Ethopathology and Civilization Diseases: Niko and Elisabeth Tinbergen on Autism

Can Bull Med Hist. 2018 Spring;35(1):1-31. doi: 10.3138/cbmh.191-122016. Epub 2018 Apr 16.

Abstract

The idea that some diseases result from a poor fit between modern life and our biological make-up is part of the long history of what historian of medicine Charles Rosenberg has called the "progress-and-pathology narrative." This article examines a key episode in that history: 1973 Nobel laureate Niko Tinbergen's use of an evolutionary framework to identify autism as a pathogenic effect of progress. Influenced by British psychiatrist John Bowlby's work, Tinbergen and his wife Elisabeth saw autistic children as victims of environmental stress caused mainly by mothers' failure to bond with their children and to protect them from conflicting situations. However, the author argues that their position was not "environmental." For them, autism was due to a failure of socialization but the mechanisms that explain that failure were established by biological evolution. Situating their views within the context of Niko's concern about the derailment of biological evolution by cultural evolution, this article shows that their ideas are of special significance for understanding the persistence of the view that civilization poses a risk to human health.

Keywords: Elisabeth Tinbergen; John Bowlby; Niko Tinbergen; attachement; attachment; autism; autisme; civilization diseases; evolutionary psychiatry; evolutionary psychology; maladies de civilisation; maladies liées au stress; maternal care; psychiatrie évolutionniste; psychologie de l'évolution; soins maternels; stress diseases.

Publication types

  • Biography
  • Historical Article
  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Autistic Disorder / etiology
  • Autistic Disorder / history*
  • Biological Evolution
  • Civilization
  • History, 20th Century
  • Humans

Personal name as subject

  • Niko Tinbergen
  • Elisabeth Tinbergen