Over the last 50 years, I have probably been to Disneyland and Disney World a dozen times. I just returned from a visit to Disney World with my family. Since I am 70, I found that the old bones do not quite move as fast as they use to. But as I traveled around the various parks, I was struck by the thought the this whole world was actually created by an Aspie. It is a marvelous magical world. I was actually walking around on another planet, a whole new universe.
So when I returned home, I searched the internet and sure enough I was not the only one that was struck with that thought.
According to George Ratliff at Prezi - Walt Disney had a mild version of aspergers, dyslexia. Walt struggled in school. He found maths and physics/ sciance very hard. He ended up dropping out of high school to continue his dream of being a artist.
Source: Famous people with Asperger's
Douglas Quenqua at US Campaign also seems to think Disney was an Aspie.
Given the choice, few people would choose to have a condition like Asperger's. The same goes for learning disabilities including dyslexia, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder or dysgraphia. Everyday business chores such as writing an email, managing a schedule, giving a presentation or reading a creative brief can take twice as long when your brain doesn’t process information in the usual way.
But a growing body of research suggests that many of these conditions come with a little-understood benefit: higher degrees of creative thinking and achievement. Study after study has shown a link between such conditions and artistic capacity or the ability to solve problems in unconventional ways. Da Vinci, Albert Einstein and Walt Disney are just some of the creative nonconformists who have been posthumously (and controversially) diagnosed with learning disabilities. The idea, researchers believe, is that people who are constantly forced to think about tasks in unusual ways train themselves to become creative problem-solvers.
"We speculate that it may be because they are approaching things very differently," according to the authors of a 2015 study that found a connection between autistic traits and divergent thinking. "It goes a way towards explaining how some people with what is often characterised as a disability exhibit superior creative talents in some domains."
Source: The upside of thinking different: Asperger's, ADHD and enhanced creativity