Originally posted by curious4
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I am talking about people who are not doctors, or someone in a field where they have some expertise, like a person with a Ph.D in education, or psychology, or neurochemistry; usually, they are people who know something about an historical period, which seems like it should give them an edge over a shmo who knows nothing, but really, a Civil War expert is no more qualified to diagnose frontal lobe deficits in Stonewall Jackson than anyone else.
First, Jackson was not suspected during his lifetime of having a problem, and one criterion, probably the most important one, of Asperger's is that it causes impaired functioning. Second, the articles I have read are by people who have a very cursory knowledge of the syndrome. From what I can find out about their backgrounds, they do not appear even to have met a person actually diagnosed with the disorder by a qualified professional. Last, since there were no problems during Jackson's life, all the "evidence," such as it is, is inferential, anecdotal, and highly personal to the person making the erzatz diagnosis. Just as an example, most of what we know about Jackson is from his life as a military man. To judge that he, as a person, was routine-oriented, and "obsessive" about detail based on his life as a military man is unfair. Aside from "obsessive" being a really questionable adjective to use, when it doesn't come from a contemporary account, both those qualities are valuable in military life, and people who are in the military behave like that on active duty, but those are job skills, not personality traits. It would be like calling a secretary who can type 80 wpm without error a "perfectionist."
This is happening to more people than just Jackson. It's practically a hobby in the US to go fishing for historical figures with things like Asperger's syndrome. AS seems to be the favorite, I guess because it is possible to be fairly high functioning with it, although, honestly, if a child who is diagnosed with it achieves normal function before finishing school, the diagnosis is usually removed. OCD and bipolar disorder are also popular, probably because most people get their image of those from TV and movies.
I have no problem with qualified people trying to update a diagnosis of someone who really did have a problem. I'd love to know exactly what Catherine Eddowes had that was called "Bright's disease," particularly since some of the nephritic conditions that were once called that are frequently comorbid with diabetes. I'd love to know if she could have been less drunk than she appeared, because her blood sugar was very high, or very low, because if that was true, she could have become much more disoriented after she left the jail, without getting anything else to drink. I am not an endocrinologist. I have had diabetic clients, and a diabetic grandmother, and I have chronic and reactive hypoglycemia, so I know a little more than most people, but I'm not going any further with it unless there is a photo or very good description of Eddowes intact kidney somewhere, and I could ask a real doctor.
I just don't like seeing historical figures getting labels slapped on them, and I also don't like seeing people diagnosing people they met through Facebook, based on an article they saw on Wikipedia.
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