Economist Paul Seabright shows how an awareness of the fragility of our social institutions and their roots in our evolutionary past can help us deal with the challenges of today's globally networked world.
People with autism lack the ability to "size up" social relationships in the way that most of us do. They don't read faces and body language. They don't (naturally) make inferences based on language, verbal or non-verbal. Does that make them non-human? NO. They are a different type of human. Their brains (sometimes) have special abilities that the rest of us lack.
It is evident he is deep.
felpaluche 1 month ago
I have taken his class for one semester, professor Seabright has very wide horizon
WINDYCHUNG 6 months ago
yes, they are called retards.
stevehwan 1 year ago
People with autism lack the ability to "size up" social relationships in the way that most of us do. They don't read faces and body language. They don't (naturally) make inferences based on language, verbal or non-verbal. Does that make them non-human? NO. They are a different type of human. Their brains (sometimes) have special abilities that the rest of us lack.
ruthelator 1 year ago