Books : Autism and Sensing: The Unlost Instinct

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Author name: Donna Williams

 : Autism and Sensing: The Unlost Instinct
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Type of bind: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 362
EAN num: 9781853026126
ISBN number: 1853026123
Label: Jessica Kingsley Publishing houses
Manufacturer: Jessica Kingsley Publishing houses
Quantity: 1
Page Count: 131
Printing Date: 1998-07
Publishing house: Jessica Kingsley Publishing houses
Sale Popularity Level: 897141
Studio: Jessica Kingsley Publishing houses




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Customer Reviews
User popularity level:  out of 5 stars

Rated by buyers 5 out of 5 stars - Packed full of food for thought
Interesting, interesting, interesting. I have, as far as I know, no characteristics related to autism, but I am truely amazed at Donna's excellent ability to describe the varioius "shifts" in perception related to her autism. Thank goodness she has the ability to describe her experiences so that people might better understand autism, and the workings of the human brain in general. I can especially relate to her description of "lemon-ness" (you have to read the book - too difficult for me to paraphrase here). This little book, as one other reviewer mentioned, is packed full of insight. Thanks, Donna, for an excellent read.



Rated by buyers 5 out of 5 stars - A work of genius
I am a philosopher and expert hypnotist, and this book is the finest exposition of 'low-level' perception and apperception that I have ever read. Anyone interested in issues of consciousness and altered states of awareness should read this superbly well-written book.



Rated by buyers 4 out of 5 stars - Thoughtful and Fascinating
This is a book about the experience of sensing not the mechanics of perception... it is philosophy, not science. The basis of the book is the idea that most people move quickly on from sensing the world to interpreting it, but that autistic people either remain in the sensing stage or never quite fully let go of it. I identified with a lot of the thoughts and experiences related here and found it interesting and enjoyable to read. I think there are many people who might not 'get' where this is coming from though... from those who do not understand her philosophical approach and mistake it for bad science to those who take every word literally and mistake this for a book about the paranormal. This isn't a book suitable for everybody, but if you have enjoyed Donna's other books or are in to self analysis and exploration I think you'll find this delicious.



Rated by buyers 5 out of 5 stars - A challenging and innovative exploration of where Autism ends and Asperger's begins.
Donna Williams is not an expert but an explorer of ideas. Here we see an intriguing theory about Autism as a state before the ability to process information with meaning and conscious awareness; a place of Sensing.

As someone who didn't grasp meaning of what she saw or heard until very late in childhood, Donna describes what the world was like in a preconscious state of pattern, theme and feel. She contrasts this strikingly with what it was like to then develop awaress of meaning in incoming language and to look past the purely sensory and pattern form of objects to try to find their intellectual concept and, hence, link them with thought and language.

In this sense, Autism And Sensing is an amazing exploration because most people on the Autistic Spectrum who do communicate developed the capacity to understand meaning or hold conscious awareness long before Donna did. Hence they usually can tell us what it was like to have Autistic behaviours or facinations but they can't so easily tell us what it was like as a whole to navigate a world without meaning or what it was like to be almost out of childhood and discover meaning existed and try to learn its system and use it as most people do. She covers things like how this changes identity and sense of self which tells us a whole other social-emotional dimension to what people with Autism may experience in moving what may for them be like moving between two very different worlds.

Donna described the more intellectual but literal world of people with Asperger's who have always known and relied upon a relatively fluent system of meaning, but contrasts it strongly with the Autistic end of the spectrum when everything is known through movement and the body rather than the mind.

Its a challenging concept given we don't have a clear idea yet where Autism ends and Asperger's begins. But if Donna is right then this book may help us indicate who is where on the spectrum according to how they process information rather than how 'Autistically' they behave and to shape learning and development programs accordingly both for those who, like Donna, were able to later develop some processing skills more akin to Apserger's and those with Autism who are not but could be, nevertheless, relatively able.

Donna's writing and structure is always unusual but then we are reading the work of someone who didn't learn to understand three sentences in a row until she was nine years old. This in itself is informative if we judge it on its own terms.

What's without doubt is that it takes a great deal of courage to write on a subject as intangible as Sensing and then give it to a world of readers who will read it with minds that have always known Interpretation and meaning.





Rated by buyers 5 out of 5 stars - Intense reading
Though slim, this book is dense and intense. Perhaps it is one of the most provacative books on autism as it gets into the core of what's going on with many people--though certainly not all--on the spectrum. It was an incredible window into my daughter's world that helped me to understand and make sense of what I felt I knew about my daughter but couldn't put into words. Donna found those words beautifully and effectively.

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