Fictional characters with AS
silvskaterdude wrote:
mitharatowen wrote:
I don't know if anyone watches the new Terminator show but on the newest episode last night there was a guy whose (adult) son was inventing an AI program. The son seemed AS or mildly autistic to me.
He was a pretty minor character and didn't have much screen time but thats the idea I got anyway.
He was a pretty minor character and didn't have much screen time but thats the idea I got anyway.
i love that show yo it is awasome gnarley sweet yo and rember in the episode where the psycrirists is talking to sarah and says about camron(cuz she is a temintor lol) your daughter is difrent very anti social she might have aspergers synrome or something along those lines.
Sorry, but, I honestly didn't think anyone used the term gnarley anymore.
nothingunusual
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Padium wrote:
I don't think anyone has mentioned the Creature from Mary Shelley's Frankenstein yet.
How could I forget the creature? No wonder Frankenstein was always one of my favorite books when I was in school.
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In the order of our years,
In the discipline of our ways,
And in the passing of momentary stillness.
We can see our chaos in motion.
Cadzie
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nothingunusual wrote:
Padium wrote:
I don't think anyone has mentioned the Creature from Mary Shelley's Frankenstein yet.
How could I forget the creature? No wonder Frankenstein was always one of my favorite books when I was in school.
yeah the creatures way of learning how to socialize with people and then Rejected
violet_yoshi wrote:
silvskaterdude wrote:
mitharatowen wrote:
I don't know if anyone watches the new Terminator show but on the newest episode last night there was a guy whose (adult) son was inventing an AI program. The son seemed AS or mildly autistic to me.
He was a pretty minor character and didn't have much screen time but thats the idea I got anyway.
He was a pretty minor character and didn't have much screen time but thats the idea I got anyway.
i love that show yo it is awasome gnarley sweet yo and rember in the episode where the psycrirists is talking to sarah and says about camron(cuz she is a temintor lol) your daughter is difrent very anti social she might have aspergers synrome or something along those lines.
Sorry, but, I honestly didn't think anyone used the term gnarley anymore.
us skaters still do but that's about it that is what makes us better then the prepies cuz we say their phrases such as awasome cool sick sweet ill but we have our own catchphrase that w only say us well ha ha we are better then the boring common preps.
MOA
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Location: North Carolina, USA
richie wrote:
Anyone remember Aaron Pratt? A higher functioning autie on a CSI episode that involved the poisoning of a co-worker with ricin.
I remember that episode. Wasn't he the suspected killer who is exonerated when he helps prove it was a woman in the museum who "done it?" I seem to remember poisoned leaves in a book???
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How glorious it is ? and also how painful ? to be an exception. --Alfred De Musset
Quote:
Hinata Shikimaru and Sai from Naruto
Hinata? Really? She's shy but I don't think she's autistic...
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Humans: Proof against intelligent design.
"There is no law or ordinance greater then understanding" -Plato
"Repeat after me: Morality pays poorly"-Sergent Schlock
Just about every character - Spongebob Squarepants
Quote:
(Spongebob is extremely routine oriented to the point where he has a tantrum when he can't go to work on time. He is very OCD about his job and completely breaks down when he thinks he forgot the pickles on a hamburger. He is a grown man (sponge) and living alone, but is extremely immature (blows bubbles, loves sqeaky toys). He is very hyperactive and does a lot of stimming. He has imaginary friends. He has a very irregular speech pattern. He has an obsessive interest in jellyfishing. I wonder if the show was intentionally made to exhibit autism.)
Patrick might qualify for moderately functioning autism. He seems ret*d, and the show never portrays him as having any sort of job or life beyond following Spongebob around and living under a rock....very overly emotional as well.
Sandy - definite Aspie
Patrick might qualify for moderately functioning autism. He seems ret*d, and the show never portrays him as having any sort of job or life beyond following Spongebob around and living under a rock....very overly emotional as well.
Sandy - definite Aspie
Hermione Granger, Neville Longbottom, Xenophilius(sp) Lovegood - Harry Potter series
Ben - Castaways of the Flying Dutchman series by Brian Jacques
Ender and Bean from the Ender's Game/Shadow series
Some more advanced literature:
Sydney Carton & Dr. Manette - A Tale of Two Cities
Pip - Great Expectations
David Copperfield
Raskolnikov- Crime and Punishment by Dostoyevsky
Creature - Frankenstein by Mary Shelley
TPE2 wrote:
SquishypuffDave wrote:
Also, someone mentioned the Joker from The Dark Knight but it sort of got buried between posts. I'd have to aggree that on some level, his thinking is very aspie-like. He feels no connection to people and perhaps is willing to kill for fun because he lacks some theory of mind. I remember a time in my childhood when I was obsessed with making booby traps to the extent that people got hurt (no seriously, I had some sense of responsibility) but all I could think of was how well the trap worked and how cool it looked. This is sort of how I imagine the Joker thinks.
Joker seems to have a "theory of mind" (perhaps a werong theory, but a theory nevertheless) - his actions are nothing more than a giant psychological expriment.
That doesn't mean anything. A psychological experiment using humans as test subjects sounds somewhat aspie to me. Perhaps that is because I am more morbid aspie than most here. If I had the resources, I might want to do something like The Joker did, just to show people how illogical their morals really are. I am also quite disgusted with what people will do for money. It is just cotton with a dead president on it. It's value is purely psychological. To say he is not an aspie based on the experiment is not an adequate argument.
Most humans live delusional and illogical lives. The Joker is not insane, he is completely sane. Those who live by "morals" and "laws" they are taught from childhood are the delusional ones. He tries to show them this. Unfortunately, most aspies also follow the delusion of society.
I hope you all enjoy your worthless moral code.
Captain Marlowe from the movie Apocolypse Now. Quote I hardly said a word to my wife until I said yes to a divorce." His behavior during while being assigned his mission and his focus on the mission all point to this character being an Aspie.
Abby from NCIS. So obviouse they almost modeled her character on an Asperger's description.
IndridCold wrote:
TPE2 wrote:
SquishypuffDave wrote:
Also, someone mentioned the Joker from The Dark Knight but it sort of got buried between posts. I'd have to aggree that on some level, his thinking is very aspie-like. He feels no connection to people and perhaps is willing to kill for fun because he lacks some theory of mind. I remember a time in my childhood when I was obsessed with making booby traps to the extent that people got hurt (no seriously, I had some sense of responsibility) but all I could think of was how well the trap worked and how cool it looked. This is sort of how I imagine the Joker thinks.
Joker seems to have a "theory of mind" (perhaps a werong theory, but a theory nevertheless) - his actions are nothing more than a giant psychological expriment.
That doesn't mean anything. A psychological experiment using humans as test subjects sounds somewhat aspie to me. Perhaps that is because I am more morbid aspie than most here. If I had the resources, I might want to do something like The Joker did, just to show people how illogical their morals really are. I am also quite disgusted with what people will do for money. It is just cotton with a dead president on it. It's value is purely psychological. To say he is not an aspie based on the experiment is not an adequate argument.
Most humans live delusional and illogical lives. The Joker is not insane, he is completely sane. Those who live by "morals" and "laws" they are taught from childhood are the delusional ones. He tries to show them this. Unfortunately, most aspies also follow the delusion of society.
I hope you all enjoy your worthless moral code.
There's a reason why I have a poster of the Joker in my room.
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