Yes there is. Sociopaths damage the understanding of trust that is required for a society to effectively function. Their greatest potential damage isn't in anything that they directly contributed to, but rather the engenderment of a culture of mistrust. As soon as pro-social people take on completely self-serving behavior because they can't trust anyone within their organization, the organization is doomed to long-term failure, and the members within often experience negative consequences.
To anyone who's claiming to be a sociopath - no, you're not. One of the hallmarks of Antisocial Personality Disorder is a complete obliviousness of one's own personality - a lifetime of lying to oneself convinces the person that he is the normal one, and everyone else is either lying about actually caring about people, or fools. True sociopaths would never claim to be so, as the cognitive pathways that are required for introspection are permanently never developed, along with those required for emotional affect.
That being said, I understand where you're coming from - sometimes, I think I'm completely devoid of emotions as well. However, that's more a function of my being NT dominant than anything - all I have to do is start thinking about my relationships with people, and I'll realize very quickly that I do have emotional affect. NT dominance is a radically different way of engaging the world than what most people are used to, and it's easy and understandable to feel different because of it. It's no easier that it takes concerted effort to reconcile our particular F tertiary/inferior and engage on the same level as most people, either.
Personally, I think that ASPD falls outside the sixteen types. Superficially, it may resemble ENTJ the most, as both appreciate making others do what the individual wants. The key difference there is that an ENTJ derives his or her satisfaction by the plan being followed through, while the sociopath derives satisfaction from making the other person jump.
That being said, it's impossible to type someone when there simply is no cognitive pathway for anything resembling an F to form.