Now this is amazing!
http://www.compfused.com/directlink/3909/
Human camera
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- Mobius
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I believe that autistics have these powers precisely because they do not possess the normal powers we have. It's a zero-sum game: you can have good powers of social interaction, or you can be a savant, but not both.Flabby Chick wrote:The question i ask meself is..is his kind of autism an affliction that enhances a particular talent, or does it unlock a door to powers that we all possess?
True, there is that weird ginger in Britain who can explain what he does, but he is still very much a person who can not tolerate much of teh normal world.
I do not believe it is possible to "unlock" these so called powers in a normal person. Sure, there are training courses which can give you an astounding memory, let you read at 2500 words a minute, and calculate crazy-a55 numbers lightning fast - but they are just modern technology-based training which allows you to do more with what you already have, rather than giving you something new.
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In general, this seems to be a very good theory. BUT, there are exceptions. Not all Savants are Autistic Savants. Look at Mozart, or Henri Poincaré. I think the theory that Autistic Savants have certain skills atrophied while others are emphasised is reasonable, but it can't account for all cases.Mobius wrote:I do not believe it is possible to "unlock" these so called powers in a normal person
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So were Mozart and Poincaré.Sir Sam II wrote:That guy is more then talented.
At 14, Mozart listened to Miserere ONCE in the Sistine Chapel. He then went home and transcribed it accurately, note for note. That is a feat that is quite beyond comprehension.
Poincare could tell you the page and line of any item in a book or paper he had read.
BOTH of these people qualified as savants, but were multi-talented and far from autistic.
Like I said, I don't think one theory can't account for all cases of photographic memory.