www.amazon.com Open in urlscan Pro
2600:9000:2490:4800:7:49a5:5fd2:8621  Public Scan

URL: https://www.amazon.com/dp/0399185615?ref_=cm_sw_r_apin_dp_4XQ9NBD7XT7T2X6VWQST
Submission: On June 28 via manual from US — Scanned from DE

Form analysis 5 forms found in the DOM

Name: site-searchGET /s/ref=nb_sb_noss

<form id="nav-search-bar-form" accept-charset="utf-8" action="/s/ref=nb_sb_noss" class="nav-searchbar nav-progressive-attribute" method="GET" name="site-search" role="search">
  <div id="nav-search-bar-internationalization-key" class="nav-progressive-content">
    <input type="hidden" name="__mk_de_DE" value="ÅMÅŽÕÑ">
  </div>
  <div class="nav-left">
    <div id="nav-search-dropdown-card">
      <div class="nav-search-scope nav-sprite">
        <div class="nav-search-facade" data-value="search-alias=aps">
          <span id="nav-search-label-id" class="nav-search-label nav-progressive-content" style="width: auto;">Bücher</span>
          <i class="nav-icon"></i>
        </div>
        <label id="searchDropdownDescription" for="searchDropdownBox" class="nav-progressive-attribute" style="display:none">Wähle die Kategorie aus, in der du suchen möchtest.</label>
        <select aria-describedby="searchDropdownDescription" class="nav-search-dropdown searchSelect nav-progressive-attrubute nav-progressive-search-dropdown" data-nav-digest="1SD8NwQshDByAo2UzADo2J0Dtdw=" data-nav-selected="3"
          id="searchDropdownBox" name="url" style="display: block; top: 2.5px;" tabindex="0" title="Suchen in">
          <option value="search-alias=aps">Alle Kategorien</option>
          <option value="search-alias=automotive-intl-ship">Automobil</option>
          <option value="search-alias=baby-products-intl-ship">Baby</option>
          <option selected="selected" current="parent" value="search-alias=stripbooks-intl-ship">Bücher</option>
          <option value="search-alias=computers-intl-ship">Computer</option>
          <option value="search-alias=fashion-womens-intl-ship">Damenmode</option>
          <option value="search-alias=electronics-intl-ship">Elektronik</option>
          <option value="search-alias=movies-tv-intl-ship">Filme und Fernsehen</option>
          <option value="search-alias=luggage-intl-ship">Gepäck</option>
          <option value="search-alias=hpc-intl-ship">Gesundheit &amp; Haushalt</option>
          <option value="search-alias=pets-intl-ship">Haustierbedarf</option>
          <option value="search-alias=kitchen-intl-ship">Heim und Küche</option>
          <option value="search-alias=fashion-mens-intl-ship">Herrenmode</option>
          <option value="search-alias=industrial-intl-ship">Industriell und Wissenschaftlich</option>
          <option value="search-alias=digital-text">Kindle-Shop</option>
          <option value="search-alias=arts-crafts-intl-ship">Kunst und Handwerk</option>
          <option value="search-alias=fashion-boys-intl-ship">Mode für Jungen</option>
          <option value="search-alias=fashion-girls-intl-ship">Mode für Mädchen</option>
          <option value="search-alias=music-intl-ship">Musik, CDs &amp; Vinyl</option>
          <option value="search-alias=digital-music">Musik-Downloads</option>
          <option value="search-alias=instant-video">Prime Video</option>
          <option value="search-alias=deals-intl-ship">Sales &amp; Angebote</option>
          <option value="search-alias=beauty-intl-ship">Schönheit &amp; Körperpflege</option>
          <option value="search-alias=software-intl-ship">Software</option>
          <option value="search-alias=toys-and-games-intl-ship">Spielzeug und Spiele</option>
          <option value="search-alias=sporting-intl-ship">Sport und Freizeit</option>
          <option value="search-alias=videogames-intl-ship">Videospiele</option>
          <option value="search-alias=tools-intl-ship">Werkzeug &amp; Heimwerken</option>
        </select>
      </div>
    </div>
  </div>
  <div class="nav-fill">
    <div class="nav-search-field ">
      <label for="twotabsearchtextbox" style="display: none;">Suche Amazon</label>
      <input type="text" id="twotabsearchtextbox" value="" name="field-keywords" autocomplete="off" placeholder="Suche Amazon" class="nav-input nav-progressive-attribute" dir="auto" tabindex="0" aria-label="Suche Amazon" spellcheck="false">
    </div>
    <div id="nav-iss-attach"></div>
  </div>
  <div class="nav-right">
    <div class="nav-search-submit nav-sprite">
      <span id="nav-search-submit-text" class="nav-search-submit-text nav-sprite nav-progressive-attribute" aria-label="Los">
        <input id="nav-search-submit-button" type="submit" class="nav-input nav-progressive-attribute" value="Los" tabindex="0">
      </span>
    </div>
  </div>
</form>

POST /gp/product/handle-buy-box/ref=dp_start-bbf_1_glance

<form method="post" id="addToCart" action="/gp/product/handle-buy-box/ref=dp_start-bbf_1_glance" class="a-content" autocomplete="off">
  <input type="hidden" name="items[0.base][asin]" value="0399185615">
  <input type="hidden" name="clientName" value="OffersX_OfferDisplay_DetailPage">
  <input type="hidden" name="items[0.base][offerListingId]"
    value="mb6lsdN93PgLhhLnmSgtu1bPkROPV0WDA8W85fZ%2BsBj9hjCgQLwCyRjCo92gltU%2B0fN39bgmaMOPc%2BxBCpzglNAXb9bZou7W8C6favYyiMv3KB9X7KiNxDhAf1bjHgeC1ZoHkjw6t32LvVvG5vWISP3V4UAFBe8NyjU9r70WrXKhjLsnyOnCKL4iHzgvCCUG">
  <input type="hidden" name="CSRF" value="g5kyM5LaOkC4SmyJoOGTeOKHxg3zAQXQiDf6zEGi5vF9AAAADAAAAABknEXTcmF3AAAAABVX8CwXqz4nuL9RKX///w=="> <input type="hidden" id="anti-csrftoken-a2z" name="anti-csrftoken-a2z"
    value="g3jmm0SidKnjUXgDe+unZm87OIZukItgaXrkVfwsA0qiAAAADAAAAABknEXTcmF3AAAAABVX8CwXqz4nuL9RKf///w==">
  <input type="hidden" id="offerListingID" name="offerListingID"
    value="mb6lsdN93PgLhhLnmSgtu1bPkROPV0WDA8W85fZ%2BsBj9hjCgQLwCyRjCo92gltU%2B0fN39bgmaMOPc%2BxBCpzglNAXb9bZou7W8C6favYyiMv3KB9X7KiNxDhAf1bjHgeC1ZoHkjw6t32LvVvG5vWISP3V4UAFBe8NyjU9r70WrXKhjLsnyOnCKL4iHzgvCCUG">
  <input type="hidden" id="session-id" name="session-id" value="147-4309239-3054321">
  <input type="hidden" id="ASIN" name="ASIN" value="0399185615">
  <input type="hidden" id="isMerchantExclusive" name="isMerchantExclusive" value="0">
  <input type="hidden" id="merchantID" name="merchantID" value="A152MEJPVNQG10">
  <input type="hidden" id="isAddon" name="isAddon" value="0">
  <input type="hidden" id="nodeID" name="nodeID" value="">
  <input type="hidden" id="sellingCustomerID" name="sellingCustomerID" value="">
  <input type="hidden" id="qid" name="qid" value="">
  <input type="hidden" id="sr" name="sr" value="">
  <input type="hidden" id="storeID" name="storeID" value="">
  <input type="hidden" id="tagActionCode" name="tagActionCode" value="">
  <input type="hidden" id="viewID" name="viewID" value="glance">
  <input type="hidden" id="rebateId" name="rebateId" value="">
  <input type="hidden" id="ctaDeviceType" name="ctaDeviceType" value="desktop">
  <input type="hidden" id="ctaPageType" name="ctaPageType" value="detail">
  <input type="hidden" id="usePrimeHandler" name="usePrimeHandler" value="0">
  <input type="hidden" id="smokeTestEnabled" name="smokeTestEnabled" value="false">
  <input type="hidden" id="rsid" name="rsid" value="147-4309239-3054321">
  <input type="hidden" id="sourceCustomerOrgListID" name="sourceCustomerOrgListID" value="">
  <input type="hidden" id="sourceCustomerOrgListItemID" name="sourceCustomerOrgListItemID" value="">
  <input type="hidden" name="wlPopCommand" value="">
  <div id="usedOnlyBuybox" class="a-section a-spacing-medium">
    <div class="a-row a-spacing-medium">
      <div class="a-box">
        <div class="a-box-inner">
          <div class="a-section a-spacing-none a-padding-none">
            <div id="usedBuySection" class="rbbHeader dp-accordion-row">
              <div class="a-row a-grid-vertical-align a-grid-center" style="height:41px;">
                <div class="a-column a-span12 a-text-left"> <span class="a-text-bold">Gebraucht kaufen</span> <span class="a-size-base a-color-price offer-price a-text-normal">11,95&nbsp;$</span> </div>
              </div>
              <div class="a-row"> <span class="a-size-base a-color-price offer-price a-text-normal"></span> </div>
            </div>
            <div id="usedbuyBox" class="rbbContent dp-accordion-inner" spacingtop="small">
              <input type="hidden" id="usedMerchantID" name="usedMerchantID" value="A152MEJPVNQG10">
              <input type="hidden" id="usedOfferListingID" name="usedOfferListingID"
                value="mb6lsdN93PgLhhLnmSgtu1bPkROPV0WDA8W85fZ%2BsBj9hjCgQLwCyRjCo92gltU%2B0fN39bgmaMOPc%2BxBCpzglNAXb9bZou7W8C6favYyiMv3KB9X7KiNxDhAf1bjHgeC1ZoHkjw6t32LvVvG5vWISP3V4UAFBe8NyjU9r70WrXKhjLsnyOnCKL4iHzgvCCUG">
              <input type="hidden" id="usedSellingCustomerID" name="usedSellingCustomerID" value="">
              <input type="hidden" name="items[0.base][asin]" value="0399185615">
              <input type="hidden" name="clientName" value="OffersX_OfferDisplay_DetailPage">
              <input type="hidden" name="items[0.base][offerListingId]"
                value="mb6lsdN93PgLhhLnmSgtu1bPkROPV0WDA8W85fZ%2BsBj9hjCgQLwCyRjCo92gltU%2B0fN39bgmaMOPc%2BxBCpzglNAXb9bZou7W8C6favYyiMv3KB9X7KiNxDhAf1bjHgeC1ZoHkjw6t32LvVvG5vWISP3V4UAFBe8NyjU9r70WrXKhjLsnyOnCKL4iHzgvCCUG">
              <div id="usedDeliveryBlockContainer" class="a-row">
                <div id="deliveryBlock_feature_div" class="a-section a-spacing-none">
                  <div id="deliveryBlockMessage" class="a-section">
                    <div id="mir-layout-DELIVERY_BLOCK">
                      <div class="a-spacing-base" id="mir-layout-DELIVERY_BLOCK-slot-PRIMARY_DELIVERY_MESSAGE_LARGE"><span data-csa-c-type="element" data-csa-c-content-id="DEXUnifiedCXPDM" data-csa-c-delivery-price="" data-csa-c-value-proposition=""
                          data-csa-c-delivery-type="Lieferung" data-csa-c-delivery-time="25. Juli - 2. August" data-csa-c-delivery-destination="" data-csa-c-delivery-condition="" data-csa-c-pickup-location="" data-csa-c-distance=""
                          data-csa-c-delivery-cutoff="" data-csa-c-mir-view="CONSOLIDATED_CX" data-csa-c-mir-type="DELIVERY" data-csa-c-mir-sub-type="" data-csa-c-mir-variant="DEFAULT" data-csa-c-delivery-benefit-program-id="paid_shipping"
                          data-csa-c-id="w54tew-hn7vxt-tjzvbj-e7o6d1"> Lieferung <span class="a-text-bold">25. Juli - 2. August</span> </span></div>
                      <div class="a-spacing-base" id="mir-layout-DELIVERY_BLOCK-slot-SECONDARY_DELIVERY_MESSAGE_LARGE"><span data-csa-c-type="element" data-csa-c-content-id="DEXUnifiedCXSDM" data-csa-c-delivery-price="schnellste"
                          data-csa-c-value-proposition="" data-csa-c-delivery-type="Lieferung" data-csa-c-delivery-time="20. - 24. Juli" data-csa-c-delivery-destination="" data-csa-c-delivery-condition="" data-csa-c-pickup-location=""
                          data-csa-c-distance="" data-csa-c-delivery-cutoff="" data-csa-c-mir-view="CONSOLIDATED_CX" data-csa-c-mir-type="DELIVERY" data-csa-c-mir-sub-type="" data-csa-c-mir-variant="DEFAULT" data-csa-c-delivery-benefit-program-id=""
                          data-csa-c-id="21148v-u5okhd-a0dfts-71fusl"> Oder schnellste Lieferung <span class="a-text-bold">20. - 24. Juli</span> </span></div>
                    </div>
                  </div>
                </div>
                <div id="cipInsideDeliveryBlock_feature_div" class="a-section a-spacing-none"> <span class="a-declarative" data-action="dpContextualIngressPt" data-csa-c-type="widget" data-csa-c-func-deps="aui-da-dpContextualIngressPt"
                    data-dpcontextualingresspt="{}" data-csa-c-id="o1hv6v-a4iaeg-3u6r5s-re13e1"> <a class="a-link-normal" href="#">    <div class="a-row a-spacing-small"> <div class="a-column a-span12 a-text-left"> <div id="contextualIngressPt">
                                <div id="contextualIngressPtPin"></div>
                                <span id="contextualIngressPtLabel" class="cip-a-size-small">
                                    <div id="contextualIngressPtLabel_deliveryShortLine"><span>Liefern nach&nbsp;</span><span>Deutschland</span></div>
                                </span>
                            </div>
                        </div> </div>   </a> </span> </div>
              </div>
              <div class="a-section a-spacing-base">
                <div class="a-row"> <strong> Gebraucht: Gut </strong>
                  <span class="a-size-base"> <span class="a-color-tertiary"> | </span><a id="usedItemConditionInfoLink" class="a-link-normal a-declarative" href="#">Details</a> </span>
                </div>
                <div class="a-row"> Verkauft von <a id="sellerProfileTriggerId" data-is-ubb="true" class="a-link-normal" href="/-/de/gp/help/seller/at-a-glance.html?ie=UTF8&amp;seller=A152MEJPVNQG10&amp;isAmazonFulfilled=1">Port-City Sales</a> </div>
                <div class="a-row"> <a id="SSOFpopoverLink_ubb" class="a-link-normal a-declarative" href="/-/de/gp/help/customer/display.html?ie=UTF8&amp;ref=dp_ubb_fulfillment&amp;nodeId=106096011">Versand durch Amazon</a> </div>
              </div>
              <div class="a-popover-preload" id="a-popover-usedItemConditionDetailsPopover">
                <div class="a-section a-spacing-micro"> <span class="a-size-mini"> <strong>Zustand:</strong> Gebraucht: Gut </span> </div>
                <div class="a-section a-spacing-micro"> <span class="a-size-mini"> <strong>Kommentar:</strong> No writing or highlighting. Normal wear from use. Ships directly from Amazon. </span> </div>
              </div>
              <div class="a-popover-preload" id="a-popover-SSOFpopoverLink_ubb-content">
                <p>Beim Versand durch Amazon nutzen Verkaufspartner die Logistik der Amazon-Versandzentren: Amazon verpackt und verschickt die Artikel und übernimmt den Kundenservice. <b>Deine Vorteile:</b> <em>(1) Lieferung ab 29 EUR Bestellwert
                    (Bücher, Bekleidung und Schuhe generell versandkostenfrei, auch zusammen mit Media-Produkten). (2) Kombinieren und sparen - bestelle bei Amazon.de oder Verkaufspartnern, die den Versand durch Amazon nutzen, wird deine Bestellung
                    zu einer Lieferung zusammengefasst. (3) Alle Artikel sind mit Amazon Prime für noch schnellere Lieferung bestellbar.</em></p>
                <p>Wenn Sie Verkäufer sind, kann Versand durch Amazon Ihnen dabei helfen, Ihre Umsätze zu steigern. <a href="https://services.amazon.de/programme/versand-durch-amazon/merkmale-und-vorteile.html">Weitere Informationen zum Programm</a>
                </p>
              </div>
              <script type="text/javascript">
                P.when("A", "jQuery", "a-popover", "ready").execute(function(A, $, popover) {
                  "use strict";
                  var title = "Was bedeutet Versand durch Amazon?";
                  var triggerId = "#SSOFpopoverLink_ubb";
                  var contentId = "SSOFpopoverLink_ubb-content";
                  var options = {
                    "header": title,
                    "name": contentId,
                    "activate": "onclick",
                    "width": 430,
                    "position": "triggerBottom"
                  };
                  var $trigger = $(triggerId);
                  var instance = popover.create($trigger, options);
                });
              </script>
              <div class="a-section a-spacing-small">
                <div class="a-section a-spacing-none a-text-left">
                  <div class="a-row"> <span class="a-size-mini a-color-tertiary"> Zugriffscodes und Beilagen sind bei gebrauchten Artikeln nicht garantiert. </span> </div>
                </div>
              </div>
              <script type="a-state" data-a-state="{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;atc-page-state&quot;}">{"shouldUseNatcUsed":true}</script>
              <div class="a-button-stack"> <span class="a-declarative" data-action="dp-pre-atc-declarative" data-csa-c-type="widget" data-csa-c-func-deps="aui-da-dp-pre-atc-declarative" data-dp-pre-atc-declarative="{}" id="atc-declarative"
                  data-csa-c-id="pve5qy-4k7tr3-12v4il-gut6ji"> <span id="submit.add-to-cart-ubb" class="a-button a-spacing-small a-button-primary a-button-icon natc-enabled"><span class="a-button-inner"><i class="a-icon a-icon-cart"></i><input
                        id="add-to-cart-button-ubb" name="submit.add-to-cart-ubb" title="In den Einkaufswagen" data-hover="<b> auswählen__dims__</b> auf der linken Seite<br> zum Hinzufügen zum Einkaufswagen" data-ref="" class="a-button-input"
                        type="submit" value="In den Einkaufswagen" aria-labelledby="submit.add-to-cart-ubb-announce" formaction="/cart/add-to-cart/ref=dp_start-ubbf_1_glance"><span id="submit.add-to-cart-ubb-announce" class="a-button-text"
                        aria-hidden="true">In den Einkaufswagen</span></span></span> </span> </div>
              <div class="a-section a-spacing-none a-text-center">
                <div class="a-row">
                  <div class="a-button-stack"> </div>
                </div>
              </div>
            </div>
          </div>
        </div>
      </div>
    </div>
    <div class="a-box a-spacing-top-base">
      <div class="a-box-inner">
        <script>
          function atwlEarlyClick(e) {
            e.preventDefault();
            if (window.atwlLoaded) {
              return; //if JS is loaded then we can ignore the early click case
            }
            var ADD_TO_LIST_FROM_DETAIL_PAGE_VENDOR_ID = "website.wishlist.detail.add.earlyclick";
            var paramMap = {
              "asin": "0399185615",
              "vendorId": ADD_TO_LIST_FROM_DETAIL_PAGE_VENDOR_ID,
              "isAjax": "false"
            }
            var url = "/hz/wishlist/additemtolist?ie=UTF8";
            for (var param in paramMap) {
              url += "&" + param + "=" + paramMap[param];
            }
            var xhr = new XMLHttpRequest();
            xhr.open("POST", url, false);
            xhr.setRequestHeader("anti-csrftoken-a2z", "g/F1mKZ2pHsLi8oK1EIWBmeu1OQftg7Nx60dLack08zyAAAAAQAAAABknEXTcmF3AAAAAHuL9oHQYR32uqP6iUf9gA==");
            xhr.onload = function() {
              window.location = xhr.responseURL; //Needed to force a redirect; not supported on IE!
            }
            xhr.send();
          }
        </script>
        <div id="wishlistButtonStack" class="a-button-stack">
          <script>
            'use strict';
            P.when('A').execute(function(A) {
              A.declarative('atwlDropdownClickDeclarative', 'click', function(e) {
                window.wlArrowEv = e;
                e.$event.preventDefault();
                (function() {
                  if (window.P && window.atwlLoaded) {
                    window.P.when('A').execute(function(A) {
                      A.trigger('wl-drop-down', window.wlArrowEv);
                    })
                    return;
                  }
                  window.atwlEc = true;
                  var b = document.getElementById('add-to-wishlist-button-group');
                  var s = document.getElementById('atwl-dd-spinner-holder');
                  if (!(s && b)) {
                    return;
                  }
                  s.classList.remove('a-hidden');
                  s.style.position = 'absolute';
                  s.style.width = b.clientWidth + 'px';
                  s.style.zIndex = 1;
                  return;
                })();
                return false;
              });
            });
          </script>
          <div id="add-to-wishlist-button-group" data-csa-c-func-deps="aui-da-a-button-group" data-csa-c-type="widget" data-csa-interaction-events="click" data-hover="<!-- If PartialItemStateWeblab is true then, showing different Add-to-wish-list tool-tip message which is consistent with Add-to-Cart tool tip message.  -->
       Auf die Liste? Bitte wähle aus dem Sortiment links." class="a-button-group a-declarative a-spacing-none" data-action="a-button-group" role="radiogroup" data-csa-c-id="op3nim-in1q5u-rsj4ed-81s8lp"> <span id="wishListMainButton"
              class="a-button a-button-groupfirst a-spacing-none a-button-base a-declarative" role="radio" data-action="add-wishlist-declarative" aria-posinset="1" aria-setsize="1"><span class="a-button-inner"><a href="https://www.amazon.com/-/de/ap/signin?openid.return_to=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.com%2Fgp%2Faw%2Fd%2F0399185615&amp;openid.identity=http%3A%2F%2Fspecs.openid.net%2Fauth%2F2.0%2Fidentifier_select&amp;openid.assoc_handle=usflex&amp;openid.mode=checkid_setup&amp;openid.claimed_id=http%3A%2F%2Fspecs.openid.net%2Fauth%2F2.0%2Fidentifier_select&amp;openid.ns=http%3A%2F%2Fspecs.openid.net%2Fauth%2F2.0&amp;" name="submit.add-to-registry.wishlist.unrecognized" title="Auf die Liste" data-hover="<!-- If PartialItemStateWeblab is true then, showing different Add-to-wish-list tool-tip message which is consistent with Add-to-Cart tool tip message.  -->
       Auf die Liste? Bitte wähle aus dem Sortiment links." class="a-button-text a-text-left"> Auf die Liste </a></span></span> </div>
          <div id="atwl-inline-spinner" class="a-section a-hidden">
            <div class="a-spinner-wrapper"><span class="a-spinner a-spinner-medium"></span></div>
          </div>
          <div id="atwl-inline" class="a-section a-spacing-none a-hidden">
            <div class="a-row a-text-ellipsis">
              <div id="atwl-inline-sucess-msg" class="a-box a-alert-inline a-alert-inline-success" aria-live="polite" aria-atomic="true">
                <div class="a-box-inner a-alert-container"><i class="a-icon a-icon-alert"></i>
                  <div class="a-alert-content"> <span class="a-size-base" role="alert"> Hinzugefügt zu </span> </div>
                </div>
              </div> <a id="atwl-inline-link" class="a-link-normal" href="/-/de/gp/registry/wishlist/"> <span id="atwl-inline-link-text" class="a-size-base" role="alert"> </span> </a>
            </div>
          </div>
          <div id="atwl-inline-error" class="a-section a-hidden">
            <div class="a-box a-alert-inline a-alert-inline-error" role="alert">
              <div class="a-box-inner a-alert-container"><i class="a-icon a-icon-alert"></i>
                <div class="a-alert-content"> <span id="atwl-inline-error-msg" class="a-size-base" role="alert"> Hinzufügen war nicht erfolgreich. Bitte versuche es erneut. </span> </div>
              </div>
            </div>
          </div>
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DEM AUTOR FOLGEN

Steve Silberman
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NEUROTRIBES: THE LEGACY OF AUTISM AND THE FUTURE OF NEURODIVERSITY TASCHENBUCH –
23. AUGUST 2016

von Steve Silberman (Author), Oliver Sacks (Foreword)
4,7 4,7 von 5 Sternen 3.492 Sternebewertungen

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This New York Times–bestselling book upends conventional thinking about autism
and suggests a broader model for acceptance, understanding, and full
participation in society for people who think differently.
 
What is autism? A lifelong disability, or a naturally occurring form of
cognitive difference akin to certain forms of genius? In truth, it is all of
these things and more—and the future of our society depends on our understanding
it. Wired reporter Steve Silberman unearths the secret history of autism, long
suppressed by the same clinicians who became famous for discovering it, and
finds surprising answers to the crucial question of why the number of diagnoses
has soared in recent years.  Going back to the earliest days of autism research,
Silberman offers a gripping narrative of Leo Kanner and Hans Asperger, the
research pioneers who defined the scope of autism in profoundly different ways;
he then goes on to explore the game-changing concept of neurodiversity.
NeuroTribes considers the idea that neurological differences such as autism,
dyslexia, and ADHD are not errors of nature or products of the toxic modern
world, but the result of natural variations in the human genome. This
groundbreaking bookwill reshape our understanding of the history, meaning,
function, and implications of neurodiversity in our world.

Mehr lesen




--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Previous page
 1. Lesealter
    
    10–17 Jahre
 2. Seitenzahl der Print-Ausgabe
    
    560 Seiten
 3. Sprache
    
    Englisch
 4. Abmessungen
    
    15.16 x 3.35 x 22.86 cm
 5. Herausgeber
    
    Avery
 6. Erscheinungstermin
    
    23. August 2016
 7. ISBN-10
    
    0399185615
 8. ISBN-13
    
    978-0399185618
 9. Alle Details anzeigen

Next page














--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


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REZENSIONEN DER REDAKTION


PRESSESTIMMEN

Winner of the 2015 Samuel Johnson Prize for non-fiction

"Ambitious, meticulous and largehearted history...NeuroTribes is beautifully
told, humanizing, important."
—The New York Times Book Review

"Mr. Silberman has surely written the definitive book about [autism’s] past." 
–The Economist 

“A comprehensive history of the science and culture surrounding autism
studies…an essential resource.” –Nature magazine

“NeuroTribes is a sweeping and penetrating history, presented with a rare
sympathy and sensitivity. It is fascinating reading; it will change how you
think of autism, and it belongs, alongside the works of Temple Grandin and Clara
Claiborne Park, on the bookshelf of anyone interested in autism and the workings
of the human brain.”
--From the foreword by Oliver Sacks, author of An Anthropologist On
Mars and Awakenings

“Breathtaking… as emotionally resonant as any [book] this year." –The Boston
Globe

“A lively, readable book… To read NeuroTribes is to realize how much autistic
people have enriched the scope of human knowledge and diversity, and how
impoverished the world would be without them.” –The San Francisco Chronicle

“It is a beautifully written and thoughtfully crafted book, a historical tour of
autism, richly populated with fascinating and engaging characters, and a
rallying call to respect difference.” – Science magazine
 
“Epic and often shocking…Everyone with an interest in the history of science and
medicine — how it has failed us, surprised us and benefited us — should read
this book.” –Chicago Tribune

“The best book you can read to understand autism" –Gizmodo 

“Required reading for every parent, teacher, therapist, and person who wants to
know more about autism” –Parents.com

"This is perhaps the most significant history of the discovery, changing
conception and public reaction to autism we will see in a generation." –TASH.org

“A well-researched, readable report on the treatment of autism that explores its
history and proposes significant changes for its future…In the foreword, Oliver
Sacks writes that this 'sweeping and penetrating history…is fascinating reading'
that 'will change how you think of autism.' No argument with that
assessment." –Kirkus Reviews
 
“The monks who inscribed beautiful manuscripts during the Middle Ages, Cavendish
an 18th century scientist who explained electricity, and many of the geeks in
Silicon Valley are all on the autism spectrum.  Silberman reviews the history of
autism treatments from horrible blaming of parents to the modern positive
neurodiversity movement.  Essential reading for anyone interested in
psychology.”
--Temple Grandin, author of Thinking in Pictures and The Autistic Brain
 
“NeuroTribes is remarkable. Silberman has done something unique: he’s taken the
dense and detailed history of autism and turned the story into a genuine
page-turner. The book is sure to stir considerable discussion.”
--John Elder Robison, Neurodiversity Scholar in Residence at The College of
William & Mary and author of Look Me in the Eye
 
“This gripping and heroic tale is a brilliant addition to the history of
autism.”
--Uta Frith, Emeritus Professor of Cognitive Development at University College
London
 
“In this genuine page-turner, Steve Silberman reveals the untold history of
autism: from persecution to parent-blaming, from Rain Man to vaccines, of
doctors for whom professional ego trumped compassion, to forgotten heroes like
Hans Asperger, unfairly tainted by Nazi links.  It ends on an optimistic note,
with ‘autistics’ reclaiming the narrative and defining autism in their terms —
more difference than disability and an essential part of the human condition.
Highly recommended for anyone with an interest in autism or Asperger’s, or
simply a fascination with what makes us tick.”
--Benison O’Reilly, co-author of The Australian Autism Handbook


ÜBER DIE AUTORENSCHAFT UND WEITERE MITWIRKENDE

Steve Silbermanhas covered science and cultural affairs for Wired and other
national magazines for more than twenty years. His writing has appeared in The
New Yorker, Time, Nature, and Salon. He lives in San Francisco.


LESEPROBE. ABDRUCK ERFOLGT MIT FREUNDLICHER GENEHMIGUNG DER RECHTEINHABER. ALLE
RECHTE VORBEHALTEN.

In a room on a high ridge overlooking the Santa Cruz Mountains in California,
Leo Rosa is waking up. The sun breaks through a bank of coastal fog, filling his
window with streaks of orange and crimson. A cherubic eleven-year-old with hazel
eyes under a tuft of russet curls, he climbs out of bed to give his father a
hug.

Leo’s father, Craig, produces science videos for KQED, a public TV station in
San Francisco. Shannon Rosa is a blogger, editor, and software consultant. Each
morning, they take turns helping their son get ready for school. The first thing
that Leo does each day is read a list of icons taped to his door, which Shannon
made for him by downloading and laminating clip art from the Internet. This
list—his “visual schedule”—is written in a pictorial language that is easier for
his mind to absorb than words. An image of a boy putting on his shoes prompts
Leo to get dressed, followed by the likeness of a toothbrush, and then an icon
of a boy making his bed.
Leo’s visual schedule parses the sprawling unpredictability of an eleven-
year-old’s life into a series of discrete and manageable events. This helps him
regulate his anxiety, which is a challenge for people on the spectrum at every
age.
  
In a cluttered room down the hall, Leo’s sisters are also getting ready for the
day. Zelly (short for Gisela, the name of Craig’s aunt) already has the poised,
self-possessed air of the thoughtful young woman she’s becoming at thirteen. In
a family of brazen eccentrics, she’s taken on the job of being the “normal” one.
India, who is five years younger, exudes her own potent brand of charisma, but
it’s more antic and subversive, with mischief and drama perpetually brewing in
her bright green eyes behind thick glasses. While Zelly is generally reserved,
India will walk right up to a stranger in a restaurant and say, “My, what a
pretty dress you have!” She instinctively knows how to make herself the center
of attention and work a crowd.

While eating breakfast with his sisters in the kitchen, Leo suddenly jumps down
from his chair as an alarming expression—between terror and exhilaration—takes
possession of his face. He bolts for the door but his father doesn’t flinch;
instead, Craig calls after him in his softest voice, “Where ya goin’, buddy?”

Leo immediately sits down again and resumes eating as if nothing had happened.
His first spoonful of yogurt this morning contains a crushed tablet of
Risperdal, an atypical antipsychotic developed for the treatment of
schizophrenia in adults. His parents don’t like the idea of giving him this
powerful drug, but for now, it seems to be helping him get a handle on his most
distressing behavior, which is teasing and bullying India. Leo has never quite
forgiven her for being an unexpected intrusion into a world that he was just
getting used to himself. One of the downsides of the drug is that it amplifies
Leo’s already considerable appetite. His uncanny ability to snatch food from
distant plates has earned him a family nickname: the Cobra. When Shannon brings
bowls of oatmeal to the table, India quietly slides hers out of Cobra range and
mutters under her breath, “This is mine.”

Suddenly Leo jumps up from the table again and says to his father, “Green
straw?” It is not yet time for his first green straw of the day, but he will get
one before the school bus pulls into the driveway—one of tens of thousands of
wide, bright green Starbucks straws that Leo has used over the years for the
purpose of stimming (self-stimulation), one of the things that autistic people
do to regulate their anxiety. They also clearly enjoy it. When nonautistic
people do it, it’s called fidgeting and it’s rarely considered pathological.

A red straw from Burger King can occasionally fit the bill, or a blue one from
Peet’s. Clear straws from Costco just don’t cut it. But a green straw from
Starbucks is Leo’s Platonic stim. If Shannon allowed him to do so, he would take
a green straw to bed with him, or even better, a pair—one between his lips and
the other in his toes. He would stim in the bath, on the toilet, and jumping on
the trampoline.

Leo’s fascination with straws is a wonder to behold. First, he tears the coveted
object free of its paper wrapper; then he wets his lips and starts nibbling
along its length, palpating the stiff plastic to pliability; finally, he
masticates it to a supple L-shaped curve. All the while, he’s twiddling the far
end in his fingers, making it dance with a finesse that would be considered
virtuosic if he was performing sleight-of-hand tricks. Watching Leo’s Ritual of
Straws is like seeing one of W. C. Fields’s vaudeville routines with a hat and
cane run at hyperspeed.

A few years ago, Shannon pulled the family minivan up to the entrance of Zelly’s
summer camp, when Leo, with his usual exquisite timing, made it known that he
had to pee. There were no bathrooms in the vicinity, so Shannon escorted her son
behind a convenient bush and urged him to do his business as India and her pal
Katie pretended not to watch. She assured the girls that peeing on school
grounds was tolerated under certain circumstances, and even kind of
cool. “Sometimes, when you’re a boy, it’s great,” she said. “You can pee in
bushes all over the world!”

“And sometimes, when you’re a girl, you have a brother with autism,” India shot
back. “And then your whole world changes.”
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PRODUKTINFORMATION

 * Herausgeber ‏ : ‎ Avery; Reprint Edition (23. August 2016)
 * Sprache ‏ : ‎ Englisch
 * Taschenbuch ‏ : ‎ 560 Seiten
 * ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0399185615
 * ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0399185618
 * Lesealter ‏ : ‎ 10–17 Jahre
 * Artikelgewicht ‏ : ‎ 658 g
 * Abmessungen ‏ : ‎ 15.16 x 3.35 x 22.86 cm

 * Amazon Bestseller-Rang: Nr. 11,452 in Bücher (Siehe Top 100 in Bücher)
    * Nr. 4 in Geschichte der Allgemeinen Psychologie
    * Nr. 13 in Autismus & Asperger-Syndrom
    * Nr. 23 in Leben mit behinderten Kindern

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INFORMATIONEN ZUM AUTOR

Folge Autoren, um Neuigkeiten zu Veröffentlichungen und verbesserte Empfehlungen
zu erhalten.
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STEVE SILBERMAN

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Steve Silberman is an American writer based in San Francisco, California.
Silberman is best known as a writer for Wired magazine, where he has been an
editor and contributor for 14 years. In 2010, Silberman was awarded the AAAS
"Kavli Science Journalism Award for Magazine Writing." His featured article "The
Placebo Problem" discussed the impact of placebos on the pharmaceutical
industry.

Silberman's 2015 book about autism and neurodiversity was awarded the Samuel
Johnson Prize. Silberman's Wired article "The Geek Syndrome", which focused on
autism in Silicon Valley, has been referenced by many sources and has been
described as a culturally significant article for the autism community.
Silberman's Twitter account made Time magazine's list of the best Twitter feeds
for the year 2011.

Bio from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.


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Theo Pinette
5,0 von 5 Sternen A Must Read for Understanding the Long Trail to Understanding
Autism
Rezension aus den Vereinigten Staaten vom 15. Juni 2023
Verifizierter Kauf
NeuroTribes is a must-have book for anyone interested in the history, research
and the researchers who took many wrong turns before beginning to understand the
autism spectrum. It is rich with information going back centuries and is so well
written that I couldn't put it down. The Introduction is written by Oliver Sacks
who recommends the book and the brilliance of author Steve Silberman.

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Susan Senator
5,0 von 5 Sternen A caring, deeply thoughtful, and at times heartbreaking
account of the history of autism
Rezension aus den Vereinigten Staaten vom 29. September 2015
Verifizierter Kauf
[Disclosure: I am mentioned in this book]
With a deft and gentle hand Steve Silberman has reconstructed the diaspora of
autism. And it is a heartbreaking account of lost souls, misunderstood, reviled,
shut down and shut away lives. Silberman has effectively proved that the people
we see now, up and down the spectrum, have indeed always been here, but because
there was so little understanding of what to do with the “feebleminded,” as they
were called, the “useless eaters,” the sick and irrevocably strange and
different were sent away to institutions or languished at home or worse. Anyone
with even a little autism was thought to be mentally deranged, broken. There was
no cultural belief in special education, no awareness of how human minds can be
taught just about anything. There had to be an evolution, centuries,
millenia-long, before people understood that these beings are every bit as human
as the rest of society, and thereby able to learn, grow, adjust, work, and be
part of Us.

Silberman says, “In an eerie preview of the autism ‘epidemic’ to come four
decades later, the prevalence of childhood schizophrenia started spiking in the
midtwentieth century.” Just as we had an onslaught of people with ADHD when we
first discovered it — and it became the diagnosis of the 90′s — just as bipolar
is right now — childhood schizophrenia was one very popular explanation for
people who were actually on the autism spectrum. That accounts for the
deeply-involved, most disabled autistics.

And these were the people whose families were educated and well-off enough to
even know to bring them to the few psychiatrists in the country at that time.
Silberman finds that French physician Edouard Seguin coined the term ‘idiot
savant’ as far back as 1869. Seguin wrote,“It is from this class, almost
exclusively, that we have musical, mathematical, architectural, and other
varieties of the idiot savant; the useless protrusion of a single faculty,
accompanied by a woeful general impotence.” The real hero in the book, Hans
Asperger, though practicing in the early 20th century, put this in a humane,
21st century light: “Autistic children have the ability to see things and events
around them from a new point of view, which often shows surprising maturity.
This ability, which remains throughout life, can in favorable cases lead to
exceptional achievements which others may never attain. Abstraction ability, for
instance, is a prerequisite for scientific endeavor. Indeed, we find numerous
autistic individuals among distinguished scientists.” This was almost 100 years
ago. This accounts for the Asperger types, the splinter skills.

Think about it. A child who presented as odd, to the point of not being able to
talk until he was around five, and then, after that, presented as so strange, so
unaware of or unskilled around others — Temple Grandin comes to mind — with no
precedent of what speech therapy, sensory integration therapy, etc., could
achieve — the common thing was to give up on this child. So even the
“higher-functioning” would have been put away. Yes, there were many many
institutions back then. More than you realize. And what happened there? They
likely became worse, thereby proving the doctors “right.” Crowded into rooms
without pants on and hosed off when they defecated. Things like that. Some of
these people of course ended up in jail. Some — well, it’s too horrible to
contemplate what a cruel, ignorant family might have done.

The Nazis exterminated the disabled first, before they got to the elderly or the
Jews. No, we did not send our monsters to the gas chambers, but we did treat
them abominably. They were mistakes, burdens, disgusting, useless, scary.

Without education, and without understanding the potential of people with
autism, it would have taken a remarkably unique person (like Hans Asperger) to
feel anything but fear and shame. About Asperger, Silberman says, “He christened
this distinctive cluster of aptitudes, skills, attitudes, and abilities autistic
intelligence, making the bold suggestion that autistic people have played an
unappreciated role in the evolution of culture:

‘It seems that for success in science and art, a dash of autism is essential.
For success, the necessary ingredient may be an ability to turn away from the
everyday world, from the simply practical, an ability to re-think a subject with
originality so as to create in new untrodden ways.’

The autistics have always been here. We just did not see them, and if we did,
God help them. Now we see them. They aren’t sent away, hidden, cast out. They
are sent to school. They are trying to get work, any work, for at least minimum
wage.

The real Autism Tsunami? The real disaster? That we don’t have enough funding
for all of these very different but very worthwhile people to live productively
after high school. The real puzzle? When are we going to wake up, treasure
difference, and learn from it?

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DurgaDas
5,0 von 5 Sternen The Compassionate and Profound History Of My Tribe
Rezension aus den Vereinigten Staaten vom 30. Januar 2016
Verifizierter Kauf
This book made me cry, and deeply. It may be impossible to describe adequately
why this book is so good, even as it is so to describe why people with autism
are, without knowing us. Still, of all the books I've read on this topic, this
is the best.
Even though it is reasonably impossible to do so with any level of
appropriateness to the depth of his accomplishment in the writing of this book,
I must thank Steve Silberman for this highly compassionate and comprehensive
account of the history of what in many ways could be said to be my own 'race'; a
race even more invisible than Ralph Ellison's Invisible Man, since my race is
not divided by any simplistic or obvious trait.
In a world preoccupied with surfaces and mirrors, the race of people I belong to
must be known only in compassion, by way of un-intrusive study, reflection and
observation; indeed, we can only be known by the very qualities which we
ourselves possess; to a degree scarcely known by the violence of various
idealisms, divisive thinking and ever-quickening societal change.
It is a history that is PROFOUNDLY moving in the way that a thing can only be
once it is known that it exists at all, as if for the first time. It is as if
centuries of human progress and profound insight has been revealed before me, by
my own extended hands, and by my own extended consciousness, across time and
space. Indeed, it is so moving because it is as if Silberman was allowing me to
understand that I was Dirac and Cavendish reincarnated, having never heard of
either before, and in his words and descriptions discovering a long lost family
to which I belong; never having belonged before...
Indeed, I also cried because it is astounding to hear stories of compassion and
understanding extended to and revealed by my long-lost tribe members in the
patient understandings of their teachers, doctors and parents; none of which I
have experienced myself, since my family are entirely unaware of their own
inherited Autism (and thus their lack of understanding both for themselves or
me). I brought these facts up to them, only to have it largely denied.
One particular scene described in the book about the caring of a family to show
their child an advance preview of the experience of visiting the dentist will
remain permanently etched in my mind, such is the gulf between the experience of
compassion and caring described in this book and between this scene and my own
personal experience.
Throughout the book, the sheer beauty of what it is like to experience life in
the ways I do is expressed in a way that validates the lives of all
inward-focused people everywhere. Some, like Henry Cavendish, lived lives in
profoundly positive circumstances (being wealthy and having a father who
appropriately focused the mind of his son, to the lasting benefit of all), such
that in Cavendish, one can see an example of what I think nearly all the
Asperger's (this is certainly true of myself) tribe would (and do) strive for,
given the chance. I am shocked to learn about examples of my fellow
brothers-in-mind, and feel as though the hidden and mysterious history of the
modern world has been shown to me in a map of my own heart, written in the hands
of Steve Silberman, a proxy for my long-dead brethren, and for myself.
The service provided by such a history will ever be with me, now. I would hope
that anyone with autism would read this deeply wonderful book, and I would hope
anyone who is taking an idealistic stance against autism or regards people with
autistic in such a violent way would read this book and know that you have to
spend time getting to know us. We know you better than you can imagine, and we
experience things more deeply than you can know.
Nature abhors a vacuum, it is said, and by removing ourselves into quiet,
consistent lives, we are able to reveal larger truths about the nature of the
world around us. This is both a history of the traits of people doing this, and
I believe could be an insight and a history into how truth itself is revealed to
human beings in general.

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Peter J Welborn
5,0 von 5 Sternen Five Stars
Rezension aus dem Vereinigten Königreich vom 11. Januar 2016
Verifizierter Kauf
very good and informative book when dealing with this potentially challenging
issue

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Bernie Gourley
5,0 von 5 Sternen A history of the changing findings of autism research and how
the condition is seen
Rezension aus Indien vom 21. April 2020
Verifizierter Kauf
A combination of mystery and proclivity for lightening storms of controversy
surrounds autism and related conditions (e.g. Asperger’s.) On one hand, it seems
like the number number of cases has skyrocketed in the past few decades. On the
other hand, it’s hard to tell because long after autism began to be seen as a
condition in its own right, children were being diagnosed with a range of other
conditions from schizophrenia to brain damage to just plain “being difficult.”
So, the question of the degree to which autism is more prevalent versus being
more visible and readily-diagnosed remains.

Tellingly, Silberman’s first chapter describes an 18th century English scientist
named Henry Cavendish as a way of refuting the notion that Autism is a wholly
new phenomenon. The appearance that Autism is new and growing at epidemic
proportions has facilitated some spurious thinking, most famously the idea that
childhood vaccinations cause of autism. [To be fair, it’s easy to see why
parents would want to find a simple, single-point cause, given that one of the
previous hypothesized causes (which turned out to be also wrong) was that autism
was caused by cold and detached parenting.] However, decades of intense
investigation without a consensus conclusion suggests that a simple,
straightforward cause-effect dynamic is unlikely and that more complexity is
involved.

But the controversy doesn’t stop there. As within the deaf community, an
argument has been on the rise that autism shouldn’t be treated as a disability
to be cured but rather a difference that can be managed and which offers
strengths that can be leaned into. And one of the most intriguing aspects of
Autism and Asperger’s Syndrome are the mental strengths that can accompany the
condition. Anyone who’s seen “Rain Man” (a chapter is devoted to it) will be
aware of how savant-like mental capabilities can accompany the immense social
difficulties displayed by people on the Autism Spectrum. Silberman takes on all
of this and more as he presents a history of Autism.

The book is arranged into twelve chapters. As mentioned, the first chapter
proposes that autism is nothing new and can be seen if one looks closely into
select biographies, such as that of Henry Cavendish. While appearances in the
historical record may be rare, the fact that some autistics have great mental
capacities has resulted in instances in which they produced results so
impressive that they remain noteworthy across the ages, despite the fact that
such people were often socially isolated. The book next looks at modern-day
examples of autistics who are changing the world. After that, having hooked the
reader, Silberman proceeds chronologically through the advancements in
understanding of autism -- giving extensive attention to the work of Hans
Asperger, Leo Kanner, and Bernard Rimland -- but also addressing others such as
Oliver Sachs and Bruno Bettelheim. In addition to discussing the research (which
presents many of its own controversies,) Silberman shows how societal views of
autism have changed from being considered either a form of retardation or of
psychosis to being seen as a difference in abilities that should be respected.

Along the way, one learns a bit about the history of eugenics, and not just
among the Nazis. (Hans Asperger’s reputation was sullied by the widespread
belief that he’d worked with the Nazis.) Silberman explores the Second
International Eugenics Congress that was hosted by the American Museum of
Natural History in New York City. We also learn about the movie “Rain Man” and
how Dustin Hoffman prepared for the role, and how the movie became a
game-changer for the autistic community.

The final chapter shifts gears from what has been happening with autism to how
to move forward. It presents the idea of neurodiversity, and considers how it
can be accommodated. There is a brief epilogue that revolves around the son of
Bernard Rimland. Rimland, while already a psychologist, shifted into the study
of autism because he had an autistic child of his own.

I found this book quite intriguing. It is a fascinating exploration of the
spectrum of states that we think of as autism. If you have any interest in the
mind and neurological conditions, you’ll likely find it an educational read.

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L.Roach
5,0 von 5 Sternen Excellent
Rezension aus dem Vereinigten Königreich vom 6. Juni 2023
Verifizierter Kauf
Very interesting and comprehensive history of autism. Couldn't put it down.

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Leitir
5,0 von 5 Sternen Completely at home on earth - much work to be done
Rezension aus dem Vereinigten Königreich vom 11. September 2016
Verifizierter Kauf
These are two phrases that occur in the closing pages of this illuminating book.
It casts a light on a group of people who have always been part of our society
and communities, yet only in the last two or three decades are we beginning to
ask the right questions about how they think and learn and live and love. The
book traces the history of the research and discourse around autism through a
remarkable series of human stories that illustrate and illuminate the macro in
engaging and thought-provoking detail. The fact that autistic people view and
talk about so-called "normal" people as "neurotypical" is a good example of the
insight this book gives. It will definitely give you plenty of food for thought,
particularly on the question of how much progress we have actually made in
thinking differently about people who think differently. It also raises
interesting questions about how assumed authority can become, to the detriment
of progress. As the book itself says, 80 years after the work of both Kanner and
Asperger, there is much work to be done.

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Lindosland
3,0 von 5 Sternen Too many stories; too little science
Rezension aus dem Vereinigten Königreich vom 11. Oktober 2015
Verifizierter Kauf
If this book were entitled, 'were they autistic', it would be an interesting
read as a series of anecdotes about famous people. But it claims to offer a new
approach to autism, of acceptance and support for 'people who think
differently'. This is actually not very new, and as the book explains, has
largely come out of internet groups embracing high-functioning autistics in
particular as possibly 'gifted' compared to the 'Neurotypicals' (NT's) who are
the ones with the problems. This is an attractive idea, especially for the
parents of autistic children, but the book takes a very biased look at the
problem, and tries hard to lead the reader down a path to Silberman's
pre-ordained conclusion, without asking the right questions or looking for
evidence to the contrary as required by a proper scientific approach. His
implicit message of, 'lets stop spending so much on futile research and start
spending it on supporting people,' is dangerously wrong unless you think there
really isn't a problem. A look at the facts says to many people that there is.
The first question to ask is, 'are we in the middle of an epidemic of
autistic-spectrum diagnosis?' At first sight we certainly are; numbers have
increased from one per thousand or so to one in a hundred in the UK and one in
68 in the US. Arguments about past under-diagnosis and broadening diagnostic
criteria, while having some validity, do not hold water, because the majority of
those diagnosed today are at the low-functioning end of the spectrum and would
not have been missed in the past. Were they just classified differently, as
'juvenile schizophrenia' or 'mentally subnormal'. Probably not because we never
had such numbers before. Then there is the problem of regression; the many
children who develop normally and then suddenly lose abilities. This seems to be
a modern day problem.

The truth I think is, as the committee behind DSM5, the american diagnostic and
statistical manual, are slowly beginning to concede, that Autism, Aspergers,
Schizophrenia, Body Dismorphic Disorder (BDD), and Attention deficit
hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) are probably all catch-all terms that actually
describe supposed syndromes, or collections of characteristics. In the future we
will probably look back on such crude categorisation with horror. The brain is
extremely complex, and potentially subject to all sorts of damage and disease,
as well as being able to develop in complex and different ways. While many 'high
functioning' individuals are likely to have brains that developed differently in
ways that produce what we used to call 'personality', 'eccentricity', 'genius',
many other 'autistic spectrum' cases must still be considered as part of a
likely epidemic with brain-damaging causes. These potential causes range from
pesticides like glyphosate sprayed on parks and verges, to vaccines like MMR, or
heavy metals like lead, mercury, or antimony (in fire retardents), or
paracetamol, or anti-depressants (SSRI's are now accepted as significantly
increasing the chance of autism if taken during pregnancy). Then there is
Toxoplasma Gondii, the protist parasite caught from cats or undercooked meat,
recently implicated in schizophrenia, and to some extent a suspect in autism
(20% of people in the UK have caught it at some time and since it has been found
to make a dopamine precursor and to hide in the brain it is worthy of serious
attention.) Then there is the horribly named, 'refrigerator mother' theory,
mentioned in the book, but dismissed simply because it 'wrongly made mothers
feel guilty'. That's not science! There is serious evidence that lack of proper
attention from and attachment to a close caregiver, usually the mother, leads to
autistic-like behaviour, as shown in studies of Romanian orphans brought up in
the West. Not all so-called autism may be down to mothers, but some probably is.
Silberman begins his book with an account of Henry Cavendish, who is now
labelled as possibly autistic on Wikipedia and many other sites, since Oliver
Sacks popularised the idea. He fails to inform us though that Cavendish's mother
died when he was just two, and that he was brought up solely by his father -
surely the ultimate 'refrigerator mother? He then tells us about Dirac, famous
quantum physicist, but again fails to emphasise the obvious; Dirac is quoted as
saying, "I never knew love or affection when I was a child". Or that Dirac's
father was 'overly authoritarian' and that his brother killed himself. This is
evidence, and there is much more if we look for it, rather than just saying, in
accordance with current politically correct ideas of non-judgementalism, that it
is not acceptable to think the parents may be the cause.

Silberman, a Jewish American, makes reference to many American (and largely
Jewish) psychologists, ignoring the many British psychologists who have done
serious work. Read Richard Bentall's 'Doctoring the Mind' or 'Madness
explained'. Or Peter Hobson's 'The Cradle of Thought' for some real evidence
from professors researching the field. All psychologists are familiar with the
work of John Bowlby and Mary Ainsley in the UK on Attachment theory, as well as
the 'wire monkey' experiments of Harry Harlow in the US. To just ignore or
dismiss such scientific evidence in a book of 500 pages on autism is shocking!
Finally there is evidence that inflammation is implicated in many cases of
autism, especially when associated with food intolerance, irritable bowel
sydrome, and leaky gut evidence. The point is - all these things are probably
causing things we bundle together under the term autism in some individuals and
by researching we will eventually be able to avoid or cure what in many cases is
a distinct disease with a distinct pathological cause. This book is dangerously
misleading.

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