I revised the contents and the direction a bit to make it more coherent.
Basically rn it's more like a list of questions. It makes it easier to decide what to write or research, but also I think it makes my goals come across better.
Neurological:
0) Can childhood delirium, infections, congenital blindness, etc alter development? (find some research here) What systems are involved in development? (I wanna fit emotions there somehow too)
1) What counts as a neurologically significant event and constraints? (instead of vague "experiences")
2) How do developmental cascades work? (ie how does long term change happen in a person, how they become who they are) Why do small biological differences sometimes produce large differences?
3) What alternative developmental pathways become possible when the brain develops under different constraints? (I have a good example - congenital blindness is extremely protective against schizophrenia)
Social:
1) How do cultures create roles for "unusual" people? (ie those who largely differ from others due to their developmental pathways)
2) What happens when society loses those roles?
I guess I could somehow use the fact that autism and schizophrenic spectrum are overrepresented in certain fields (engineering and creativity respectively)
Anthropological:
1) Why do shamans appear across cultures?
2) How does narrative shape outcomes? (someone acting as a shaman is basically a narrative)
Psychiatric:
1) When is a trait a disorder? What gets pathologized? What gets integrated?
2) What is the place of narrative in treatment? (Oliver Sacks was really huge about this)
3) What role do emotions play in psychiatric disorders?
Phenomenology:
1) Emotions as a missing sense (I just want to talk about my personal experience here)
Also I need to fit in developmental projection theory and developmental psychopathology.
I refuse to use the label acquired neurodivergence because if you google that around you'll mostly find quacks like holistic and naturopathic "doctors". I don't wanna be associated with those guys.