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This volume explores interesting and emerging philosophical questions related to autism. It sheds light on the ways in which cultural attitudes about autism have changed in the decade since the editors published their first volume on the philosophy of autism.
List of contents
Introduction 1. Autistic Vulnerability to Intellectual Arrogance 2. Moral Responsibility and Autism 3. Autism, the Double Empathy Problem and Feelings the Emotions of Another Person 4. Autism From the Second Person Perspective 5. Autism and Gender 6. Autism, Care, and the Limits of Destigmatization 7. Elephants and Armadillos: Anti-Autistic Ideology Forms an Anti-Autistic World 8. Ain't Misbehavin': Scrapping Applied Behavioral Analysis 9. Masking as Persona Flexibility 10. Re-Examining Knowledge: Sensory and Social Challenges in the Autistic Community 11. The Thing of It Isn't: Defending Eliminativism About Autism
About the author
Jami L. Anderson is a Professor of Philosophy at the University of Michigan-Flint and an Associate Teaching Professor in the Wayne State University Law School. She co-edited
The Philosophy of Autism. She is currently working on a monograph titled
Special Risk of Wrongful Execution: Atkins v. Virginia and the Illusory Prohibition of the Execution of Intellectually Impaired Criminals in the U.S.Simon Cushing is a Professor of Philosophy at the University of Michigan-Flint, co-editor of
The Philosophy of Autism, editor of
Heaven and Philosophy and
New Philosophical Essays on Love and Loving. He is currently working on a monograph about the metaphysics of abortion.