this post was submitted on 17 Mar 2026
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Autism
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Oh I agree with you in that, being detail and consistency focused are autistic traits that are very helpful to complex research, and yeah, you're probably not wrong, a lot of PhDs probably are on the spectrum.
I guess I'm just trying to be more broadly encouraging of anyone who wants to pursue research, education, learning the scientific method.
Autism is not a hard requirement, is what I'm trying to say.
The flip side of autism being a benefit for PhDs is that, well, autists tend to hyperfocus, burnout, snd not be so great with social skills...
... and social skills are often quite a necesssry component of becoming a PhD, overfocus and then burning out can be quite detrimental to the pursuit.
... What I am aware of is a paradigm where, when you are pursuing your PhD, you teach undergrads, usually for not really enough money to comfortably pay your CoL + all the loans you likely had to take to get to the academic level where you would be considered for all that.
That's the trick. Get your bachelor in a real country that cares about educating their inhabitants for little or no money.
Then the phd is paid by ~~selling your soul to the system~~ teaching kids and ~~doing all the work of a lecture for breadcrumbs~~ assisting with assignments