"On the
trip home from the Nobel ceremonies
in Stockholm, prize-winning physicist
Richard Feynman stopped in Queens, N.Y.,
and looked up his high-school records.
'My grades were not as good as I remembered,'
he said, 'and my I.Q. was 124, considered
just above average.' "
James
Gleick. (1992). Genius: The
Life and Science of Richard Feynman.
New York: Pantheon.
Editor's note -- Richard
Feynman's IQ of 124 was well above average
for high school graduates and even college
graduates. The average IQ of PhD/MD
degree recipients is about
125, which is higher
than 95 percent of the general population.
Beyond a certain level of ability, other
factors are certainly more important
in determining an individual's chances
of winning the Nobel Prize than IQ,
not the least of which is the quality
and reputation of the institution where
the individual obtained his/her graduate
degree and worked or taught. See
Nobel Prize Winners and Universities.
-- W.E.B.
"The
four socially and personally most important
threshold regions on the IQ scale are
those that differentiate with high probability
between persons who, because of their
level of general mental ability, can
or cannot attend a regular school (about
IQ 50), can or cannot master the traditional
subject matter of elementary school
(about IQ 75), can or cannot succeed
in the academic or college preparatory
curriculum through high school (about
IQ 105), can or cannot graduate from
an accredited four-year college with
grades that would qualify for admission
to a professional or graduate school
(about IQ 115). Beyond this, the
IQ level becomes relatively unimportant
in terms of ordinary occupational aspirations
and criteria of success. That is not
to say that there are not real differences
between the intellectual capabilities
represented by IQs of 115 and 150 or
even between IQs of 150 and 180. But
IQ differences in this upper part of
the scale have far less personal implications
than the thresholds just described and
are generally of lesser importance for
success in the popular sense than are
certain traits of personality and character."
Arthur
Jensen. (1980). Bias in
Mental Testing.
New York:
Free Press, p. 113.
"It has
been said that a 140 IQ is a "genius"
score, however there is no definition,
as such, in either of my psychological
dictionaries about "genius." Neither
is there an IQ score ranked as "genius"...
Genius may be in the eye of the beholder.
Furthermore, a true genius may not score
particularly well on a standard group
IQ test... And really, those who are
what we may call a genius don't need
a score to prove it."
Abbie
F. Salny, Ed.D., former supervisory psychologist,
American Mensa
IQ tests
Online and the Mensa Workout
by the International
High IQ Society and Mensa
International
Genius and Disability
Thomas B. Macaulay
(1st Baron Macaulay), an eminent
19th Century English writer,
barrister and Member of Parliament,
was estimated by
Cox to
have had an IQ of 175; yet
legend has it that he did not
utter a word until around the age of
4 when he turned to a wailing baby
and asked, "What ails thee, Jock?"
Soon after that someone spilled hot
coffee on him, and when a concerned
onlooker rushed to help, he said
"Thank you madam, the agony has
abated!"
Albert Einstein is
another genius who did not speak
until a late age and was thought to
have had a developmental language
disability. His IQ was never tested,
but had it been possible to test him
when he was a young child, his IQ
score might not have been very high!
Genius and Adjustment
The Story
of William James Sidis
Good
Will Sidis. (1998). Harvard
Magazine, March Issue.
High
IQ and adjustment
Grady
M. Towers. (1987).
The Outsiders.
Gift of Fire, Issue No. 22.
(Journal of the Prometheus Society)
Highest
Tested IQs in History
Universal
Geniuses and Renaissance Men
The Polymath
Leonardo Da Vinci,
Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, Johann
Wolfgang von Goethe, and others.
Einstein's IQ
Albert Einstein's name is synonymous
with 'genius' and has generated a
lot of speculation about his IQ, but
the fact is his IQ is unknown
because he never took an IQ test. In
fact, Einstein was 26 years old when
French psychologist Alfred Binet in
1905 began work on the first IQ test
named after him and colleague
Théodore
Simon for the
purpose of identifying mentally
handicapped Parisian school children
3-15 years old. Einstein is a genius
because of what he accomplished, and
speculation about his IQ is
inconsequential.