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12 year old boy with higher IQ than Einstein developing his own theory of relativity
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| A 12-year-old child prodigy has astounded university professors after grappling with some of the most advanced concepts in mathematics. Jacob Barnett has an IQ of 170 - higher than Albert Einstein - and is now so far advanced in his Indiana university studies that professors are lining him up for a PHD research role. The boy wonder, who taught himself calculus, algebra, geometry and trigonometry in a week, is now tutoring fellow college classmates after hours. And now Jake has embarked on his most ambitious project yet - his own 'expanded version of Einstein's theory of relativity'. According to the Indiana Star, Institute astrophysics professor Scott Tremaine -himself a world renowned expert - confirmed the authenticity of Jake's theory. Jake was diagnosed with Aspergers syndrome, a mild form of autism, from an early age. |
He cheated. Its still impressive. I did the same.



he has assburgers
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| Originally posted by Vivid Boy he has assburgers |
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Originally posted by kadomony |
There was a 12 year old in my undergraduate physics course at Purdue and for most tests the average was around 40% with one person scoring 100%. We all knew it was him, and we all felt like dumbasses.
Anyways, that's really cool the kid was lucky that his mother took the initiative to contact Princeton. I was teaching a first grader who was absolutely brilliant, he picked up Japanese by watching hello kitty in a couple of weeks, could draw anything in perfect 3-d, but his main teacher and parents were too stupid to even realize what he was doing was exceptional. I'm still trying to get one of his parents to pick up the phone so that I can schedule him for an IQ test and get him into an accelerated program.
Seems strange that there are quite a few young kids with an exceptional grasp on maths/physics...and not other subjects.
Re: 12 year old boy with higher IQ than Einstein developing his own theory of relativity
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| Originally posted by Happymess Source Interesting. |
go back to NAMBLA
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| Originally posted by Jackson Seems strange that there are quite a few young kids with an exceptional grasp on maths/physics...and not other subjects. |
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| Originally posted by gmilf go back to NAMBLA |
exactly, damn Brando's... And I've met a few people insanely good at languages, as in they can go into a bar in any country and figure out how to converse by the 3rd beer. If I could be any type of genius this is the type I would choose. I'm envious of Banora even, she's quite good at picking up languages and that's an area I've always struggled with. What is the difference between a prodigy and a genius, does a prodigy just require no training, like an innate ability to solve the mysteries of the universe or belt out some opera instead of crying
Prodigies show amazing skill very young. "Genius" is a more generic term for someone who shows amazing skill at any age.
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| Originally posted by MrJiveBoJingles It is odd, yes. "Math prodigy" is a common phrase, and also "musical prodigy," but I have never even seen "language prodigy" (for example) written out before, much less read about one in the news. |
Neat.
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| Originally posted by Jackson Seems strange that there are quite a few young kids with an exceptional grasp on maths/physics...and not other subjects. |
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| Originally posted by gmilf There was a 12 year old in my undergraduate physics course at Purdue and for most tests the average was around 40% with one person scoring 100%. We all knew it was him, and we all felt like dumbasses. Anyways, that's really cool the kid was lucky that his mother took the initiative to contact Princeton. I was teaching a first grader who was absolutely brilliant, he picked up Japanese by watching hello kitty in a couple of weeks, could draw anything in perfect 3-d, but his main teacher and parents were too stupid to even realize what he was doing was exceptional. I'm still trying to get one of his parents to pick up the phone so that I can schedule him for an IQ test and get him into an accelerated program. |
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| Originally posted by gmilf What is the difference between a prodigy and a genius, does a prodigy just require no training, like an innate ability to solve the mysteries of the universe or belt out some opera instead of crying |
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| Originally posted by MrJiveBoJingles It is odd, yes. "Math prodigy" is a common phrase, and also "musical prodigy," but I have never even seen "language prodigy" (for example) written out before, much less read about one in the news. |
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| Originally posted by Domesticated I think the reason is because people don't perceive language skills as being useful in the wider sense. A 12 year old doing maths could potentially solve some huge scientific problem and change the world. A 12 year old who speaks 10 languages fluently could not. As Adam said, I have seen a languages person on TV though. In two weeks, he is able to become fluent in any language, and was in the process of making up his own perfect one. I think he spoke about ten or fifteen? Fuck would I love that skill; it basically guarantees you entry into any culture you want, something which is otherwise next to impossible. These things are as much a curse as anything, though. Prodigies usually aren't endowed with great social skills, or if they are, they're ostracised by their peers anyway. I often think about this subject (aspergers, super smart people), and wonder several things. Are humans on the cusp of some great leap in evolution, or perhaps at the very beginning of a long, slow process? Apart from the Flynn effect (link), I do believe we're getting smarter with each generation. What would the world be like if every person could speak ten languages or memorise whole books? Why are only some people born with this? Why does nature intentionally hold the rest of us back? Why did god have to be such a wanker and let me be born without music/colour synesthesia? I'll just put this here, too. edit: Fuck. That tiny post took me like 20 minutes to type. Fuck you, hangover. Fuck. |
We're not always working, always in intellectual conversation- genius intelligence makes those times easier, but they don't make up the majority of our lives. I'm not claiming to be a genius, but I can imagine what it would be like if a person was at that level- it would be horribly lonely... Geniuses can be ostracised as you said, but beyond that, it can simply be hard, or impossible to find anyone who can talk to you on your own level. Imagine trying to communicate ideas nobody around you can understand... Its not fun.
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| Originally posted by Jackson Seems strange that there are quite a few young kids with an exceptional grasp on maths/physics...and not other subjects. |
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| Originally posted by Lira Durkheim and Max Weber, not so much. Ferdinand de Saussure is virtually unknown outside academia, and Chomsky is known just because of his political writings. Being a polyglot grants you even less recognition... |
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| Originally posted by Boomer187 Were they your high school teachers??? |
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