The theory of self-reference

I’ve often wondered why we don’t hear much about the possibility that artificial hormones play a role in the rise of autism rates.

I couldn’t tolerate birth control pills and wrote about the experience, in relation to Sam’s autism, in my book. To me, hormones could explain why, until recently, autism was in first-born males four out of five times. It could explain why the uptick in recent years. It could explain why more girls now, and not just boys. It could explain why a recent university study found more occurrences among the wealthy

Like being rich causes autism. No one believes any chicken laid that egg. But it is well-known that the wealthy have better access to birth control options.

Yet, people keeping beating that vaccination horse, even though it’s been looked at rigorously for the past decade and no one has found a solid link. And lately, Vitamin D deficiency is all the rage.

I’m skeptical any causation theory if the proponent follows their theory with a “treatment” protocol, or hopes to file a class action lawsuit. Yeah, right. I’m not buying it.

From the theory of self-reference — in other words, no scientific basis whatsoever — I still want to ask, why aren’t we looking at the effect of artificial hormones?

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