naturalplastic wrote:
Like blindness aspergers is absolutely a disability.
blindness is a disability.
Yes it is, primarily, but plunge a group of people into pitch darkness and the blind one, being the most accustomed to coping without sight, may suddenly become the most able of them all. The matter isn't absolute, it's relative. It's an extreme and unlikely example, but it does illustrate that even an apparently clear-cut disability can be an asset under the right circumstances. With something like ASD, the disability isn't quite so clear-cut as blindness is, so its so-called superpowers are a tad more likely to come into their own, though it clearly doesn't pan out that way in every case.
Personally I'm happy to keep my ASD because in my case I think it's been worth having. So I wouldn't take a permanent cure, though a reversible one appeals to my childlike curiosity (another likely ASD trait that I suppose otherwise ought to be on the wane by now), and my critical thinking skills inform me that although I feel pretty sure my ASD is overall an asset, I can't be certain, so I'd be willing to subject my views to a safe and reversible test. Now if I could reversibly tinker with the individual traits, I'd be onto it like a shot.
I don't claim that ASD is always more baby than bathwater. So much depends on the profile of traits the individual has, and on the aspects of their environment, in as far as they're stuck with them, particularly the attitudes of the people in their lives. Perhaps one answer to the question "is ASD a disability or not?" is to look at the WP polls that ask people whether they'd take a cure or not, and of course we see that the result isn't 100% yes or no. For example, this one:
viewtopic.php?f=3&t=291702Seems to be saying that the majority would rather keep their ASD, though some of the posts in that thread make me think the question wasn't refined enough to give a definitive answer. Still, 60% no-cure responses suggests that we don't all feel our ASD as a pure disability, and I can't think of a better way of judging the matter than to ask those who have the condition whether or not they'd rather keep it.
All of which would seem to support my original answer to this thread's question - "yes and no."