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Abacab "The REAL truth" 06-02-2011 01:22 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Krimsin (Post 304159)
I took a look at the "Titan Test". Seems the perfect scam to pry money from all the self-appointed geniuses of the world. $50 bucks to grade 45 questions what a deal. :rolleyes:

Only $50 to feel important? I wonder how many people pay the fee and still remain at a shift manager position in some fast food joint? that 176 I.Q really comes in handy there when you've flunked college for the fifth time because you can't cite sources...

Ya know what I'm sayin'?

deathgirl 06-02-2011 02:22 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Knuckle (Post 303782)
epic tag.

I made it, ty ^_^

Knuckle 06-02-2011 08:33 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by deathgirl (Post 304333)
I made it, ty ^_^

A+. plz respond to pm

WizardEQ 06-02-2011 11:59 AM

Some truth to it
 
I disagree to the comment about flunking out of college. Most members do quite well, as you would imagine, with post-secondary education which is undergraduate, graduate and post-grad. Some have multiple PhDs, in the order of 6 or 7. On the flip side, some do lack the social skills to adequately interact with professors to garner that extra edge to succeed. And of course, some do not finish their school. In any population, there are no absolutes; there's the majority swimming around the middle of the bell curve and those who make it to the tails of any normal distribution. With such a small population though, I find it safe to say that most have attained the highest forms of education you'll find anywhere.

Now take a look at this:

http://www.eskimo.com/~miyaguch/grady/emptypromise.html

To summarize, do those with high IQs necessarily have a significant advantage to succeed?

To address your second point about success (as in a job), I partially agree with it. A higher IQ doesn't translate into a higher salary, per se. It does at the 110-140 level because this level is required to get through college, and an undergrad degree is necessary for a career that will sustain yourself or a family. IQ beyond that (140+) won't get you that CEO job necessarily, but it should be sufficient to become a mathematician, particle physicist, or member of a think-tank. The positive correlation does taper off at the high end because the high paying jobs actually require more fortitude and determination than anything else. To be an investment banker you need to have a college degree or MBA, be willing to work ~90-120 hours a week, be a team player, and do whatever it takes. In these types of jobs, creativity is thrown out the window. That's why people with high IQs don't do these jobs; after a while they become so mundane and boring there's no more need to do them! The old adage: the world is run by "C" students rings true.

When the subject of IQ comes up, it is funny to see how people react. Your reaction is pretty defensive. It's not really the reaction I'd expect from these boards. I was actually looking more for interest rather than disdain. Also, an IQ of 176 is the minimum IQ required for entrance into Mega, not the ceiling. Members come from all walk of life and have unique interests. Our main similarity is that we like to solve problems, either fabricated or real-life. In the two careers I've had, I've worked with some very highly intelligent folks who do their jobs extremely well. Noone could get beyond a fraction right on the Mega or Titan tests. You can talk about the problems and even do some, but very few take the entire test, and even fewer get a 43/48. Don't talk the talk, if you can't walk the walk.

As an adult (let's say around 24 and finished with school) if you're successful you should be able to make enough money to support yourself at the bare minimum. When you start out, you're probably not making a hell of a lot. Even $50,000 is not a lot today! But as you become more proficient and acquire more responsibilities, you should eventually be making more and have enough to support yourself well, take a vacation or two, or even support a family. I worked in consulting for a decade and saw my salary triple over time. As of now, I'm doing a job I love, am married with a large family, have built my second house (over 6000 sq. ft. on an acre), can take vacations, and pretty much coast the rest of the way. I've used my powers for good and am pretty damn proud of the results. This last stuff I should never have to say, but I'm saying it because it has to be said.

I suggest that anyone here go for it!

Chanur 06-02-2011 01:07 PM

I think the board would be better served if Tyen could translate WizardEqs posts into graph form.

JayDee 06-02-2011 03:02 PM

Dude with the nazi menorah avatar got trolled

Knuckle 06-02-2011 03:50 PM

I think WizardEQ and Asinine Cowboy could have some good mumble conversations, maybe start a hallmark gift card club?

Knuckle 06-02-2011 03:50 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Knuckle (Post 304648)
I think WizardEQ and Asinine Cowboy could have some good mumble conversations, maybe start a hallmark gift card club?

fuck i meant online store

Skope 06-02-2011 04:16 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JayDee (Post 303277)
So if I put up an avatar of Dominique Wilkins, I will be able to dunk on people

hahaha. win.

Krimsin 06-02-2011 04:32 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by WizardEQ (Post 304494)
I disagree to the comment about flunking out of college. Most members do quite well, as you would imagine, with post-secondary education which is undergraduate, graduate and post-grad. Some have multiple PhDs, in the order of 6 or 7. On the flip side, some do lack the social skills to adequately interact with professors to garner that extra edge to succeed. And of course, some do not finish their school. In any population, there are no absolutes; there's the majority swimming around the middle of the bell curve and those who make it to the tails of any normal distribution. With such a small population though, I find it safe to say that most have attained the highest forms of education you'll find anywhere.

Now take a look at this:

http://www.eskimo.com/~miyaguch/grady/emptypromise.html

To summarize, do those with high IQs necessarily have a significant advantage to succeed?

To address your second point about success (as in a job), I partially agree with it. A higher IQ doesn't translate into a higher salary, per se. It does at the 110-140 level because this level is required to get through college, and an undergrad degree is necessary for a career that will sustain yourself or a family. IQ beyond that (140+) won't get you that CEO job necessarily, but it should be sufficient to become a mathematician, particle physicist, or member of a think-tank. The positive correlation does taper off at the high end because the high paying jobs actually require more fortitude and determination than anything else. To be an investment banker you need to have a college degree or MBA, be willing to work ~90-120 hours a week, be a team player, and do whatever it takes. In these types of jobs, creativity is thrown out the window. That's why people with high IQs don't do these jobs; after a while they become so mundane and boring there's no more need to do them! The old adage: the world is run by "C" students rings true.

When the subject of IQ comes up, it is funny to see how people react. Your reaction is pretty defensive. It's not really the reaction I'd expect from these boards. I was actually looking more for interest rather than disdain. Also, an IQ of 176 is the minimum IQ required for entrance into Mega, not the ceiling. Members come from all walk of life and have unique interests. Our main similarity is that we like to solve problems, either fabricated or real-life. In the two careers I've had, I've worked with some very highly intelligent folks who do their jobs extremely well. Noone could get beyond a fraction right on the Mega or Titan tests. You can talk about the problems and even do some, but very few take the entire test, and even fewer get a 43/48. Don't talk the talk, if you can't walk the walk.

As an adult (let's say around 24 and finished with school) if you're successful you should be able to make enough money to support yourself at the bare minimum. When you start out, you're probably not making a hell of a lot. Even $50,000 is not a lot today! But as you become more proficient and acquire more responsibilities, you should eventually be making more and have enough to support yourself well, take a vacation or two, or even support a family. I worked in consulting for a decade and saw my salary triple over time. As of now, I'm doing a job I love, am married with a large family, have built my second house (over 6000 sq. ft. on an acre), can take vacations, and pretty much coast the rest of the way. I've used my powers for good and am pretty damn proud of the results. This last stuff I should never have to say, but I'm saying it because it has to be said.

I suggest that anyone here go for it!

TL;DR

Open a landscaping business in any area greater than a hundred thousand people and you are a millionaire inside of 10 years.

IQ doesn't mean dick. You are obviously swollen with useless ideas which is why you prattle on like a 15 year old with something to prove on a message board to a game retired half a decade ago.


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