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Mike Kaliski wrote:
wrote in message ... On Dec 6, 5:19 pm, Jim Kelley wrote: Among the things evidently manifested by an alleged "IQ of 168" are a narcisitic overestimate of ones own abilities and a compulsive need to demonstrate same. What does "its current maximum is not caused by standing waves" mean to someone with an "IQ of 168"? ac6xg IQ doesn't mean a whole lot to me.. I've also been tested in the same appx 160+ range.. Big deal.. I'm still basically a redneck dumbass because I never applied myself much in school. I hated school actually, and snuck away every chance I got... :/ I sure never had any interest in trying to join Mensa. What do Mensa groups do anyway? I'm fairly sure whatever they do would be boring to me... ![]() MK I went along to a couple of meetings many years ago. Full of under achievers with high IQ's complaining how they weren't being recognised or credited in their exams/career/promotion ladder/etc. You can coast along with a high enough IQ without having to work too hard, but it takes hard work and dedication to achieve anything worthwhile. The top people anywhere in the world are not the smartest, but they learned to use what they have to the maximum and put the hours in. If you expect a high IQ to grant you a short cut to the top, it won't and there are a whole lot of only slightly less intelligent people who know just enough and have a vested interest to stop you from getting there. Mensa is merely a self congratulatory society for smart people who lack the drive to succeed. But don't let that stop you from joining so long as all you expect is the chance of some (reasonably) intelligent conversation at social functions. Well it didn't match up to my standards (or the intelligence that is displayed on r.r.a.a.) so I didn't bother renewing my subscription when it expired. Cheers all, Mike GOULI Considering that our president has the I.Q. of the slowest learner in the slow learners class at the local obedience school, it's obvious it doesn't take intelligence to get ahead in life. Truman and Nixon weren't much better. From what I've read, intelligence tests were invented in France to identify students with learning problems in order to give them additional attention. When the test got to the U.S. it was immediately used as a way to stratify society. One of the chief fellows behind the American effort was a Stanford academic named Lewis Madison Terman, who, of course, was awesomely intelligent by definition. 73, Tom Donaly, KA6RUH |
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