Real Freedom is Living Outside the NT Box


© A.J. Mahari
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Adults with Asperger's Sydrome (AS) really know what it is to live life and to exist, be and differently function outside of the Neuro-Typcial (NT) box which is all-too-often held up as the measure by which we all must be held to standard. It is the measure used to determine value and worth, success and failure. It is the box that traps the NT and those with AS live much richer lives and should not be tarnished with this brush of judgment.

Monism, which is the doctrine that mind and matter are formed from, or reducible to, the same ultimate substance or principle of being, can be assimilated into an understanding of what it is like to be an adult with Asperger's Syndrome (AS). It speaks to the reality that life is not some "other defined box" into which we must all fit. We, as beings, within this human realm with all of its incumbent nature cannot and should not be reduced to a single principle or way of being.

Human nature to varying degrees conditions human knowledge. Knowledge is inherently derived from what we are taught and what we experience. It can also be postulated that knowledge is also derived from our intuition, our spiritual essence. How we learn, how we process, how we experience concepts, precepts, and datum drive the ways in which we come to a working and ongoing understanding of ourselves and the world around us.

Ashok Tiwari - in "Real Freedom, A Philosophical View, on the following website www.geocities.com/ashokktiwari/freedom.html asserts that, "Monism does not see, behind man's actions, the purposes of a supreme directorate, foreign to him and determining him according to its will, but rather sees that men, in so far as they realize their intuitive ideas, pursue only their own human ends. Moreover, each individual pursues his own particular ends. For the world of ideas comes to expression, not in a community of men, but only in human individuals. What appears as the common goal of a whole group of people is only the result of the separate acts of will of its individual members..."

So, what I am driving at here is simply this: People with Asperger's Syndrome (AS) live outside the box of the "whole group", or society in general. This is seen, viewed, and defined by most as being "less than" and/or dysfunctional. When, in truth, what this really means is that those with AS are living lives that are of a different nature than those who are neuro-typical (NT). What the majority, in this case, NT's, have in common, is all-too-often (if not always) seen and defined as "normal" leaving anyone, anything, or any difference in values, morals, goals, life choices, paths in life and so forth being categorized as unsuccessful or not valuable in accordance with a monistic view that rejects the metaphysical philosophy of freedom.

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Here's the follow-up discussion on this article: View all related messages

8.   Apr 12, 2005 9:26 AM
In response to Re: New to this posted by Recola:

Hi deehout and thank you for thanking me!
What you're now experiencing with ...


-- posted by beejayUK


7.   Feb 24, 2005 2:18 PM
Hello Dehout
You seem to be in almost the same space that I am - see my response (#20)to A.J.Marhari's #2 article (Jan 16). I have known my boyfriend for 6 months now and at first was very taken by h ...

-- posted by Recola


6.   Jan 28, 2005 8:49 PM
In response to New to this posted by deehout:


deehout,

I am not a professional, but if reading, "Loving Mr. Spock," help ...


-- posted by Red


5.   Jan 24, 2005 2:58 AM
have been married for 2 1/2 years to a wonderful and beautiful man (an engineer turned IT guru!) who I have been unable to reach or understand. I have been in private therapy for 18 months believing t ...

-- posted by deehout


4.   Jan 22, 2005 7:01 PM
AJ,

It my grandson is any indication, he lives free as the wind. With him, there are no gray areas, only black and white. He sounds rude sometimes because he tells things as he sees them. Unless so ...


-- posted by Red





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