this post was submitted on 13 Jun 2023
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Autism

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A community for respectful discussion and memes related to autism acceptance. All neurotypes are welcome.

Values

  1. Acceptance
  2. Openness
  3. Understanding
  4. Equality
  5. Reciprocity
  6. Mutuality
  7. Love

Rules

  1. No abusive, derogatory, or offensive post/comments
  2. No porn, gore, spam, or advertisements allowed
  3. Do not promote Autism Speaks
  4. Do not request for donations
  5. Do not gatekeep or diagnose
  6. Mark NSFW content accordingly
  7. Unless supported directly by a publication in a respected scientific journal, do not link autism to vaccines.
  8. No racism, homophobia, sexism, ableism, or ageism
  9. Respectful venting, including dealing with oppressive neurotypical culture, is okay

Encouraged

  1. Open acceptance of autism as a respectable neurotype
  2. Funny memes
  3. Welcoming and accepting attitudes
  4. Questions regarding autism
  5. Questions on confusing situations
  6. Seeking and sharing support
  7. Engagement in our community's values

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ADHD:

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Neurodivergence:

lemmy.world/c/autism will happily promote other ND communities as long as said communities demonstrate that they share our community's values.

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How to talk about autism:

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[–] Phileosopher@programming.dev 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

That really depends on which philosophy you subscribe to.

The TL;DR is that existential and post-modern philosophy say it's varying degrees of relative, while everything anyone said before ~1800 was saying that facts were immutable.

One fact I can glean is that the data itself may be real (e.g., the wavelengths of light that hit your eyeballs) but the perception is a composite illusion of our mind (e.g., the fact that you just saw a kitty).

[–] CoffeeTails@lemmy.world 3 points 1 year ago (2 children)

ooh, yes I see your point. I think both can be true, and a third; we think we (aka scientists) know how something is, but later finds out it works in a different way. The fact never changed, we just learned what it actually is.

example: red pandas used to be categorised with the gigant pandas (that are closer to regular bears) but after we've learned more about the red pandas they are actually closer to raccoons.

I don't know what I'm trying to say. I hope I understood you correctly, English isn't my first language.

[–] Phileosopher@programming.dev 2 points 1 year ago

Yeah, you get the idea. Things can be always true, but also where we see them wrong. The Sheep in the Field thought experiment shows it clearly.

[–] BackOnMyBS@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

you guys just did the OP meme