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  1. Last 7 days
    1. Things that stood out

      1. Social justice perspective on psychological disability, hence interventions via ecological model
      2. Psychological disability as identity (at least part of it), and them having epistemic authority over it
      3. ontological collaboration

      Themes 1. dysfunction as relational rather than individual. 2. neurodivergence acceptance and pride 3. therapists to cultivate a relational epistemic humility

  2. Jan 2023
  3. Jul 2022
  4. Sep 2021
    1. I wondered about something outside the scope of her book, which is neurodivergence. The Embodied Mind looks at a wide range of studies that all seem to search for the qualities, behaviors, and tendencies of a typical mind. The typical mind, like the typical body, is a statistical figment, an abstraction from tens, hundreds, thousands, and millions of individual minds and bodies, each atypical in its own way. What happens, for instance, to the extended mind of someone with significant physical limitations? (Stephen Hawking seems to have extended his mind pretty well.) A fascinating sequel to Paul’s book might be something along the lines of Oliver Sacks’s writings, a study of neurodivergence, atypicality, and what they can tell us about how we live, learn, and work. As fascinating as the similarities between brains are the differences.

      Looking at neurodivergence within this framing can be an important extension.

      We're definitely not all the same and some of the differences and research on them can potentially help us all.