Wednesday, April 02, 2025

What is the most likely cause of autism?

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Put simply, natural selection.

You need to understand this from an evolutionary perspective.

Nature has a problem. It has reached the physical limits of how big a cranium the spine can support.

So there's only way to make human beings smarter.

Play with the wiring.

It's simply a matrer of time and mutations. Human beings and wolves share common ancestors millions of years back.

So given enough time and enough mutations, human beings WILL appear who are rewired from primates to a more wolflike operating system.

Such human beings lack much of the dexterity of primates. They're just a head with a weapon attached. But they are much smarter than the old humans.

Of course, this is a process of random trial and error. These are experiments of nature.

But anyway, here we are today. Human beings do exist who are mutated enough to be fifty percent more intelligent than the old ones, have memories four orders of magnitude greater, sharper releces, more pure aggression, sensory perception that is far greater (synaesthesia) better enotional control, they're the wolf man.

This is, of course, what a genius is. The true hunter, the master predator.

Autism is a very big part of the combination of mutations needed by nature to create this, the literall pinnacle of biological evolution. It is, as Hans Asperger remarked, the necessary precondition. Autism is necessary as the first step that makes the rest of the mutation possible.

Different people are on different levels of this ladder of genetic mutation. Some just have the Autism one and they're fucked, being blunt.

It's what that mutation makes possible that makes it so important.

Without it, humanity would still be living in caves today.

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