Social skills are skills—a learned body of knowledge. You can fail to develop a body of knowledge for all sorts of reasons, not limited to a specific spectrum of neurological dysfunctions.
True, though I’d hesitate to characterize social skills as “a learned body of knowledge” precisely.
Perhaps I should have been speaking of “social inelegance”, rather than autism? Have I conflated unjustly?
Yes!
I’ve changed it, and I’m open to changing it again, or scrapping it.
Social skills are skills—a learned body of knowledge. You can fail to develop a body of knowledge for all sorts of reasons, not limited to a specific spectrum of neurological dysfunctions.
True, though I’d hesitate to characterize social skills as “a learned body of knowledge” precisely.
Perhaps I should have been speaking of “social inelegance”, rather than autism? Have I conflated unjustly?
Yes!
I’ve changed it, and I’m open to changing it again, or scrapping it.