“Misfitting” and Friendship in the Virtuous Life: Neurodiversity and Moral Formation

Q2 Arts and Humanities Journal of Disability and Religion Pub Date : 2023-09-25 DOI:10.1080/23312521.2023.2261438
Elizabeth Agnew Cochran
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Abstract

AbstractThe self-reported experiences of autistic individuals invite ways of thinking about moral character and moral formation that challenge Christians to rethink a number of traditional claims regarding the virtues. This paper argues that attention to autism requires rethinking accounts of growth in virtue that depend on normative views of social interactions such as friendship. Drawing on scholarship in disability studies and testimony from autistic participants in an IRB-supported research study, I contend that the phenomenon of “misfitting” put forth in the work of Rosemarie Garland-Thomson (Citation2011) plays a constructive and essential role in shaping virtuous character.Keywords: virtueethicsautismneurodiversity AcknowledgmentsThe research and writing of this essay were supported by Collaborations in Christian Theological Anthropology, a project affiliated with Villanova University and the John Templeton Foundation, and New Visions in Theological Anthropology, a project affiliated with St. Andrew’s University and the John Templeton Foundation. I am grateful to colleagues from both projects who read and provided feedback on versions of these arguments, and particularly to John Bowlin and Elizabeth Fein.Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.Notes1 Premack and Woodruff (Citation1978) first used this term to describe a cognitive ability to infer the perspective of others. Simon Baron-Cohen, Alan Leslie, and Uta Frith (Citation1985) assessed theory of mind in autistic children on the basis of a false-belief task in a laboratory setting, and concluded that the capacity for theory of mind in autistic children is diminished. This study had a significant influence on subsequent research. Baron-Cohen’s subsequent work turned explicitly to empathy, demonstrating a presumption that empathy builds on and requires a capacity to interpret other people’s mental states. He developed a psychological questionnaire called the Empathy Quotient (EQ), designed to measure empathy in adults with IQs in the normal range. In an early publication communicating results of a study that made use of this questionnaire, Baron-Cohen and Wheelwright (Citation2004) argued that autism is associated not simply with a diminished theory of mind, but more explicitly with a deficit in empathy.2 See, for example, Barnbaum, Citation2008, Shoemaker, Citation2015.3 See, for example, Dempsey et al., Citation2020.4 John Swinton (Citation2012) contends that autistic voices have historically been excluded from Christian accounts of love in particular.5 This research study, “Friendship, Spirituality, and Autistic Well-Being,” is conducted at Duquesne University and was initially approved by Duquesne University’s Institutional Review Board on May 1, 2021. The IRB number is 2021/02/7.6 Barnes (Citation2016), drawing on the work of Miranda Fricker, explains that “testimonial injustice,” dismissing the testimony and experience of disabled persons, is a form of epistemic injustice. In giving narrative testimony pride of place, my study attempts to counter this injustice.7 A philosophical debate about the “moral luck” offers tools for thinking further about the role these situational and contextual factors play in moral formation, and the degree to which it is fair to hold moral agents responsible for factors outside our control. See, for example, Williams & Nagel Citation1976, Zimmerman Citation2015.8 For more on this history, see Pripas-Kapit Citation2020.9 Walker speaks positively of McLaren’s work in a 2015 interview included in Norm Kunc’s Conversations That Matter series. Video of this interview can be found on https://neuroqueer.com/autism-empathy-and-theory-of-mind/ (accessed December 10, 2021).Additional informationFundingJohn Templeton Foundation
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道德生活中的“错位”与友谊:神经多样性与道德形成
摘要自闭症患者自我报告的经历引发了对道德品质和道德形成的思考方式,挑战基督徒重新思考一些关于美德的传统主张。这篇论文认为,对自闭症的关注需要重新思考依赖于社会互动(如友谊)的规范性观点的美德成长的解释。根据残疾研究方面的学术研究和irb支持的一项研究中自闭症参与者的证词,我认为Rosemarie Garland-Thomson (Citation2011)的研究中提出的“不适应”现象在塑造良好品格方面起着建设性的重要作用。本文的研究和写作得到了维拉诺瓦大学和约翰邓普顿基金会的基督教神学人类学合作项目,以及圣安德鲁大学和约翰邓普顿基金会的神学人类学新视野项目的支持。我要感谢这两个项目的同事,他们阅读了这些观点并提供了反馈,尤其是约翰·鲍林和伊丽莎白·费恩。披露声明作者未报告潜在的利益冲突。注1 Premack和Woodruff (Citation1978)首次使用这个术语来描述一种推断他人观点的认知能力。Simon Baron-Cohen, Alan Leslie和Uta Frith (Citation1985)在实验室环境中基于错误信念任务评估了自闭症儿童的心理理论,并得出结论:自闭症儿童的心理理论能力减弱。本研究对后续研究产生了重大影响。巴伦-科恩随后的研究明确转向共情,证明了一种假设,即共情建立在理解他人心理状态的能力之上,并需要这种能力。他设计了一份名为“同理心商数”(EQ)的心理问卷,用来测量智商在正常范围内的成年人的同理心。Baron-Cohen和Wheelwright (Citation2004)在早期发表的一份研究报告中指出,使用该问卷的研究结果表明,自闭症不仅仅与心智理论能力下降有关,更明显的是与移情能力不足有关参见,例如,Barnbaum, Citation2008, Shoemaker, Citation2015.3,参见,例如,Dempsey等人,Citation2020.4, John Swinton (Citation2012)认为,自闭症的声音在历史上被排除在基督教对爱的描述之外这项名为“友谊、灵性和自闭症健康”的研究是在杜肯大学进行的,并于2021年5月1日获得了杜肯大学机构审查委员会的初步批准。IRB编号是2021/02/7.6。巴恩斯(Citation2016)借鉴了米兰达·弗里克(Miranda Fricker)的作品,解释说,“证词不公正”,无视残疾人的证词和经历,是一种认识上的不公正。我的研究给予叙事性证词以重要地位,试图反驳这种不公正关于“道德运气”的哲学辩论提供了进一步思考这些情境和背景因素在道德形成中的作用的工具,以及让道德行为者对我们无法控制的因素负责的公平程度。例如,参见Williams & Nagel Citation1976, Zimmerman Citation2015.8关于这段历史的更多信息,请参见pripaskapit citation20120.9沃克在2015年的采访中积极评价了迈凯轮的工作,该采访收录在Norm Kunc的重要对话系列中。本次采访的视频可在https://neuroqueer.com/autism-empathy-and-theory-of-mind/(2021年12月10日访问)上找到。约翰邓普顿基金会
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来源期刊
Journal of Disability and Religion
Journal of Disability and Religion Arts and Humanities-Religious Studies
CiteScore
0.80
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发文量
47
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