Tommy1989 wrote:
Well, echonomy requires a lot of social skills, doesn't it?
I guess it would depend on the kind of economics you're doing. There's a book called Freakonomics that's written by a guy who's won a ton of awards for being an insanely talented economist. I forget his name... but he's referred to in the book blurb as a "rogue economist"... he may very well be undiagnosed AS. He's an economist and has zero interest in money or "the economy" as relates to money... He spends all his time looking for interesting data sets he can apply regression tests to so he can figure out things that... mostly have no practical application.

Like in the book one of the things he talks about is the amount of falsification of personal info in internet dating sites -- how it is that people on those sites are on average taller, fitter and blonder than the average person (which means they're lying basically).

I believe he now teaches economics at a university.
Tommy1989 wrote:
I would also like more advice about which careers are good for aspies who like math and physics(not general science). Are there only the options of becoming a mathematician or a physicist then?
Jet propulsion labs... anything at NASA... robotics(?)... those may or may not actually be "physicist" jobs... although you may have to be amazingly talented (valedictorian from an ivy-league school with a triple-major?) plus lucky to even get the interview for a lot of them if Metal Man's comments about market saturation are accurate. Don't take anyone's word for it though -- research the jobs that are available here, look at the salaries they're offering and the requirements they're asking for and decide based on that whether you think you can hold out long enough to luck on to the job you want in that field.
Internship on MythBusters?