Re: Re: autism and autistic economics

2002-09-13 Thread Waistline2
In a message dated 9/12/02 11:17:51 AM Pacific Daylight Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: Recently, I was trying to convince my son, who has Asperger's Syndrome (borderline autism), that nothing can ever be perfect. This goes against his perfectionism, a common symptom of AS, which encourages him

Re: Re: Re: autism and autistic economics

2002-09-13 Thread Lisa Stolarski
Title: Re: [PEN-L:30210] Re: Re: autism and autistic economics Gosh Ian, this is interesting. What are the principles of these two types of economics? HOw about: 4. the new emerges from the decomposing on 09/13/2002 2:57 AM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] at [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: In a message dated

RE: autism and autistic economics

2002-09-12 Thread Max B. Sawicky
Shit happens? -- i.e., shocks, kinks, discontinuities [sounds like one of my dates] mbs Recently, I was trying to convince my son, who has Asperger's Syndrome (borderline autism), that nothing can ever be perfect. This goes against his perfectionism, a common symptom of AS, which encourages

Re: autism and autistic economics

2002-09-12 Thread Ian Murray
autism and autistic economics - Original Message - From: Devine, James To: Pen-l (E-mail) Sent: Thursday, September 12, 2002 10:40 AM Subject: [PEN-L:30192] autism and autistic economics Recently, I was trying to convince my son, who has Asperger's Syndrome (borderline autism), that

RE: Re: autism and autistic economics

2002-09-12 Thread Devine, James
Title: RE: [PEN-L:30194] Re: autism and autistic economics nothing is inevitable but death, taxes, and ... lawyers. Jim Devine [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://bellarmine.lmu.edu/~jdevine 1. Nothing is ever perfect. 2. Change is normal. 3. The future is uncertain

re: autism and autistic economics

2002-09-12 Thread Tom Walker
Can anyone think of what to add to the list? The way money grows is not the way plants, animals and humans grow. - Gene Logsdon Tom Walker 604 255 4812