Thursday, 19 March 2026

Correcting Myths about the Provenance of Neurodiversity

A number of myths have been circulating about the provenance of Neurodiversity and my role in it. 

Some are positive, some are negative, some are libellous.

Of the positive ones, - I appreciate them. Thank you all!  Inevitably some of these myths are inflated and I do try to set the record straight when I come across them... the most common is calling me "Dr Singer". I do not hold a PhD.   

Some myths may arise innocently from misunderstandings, or misinformation, which are hardly lacking on social media.

But some of the negative myths -  or allegations - to call them by their more contemporary names - appear to be specifically crafted as disinformation by a small coterie of my rival academics, Chapman, Walker et al, who have not been ashamed to sign off on them despite failing to use their professional research skills to check the facts. For example, they might have reasonably guessed that I would possess original documents, which I do, or that my work was submitted in 1998 to a highly regarded  academic journal, and published in their next edition, now still available at McGraw Hill.

Chapman et al have succeeded in getting a major academic journal to publish a take down of my work, based primarily on the selective "memories" of a single non-academic source, whose motives can only be guessed at. I am not giving any of these people oxygen. You can find them easily with any search engine. I only ask that you read their allegations with a huge grain of salt, despite their impeccably formatted Academese.

At best, the allegations of these contenders may stem from  Confirmation Bias, — a fancy name for "wishful thinking". But for academics and researchers of their calibre, that is no excuse for poor, self‑serving research built on cherry‑picked ‘evidence’ drawn from non‑academic social‑media scuttlebutt. 

To add insult to injury,  these two male* scholars have attempted to cloak their self‑interest by selectively quoting leading feminist scholars — who might well be appalled to find their work appropriated in this way. 

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 * Male judging by their names and appearance. So, what else is new in the history of credit for scholarship?  Although Walker seems to change his pronouns to suit the times,  at least the last time I looked, he was a "he, him, his".