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The Roots of MindblindnessYork Universityshanker{at}yorku.ca This paper challenges the hypothesis that the type of social impairment observed in children with autism is evidence of an underlying malfunction in their Theory of Mind, resulting in mindblindness. To establish this point, the paper takes up two interesting ideas in the Theory of Mind literature, purged of their Cartesianism: first, that the study of autism does indeed provide us with critical insights into the development of social understanding and empathy; and, second, that no meaningful distinction can be drawn between a childs interpersonal and intrapersonal development. The paper seeks to show how the ability to understand someone elses thoughts and emotions is a product of endless co-regulated interactions in which the childs own emotions and sense of self develop. The reason why children with autism so frequently exhibit impaired social relatedness is because basic biological challengessuch as sensory over-and under-reactivityinhibit their ability to engage in these co-regulated interactive experiences.
Key Words: affect autism emotional capacity Theory of Mind
Theory & Psychology, Vol. 14, No. 5,
685-703 (2004) This article has been cited by other articles:
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