The site is all about a work of Donald E. Watson, “Autistic Certainty” that was reprinted from Telicom XI, 1993. The site is as interesting as the author himself. The site informs that the author asked at the age of five, how one knows that he or she exists and what the meaning of being dead is.
The site is all about a work of Donald E. Watson, “Autistic Certainty” that was reprinted from Telicom XI, 1993. The site is as interesting as the author himself. The site informs that the author asked at the age of five, how one knows that he or she exists and what the meaning of being dead is.
The site provides you all the information related to autistic thinking on web. To gather all the information from the website, all you have to do is to get a subscription. If you are from a university that has a registered IP you do jot need to log in. just contact your librarian.
Temple Grandin, Assistant Professor of Colorado State University, here shares his experience of the sensory problems and communication difficulties of visual thinking. Here he also discusses the similarities and differences that he has with other people as far as an autism diagnosis is concerned. He also talks about other neurological problems in his paper.
Carla Cheltenham, who is a freelance writer and the mother of a seven year autistic son, has written a review of the Autistic thinking, by Peter Vermeulen. According to her, "The anecdotal style offers several 'light-bulb' moments - a sudden understanding of why a person with autism reacts the way he does in certain circumstances."
The site displays the review of Autistic Thinking of Peter Vermeulen by Andrew Foster. He said that the book is like ringing bells for the people who are related with the autistic persons in a way or other. Some of them are like alarms. But mostly they are truths that are crystal clear. The book has highlighted some parts that we never have given a thought to.




