Você está na página 1de 8

High

IQ
And
Understanding

Not

Written by Adi Cox


5th July 2015
This essay is a hypothysis because I
cannot find anything on the internet that
backs up what I have to say. This is
probably an even better reason for writing
up my ideas.
In statistics and probability there is a bell
curve also known as the Normal

(Gaussian) distribution. I am looking here


at how this curve is used to model IQ. It is
standard that an average IQ is 100. This
applies to most IQ tests but the standard
deviation for different IQ tests are often
not the same. Using the wechler IQ
intelligence score we have a standard
deviation of 15.
As an example an IQ of 115 has a positive
standard deviation of one because 100 is
the mean average:

Students of various subjects have different


average IQ's:

What I am interested in is two standard


deviations. So in the case of IQ's a
standard deviation of positive 2 would
give an IQ of 130. A standard deviation of
negative 2 would give an IQ of 70. It is my
belief that 2 deviations are significant
because people with a difference of two
deviations in an IQ score have no
similarities in how they think. So someone

with an average IQ of 100 has no idea how


someone with an IQ of 130 thinks or in the
negative direction someone with an IQ of
70 is similarly misunderstood. This is
probably why anyone below an IQ of 70
has learning disabilities and anyone with
an IQ of 130 is gifted.
So taking this idea further it would follow
that someone with an IQ of 130 does not
understand how someone with an IQ of
160 thinks and similarly someone with the
positive six standard deviations IQ of 190
is misunderstood by people with 160 IQ.
So how can we understand when:

Stephen Hawking the English theoretical


physicist and cosmologist with an IQ of
160 writes his academic papers on black
holes.

Andrew Wiles the English mathematician


with an IQ of 170 proves Fermat's Last
Theorem.

The American Chris Langan with an IQ of


200 says that he can prove god exists with
logic.

The
Russian
mathematician
Grigori
Perelman who solved the Poincare
conjecture and who has an unknown high
IQ claims he can control Universe.

Você também pode gostar