Solution: get an eBook edition or get a used hardcover and take off the dust jacket.
Also, it’s not going to make you meaner than the general population. It just teaches you how to do consciously what some people can do unconsciously.
If it’s morally good for me, as an autistic person, to improve my social/manipulation skills such that they’re closer to the average NT, then why would it be immoral for you to improve your social skills? Unless there’s some morally optimal level of social skills that is quite conveniently the level of the average person, this seems strange.
Solution: get an eBook edition or get a used hardcover and take off the dust jacket.
Also, it’s not going to make you meaner than the general population. It just teaches you how to do consciously what some people can do unconsciously.
If it’s morally good for me, as an autistic person, to improve my social/manipulation skills such that they’re closer to the average NT, then why would it be immoral for you to improve your social skills? Unless there’s some morally optimal level of social skills that is quite conveniently the level of the average person, this seems strange.
I enjoyed it a lot as an Audiobook.