Why Asperger’s people don’t lie and hate corruption and unfair business cartels:
People with Asperger's are often meticulously honest. That's to say
that they go out of their way to be honest about things, even when
honesty really isn't the best policy.
It's not that
people with Asperger's cannot lie but simply that many, not
all, feel very uncomfortable about lying.
If
you ask a neurotypical person if they love you, you’ll generally
get a “yes” response (if they're going to give you one),
immediately - even if they don't actually "love you".
This
is because a neurotypical person is fairly comfortable with the
concept of love if they DO love you -- or they're comfortable with
lying if they DON’T.
A neurotypical person will
understand that a “yes” answer is their best chance of
manipulating their partners into something, usually sex or money.
A
person with Asperger's however won't usually lie to protect your
feelings or to manipulate you. It's not that people with Asperger's
are “Good people by definition”, just that they usually lack
non-verbal communication skills to manipulate anyone.
A
person with Asperger's will tend to give a "no" or an
indefinite answer if they're struggling with definitions (ie: if they
really don't know) - or they'll give an honest answer even if it
means that they lose certain privileges on offer.
Per Simon Baron-Cohen:
In
moral terms, honesty is without doubt a virtue, and dishonesty is a
vice. But in social terms, absolute honesty can lead to trouble,
risking causing offense to others who may not want or need to hear
the complete truth. White lies may be desirable. And in biological
terms, dishonesty is a sign of typical brain development, whereas
someone who is incapable of dishonesty may be neurologically
atypical. Dishonesty is one defining characteristic of what it is to
be human. It is not the only defining characteristic, but it does
separate us from other animals. Some nonhuman species may have a
limited capacity for deception, but humans have a flexible, unlimited
capacity for deception. And since anything that is uniquely human is
likely to be part of our genetic makeup, it stands to reason that we
are, in a sense, built for dishonesty — and those incapable of
dishonesty, like people with autism, have a uniquely human
disability. Beyond having deficits in social interaction, they live
with a different relationship to morality. Their experience is a
unique window into the typical human mind.
We’ll
return to this point in just a moment. But before we can see what
honesty means for being human, and what we can learn about it from
autism, we need to take an unexpected detour and examine first what
other species can and can’t do when it comes to deception. To
understand how humans lie, it profits us to begin by looking at
monkeys.
Consider,
for example, the reports of how one monkey will wait until a second
monkey (who is watching him) is not around before approaching a food
source. Some interpret this as the first monkey trying to ensure that
the observer does not discover the food source. Critics call this the
“rich” interpretation. The “lean” interpretation is that the
first monkey has simply learned that if he waits until no other
animals are around before going to the food source, he will get more
food. In this interpretation, there is no need to attribute to the
first monkey any capacity to deceive. They are simply able to learn
the rule that eating
alone = more food.
Or
consider the examples of animals who hunt in silence. Imagine the
lioness who lies in wait in the long grass, silently watching a
wildebeest who has not yet spotted her. The lioness waits for her
moment, remaining as still and as invisible as possible, until she
sees her split-second opportunity and lunges, as if out of nowhere,
to successfully seize and kill her prey. Some interpret this as the
lioness trying to ensure that the wildebeest does not discover she is
there, so that he will believe he is safe and not run away. Again,
critics call this the rich interpretation. The lean interpretation is
that the lioness has learned that hunting in silence results in a
kill, while making a noise results in the prey getting away. In this
lean interpretation, there is no need to attribute to the lioness any
capacity to deceive. She is simply able to learn the rule that
hunting
in silence = more food.
An even leaner interpretation might be that silent stalking is in the
lioness’s genes – that it does not even require learning. The
lioness just does this because she inherited genes that produce this
behavior, much as a spider spins webs. Such genes have been passed on
precisely because they lead to more food and therefore better chances
of survival.
How
do we decide if the rich or the lean interpretation is correct or
better? Among scientists, good practice dictates that a lean
interpretation, where possible, is preferable over a rich one, since
lean interpretations are more parsimonious. In science, we want to
explain events with the fewest number of factors; the aim is to avoid
a proliferation of unnecessary factors. Explaining monkeys’ or
lionesses’ behavior in terms of rule-learning is more parsimonious
than explaining it by attributing to them the capacity for deception.
This is because we already know they can learn rules. So why invoke
an extra capacity when an existing one will do?
Leaving
parsimony aside, one may wonder: If monkeys or lions or other animals
could truly deceive, why do we only see possible instances of
deception in very limited situations? If they can deceive, why don’t
they do it left, right, and center? Why only when hunting, or when
locating food, or during sex? (Some monkeys mate in silence and out
of sight, to avoid a fight with a rival male. Presumably the rule is
mate
silently and out of sight = less conflict.)
According to this line of thought, the idea is that if nonhuman
animals appear to deceive only in very limited situations, perhaps it
isn’t genuine deception at all. The philosopher Daniel Dennett
gives the wonderful example of his dog going to the back door and
scratching his paw on the door, as if to signal that he wants to go
out. When his master gets out of his favorite armchair to let the dog
out, the dog doubles back to sit in the now empty armchair. Did the
dog deceive his master? Again, one can always give a leaner
interpretation. The dog may simply have learned the rule scratching
at the door = get comfy seat.
If
what other animals are doing when they appear to be dishonest is not
real deception, this begs the question of what counts as real
deception. True deception assumes the deceiver knows that (1) other
beings have minds, (2) different beings’ minds can believe
different
things are true (when only one of these is actually true), and (3)
you can make another mind believe that something false is actually
true. Defined in this way, one can see that deception is no trivial
achievement! The deceiver needs to have the mental equipment to
juggle different representations of reality. No wonder that scholars
of animal behavior are wary of elevating a single instance of
behavior to genuine deception, and prefer to reduce it to simpler
mental processes like learned associations.
When
we look at human cases of dishonesty, could these not also be demoted
to simple rule-learning? In the human case, it is actually more
parsimonious to regard typical children’s deception as true
deception – the single easiest way of explaining the multifarious
cases of children’s deception is to admit that, yes, the child has
a real capacity for deception. A typical child of four years old (or
older) does not only lie in relation to eating chocolate cookies but
also in relation to pushing his sister, or sneaking a look at his
birthday presents, or saying that he liked his present when he did
not. One either has to say that each of these situations gives rise
to a separate learned association or rule (e.g., to avoid punishment
or get a reward) or to acknowledge that typical preschoolers have the
capacity for deception.
So
what is entailed when we say that the child’s brain is capable of
genuine deception? Rutgers psychologist Alan Leslie suggests that to
deceive, the child must be able to represent two parallel but
different versions of reality. The child knows that version 1 is the
true description of an event, and that
version
2 is false or fictional but is held to be true to some other person.
Leslie calls this ability to keep two parallel versions of reality
simultaneously in mind the capacity for meta-representation.
Meta-representation
involves understanding how you can play with “truth conditions.”
Consider the sentence “John believes the moon is made of cheese.”
This can be true even if we know the moon is made of different stuff,
so long as it the case that John believes his assertion. So, when
Leslie suggests that at four years old typical children are capable
of meta-representation, what he means is that the typical
four-year-old child can separate the truth conditions of the two
versions of reality. One version of reality – “The moon is made
of rocks” – is true if and only if the moon is really made of
rocks. And four-year-old children understand this. The other version
of reality – “John believes the moon is made of cheese” – is
true if and only if John believes this, and four-year-old children
understand this as well. And that is why the typical four-year-old
child can deceive. He can represent “I ate the chocolate cookies”
and at the same time represent “Mom believes I didn’t eat the
chocolate cookies.” One can marvel at the psychological and
neurological complexity of such a capacity, already in place in a
typical four-year-old.
And
then there are people with autism. Their neurological condition leads
not only to difficulties socializing and chatting but also to
difficulties recognizing when someone might be deceiving them or
understanding how to deceive others. Many children with autism are
perplexed by why someone would even want to deceive others, or why
someone would think about fiction or pretense. They have no
difficulty with facts (version 1 of reality) and can tell you easily
if something is true or false (“Is the moon made of rocks? Yes! Is
the moon made of cheese? No!”). But they may be puzzled by version
2 of reality, that “John believes the moon is made of cheese.”
Why would a person believe something that is untrue?
They
have major difficulties grasping that another person might hold a
false belief that to
that person is true.
A large body of experimental research shows that while the typical
child achieves this understanding easily by four years old, children
with autism are to varying degrees delayed in this area of
development. As a result, they show some degree of “mindblindness.”
Even the higher-functioning children on the autistic spectrum, such
as those with Asperger’s syndrome, show delays in the development
of mind-reading ability. This neurological (and ultimately genetic)
set of conditions can leave the person with autism or Asperger’s
syndrome prey to deception and exploitation.
Take
the boy with Asperger’s syndrome in the playground at school who
was approached by a group of other boys, one of whom asked, “Can I
have a look your wallet?” Innocently, the boy handed it over, and
was shocked when the other boy ran off with it. This lack of “street
smarts” boils down to not being aware that other people may say one
thing but mean another. For the child with autism, there is only one
version of reality. The other version (the world of beliefs and
intentions) may be one he rarely glimpses, or grasps too slowly, too
late. This tells us something very important: that the skills you
need to survive and negotiate the social world involve mind-reading
and meta-representation – and that the capacity to deceive is a
marker that a child is developing typical social skills.
When
I was a young Ph.D. student, I tested children using the
“penny-hiding game.” This is the age-old game where you sit
opposite the child and show him you have a penny. You then put your
hands behind your back, conceal the penny in one of your hands, and
then bring your two closed hands in front of your body to invite the
child to guess which hand the penny is in. Obviously he has a 50/50
chance of choosing the correct hand. You then repeat this, varying
which hand you hide the penny in. To trick the child, your best
strategy is to be unpredictable, rather than always hiding it in the
same hand. Most children find this game lots of fun. But to test
whether he himself can deceive, you then swap roles. Now he is the
hider and you are the seeker. The question is: how good is he at
trying to trick you?
Playing
this game with a typical child over four years old soon reveals that
this is – literally – child’s play. He realizes that in the
role of hider he needs to do three things: (1) conceal the penny only
when his hands are behind his back; (2) keep both hands tightly shut
when inviting you to choose; and (3) over a series of trials, hide
the penny in a sequence that is hard to predict. But playing this
game with a child with classic autism – even if he is older than
four – soon reveals major difficulties. The child with autism
typically makes one of three kinds of error: transferring the penny
from one hand to another in full view of you, in front of his body;
keeping one hand open when inviting you to guess which hand the penny
is in; or hiding the penny in an easy-to-predict pattern (such as in
the same hand each time, or just alternating). The first two of these
errors suggest he is not keeping track of what you might know, based
on what you can see. He is just not keeping track of another person’s
beliefs.
As
such, children with autism make very poor liars. Like the typical
two-year-old boy who says, “I didn’t eat the chocolate cookies,”
but who has chocolate smeared all over his face and fingers, or like
the two-year-old girl who plays hide-and-seek by standing in the
middle of the room with her eyes shut and saying, “You can’t see
me!,” the child with autism is very poor at telling lies. But
whereas the two-year-old child is well on the way to developing a
capacity for deception (spontaneously playing peekaboo because she is
interested in what other people can see), the child with autism finds
very little pleasure in playing such mind games.
Far
more satisfying for a child with autism is a game rooted in version 1
of reality, the version he does understand, the world of physical
objects. Lego bricks, which can be built into pleasing patterns and
constructions, and which can be assembled and disassembled in the
same predictable way each time, or can be varied in a logical,
systematic, rule-governed way, are far more attractive than a game of
deception. Hence a neurological disability that leaves the child
challenged in fast-changing social situations also leaves him or her
more virtuous, more truthful, less deceitful. The person with autism
or Asperger’s syndrome may say that your haircut is awful, and this
may be true. He means no offense in such a personal remark. He is
simply saying what he thinks, and don’t see the purpose of saying
the opposite of what he thinks.
And
even after twenty-five years in the field of autism, I am still
shocked. A Ph.D. student with Asperger’s syndrome said to me last
week, “I’ve just discovered that people don’t always say what
they mean. So how do you know how to trust language?” Her
“discovery” at the age of twenty-seven is one that the typical
child makes at age four, in the teasing interactions of the
playground.
Brain-scanning
studies reveal that one key brain region typically involved in
mind-reading is the left medial prefrontal cortex. This brain region
is underactive in people with autism and Asperger’s syndrome. Since
these conditions to some extent run in families, genes will partly
determine whether a person finds mind-reading easy or hard. I say
“partly” because autism is not wholly genetic. Environmental
experience is also important, but it appears to interact with genetic
makeup. And if mind-reading is in part genetically programmed, it
means it is the result of our evolution, since the processes shaping
evolution (such as natural selection and sexual selection) act by
enabling animals to survive to the age of reproduction, find a mate,
and pass on their genes. It has been speculated that the first
hominids who could mind-read would have had major advantages over
those who could not – by deceiving and outwitting them, by being
able to create shared plans and collaborate, by being able to teach
each other, by being able to see other perspectives and negotiate to
avoid conflict, or by being able to mind-read their offspring to
anticipate their needs and thus provide better parenting.
So
does this mean that people with autism or Asperger’s syndrome are
somehow less evolved? Not at all. What appears to have happened in
human evolution is that the brain has developed down more than one
path. The “neurotypical” brain has been selected for its capacity
to socialize and chat with ease, keeping track of the rapidly
changing social world, different points of view, innuendo, hidden
meanings, exchanges of glances, and exploitation. The autistic brain,
on the other hand, has been selected for its capacity to focus on the
physical world in greater depth than is typical, noticing small
details that others miss (such as patterns in numbers or shapes) and
attending to highly specific topics in order to understand them
completely.
Pejoratively,
clinicians describe the deep, narrow interests in autism as
“obsessions,” but a more positive description might be “areas
of expertise.” Sometimes the area of expertise a person with autism
focuses on appears not to be very useful (e.g., geometric shapes, or
the texture of different woods). Sometimes the area of expertise is
slightly more useful, though of limited interest to others (e.g.,
train timetables, or flags of the world). But sometimes the area of
expertise can make a real social contribution (such as fixing
machines, or solving mathematical problems, or debugging computer
software).
It
is not that the neurotypical brain or the autistic brain is more
evolved than the other: each has evolved differently, one to
empathize and master the social climate, the other to systemize
successfully so as to master the physical niche. The unique qualities
of human intelligence are characterized not just by the capacity for
mind-reading (and deception), which has enabled humans to work in
coordinated activity unusually well, but also by the capacity to
systemize, which has enabled humans to understand how things work,
and to develop innovative technology par excellence. People with
autism, who can perceive patterns better and concentrate better than
their peers, are also more honest. Rather than regarding autism as a
“disease,” we should recognize it as a difference that deserves
our respect. Some features of it, like a learning or language
disability, may benefit from treatment. But other features, like
remarkable attention to detail and utmost honesty, are valuable human
qualities.
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What Can “Aspies” Accomplish? Take A Look At This List of Famous Aspies: |
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Adam Young, multi-instrumentalist, producer and the founder of the electronic project Owl City. |
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Adrian Lamo, American computer hacker |
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Carl Soderholm, speaker in neuropsychiatric disorders |
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Clay Marzo, American professional surfer |
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Craig Nicholls, frontman of the Australian garage rock band, The Vines |
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Dan Aykroyd, comedian and actor: Aykroyd stated he has Asperger's, but some feel he was joking. |
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Daniel Tammet, British autistic savant, believed to have Asperger Syndrome |
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Daryl Hannah, actress |
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Dawn Prince-Hughes, PhD, primate anthropologist, ethologist, and author of Songs for the Gorilla Nation |
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Gary Numan, British singer and songwriter |
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Heather Kuzmich, fashion model and reality show contestant on America's Next Top Model |
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James Durbin, finalist on the tenth season of American Idol |
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Jerry Newport, American author and mathematical savant, basis of the film Mozart and the Whale |
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John Elder Robison, author of Look Me in the Eye |
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Judy Singer, Australian disability rights activist |
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Liane Holliday Willey, author of Pretending to be Normal, Asperger Syndrome in the Family; Asperger syndrome advocate; education professor; and adult diagnosed with Asperger syndrome at age 35 |
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Lizzy Clark, actress and campaigner |
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Luke Jackson, author |
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Michael Burry, US investment fund manager |
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Nicky Reilly, failed suicide bomber from Britain |
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Paddy Considine, actor |
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Peter Howson, Scottish painter |
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Phillipa "Pip" Brown (aka Ladyhawke), indie rock musician |
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Raymond Thompson, New Zealand scriptwriter and TV producer |
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Richard Borcherds, mathematician specializing in group theory and Lie algebras |
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Robert Durst, American real estate developer accused of murder |
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Robert Napper, British murderer |
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Satoshi Tajiri, creator and designer of Pokemon |
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Tim Ellis, Australian magician and author |
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Tim Page, Pulitzer Prize-winning critic and author |
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Travis Meeks, lead singer, guitarist and song writer for acoustic rock band Days of the New. |
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Vernon L. Smith, Nobel Laureate in Economics |
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William Cottrell, student who was sentenced to eight years in jail for fire-bombing SUV dealerships |
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Abraham Lincoln,1809-1865, US Politician |
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Alan Turing, 1912-1954, English mathematician, computer scientist and cryptographer |
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Albert Einstein, 1879-1955, German/American theoretical physicist |
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Alexander Graham Bell, 1847-1922, Scottish/Canadian/American inventor of the telephone |
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Anton Bruckner , 1824-1896, Austrian composer |
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Bela Bartok, 1881-1945, Hungarian composer |
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Benjamin Franklin,1706-1790, US polictician/writer |
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Bertrand Russell, 1872-1970, British logician |
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Bobby Fischer, 1943-2008, World Chess Champion |
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Carl Jung, 1875-1961, Swiss psychoanalyst |
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Charles Rennie Mackintosh, 1868-1928, Scottish architect and designer |
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Emily Dickinson, 1830-1886, US poet |
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Erik Satie, 1866-1925 - Composer |
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Franz Kafka, 1883-1924, Czech writer |
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Friedrich Nietzsche, 1844-1900, German philosopher |
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George Bernard Shaw, 1856-1950, Irish playwright, writer of Pygmalion, critic and Socialist |
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George Washington, 1732-1799, US Politician |
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Gustav Mahler, 1860-1911, Czech/Austrian composer |
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Marilyn Monroe, 1926-1962, US actress |
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H P Lovecraft, 1890-1937, US writer |
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Henry Cavendish, 1731-1810, English/French scientist, discovered the composition of air and water |
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Henry Ford, 1863-1947, US industrialist |
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Henry Thoreau, 1817-1862, US writer |
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Isaac Newton, 1642-1727, English mathematician and physicist |
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Jane Austen, 1775-1817, English novelist, author of Pride and Prejudice |
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Kaspar Hauser, c1812-1833, German foundling, portrayed in a film by Werner Herzog |
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Ludwig II, 1845-1886, King of Bavaria |
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Ludwig Wittgenstein, 1889-1951, Viennese/English logician and philosopher |
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Ludwig van Beethoven, 1770-1827, German/Viennese composer |
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Mark Twain, 1835-1910, US humorist |
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Michelangelo, 1475 1564 - Italian Renissance artist |
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Nikola Tesla, 1856-1943, Serbian/American scientist, engineer, inventor of electric motors |
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Oliver Heaviside, 1850-1925, English physicist |
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Richard Strauss, 1864-1949, German composer |
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Seth Engstrom, 1987-Present, Magician and World Champion |
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Thomas Edison, 1847-1931, US inventor |
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Thomas Jefferson, 1743-1826, US politician |
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Vincent Van Gogh, 1853-1890, Dutch painter |
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Virginia Woolf, 1882-1941, English Writer |
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Wasily Kandinsky, 1866-1944, Russian/French painter |
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Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, 1756-1791, Austrian composer |
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Alfred Hitchcock, 1899-1980, English/American film director |
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Andy Kaufman, 1949-1984, US comedian, subject of the film Man on the Moon |
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Andy Warhol, 1928-1987, US artist. |
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Charles Schulz, 1922-2000, US cartoonist and creator of Peanuts and Charlie Brown |
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Glenn Gould, 1932-1982, Canadian pianist |
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Hans Asperger, 1906-1980, Austrian paediatric doctor after whom Asperger's Syndrom is named |
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Howard Hughes, 1905-1976, US billionaire |
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Isaac Asimov, 1920-1992, Russian/US writer on science and of science fiction, author of Bicentennial Man |
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Jim Henson, 1936-1990, creator of the Muppets, US puppeteer, writer, producer, director, composer |
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John Denver, 1943-1997, US musician |
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L S Lowry, 1887-1976, English painter of "matchstick men" |
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Al Gore, 1948-, former US Vice President and presidential candidate |
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Bill Gates, 1955-, Entrepreneur and philanthropist. A key player in the personal computer revolution. |
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Bob Dylan, 1941-, US singer-songwriter |
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Charles Dickinson, 1951, US Writer |
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Crispin Glover, 1964-, US actor |
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David Helfgott, 1947-, Australian pianist, subject of the film Shine |
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Garrison Keillor, 1942-, US writer, humorist and host of Prairie Home Companion |
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Genie, 1957-?, US "wild child" (see also L'Enfant Sauvage, Victor, ) |
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James Taylor, 1948-, US singer/songwriter |
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Jamie Hyneman, 1956-, Co-host of Mythbusters |
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Jeff Greenfield, 1943-, US political analyst/speechwriter, a political wonk |
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John Motson, 1945-, English sports commentator |
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John Nash, 1928-, US mathematician (portrayed by Russell Crowe in A Beautiful Mind, USA 2001) |
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Joseph Erber, 1985-, young English composer/musician who has Asperger's Syndrome, subject of a BBC TV documentary |
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Kevin Mitnick, 1963-, US "hacker" |
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Michael Palin, 1943-, English comedian and presenter |
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Oliver Sacks, 1933-, UK/US neurologist, author of The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat and Awakenings |
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Paul Kostabi 1962-, writer, comedian, artist, producer, technician |
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Pip Brown "Ladyhawke", 1979-, New Zealand Singer/Songwriter, Musician |
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Robin McLaurin Williams, (July 21, 1951 - August 11, 2014), US Actor |
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Seth Engstrom, 1987-, Magician and World Champion in Sleight of Hand. The best man with a deck of cards that the world has ever seen. |
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Tony Benn, 1925-, English Labour politician |