Do people with autism show empathy towards others?
Share
Sign Up to our social questions and Answers Engine to ask questions, answer people's questions, and connect with other people.
Lost your password? Please enter your email address. You will receive a link and will create a new password via email.
Please briefly explain why you feel this question should be reported.
Please briefly explain why you feel this answer should be reported.
Please briefly explain why you feel this user should be reported.
In my experience with autism, people have a connectedness that I feel is empathy. Autism is a spectrum within another spectrum that may reach beyond limitations at some point. Though different thinking and developing, autism takes a long time to reveal, unexpectedly, what has been brooding in being. I suppose it is a good idea to not expect, but to entrust faith and love in what is possible.
I think one of the reasons autistic people get flagged as lacking empathy is that empathy with people who are fundamentally different from yourself is hard. This goes for both autistic, and non-autistic people. I’m going to speak fairly pop-scientifically from here on, but this is a field tangentially related to mine, not my own, and I’m not going to attempt to bust out the big academic guns on this answer. To a large degree, you experience empathy by projecting your model of yourself onto other people, and determining how you would feel in their circumstances. I’m not claiming this is the only factor at play, but: autistic people are quite fundamentally different from non-autistic people cognitively, with all that entails in the domain of behavior, priorities, emotional responses to various stimuli, likes and dislikes, communication, and so forth. If an autistic person attempts to use their model of themselves to understand a non-autistic person, it’s largely going to fail. But that’s largely how empathy is supposed to work.