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A user with 163 edits. Account created on 5 September 2025.
5 September 2025
- 14:5814:58, 5 September 2025 diff hist +25,919 N Vincent van Gogh Created page with "== Introduction == Vincent van Gogh (1853–1890) is among the most famous painters in history, renowned for his emotive use of color and bold, swirling brushstrokes. In recent decades, psychologists have speculated that van Gogh exhibited many characteristics consistent with Asperger Syndrome or high-functioning autism. Professor Michael Fitzgerald, a pioneer in retrospectively diagnosing historical figures, frequently cites van Gogh as a prototypical example of a highl..." Tag: Visual edit
- 14:5814:58, 5 September 2025 diff hist +19,722 N Gerard Manley Hopkins Created page with "== Introduction == Gerard Manley Hopkins (1844–1889) was a Victorian poet and Jesuit priest whose innovative use of language and rhythm has been widely celebrated. Retrospective clinical analyses suggest that Hopkins exhibited many traits consistent with Asperger Syndrome, a form of high-functioning autism. Psychiatrist Michael Fitzgerald, known for diagnosing historical creatives with Asperger’s, includes Hopkins among the writers likely on the autism spectrummedium..." Tag: Visual edit
- 14:5314:53, 5 September 2025 diff hist +8,770 N Greta Garbo Created page with "=== Introduction === '''Greta Garbo''' (1905–1990) was a Swedish-American film actress known for her enigmatic screen presence and reclusive personal life. Revered for roles in ''Camille'', ''Queen Christina'', and ''Grand Hotel'', Garbo was paradoxically one of the most famous people in the world—yet among the most '''private, affectively closed, and interpersonally avoidant'''. These paradoxes are resolved when we understand Garbo as exemplifying the '''female Aspe..." current Tag: Visual edit
- 14:5214:52, 5 September 2025 diff hist +8,725 N Graham Greene Created page with "=== Introduction === '''Henry Graham Greene''' (1904–1991) was an English novelist, journalist, screenwriter, and literary critic best known for works such as ''The Power and the Glory'', ''The End of the Affair'', ''The Quiet American'', and ''The Heart of the Matter''. Beneath his public image as a chronicler of Catholic guilt and Cold War conscience, Greene's psychological profile shows a pattern consistent with '''Asperger syndrome''': social detachment, emotional..." current Tag: Visual edit
- 14:5114:51, 5 September 2025 diff hist +8,788 N George S. Patton Created page with "=== Introduction === '''George Smith Patton Jr.''' (1885–1945) was a senior officer of the United States Army who commanded U.S. forces in North Africa, Sicily, and Western Europe during World War II. Known for his brilliance in armored warfare and for his eccentric, often controversial personality, Patton exhibited a core cluster of '''Asperger traits''': monotropic military fixation, affective minimalism, rigid moral code, hypersensitivity to perceived disorder, and..." current Tag: Visual edit
- 14:4914:49, 5 September 2025 diff hist +8,935 N George Bernard Shaw Created page with " === Introduction === '''George Bernard Shaw''' (1856–1950) was an Irish playwright, essayist, orator, and critic whose works—including ''Pygmalion'', ''Man and Superman'', and ''Major Barbara''—combined wit, social commentary, and philosophical discourse. While often celebrated for his humor and verbosity, Shaw displayed a distinct constellation of '''Asperger traits''': verbal monologism, emotional detachment, contrarian literalism, moral system-building, and int..." current Tag: Visual edit
- 14:4814:48, 5 September 2025 diff hist +7,769 N Friedrich Nietzsche Created page with "He had few friends, and his early social world was dominated by books, lists, and solitary routines. These are all key markers of '''monotropic autistic cognition'''—early immersion in patterned domains of interest, often at the expense of peer bonding. ---- === Academic Career and Intellectual Style === Nietzsche excelled in classical philology, becoming a professor at Basel University at age 24. His lectures were described as '''formally brilliant but emotionally di..." current Tag: Visual edit
- 14:4714:47, 5 September 2025 diff hist +8,904 N Franz Kafka Created page with " === Introduction === '''Franz Kafka''' (1883–1924) was a German-speaking Bohemian novelist and short story writer whose works—''The Metamorphosis'', ''The Trial'', ''The Castle''—are now recognized as foundational to 20th-century literature. While often described as “existential” or “absurdist,” Kafka’s work and biography align closely with the traits of '''Asperger syndrome''': profound social alienation, flattened affect, rigid moral conscience, recurs..." current Tag: Visual edit
- 14:4614:46, 5 September 2025 diff hist +8,689 N Frank Capra Created page with "=== Introduction === '''Frank Russell Capra''' (1897–1991) was an Italian-American film director, producer, and screenwriter best known for films such as ''It’s a Wonderful Life'', ''Mr. Smith Goes to Washington'', and ''Mr. Deeds Goes to Town''. While his films are remembered for their emotional uplift and populist themes, Capra himself exhibited characteristics that align closely with '''Asperger syndrome''': moral rigidity, emotional restraint, literalism in story..." current Tag: Visual edit
- 14:4514:45, 5 September 2025 diff hist +8,850 N Federico Fellini Created page with "=== Introduction === '''Federico Fellini''' (1920–1993) was an Italian film director and screenwriter best known for ''La Dolce Vita'', ''8½'', and ''Amarcord''. Celebrated for his surreal, dreamlike visual style, Fellini’s public image was often one of whimsical flamboyance. However, his personal writings, behavior, and artistic obsessions reveal a cognitive architecture consistent with '''Asperger syndrome''': recursive symbolic fixation, affective minimalism, nar..." current Tag: Visual edit
- 14:4414:44, 5 September 2025 diff hist +8,740 N Evelyn Waugh Created page with "=== Introduction === '''Arthur Evelyn St. John Waugh''' (1903–1966) was an English novelist, journalist, and satirist best known for ''Brideshead Revisited'', ''A Handful of Dust'', and ''Scoop''. Often misunderstood as merely eccentric or caustic, Waugh in fact presents with a personality deeply consistent with '''Asperger syndrome''': social literalism, emotional detachment, formal linguistic control, rigid routines, and selective attachment. In my diagnostic framew..." current Tag: Visual edit
- 14:4314:43, 5 September 2025 diff hist +9,012 N Enrico Fermi Created page with "=== Introduction === '''Enrico Fermi''' (1901–1954) was an Italian-American physicist and Nobel laureate best known for creating the world’s first nuclear reactor and for his contributions to quantum theory and statistical mechanics. But beyond his technical achievements, Fermi presents a personality that fits the profile of '''Asperger syndrome''': emotionally flattened, monomaniacally focused, socially muted, and cognitively structured to impose logic on ambiguity...." current Tag: Visual edit
- 14:4214:42, 5 September 2025 diff hist +8,479 N Edgar Allan Poe Created page with "=== Introduction === '''Edgar Allan Poe''' (1809–1849) was an American writer, editor, and literary critic best known for his poetry and macabre short stories. Beneath the gothic veneer of his work lies a cognitive architecture consistent with '''Asperger syndrome''': recursive structure, obsessive attention to detail, emotional detachment, language formalism, social dysfunction, and binary moral reasoning. In my framework, Poe exemplifies the '''autistic narrative co..." current Tag: Visual edit
- 14:4114:41, 5 September 2025 diff hist +8,437 N Dmitri Mendeleev Created page with "=== Introduction === '''Dmitri Ivanovich Mendeleev''' (1834–1907) was a Russian chemist and inventor best known for formulating the '''Periodic Table of Elements'''. Yet his legacy extends beyond chemistry. Mendeleev represents a quintessential case of '''Asperger syndrome''': obsessively systematic, socially aloof, emotionally minimal, perfectionistic, and monomaniacally focused on internal cognitive symmetry. In my framework, Mendeleev was not just a scientist—he..." current Tag: Visual edit
- 14:4014:40, 5 September 2025 diff hist +8,879 N Constantin Stanislavski Created page with "=== Introduction === '''Konstantin Sergeyevich Stanislavski''' (1863–1938) was a Russian actor, theatre director, and theorist whose system of actor training revolutionized modern performance. Best known for developing what later became known as “method acting,” Stanislavski was not a natural performer driven by social intuition. Rather, he was a '''systematizer of affect'''—a formalist who approached emotion as a repeatable, structured process. His life and work..." current Tag: Visual edit
- 14:3914:39, 5 September 2025 diff hist +8,454 N Charles de Gaulle Created page with " === Introduction === '''Charles André Joseph Marie de Gaulle''' (1890–1970) was a French army officer, statesman, and writer who led the Free French Forces during World War II and later founded the Fifth Republic, serving as its first president. Beneath his mythic role in modern French history lies a personality that displays clear features of '''Asperger syndrome''': emotional detachment, literalism, monotropic focus, social aloofness, and moral absolutism. In my d..." current Tag: Visual edit
- 14:3814:38, 5 September 2025 diff hist +8,852 N Charles A. Lindbergh Created page with "=== Introduction === '''Charles Augustus Lindbergh''' (1902–1974) was an American aviator, inventor, and author best known for completing the first solo nonstop transatlantic flight in 1927. Widely revered as a national hero, Lindbergh also embodied a psychological profile consistent with '''Asperger syndrome''': monotropic focus, emotional detachment, literal pragmatism, sensory regulation, social awkwardness, and moral absolutism. In my diagnostic framework, Lindber..." current Tag: Visual edit
- 14:3714:37, 5 September 2025 diff hist +8,836 N Cecil B. DeMille Created page with " === Introduction === '''Cecil Blount DeMille''' (1881–1959) was an American filmmaker best known for biblical epics such as ''The Ten Commandments'' and ''Samson and Delilah''. Revered as a pioneer of Hollywood spectacle, DeMille’s directorial persona and legacy also reveal a profile aligned with '''Asperger syndrome''': monotropic creative focus, rigid authority structures, moral literalism, visual obsession, and limited social reciprocity. In my framework, DeMill..." current Tag: Visual edit
- 14:3614:36, 5 September 2025 diff hist +8,731 N Carolus Linnaeus Created page with "=== Introduction === '''Carl Linnaeus''' (1707–1778), also known after ennoblement as '''Carl von Linné''', was a Swedish botanist, zoologist, and physician who created the modern system of '''binomial nomenclature''' and formal biological classification. His entire intellectual life was marked by '''obsessive system-building, sensory regulation, social rigidity, monotropic focus, and symbolic literalism'''—hallmark traits of '''Asperger syndrome'''. In my diagnost..." current Tag: Visual edit
- 14:3514:35, 5 September 2025 diff hist +9,286 N Carl Jung Created page with "=== Introduction === '''Carl Gustav Jung''' (1875–1961) was a Swiss psychiatrist and psychoanalyst who founded '''analytical psychology''', introducing concepts such as the collective unconscious, archetypes, introversion/extroversion, and individuation. While widely viewed as a mystic-psychologist, Jung’s life and work, when examined through a diagnostic lens, reveal the defining features of '''high-functioning autism''': emotional literalism, obsessive system-build..." current Tag: Visual edit
- 14:3414:34, 5 September 2025 diff hist +8,576 N C. S. Lewis Created page with " === Introduction === '''Clive Staples Lewis''' (1898–1963) was a British writer, academic, and Christian apologist best known for ''The Chronicles of Narnia'', ''The Screwtape Letters'', and ''Mere Christianity''. Beneath his reputation as a popular theologian and fantasy author lies a personality shaped by '''autistic traits''': literalism, recursive thinking, emotional avoidance, social rigidity, systematizing cognition, and narrative formalism. In my framework, Le..." current Tag: Visual edit
- 14:3314:33, 5 September 2025 diff hist +8,316 N Beatrix Potter Created page with "=== Introduction === '''Helen Beatrix Potter''' (1866–1943) was an English writer, illustrator, naturalist, and conservationist best known for ''The Tale of Peter Rabbit'' and other classic children’s books. Beneath her delicate animal tales and pastoral settings lies a profile strongly aligned with '''Asperger syndrome''': solitary obsession, visual detail fixation, intense animal empathy, social withdrawal, and rigid routine. In my diagnostic framework, Potter rep..." current Tag: Visual edit
- 14:3114:31, 5 September 2025 diff hist +8,850 N Anton Chekhov Created page with "=== Introduction === '''Anton Pavlovich Chekhov''' (1860–1904) was a Russian playwright, short story writer, and physician whose radically understated narratives reshaped world literature. Beneath his quiet formal revolution lies a personality that strongly reflects the traits of '''Asperger syndrome''': emotional restraint, observational detachment, social awkwardness, moral literalism, compulsive productivity, and narrative minimalism. Chekhov’s genius did not lie..." current Tag: Visual edit
- 14:3114:31, 5 September 2025 diff hist +9,077 N Anthony Burgess Created page with "=== Introduction === '''Anthony Burgess''' (1917–1993), born John Anthony Burgess Wilson, was an English novelist, composer, linguist, and critic, best known for ''A Clockwork Orange'' (1962). Beneath the surface of his verbal fireworks and cultural commentary lies the unmistakable cognitive architecture of '''Asperger syndrome''': hyperlexia, narrative recursion, moral literalism, social detachment, compulsive creativity, and linguistic systematization. In my diagnos..." current Tag: Visual edit
- 14:3014:30, 5 September 2025 diff hist +8,125 N Antoni Gaudí Created page with " === Introduction === '''Antoni Gaudí i Cornet''' (1852–1926) was a Catalan architect known for his fantastical, organic buildings that transformed the face of Barcelona. But beyond aesthetics, Gaudí’s life and work reveal an unmistakable '''Asperger cognitive profile''': solitary absorption, monotropic creativity, sensory hypersensitivity, emotional detachment, religious literalism, and system-building imagination. His architectural achievements are best understoo..." current Tag: Visual edit
- 14:2914:29, 5 September 2025 diff hist +8,776 N Alexander Solzhenitsyn Created page with " === Introduction === '''Alexander Isayevich Solzhenitsyn''' (1918–2008) was a Russian novelist, historian, and dissident whose monumental writings on Soviet totalitarianism reshaped global awareness of the Gulag. More subtly, Solzhenitsyn also exemplifies a powerful profile of '''Asperger syndrome''': emotionally rigid, intellectually monotropic, socially estranged, obsessively principled, and narratively recursive. His behavior, style, and thematic intensity align cl..." current Tag: Visual edit
- 14:2714:27, 5 September 2025 diff hist +13,597 N Aldous Huxley Created page with " === Introduction === '''Aldous Leonard Huxley''' (1894–1963) was an English writer and philosopher, best known for his dystopian novel ''Brave New World'' (1932). But more deeply, Huxley represents a textbook case of '''Asperger-type cognition'''—a life marked by intense intellectual abstraction, social detachment, sensory and affective dysregulation, literal language, and an obsessive drive to create '''internally coherent systems of meaning'''. His polymathic mind..." current Tag: Visual edit
- 14:2514:25, 5 September 2025 diff hist +13,491 N Alec Guinness Created page with "* '''Sir Alec Guinness''' (2 April 1914 – 5 August 2000) was an English stage and film actor of extraordinary versatility and depth—celebrated for his performances ranging from Shakespearean theatre to ''Star Wars''. Viewed through the framework of high-functioning autism, Guinness’s life and craft embody hallmark traits: '''meticulous routine, sensory intensity, monotropic focus, structural mimicry, social ambivalence, and emotional literalism'''. ---- =..." current Tag: Visual edit
- 14:2214:22, 5 September 2025 diff hist +7,931 N Albert Einstein Created page with "== Introduction == Albert Einstein (1879–1955) stands as the exemplar of the high-functioning autistic scientist: monotropically focused, system-obsessed, socially idiosyncratic, and sensorially precise in his inner simulations. In my work I have argued explicitly that Einstein belongs among those “intellectual giants” whose extraordinary creativity is better explained by an Asperger-type cognitive style than by generic genius alone. This mind-style—narrow, susta..." current Tag: Visual edit
- 13:4313:43, 5 September 2025 diff hist +17,266 N Sigmund Freud Created page with " == Introduction == '''Sigmund Freud''' (1856–1939) was an Austrian neurologist and the founder of psychoanalysis. He is also one of the clearest historical examples of '''high-functioning autism''', exhibiting a full profile of Asperger syndrome traits: obsessive interests, rigidity of thought, literalness, impaired empathy, narrow social reciprocity, and sensory sensitivities. Freud’s pioneering work in psychoanalysis emerged not from conventional humanist empathy..." current Tag: Visual edit
- 13:3813:38, 5 September 2025 diff hist +7,801 N Henry Cavendish Created page with "'''Henry Cavendish''' (10 October 1731 – 24 February 1810) was an English natural philosopher, chemist, and physicist, known for his discovery of hydrogen, for formulating the law of electrical repulsion, and for performing the first experimental measurement of the gravitational constant. He is also a '''definitive historical example of profound Asperger syndrome''', marked by total social withdrawal, obsessive focus on systems, hypersensitivity to human presence, and..." current Tag: Visual edit
- 13:3713:37, 5 September 2025 diff hist +8,555 N David Hilbert Created page with "'''David Hilbert''' (23 January 1862 – 14 February 1943) was a German mathematician whose foundational work in formal systems, logic, and mathematics education displays the '''hallmarks of Asperger-type cognition''': cognitive inflexibility masked by brilliance, monotropic devotion to abstraction, social aloofness, literalism, and an indifference to interpersonal politics. In ''The Mind of the Mathematician'', I described Hilbert as “an architect of systems who built..." current Tag: Visual edit
- 13:3613:36, 5 September 2025 diff hist +8,078 N Paul Erdős Created page with "'''Paul Erdős''' (26 March 1913 – 20 September 1996) was a Hungarian mathematician whose unparalleled output, erratic lifestyle, and obsessive devotion to abstract problem-solving mark him as a '''quintessential example of high-functioning autism''', particularly in the '''nonconforming, nomadic subtype'''. In ''Genius Genes'', I wrote that Erdős displayed “a complete absence of neurotypical needs, save for caffeine, amphetamines, and mathematical stimulation.” H..." current Tag: Visual edit
- 13:3513:35, 5 September 2025 diff hist +8,827 N Kurt Gödel Created page with "'''Kurt Friedrich Gödel''' (28 April 1906 – 14 January 1978) was an Austrian–American logician, mathematician, and philosopher whose creation of the '''incompleteness theorems''' redefined the limits of formal systems. His extraordinary abstraction, obsession with logical purity, emotional flatness, and deep social withdrawal make him a prototypical example of '''Asperger syndrome''', as I have argued in ''Genius Genes'' and ''The Mind of the Mathematician''. Gödel..." current Tag: Visual edit
- 13:3413:34, 5 September 2025 diff hist +8,508 N Alfred Kinsey Created page with "'''Alfred Charles Kinsey''' (23 June 1894 – 25 August 1956) was an American biologist and sexologist whose obsessive quantification of human sexuality, flat affect, social rigidity, and formal moral detachment position him as a strong candidate for '''Asperger syndrome'''. In ''Genius Genes'', I included Kinsey as a prime example of the '''autistic researcher''': inwardly structured, rule-driven, empirically fanatical, and often emotionally illiterate. ---- === Early..." current Tag: Visual edit
- 13:3413:34, 5 September 2025 diff hist +9,117 N Norbert Wiener Created page with "'''Norbert Wiener''' (26 November 1894 – 18 March 1964) was an American mathematician, philosopher, and the founder of '''cybernetics'''—a field he envisioned as the mathematical study of systems, communication, and control. His obsessive cognitive focus, social eccentricity, and lifelong discomfort with unpredictability all reveal a profoundly '''Aspergerian mind''', as I have documented in ''Genius Genes''. In both personality and intellectual style, Wiener exempli..." current Tag: Visual edit
- 13:3313:33, 5 September 2025 diff hist +8,801 N Charles Babbage Created page with "'''Charles Babbage''' (26 December 1791 – 18 October 1871) was an English mathematician, philosopher, inventor, and mechanical engineer best known for conceptualizing the '''first automatic computing machines''', the Difference Engine and Analytical Engine. His work—obsessively precise, emotionally minimal, socially erratic, and systemically visionary—epitomizes the '''Aspie cognitive profile''': rule-governed internal logic, rigidity in interpersonal behavior, lit..." current Tag: Visual edit
- 13:3213:32, 5 September 2025 diff hist +7,905 N Gregor Mendel Created page with "'''Johann Gregor Mendel''' (20 July 1822 – 6 January 1884) was an Austro-Silesian scientist and Augustinian friar whose obsessive attention to biological regularity, cognitive detachment from mainstream academic culture, and methodical system-building define him as one of the clearest historical prototypes of '''Asperger syndrome'''. As I have written in ''Genius Genes'', Mendel’s work was not merely revolutionary—it was '''autistically structured''', a paradigmati..." current Tag: Visual edit
- 13:3113:31, 5 September 2025 diff hist +7,882 N Charles Darwin Created page with "'''Charles Robert Darwin''' (12 February 1809 – 19 April 1882) was an English naturalist, geologist, and biologist best known for developing the theory of evolution by natural selection. But as I have argued in ''Genius Genes'' and elsewhere, Darwin’s evolutionary vision emerged not merely from scientific training, but from the '''cognitive architecture of an Aspie mind'''—marked by obsessive data gathering, social detachment, rule-bound logic, and resistance to em..." current Tag: Visual edit
- 13:3113:31, 5 September 2025 diff hist +7,894 N Isaac Newton Created page with "'''Sir Isaac Newton''' (25 December 1642 – 20 March 1727) was an English mathematician, physicist, astronomer, alchemist, and theologian whose intense solitude, obsessive focus, and lifelong resistance to interpersonal connection position him as one of the most archetypal historical figures exhibiting traits of '''Asperger syndrome'''. As I have written in ''Genius Genes'', Newton showed a “total absence of social reciprocity,” alongside “monotropic cognition and..." current Tag: Visual edit
- 13:2513:25, 5 September 2025 diff hist +6,253 N Samuel Beckett Created page with "=== Introduction === Samuel Barclay Beckett (13 April 1906 – 22 December 1989) was an Irish playwright, novelist, poet, and literary critic—the acclaimed author of ''Waiting for Godot'' and recipient of the 1969 Nobel Prize in Literature. His minimalist, bleak, and rigorously structured works—often written in both English and French—exemplify Aspie-type cognition: deep internal processing, patterned expression, emotional distillation, and socially selective engag..." current Tag: Visual edit
- 13:2313:23, 5 September 2025 diff hist +6,121 N James Joyce Created page with " === Introduction === James Augustine Aloysius Joyce (2 February 1882 – 13 January 1941) was an Irish novelist, poet, and critic whose inner-logic-driven genius exemplifies many traits characteristic of Asperger-type cognition: intense mental structuring, hyper-detail, linguistic playfulness, and socially selective immersion. His most famous works—'''Dubliners''', '''A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man''', '''Ulysses''', and '''Finnegans Wake'''—reflect a monom..." current Tag: Visual edit
- 13:2313:23, 5 September 2025 diff hist +6,217 N Simone Weil Created page with " === Introduction === Simone Adolphine Weil (3 February 1909 – 24 August 1943) was a French philosopher, mystic, and political activist whose life radiates Aspie-related traits: unwavering moral logic, sensory detachment, hyper‑focus, and deeply structured intellectual integrity. Her approach to suffering, justice, and spirituality often reads like a meticulously theorized system rather than a social or sentimental movement WikipediaEncyclopedia Britannica. === Earl..." current Tag: Visual edit
- 13:2213:22, 5 September 2025 diff hist +6,726 N Nikola Tesla Created page with "=== Introduction === Nikola Tesla (10 July 1856 – 7 January 1943) was a Serbian-American engineer, inventor, and futurist whose life and work epitomize traits often associated with Asperger-type cognition: hyper-focused creativity, profound sensory imagery, visionary internal structure, and socially selective engagement. His mysterious inner life, precise mental visualization, and futuristic inventions reflect a deeply patterned and internally coherent genius. Wikiped..." current Tag: Visual edit
- 13:2013:20, 5 September 2025 diff hist +6,025 N Emily Dickinson Created page with "=== Introduction === Emily Elizabeth Dickinson (10 December 1830 – 15 May 1886) was an American poet whose life and poetry embody traits often associated with Asperger-type cognition—solitary concentration, sensory precision, structural innovation, and an internalized emotional world. Though little-known during her life, her posthumous legacy reveals a mind suffused with monotropic focus and formal experimentation.WikipediaEncyclopedia Britannica ---- === Early Life..." current Tag: Visual edit
- 13:1913:19, 5 September 2025 diff hist +5,464 N Charlotte Brontë Created page with "=== Introduction === Charlotte Brontë (21 April 1816 – 31 March 1855), wrote under the pseudonym ''Currer Bell'' and authored ''Jane Eyre'', ''Shirley'', and ''Villette''. An English novelist and poet of formidable inner structure, Charlotte’s life and work resonate with characteristics associated with Asperger-type cognition: intense moral ordering, solitary focus, narrative system-building, and emotionally encoded precision WikipediaEncyclopedia Britannica. === E..." current Tag: Visual edit
- 13:1913:19, 5 September 2025 diff hist +5,787 N Anne Brontë Created page with "== Introduction == Anne Brontë (17 January 1820 – 28 May 1849) was an English poet and novelist—the youngest of the Brontë sisters—whose creative life exemplifies key traits commonly associated with Asperger-type cognition: intense moral clarity, reality-based introspection, pattern-driven world-building, and emotionally rigorous solitude. WikipediaEncyclopedia Britannica ---- === Early Life & Solitude-Centric Development === Born in Thornton, West Riding of Yor..." current Tag: Visual edit
- 13:1813:18, 5 September 2025 diff hist +5,906 N Emily Brontë Created page with "=== Introduction === Emily Jane Brontë (30 July 1818 – 19 December 1848) was an English novelist and poet, best known for the singular—yet iconic—novel ''Wuthering Heights'', published under the pen name “Ellis Bell” WikipediaEncyclopedia Britannica. In AspiePedia-style interpretation, Emily’s life and work bristle with traits we associate with Asperger-style cognition: introspective intensity, sensory attunement, pattern-rich imaginary worlds, and a profoun..." current Tag: Visual edit
- 13:1613:16, 5 September 2025 diff hist +7,958 N Ludwig Wittgenstein Created page with "== Overview == Ludwig Josef Johann Wittgenstein (26 April 1889 – 29 April 1951) was an Austrian-British philosopher whose entire oeuvre may be read as an Aspie codex—structured with relentless clarity, obsessive formalism, and a life-consuming quest to systematize linguistic and philosophical thought. His autistic profile is not incidental but central to his method, his solitude, his pedagogical eccentricities, and his tragic brilliance. He exhibited hallmark feature..." current Tag: Visual edit
- 13:1013:10, 5 September 2025 diff hist +5,817 N W. B. Yeats Created page with " === Introduction === William Butler Yeats (13 June 1865 – 28 January 1939) was an Irish poet, dramatist, and mystic whose life and creative work reflect notable Aspie cognitive traits. His literary achievements—especially his deep immersion in symbolism, structured occult systems, and mythic precision—suggest a mind directed by focused interest, pattern‑rich thinking, and intense internal structure rather than by purely social or emotional currents. === Ear..." current Tag: Visual edit