Does Sherlock Holmes have Asperger s syndrome

Updated on healthy 2024-04-15
6 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-07

    No. The reasons for this manifestation are:

    Although I have known Mr. Sherlock Holmes for a long time and have been intimate, I have rarely heard him talk about his relatives or his early life. His reticence made me feel a little impersonal all the more, so much so that I sometimes saw him as a withdrawn eccentric, a man with a mind and no emotion, who, though superior in intelligence, devoid of human affection.

    His dislike of approaching women and his reluctance to make new friends are indicative of his unemotional personality, but what is especially heartless is that he never mentions his family. So I began to think that he was an orphan and had no relatives alive. But one day, to my surprise, he told me about his brother's coming.

    One summer evening, after tea, we chatted about the reasons for the change from the golf club to the yellow-red corner, and finally talked about atavism and genetic adaptation, and the main point of the discussion was how much of a person's outstanding talent is due to heredity and how much of his or her own early training is due. (Refer to Sherlock Holmes, The Greek Translator).

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    No, Asperger's social impairment and Sherlock Holmes have no comprehension problems when communicating with others. He's just more withdrawn. You can look up Asperger's.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    Be skeptical about everything.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    Is it the after-effects of Sherlock Holmes? Detective syndrome? Still is? There doesn't seem to be such a statement.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    Asperger's syndrome (AS) is an autism spectrum disorder (ASD) or pervasive developmental disorder (PDD) that has the same social communication impairments, limited interests, and repetitive, stereotyped activities as autism. It is classified as autism spectrum disorder or pervasive developmental disorder, but it is different from autism, and the difference from autism is that there is no obvious language and intellectual impairment in this disease. The clinical features of this syndrome are commonly described as Demolition Hall:

    Patient (a) lacks understanding of the emotions of others; (b) inappropriate unilateral social interactions, lack of ability to form friendships leading to social isolation; (c) dull and monotonous language; (d) poor non-verbal communication; (e) Exhibiting a strong receptivity to certain limited aspects such as weather, television schedules, train schedules, maps, etc., but merely memorizing them mechanically, but not being able to comprehend and give the impression of being strange; (f) clumsy and uncoordinated movements (especially large movements) and strange postures; (g) There is abnormal pronunciation. Although all cases were boys when the disease was first reported by Athberg, cases of girls have now been reported. However, poor boys are significantly more susceptible to the disease, and although most have a normal IQ, a small number have mild developmental delay.

    The onset of the disorder tends to be later than autism, or at least when it is detected; As a result, language and cognitive abilities are preserved, and the situation is usually stable. And this higher IQ suggests a better long-term prognosis than autism.

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-02

    Asperger's syndrome is a mental illness, a subtype of pervasive developmental disorder, and some people say that people with autism always live in their own world, while people with Asperger's syndrome live in other people's world in their own way.

    Asperger's syndrome has no obvious language and intellectual impairment, is willing to communicate with others, but lacks communication skills, always does it unilaterally in its own way, so it is difficult to form and maintain good interpersonal relationships, and cannot respond flexibly to a variety of different situations. If others don't understand their way of thinking, misunderstandings and conflicts can occur, pushing them further into self-isolation.

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