Went for a walk and got
moderately high beforehand. Went back in twice because I wanted a higher level, make it a
trip, as I thought (It's pretty mundane.). Damn, I forgot to take NSI-189. Related to the aforementioned, I also remember calculating that I've purchased $1,000 if you value it at $20/g, around the rate the seller would value it for high amount, and consumed half of that. Fortunately I got it by trading my parnate for it, and selling some as well. Got $35/g for it and only paid around $7/g for 50-60 grams.
Along the way I became lost in thought with my arms held behind my back, head angled toward the ground, though not excessively (It really is a good thinking position for walking. I didn't purposefully adapt it, some muscle issues from Asperger's make it more comfortable a fair amount of the time.). I managed to start along the path of, then perfect a system for the Asperger's thought process and how every major neurological difference, requiring a high IQ and hyper-memory trait to fully utilize it, contributes to a potential, possibly extreme, configuration of the cognitive system of Asperger's. Working title is "The Scientific ASperger's Mind".
Also came across a very interesting paper that posits/explains a fundamental cognitive style difference, which led me to another and some fascinating information:
Explaining and inducing savant skills: privileged access to lower level, less-processed informationhttps://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2677578/Snyder & Mitchell (1999) argued that all savant skills, including AP and synaesthesia, reside within everyone, but that they are not normally accessible to conscious awareness. Owing to some atypical brain function, savants have privileged access to raw, less-processed information—information in some interim state before it is packaged into holistic labels. This privileged access facilitates a distinct literal cognitive style in which a person thinks in detail, working from the parts to the whole (De Clercq 2003). Savant skills are a form of reproduction. Savants access or read off something that exists in all of our brains, but is normally inaccessible through introspection (Snyder & Mitchell 1999). The precise neuroanatomical mechanism for gaining this privileged access is not yet resolved. It may be associated with an atypical hemispheric imbalance wherein concept networks are bypassed or inhibited.
http://www.nature.com.sci-hub.cc/nature/journal/v428/n6982/full/428470a.htmlAutistic genius?
Autism and Creativity: Is There a
Link between Autism in Men and
Exceptional Ability?
Asperger even noted that the autistic mind is an extreme variant of male intelligence.
The fact that genius can fall within the autistic spectrum challenges our deepest notions of creativity. Are there two different
routes to creativity: normal and autistic? The normal mind is good at recognizing the gist of something but poor at recalling details. This,I believe,is because the brain forms concepts or mental models that encapsulate the familiar. Concepts impart automatic judgements and confer intuition, but hide details from conscious awareness. As a result, we see the whole but not the parts. In contrast, the autistic mind is literal and sees more of the parts than the whole. An impairment in the process of concept formation denies intuition, but allows access to details that are normally non-conscious. Consequently, the autistic mind must build logically from the parts to what is intuitive to a normal mind.
Leading to the possibility of novel insights, new theories or findings, criticisms, flaws found, novel arguments, even entire new theories etc.