| By Nigel Hawkes
Many highly successful people owe their eminence
to a small dose of
autism, experts in the condition believe.
Autism is a disabling and alienating disorder,
cutting sufferers off
from normal human contact, but milder forms have
probably helped
successful scientists and artists to achieve the
isolation they need to do their best
work.
Hans Asperger, the Austrian doctor who first described
what he
called autistic psychopathy of childhood, said:
"It seems that for success in
science or art a dash of autism is essential."
He was describing a set of
peculiarities, now named after him, that set apart
some children.
Asperger's patients were all boys, who often had
relations with
similar quirks. They were intelligent, original
and good at abstract
thinking, but ploughed their own furrow to the
detriment of schoolwork.
They spoke "like little adults", but
were poor listeners, making
little conversational effort. Asperger wondered
if the condition he was
observing might be "an extreme variant of
male intelligence, of the male
character".
Since his work became widely known, psychiatrists
have enjoyed
retrospectively diagnosing figures from the past
as having Asperger's
Syndrome. Among the earliest, says the psychiatrist
Lorna Wing, who played a
leading part in making Asperger's work known,
was Brother Juniper, a
follower of St Francis of Assisi. He displayed
the literalness of mind
often seen in autism.
Urged to give up his earthly goods to the poor,
he stripped and handed
over all his clothes. A classic Asperger's sufferer
was Henry Cavendish, an 18th-century aristocrat
and scientist, who gave his name to the Cavendish
Laboratory at Cambridge. His most important discovery
was hydrogen.
He was such a perfectionist that he published
only those results that
satisfied him completely, and was so reluctant
to make contact with others
that he built his library four miles from his
home.
His female servants were told to keep out of sight
on pain of dismissal. To avoid talking to them,
he ordered his dinner by means of a note placed
on the hall table.
The philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein did not speak
until he was four. He hated school, and did poorly
there. He said that his inability to recognise
another's humanity was exactly like somebody listening
to a foreign language he did not understand.
Yet Wittgenstein had a towering intellect which
enabled him to write
his philosophical work Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus
while serving with
the Austrian Army in the First World War. His
relations with others were often
strained. On a visit to the United States he was
offered rye bread and
cheese for his first lunch. He ate the same thing
during his entire stay.
To Dr Wing, such examples emphasise how the isolating
effects of
Asperger's Syndrome can be turned to advantage
by those who also have the
intelligence for intellectual pursuits. Other
candidates for retrospective
diagnosis, she suggests, include Albert Einstein
and the composer Erik
Satie. Others have nominated the Canadian pianist
Glenn Gould, a genius of
the keyboard, who retired from the concert stage
at 31 and thereafter
played only in the recording studio. He used the
telephone as a lifeline, talking
on it to people for hours at a time, enabling
him to carry on relationships
without having to meet people.
The artist Andy Warhol, described by some who
knew him as "socially inept", also hated
change, a common feature of autistic people. Some
have seen in his repeated images the obsessive
preoccupations found in people with Asperger's
Syndrome.
Copyright 2001 Times Newspapers Ltd.
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