Many things seem like a good idea as long as you don't actually put much thought into them. These adorable hamster cup accessories certainly fit into that category. After all, hamsters are simply precious and watching one climb into a cup is cute as all heck -but that doesn't mean you want to drink out of a glass adorned with a rodent. If the deeper concept doesn't bother you and you simply must have the cute, they can be yours for a very reasonable $2.50 each -though shipping from Japan can add up quickly.
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Fascinating stuff otherwise. Helped kick-start the brain this morning.
Cool, anyway.
Anyway, yeah, nice picture.
Well no duh! Who thought this was a modern disease? That makes no sense. I always assumed that it was just a human genetic condition that always existed.
Given the distinctive phenotype and prevalence of Down syndrome in the modern era, a number of authors have sought historical evidence of individuals who lived before its initial recognition, particularly in Renaissance and earlier art. Interchanges among various authors were published in the Lancet in 1968. Mirkinson [[1968]] hypothesized that Down syndrome was a modern disease, given its apparent rarity in art, and challenged others to find historical depictions of the disorder as evidence against.
Reims cathedral has a statue that stands out in my mind.
http://www.owlnet.rice.edu/~hart205/Gothic/images/71.gif
There is also one at the met from France that seems to resemble the Reims example.
http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/images/h2/h2_1990.132.jpg
There are also the giant Olmec heads...
http://www.franklinco.k12.nc.us/ESL/lessons/mexicounit/Olmecheadblackwhite.jpg
http://www.esg.montana.edu/esg/kla/bigolmec.jpg
Just curious.
The whole "modern disease" business is BS. Do they really need to disprove someone's silly comment from 1968? At that time, we were still coming out of our own dark ages in our attitude towards Down Syndrome, freeing people from being strapped to beds in mental institutions.
Loved the first few comments, by the way. But, how do you know that people with Down Syndrome aren't angels?
Those pictures you've linked to don't look half as downsy as the person in the originally posted painting.
Look it up, you weiner:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Down%27s_syndrome
I'm not taking sides on what the term should be, but ANY classification of people in what is perceived to be suboptimal or least-favored conditions (economic status, minority ethnicity, race, mental intelligence, whatever) soon gets morphed into some new term that lasts for a couple decades until people decide that the new name doesn't truly cure anything or even alleviate any suffering, so they try yet another NEWER name. And so it goes... You can bet "Down Syndrome" will be replaced by something else in 20 years...
As another note, many folks justify the switch from Down's --> Down, because Down himself didn't actually have the syndrome, and merely described it in a scientific manner. Well, that applies to Alzheimer's Disease, Parkinson's Disease, Crohn's Disease, Asperger's Syndrome, Kleinfelter's Syndrome &c. Are we going to rename all these as well? The number of medical conditions named for those who first studied them is endless! What foolish semantics -- an utter waste of effort on meaningless feelgoodedness.
Also, a lot of people don't want to call it Down syndrome because Dr. Down was a horrible person. Only English speaking countries still call it Down syndrome. Most of the rest of the world calls it Trisomy 21. (As Down syndrome is the result of a third 21st chromosome.)
Alzheimer's Disease, Parkinson's Disease, Crohn's Disease, Asperger's Syndrome, etc., as Sid points out, although Down's has gone out of favor. I don't think anyone ever thought the diseases "belonged" to the person who they were named after. That's a linguistic argument that makes no sense to me so I see it as Sid does, changing fads and fashions. Something that sounds fine in one era sounds horrible to another.
World Health Organization = United Nations = loss of sovereignty.
Ugh.
Count me out.
As for Down himself being a "horrible person", that is the first time I've heard that. Curious, I looked him up on Wikipedia. It makes no such claims and in fact says:
1. He quite liberally supported the higher education of women.
2. Was concerned that all children with any mental incapacity were regarded as beyond help.
3. During the American Civil War, he refuted apologists for Negro slavery and supported the concept of unity of mankind.
Yes, he used terms like "idiot" and "Mongolian Defective", but these were legitimate medical terms of the day, not perjoratives!
Perhaps he did have some feelings of racial difference which would be today be considered bigoted, but nearly EVERYONE felt this way in that day, including the most progressive supporters of reform. It's really quite unfair to judge people on the standards of our era, over 100 years later. If we do, we should likewise impugn Washington, Lincoln, Gahndi, Churchill, and other great men of history. People must be judged in the context of their own time.
If you have some specifics on his "horribleness", you ought to back it up. As near as I can tell, he worked to help "idiots" at a time when everyone thought him daft for doing so. What horrible things did he do?
As for "Trisomy 21", I didn't know the term! Thanks for educating me on that, but it simultaneously confirms my hypothesis about the unending name-changing. Now parents can tell friends that their kid has "trisomy 21". It sounds better because not many people are familiar with it yet. In 20 years we'll call it something different (again). If liberals can't cure a disease/syndrome (or end crime & poverty), they rename it and feel better about themselves for making the original problem go away. Better to spend the effort helping the people with it live normal, rewarding, productive lives than doing linguistic semantics.
1. This is a picture of an individual with Down Syndrome, depicted as an angel (not an angel with Down Syndrome).
2. It is not only the facial features that identify the syndrome, it is also the small hands (another characteristic of the syndrome), markedly different from all the other hands in the picture.
3. The reason it was important to question whetheror not Down Syndrome was a "modern disease" in 1968 was this: It was long known that babies with Down Syndrome were more commonly born to mothers 40 or older. The discovery of the Trisomy 21 was only a few years old, and not universally accepted, in part because it did not explain the association with advanced maternal age. If it could be shown that Down Syndrome existed before many children were born to mothers over 30, it would add to the weight of evidence for the trisomy as the cause.
4. The medical science of the 16th century and earlier did not associate dysmorphic features with intellectual disability. We cannot know how the other people in this picture (a patron's family? the artist's family? we do not know) regarded this child. Favorably enough to have included him or her in the picture, is all we can know.