As do I, an autistic person.

Also, autistic people tend to see patterns very easily and extrapolate without effort:

One possible extrapolation is that it would be better to have autistic people make important decisions of grand scale then neurotypical people.

You could also extrapolate that an autistic whitness is more trustworthy than a neurotypical one.

You could even go as far as saying that neurotypicals tend to be hypocritical as they tend to fight for a cause publicly but undermine it privately if that benefits them.

I could go on for hours but I‘m pretty sure we‘re not allowed to hate on NTs here. I think you can very well see where this is going if you try to assert individual value for mankind.

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11 points

This hits very close to home. I’ve lost friends that were very dear to me because I tried to stand up for something important to me.

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5 points

Proud of the ASD participants. You guys get it!

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Autism

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