Knowing Feynman, This might well have been a joke at their expense.
According to Feynman, he tested at 125 when he was a schoolboy. (Search for "IQ" in the Gleick biography.)
There are a couple reasons to not care about this factoid:
- Feynman was younger than 15 when he took it [....]
- [I]t was one of the 'ratio' based IQ tests - utterly outdated and incorrect by modern standards.
- Finally, it's well known that IQ tests are very unreliable in childhood; kids can easily bounce around compared to their stable adult scores.
...I suspect that this test emphasized verbal, as opposed to mathe
I intended Leveling Up in Rationality to communicate this:
But some people seem to have read it and heard this instead:
This failure (on my part) fits into a larger pattern of the Singularity Institute seeming too arrogant and (perhaps) being too arrogant. As one friend recently told me:
So, I have a few questions: