The Myth of Genius

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  • Опубликовано: 18 авг 2024
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    What's really going on when "geniuses" behave stupidly?
    Genius is a word that gets tossed around a lot, particularly when we collectively need somebody to solve huge societal problems. But what if the very idea of genius is ... kind of dumb? Let's explore in this Wisecrack Edition: The Myth of Genius
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    #genius #elonmusk
    © 2020 Wisecrack / Omnia Media, Inc.

Комментарии • 5 тыс.

  • @WisecrackEDU
    @WisecrackEDU  4 года назад +1184

    Who's the dumbest "genius"?

    • @snoopyfod1807
      @snoopyfod1807 4 года назад +533

      "Stable Genius" Donald J Trump

    • @CraftyF0X
      @CraftyF0X 4 года назад +34

      Have you guys heard about orthogonality thesis and the way how AI researchers goes about the definition of inteligence ?

    • @leo7107
      @leo7107 4 года назад +213

      @@NarinderxBali my god people like you are annoying. Could you not worship Elon and think for yourself for once?

    • @amaokoro7000
      @amaokoro7000 4 года назад +78

      @@NarinderxBali I'm not sure if any genius is self-proclaimed this video is specifically about how we view geniuses, it's about the public opinion, and I don't understand why you think he would bring up oil industries so you don't know if he's mad or not

    • @fernandoi8958
      @fernandoi8958 4 года назад +69

      Genius to me is dedication + opportunity (with a dash of creativity). Everything else is just marketing and popularity contest...

  • @AxeMurderer2222
    @AxeMurderer2222 4 года назад +2643

    People sometimes confuse success with genius, and popularity with wisdom.

  • @johnlewis8934
    @johnlewis8934 4 года назад +641

    We should normalize saying “ I don’t know” this would lesson the fear of people who are intelligent in one part of study to be more ok with not knowing everything there is to know

    • @RK-ep8qy
      @RK-ep8qy 4 года назад +37

      Yes! I find it more respectable when my teachers would say I don't know rather than when they tried to pawn off nonsense or say they knew but wanted me to go find the answers myself

    • @whiskeycan529
      @whiskeycan529 4 года назад +40

      @rvidal0001 Capitalist structures aren't exactly known for rewarding humbleness and cooperation, let alone basic decency.

    • @Earwaxfire909
      @Earwaxfire909 4 года назад +3

      I don't know.

    • @pzooka
      @pzooka 4 года назад

      Wow John you must be a *genius*

    • @zeynaviegas
      @zeynaviegas 4 года назад +4

      youre absolutely right. Not knowing things and admitting is what gets your brain going after new information in the right way

  • @bicokun
    @bicokun 3 года назад +291

    I feel like it’s weird to constantly refer to Musk as a genius given he’s given very little indication that he’s more than slightly above average intelligence-wise.

    • @emperorpalpatine6239
      @emperorpalpatine6239 2 года назад +26

      Finally somebody said this!

    • @VoorTrekker88
      @VoorTrekker88 2 года назад

      Seriously... talk about a straw-man argument... IQ is fake because Elon Musk says stupid things. Ya no shit, if you saw his actual IQ score I bet it would reflect that. The real question is, how dumb are you if you just blindly accept a billionaire ego-maniac's self-assertion of genius?

    • @Samuel-qc7kg
      @Samuel-qc7kg 2 года назад +10

      Agreed

    • @smarks-1160
      @smarks-1160 2 года назад +12

      FINALLY.... THANK YOU!

    • @ReflexVE
      @ReflexVE 2 года назад

      He's a typical white guy born into a wealthy family in an apartheid society where wealth and power was his default. He has leveraged this starting point to take the work of others, claim it as his own, and only minimally screw it up.
      Nothing more than that. Zero respect for this kind of "genius"

  • @phillipwadley6732
    @phillipwadley6732 3 года назад +88

    Never have I agreed so strongly with a Wisecrack video. These days in academia especially, most sustainable and progressive scientific advancements are by groups of several coauthors as opposed to one 'genius' author. Standing on the shoulders of giants and the value of teamwork is cliché but absolutely true.

    • @Solidlauti
      @Solidlauti Год назад +2

      @FlyingMonkies325 You really like laughing out loud at the end of every sentence, huh

    • @The_fusion_physics_guy
      @The_fusion_physics_guy 2 месяца назад

      I completely agree, in fusion it's really all-for-one. There are legends of course, who invented a technique or set of equations, but their work was just the first step (after many prior steps) in utilizing the approach, and they're often quite humble. We're all just making little steps, and as the field grows and more and more researchers join in, everybody just has to do their own little part and it all works quite well. It's okay to have heroes, just not idols, and i've always respected somebody's character and work ethic more than their intelectual talents. You need the first two much more than the later to work effectively as a group.

  • @tonymccraw3853
    @tonymccraw3853 4 года назад +2728

    So, Einstein's genius is validated by his understanding of his limitations. Smart guy.

    • @ivanvalentin7713
      @ivanvalentin7713 4 года назад +295

      In general, accepting ones limitations and questioning our own knowledge are smart things to do

    • @HeavySnorlax
      @HeavySnorlax 4 года назад +43

      Just to be clear. Israel presidency is not like the US presidency, it’s mostly an honor title. I always assumed that Einstein probably wasn’t filling connected to the position.

    • @Jedi_Are_Scum
      @Jedi_Are_Scum 4 года назад +4

      @@HeavySnorlax That was stated in the post above this one

    • @screensaves
      @screensaves 4 года назад +10

      i do this by ending all of my arguments with, “well at least that’s how i see it”

    • @dalemitchell5697
      @dalemitchell5697 4 года назад +30

      The only thing that I know, is that I know nothing

  • @ramahan21
    @ramahan21 4 года назад +1444

    "If I have seen further it is by standing on the shoulders of Giants"
    -Isaac Newton

    • @bollebollepats
      @bollebollepats 4 года назад +140

      this quote is really funny once you realise it was newton dissing Robert Hooke cuz he was so short

    • @DSCS_HarshaS
      @DSCS_HarshaS 4 года назад +6

      @@bollebollepats lol

    • @pseshanthvishal5708
      @pseshanthvishal5708 4 года назад +2

      @@bollebollepats they had some beef right?

    • @oldcowbb
      @oldcowbb 4 года назад +34

      @@pseshanthvishal5708 newton had beef with basically everyone

    • @pseshanthvishal5708
      @pseshanthvishal5708 4 года назад +5

      @@oldcowbb Newton majorly had issues with hooke, i think hooke stole his works or something. who else did he have a beef with

  • @K1RTB
    @K1RTB 2 года назад +74

    The particular awfulness of Elon Musk is that he actively takes away credit from his employees by inserting himself in every discussion.

    • @torijones9992
      @torijones9992 Год назад +1

      That’s exactly why I Despise Elon Musk.

  • @gentlemandemon
    @gentlemandemon 3 года назад +30

    Genius is one of those deeply flawed concepts that makes sense until you spend any time thinking about it. Nothing makes me doubt someone more then a person who uses it completely sincerely.
    Also, Musk gets way to much credit for Tesla and SpaceX. Yes, these are projects that his deeply involved with, but throwing his money at these projects and managing them is not the same as designing and building cars and rockets.

  • @adriandatura
    @adriandatura 4 года назад +1312

    From the wise words of Smash Mouth: _"Your brain gets smart, but your head gets dumb."_

    • @darcflame37
      @darcflame37 4 года назад +5

      No

    • @aidanrocha2043
      @aidanrocha2043 4 года назад +22

      True geniuses

    • @sujitroy3628
      @sujitroy3628 4 года назад +32

      Smash Mouth also thinks COVID is a hoax. Got to respect them for practicing what they preach.

    • @elif09elif3
      @elif09elif3 3 года назад +1

      ruclips.net/video/AU_bm1x5Yws/видео.html

    • @tylerlackey1175
      @tylerlackey1175 3 года назад +3

      @@sujitroy3628
      when a virus is so deadly the only way to recover from it is staying home for 2 weeks
      I remember when I was an npc. Well, turning 15 snapped me out of it

  • @JAIPOD100
    @JAIPOD100 4 года назад +1711

    They really picked the meme picture for zucc lol

  • @williammcneil2045
    @williammcneil2045 2 года назад +22

    yeah i love reading about geniuses, in the past. like richard feyman and albert einstein, both of them were very smart, yet both of them did not see themselves as some kind of super beings, both admitted that there was things they did not know and that there were people better and smarter than them selves. sadly geniuses today feel they are super human and can do no wrong :(

    • @The_fusion_physics_guy
      @The_fusion_physics_guy 2 месяца назад

      One of my favorite things about einstein is that he hated quantum mechanics and thought it was ridiculous, even though he helped discover it. His intuition was very wrong on that one, and he admitted it and let the next generation of physicists take the reigns. You don't have to be good at or understand everything, and intuition is a good guide but not a good result, the problem is when people get so full of themselves they equate their intuition with a valid solution.

  • @sh.a.3333
    @sh.a.3333 3 года назад +132

    *"Imagination is more important than knowledge. For knowledge is limited, whereas imagination embraces the entire world, stimulating progress, giving birth to evolution." ~ Albert Einstein*
    Einstein was truly amazing and smart, regardless of his IQ score. And he was a humanitarian, ethical and respectable human being as well.

    • @hectorvega621
      @hectorvega621 3 года назад +1

      @Leroy Awar At least his best overall than the other two on the thumbnail. Hell his the only Humanist in the Thumbnail. While the other discards the name of another Humanist, and the last one. We don't know if his even Human.

    • @hectorvega621
      @hectorvega621 3 года назад

      @Leroy Awar Well he discarded Tesla's good name, as a brand. Especially with Tequila. Also, I don't care of the space improvement, when Democracy as we know it, will be at peril by these Billionaires, who will become Trillionaires through Space.

    • @hectorvega621
      @hectorvega621 3 года назад

      @Leroy Awar It doesn't, and it won't. Thing's are probably going to probably end up like Elysium, and in all honesty. When that time comes, It'll be impossible to argue why Humanity doesn't deserve to go extinct.

    • @user-qi3lv5og4v
      @user-qi3lv5og4v 3 года назад +1

      Truly General Relativity and Special Relativity are probably the most revolutionary scientific theories.
      Makes you wonder how did he even come up with it .

    • @yanderekun4939
      @yanderekun4939 3 года назад

      KNOWLEDGE IS MORE IMPORTANT THOUGH I MEAN CAN YOU DEFINE “IMAGINATION"THERE ARE MANY GASLIGHTERS TODAY SO IMAGINATION IS DUMB

  • @enix0053
    @enix0053 4 года назад +478

    the japanese used the term "genius" pretty accurately. they say it when someone excel on something and not being a general know-it-all

    • @SelfPropelledDestiny
      @SelfPropelledDestiny 4 года назад +19

      That’s pretty much what the video said it’s etymological roots were as well.

    • @enix0053
      @enix0053 4 года назад +2

      @@SelfPropelledDestiny i commented that around the first minutes of the vid, though but at least we got our facts straight

    • @SelfPropelledDestiny
      @SelfPropelledDestiny 4 года назад +21

      @@mlvpc Wow! That sounds rife with ignorance. You would have to define terms, like "successful people", but Japan can certainly hold a candle on the world stage of achievements, especially considering their smaller population globally. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Japanese_inventions_and_discoveries

    • @yansakuya1
      @yansakuya1 4 года назад +22

      @@mlvpc Dude... they were were the second largest economy before China rise and made many world famous company after their restoration so I don't believe your opinion is even worth a pinch of salt.

    • @davechuasoup
      @davechuasoup 4 года назад +14

      If you define success by the chance of being mugged at a tourist attraction or being shot at school, then sure, US and UK definitely trumps the world in being successful

  • @dwc1964
    @dwc1964 4 года назад +531

    “I am, somehow, less interested in the weight and convolutions of Einstein’s brain than in the near certainty that people of equal talent have lived and died in cotton fields and sweatshops.”
    - Stephen Jay Gould, _The Panda's Thumb: More Reflections in Natural History_
    And speaking of Stephen Jay Gould, on the specific topic of this video, I highly recommend _The Mismeasure of Man_

    • @nightmare_automata
      @nightmare_automata 4 года назад +17

      Underrated Comment.

    • @nightmare_automata
      @nightmare_automata 4 года назад +11

      @Amarok So... I take it you dislike the idea of Punctuated Equilibria?

    • @RandomDirectors
      @RandomDirectors 4 года назад +7

      That is a terrifying thought that will haunt me.

    • @Michael-ki5oz
      @Michael-ki5oz 4 года назад +24

      @Amarok You're the one spewing baseless bullshit.
      Your argument that "socio-economic status has a .7 correlation with intelligence," is part of Gould's point. Low SES is starving developing minds of resources, support, etc.

    • @Michael-ki5oz
      @Michael-ki5oz 4 года назад +12

      @Amarok sure you're providing sources but anyone who actually reads and understands will see that it doesn't actually support your stance

  • @radical_drift572
    @radical_drift572 3 года назад +6

    As a math student, I'm only now recognizing the true greatness of Terry Tao. When I learned about him in 2008, I wrote him off as some "genius" who couldn't relate to the struggles of mere mortals. It's pretty easy to write him off right? He learned calculus at 7. He had three IMO medals by the age of 13. He got the Fields medal at the age of 31 after writing 140+ papers. You can't blame 12 year old me right?
    However, in 2021, I watch some of his interviews, and I hear how many of his ideas are wrong at first, how he proceeds by trial and error to eventually making some trivial observation that eventually solves his problem. I go back to the 2006 article I read where he talks about how doing research math is not about "being smart or fast." I then, over the span of 13ish years realize that there have been many prodigies in math in recent times (including some students in their pre-teen/teen years taking several graduate courses), and yet few have matched the output of Terry Tao. Perhaps most importantly, I have seen the extreme difference between my own math ability now versus me just three years ago, and I understand how much of this "genius" was inside of me all along. The papers I write now would be very hard to imagine for 2018 me. Going back further, if I met myself from 2008 and started saying the stuff I know, my 2008 self would think I'm on the order of a Terry Tao. Terry Tao was right all along.
    (Of course, I need a disclaimer. I don't intend on saying that everyone can be Terry Tao. Terry Tao is surely still one of the most gifted mathematicians in the world. All I mean to say is that, many people who focus on the geniuses don't recognize, as Tao would probably point out, all of the little things that allowed for them to make their big breakthroughs. I also want to point out how someone could easily read one of my papers and think "I could never do that." They don't see the countless hours in which I carefully read and digested several standard techniques from other papers and books and recognized how to apply them in my context, often after much frustration and help from my advisor. So, to summarize, Terry Tao is amazingly gifted, but there's so much more there; ideas don't come from nowhere.)

    • @radical_drift572
      @radical_drift572 3 года назад

      @Carrie White ... is this a meme?

    • @radical_drift572
      @radical_drift572 3 года назад +1

      @Carrie White I would say that surface area grows quadratically while volume grows cubically. It comes from the fact that, in the limt as x----> infty, we have x^3/x^2-----> infty.

    • @radical_drift572
      @radical_drift572 3 года назад +1

      @Carrie White your question is how "how can a large cube have a greater volume to surface area ratio than a smaller cube ?" I did the best I could, unless you can rephrase in some way I suppose. You mention that "... sure you can demonstrate it mathematically BUT you must admit it makes no sense." I don't know what you want from me.

  • @Killicon93
    @Killicon93 Год назад +24

    Einstein knowing where his limits lie was the sign of a true genius.

    • @archangecamilien1879
      @archangecamilien1879 9 месяцев назад

      Lol...14:53...I think he went to college before he was 10, Terence Tao...normal guy, lol, anyone can do it...I forgot what difficult test he passed when he was 7...he started playing video games all the time when in college, lol, and at the beginning of grad school, because he didn't have to put in much effort (he did eventually take studying more seriously after almost failing a difficult test, but most people would have had to take things more seriously way before that) but, if he says so, lol, can't possibly be to make the rest of us feel better, lol...

    • @archangecamilien1879
      @archangecamilien1879 9 месяцев назад

      Lol...someone I know knew (well, was acquainted with, lol) people who would put in quite a bit of effort, exert themselves, and still fail...maybe they needed to play a couple video games like a normal person would, lol...

  • @thatotherguy27
    @thatotherguy27 4 года назад +3635

    Elon Musk is an example of why intelligence and wisdom are separate scores in RPGs.

    • @ffxiisucks
      @ffxiisucks 4 года назад +105

      Brilliant.

    • @Arkhs
      @Arkhs 4 года назад +133

      @MrXelium I mean hey, in the video he literally said that genius is more about standing atop the shoulders of those that came before you xD

    • @IoEstasCedonta
      @IoEstasCedonta 4 года назад +10

      Popehat calls him "wisdom-dump-statted."

    • @thedayinthelifeofanothertr9524
      @thedayinthelifeofanothertr9524 4 года назад +4

      Big facts.

    • @reidwallace4258
      @reidwallace4258 4 года назад +170

      So other than the early 2000s when he helped make a website while going to a good university on his Daddies apartheid emerald money... what has he done that makes him smart? 'Electric cars are the future' is some Lisa Simpsons grade insight dude, he just bought a company that was already around because people knew it was a good idea, and poured money into it... I'm not saying that is a bad thing, or even that he shouldn't get some credit for it... but that aint fucking 'intelligence'... Space X is even less a sign of intelligence, and more a sign he is a man child with a pile of money hiring scientists and acting like he helps... Once again, I love it, but throwing money at a bunch of smart people does not buy a guy smarts.

  • @drewandfriendsproject
    @drewandfriendsproject 4 года назад +713

    "Genius is defined by whether or not you watch Rick and Morty" isn't a good thesis Jared.

    • @Dillinger86
      @Dillinger86 4 года назад +8

      Damn straight

    • @pzooka
      @pzooka 4 года назад +23

      I feel bad for people who think they are smart just because they can understand the plot line of that Futurama rip off

    • @pzooka
      @pzooka 4 года назад +5

      N.A. Fat Are you upset because you’re one of the people I was talking about or because I called R&M a Futurama rip off? You’re right, I’m not intelligent. But at least I’m smart enough to know it

    • @pzooka
      @pzooka 4 года назад +6

      N.A. Fat I figured your first comment was sarcastic. I thought the second one you tagged me in was serious. All of my comments were genuine, I think there really are people out there that are patting themselves on the back for understanding a rick and Morty episode’s concept lol

    • @LL-qe8md
      @LL-qe8md 4 года назад +3

      Only a genius can understand Rick and Morty.

  • @Xayver1082
    @Xayver1082 4 года назад +28

    My chemistry teacher in high school would always bring up how he studied under Pauling. It was always condescending

    • @abegohr2576
      @abegohr2576 3 года назад +9

      Oh yes, thia thing about being the disciple of somebody when usually means that they just sat in their class lol.

  • @HassanKhan0987
    @HassanKhan0987 3 года назад +24

    This video reminds me of a quote from an RUclips I watched..."heroes aren't born, they're built"

  • @TankTaur
    @TankTaur 4 года назад +2426

    Paraphrasing a comment I saw a couple weeks back: "Elon Musk is the 'I'm not like other girls' of billionaires."

    • @Hangman11
      @Hangman11 4 года назад +31

      Well he ticks a lot of the boxes that describe the average billionaire, but the technologie industry actually isnt one of them, despite some of the richest people coming from this background and i think that he cares about humanities future makes him somewhat special.

    • @lunarwaning
      @lunarwaning 4 года назад +56

      Soooo.. basically the Reddit of genuises?

    • @TankTaur
      @TankTaur 4 года назад +9

      @@lunarwaning Pretty much

    • @mr.knowitall5019
      @mr.knowitall5019 4 года назад +5

      Why are you all so obssessed with him then?

    • @lunarwaning
      @lunarwaning 4 года назад +38

      Video: literally has Elon Musk in the thumbnail and talks about him
      Mr. Know it all: lol rEnT-fReE

  • @tinchick2
    @tinchick2 4 года назад +280

    There is such a thing as "Dumb Smart Guy Syndrome" where someone who is very intelligent in one field fails miserably in another (often common sense or basic skills/knowledge related)

    • @bri1085
      @bri1085 4 года назад +19

      Common sense isn't really a thing,

    • @pzooka
      @pzooka 4 года назад +19

      Bri10 It is just as much as it isn’t. For instance, would you leave baby in a hot car with all the windows rolled up? No bc it’s common sense. But then again, we aren’t born with that knowledge. So if you’re choosing to define common sense as instinctual knowledge that every human is genetically predisposed to, then yes you are technically correct there is no common sense.

    • @bri1085
      @bri1085 4 года назад +15

      ​@@pzooka No I'm talking about common sense as a rhetorical device, it people's sensibilities vary far too much for there to be such a thing as common sense. Do you think AOC and Trump share the same set of sensibilities?
      Using your examp.le of the baby in a hot car, some cities simply aren't as dependant on the car, to some people the idea of having a baby in a hot car in the first place already seems senseless.
      Common sense has more or less become a calling card to stick to the status quo

    • @pzooka
      @pzooka 4 года назад +9

      Bri10 Ok well you should go back and edit your first comment clarifying that you were referring to it as a rhetorical device bc then I would have known to never respond. Using common sense as a rhetorical device is for finger pointing politicians. Anyone can pull the “it’s common sense/decency” card when they are trying to expose someone else. Childish
      Edit: So in other words I definitely agree on common sense being bullshit when it comes to rhetoric

    • @nuclearcatbaby1131
      @nuclearcatbaby1131 4 года назад +3

      It’s called being an idiot savant.

  • @benzyl350
    @benzyl350 Год назад +24

    This aged well

  • @catedoge3206
    @catedoge3206 3 года назад +81

    Hard work beats talent when talent doesn't work hard. But when talent works hard, it's game over.

    • @KershalJC
      @KershalJC 3 года назад +6

      Nah talent is just a head start. You just gotta run faster.

    • @KershalJC
      @KershalJC 3 года назад +5

      I know people who are " Talented" than me but im miles better than them now.
      Talent is just pursued interest.

    • @kristijantodorovski1918
      @kristijantodorovski1918 3 года назад +2

      98% hard work, 1% talent, 1% luck

  • @binarystar7346
    @binarystar7346 4 года назад +116

    Albert Einstein : It's not that I'm so smart, it's just that I stay with problems longer

    • @genghislad6195
      @genghislad6195 3 года назад +16

      Almost every human being wouldn't achieve what he achieved if they ''stayed with problems longer'', he IS actually a genius. And an exceptional one that is.

    • @binarystar7346
      @binarystar7346 3 года назад +3

      @@genghislad6195 agree he is an exceptional

    • @fenerevarchim1782
      @fenerevarchim1782 3 года назад +1

      Have u stayed with those problem with the same mindset in that way and not let u limit by the sentence u hear all times for several years to tell is otherwise?

  • @avatardecadewho
    @avatardecadewho 4 года назад +491

    Why The Zuck looking like a Fallout ghoul in the thumbnail?

    • @marisa1637
      @marisa1637 4 года назад +52

      That was how much sunscreen he put on the other day

    • @aguilacahc000
      @aguilacahc000 4 года назад +38

      Cuz he is??

    • @spiderjeranimo4992
      @spiderjeranimo4992 4 года назад +18

      He was using Datas sunscreen.

    • @josethebioform7519
      @josethebioform7519 4 года назад +43

      He was at the beach he was trying to protect his circuits and alloy skin from corroding.

    • @joemilan2485
      @joemilan2485 4 года назад +12

      Hes a lizard man obviously 🦎

  • @robertmiller6444
    @robertmiller6444 3 года назад +10

    First a few fallacies:
    - We know what is _meant_ by "genius" so trying to use a "definition argument" to "prove" a thing does or does not exit, is not an argument. Just because we "define" a word to mean X, doesn't mean what the user of that word means in using that word doesn't exist. A person may mean Y when using a word, but to say the word means X does NOT prove Y doesn't exist just because the word used means X.
    - Just because we can't measure a thing or can't measure it well, does not prove it doesn't exist objectively.
    - Just because an expected outcome if X exists is not observed does NOT prove X does not exist. 1. there can be confounding factors that prevent or obscured observable expression, and 2. it may be necessary but not sufficient for observable expression to arise. For example, as is relevant here - nature versus nurture. Nurture can amplify or attenuate the expression of the nature.
    Now, that all being said, let's go to "first principles". We know that "intelligence" is determined by DNA. If this were not the case then why are monkeys (or any other creature for that matter) not be as "intelligent" as humans? Our brains are different that theirs. And if not due to DNA, then how else is it that our brains are different from other animals? We also know that things determined by DNA are expressed over a continuum. Different height, different amounts of melanin, different propensities to gain weight or to develop muscle mass. ...and brain structure. So clearly, to expect intelligence to exist similarly over a spectrum is consistent with such first principles and to be expected. And to think that it wouldn't be would actually be an unreasonable position to take. Everything determined by DNA is expressed over a spectum...except for brain functioning. Unlike everything else that is expressed over a spectrum, brain function is identical for every human being. Don't think so. And we know this can't be true.
    We also know that different mental activities utilize different brain functions and regions. For example, things like spacial acuity, pattern detection, "numeracy", interpersonal, emotional, etc. We can breakdown mental processing into it's own set of "first principles" of brain functions. That being the case, we would further expect those different fundamental brain functions to themselves be expressed over a spectrum determined by the DNA.
    Now, further, that being the case - most real world activities ("problem solving) utilize multiple basic mental functions and in different proportions. That being the case, we would expect that the "genius" at various different real world activities is going to vary depending on the point on each of those mental function spectrums a given individual lies. So an individual who is "genius" at one type of real world activity may in fact be an "idiot" in a different type of real world activity that utilizes different basic mental functions where that individual may lie lower on the specturms.
    But here is a different take - it is said that people make choices emotionally and then use reasoning to justify that choice. That being the case, even a smart person may choose a dumb idea if it is one that gives them emotional satisfaction, or makes the "feel good" or is just something they want to believe. And just because one is "genius" doesn't necessarily make them immune from this. And then they will "reason" as to why that is correct. And that being the case, a "genius" will be able to construct more compelling "reasoning" as to why their emotionally driven choice is correct. In this case, "genius" is a detriment in that it results in them being better at convincing themselves that at bad or wrong idea is in fact correct and thus make it harder for them to recognize when they are in fact incorrect.

    • @julianmunoz6034
      @julianmunoz6034 3 года назад +2

      Facts. On top of that people are too loose with the word genius today. If Kanye west fits the criteria for genius than the world is fucked.

    • @gudduentertains
      @gudduentertains 2 года назад

      @@shariqtorres563 just wow! ❤️

  • @robinm1331
    @robinm1331 Год назад +11

    Man... this one is wild to look back on from 2022.

    • @robinm1331
      @robinm1331 Год назад +3

      That said, I must question whether musk is a genius in the areas often attributed to him... he didnt found Tesla, for example.

  • @Paul-lo5ce
    @Paul-lo5ce 4 года назад +146

    I think there's a whole marketing/publicity aspect that definitely adds to the idea of the modern day genius. Also, I'm kind of sad that y'all didn't mention the Halo bias, which is the tendency to form impressions of someone created in one area to influence opinions in other areas.

    • @mrbeastwithnomoney
      @mrbeastwithnomoney 4 года назад +5

      Elon is not genius stop making him one

    • @hornedgoddess8191
      @hornedgoddess8191 4 года назад +3

      This is more true for people like Elon Musk and Kanye West because their success is mainly motivated by profit whereas actual scientists - of course there are exceptions like those that are more about advocacy and speaking - are mainly motivated by the scientific method and discovering new truths or testing old truths.

    • @Paul-lo5ce
      @Paul-lo5ce 4 года назад +1

      @@hornedgoddess8191 I agree 100% with you. I wasn't saying that this applies to all cases, but more like the cases that you mentioned like Elon Musk and Kanye West.

    • @dadbodenvy4247
      @dadbodenvy4247 4 года назад +1

      his completely untested bipolar disorder wreaks havoc on his ability to do much with it but yeah, functioning Kanye is a musical genius.

  • @iiVEVO
    @iiVEVO 4 года назад +643

    "if you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid." - A genius.

    • @BeyondtheRecord
      @BeyondtheRecord 4 года назад +5

      @jocaguz18 PREACH!!!!!

    • @andreilyas1426
      @andreilyas1426 4 года назад +42

      @jocaguz18 I mean they are right. I did very well in school. However I had classmates that school just wasn't for them, a lot of them exceeded in field that I never would have.

    • @andreilyas1426
      @andreilyas1426 4 года назад +12

      @@BeyondtheRecord I mean they are right. I did very well in school. However I had classmates that school just wasn't for them, a lot of them exceeded in field that I never would have.

    • @natalieeuley1734
      @natalieeuley1734 3 года назад +16

      People use it in education because the way our education system currently is only selects for a very specific kind of intelligence. Giving myself as an example, there are lots of objective ways in which I could be classified as a genius. However, I regularly failed history classes in school, among others. It's because my memory is very poor, but my problem solving and logical abilities are very strong. My history teachers saw me as an absolute nuisance, even if I was the kid in geometry that would help my fellow students when I was done with my work. When I got to college, I learned history could be analyzed, and you could make arguments about it. You could characterize situations and fill in gaps based on predictions, just like science. And guess what? In college history, I was one of the top students instead of failing. I could do history all along. I just didn't know I could, because I wasn't good at memorizing things, and in k12 most history classes are nothing but memorization. This is what they mean when they talk about trying to get a fish to climb a tree. K12 curriculums teach things through a very narrow lense, and it leaves students who could potentially be brilliant behind.

    • @natalieeuley1734
      @natalieeuley1734 3 года назад +4

      @jocaguz18 Firstly, you had absolutely no basis on which to call me stupid. I didn't insult you; why did you feel the need to insult me? Secondly, if many students have similar experiences, it's not a case of "just you". The way history is taught in k12 classrooms is not analytical in nature. In the case of my state, we have a history graduation exam that asks about who did what when and where. You need to pass that test to graduate. That is what k12 history classes are preparing students for: standardized tests. The tests for history are based on knowing the knowledge of history, not applying it. And schools are judged on test scores, so they teach to the test. This is not the fault of the teachers, students, or individual schools; it's the fault of the greater system. I don't know where you get the idea that these issues aren't systemic, but they are.

  • @neverhuman3975
    @neverhuman3975 3 года назад +10

    Ive had extremely high grades in my educational career and gravitated towards complex mathematical and literary subjects. Ive had so many people call me extremely intelligent but ask any of my friends and im one of the dumbest people they know.

    • @Fernstead
      @Fernstead 3 года назад

      Maybe your friends just don't understand because they actually are dumber. It's not uncommon.

  • @shaggygreen7526
    @shaggygreen7526 3 года назад +19

    This made me feel 100% better about being gifted in school and subpar in real life

    • @rw4877
      @rw4877 3 года назад +3

      Wow same. It's like when you get good grades in school, suddenly you are supposed to be the next Isaac Newton. I believe true genius acts come from a place of genuine inspiration - when you really want to do something, and you put so much energy into it. Genius is a holistic effort

  • @thexalon
    @thexalon 4 года назад +150

    Truly smart people, in every field, have a good sense of how little they know. For example, Dennis Ritchie, the guy who is arguably the most responsible for all of modern computer software, was always a very humble personality who designed everything with the idea that people are going to screw things up.

    • @ismaelibanez9545
      @ismaelibanez9545 2 года назад +23

      working in the aerospace industry I've met a lot of VERY smart people (technically speaking, mainly optics, math, physics, software) . Almost all of them are very cautious in what they opine on, because they are VERY aware of their limitations and how LITTLE we all know, even the ones who know a lot.

    • @pmclean1980
      @pmclean1980 2 года назад +4

      This is absolutely so true. There's nothing worse than a "know it all".
      Everyone on the planet knows so incredibly little compared to what they know.
      There isn't a person on earth who knows everything about even one subject.
      A lot of it is just guesses anyway we could all be wrong about a lot.
      There's also some, maybe a lot, we may never understand period.

    • @pmclean1980
      @pmclean1980 2 года назад +3

      @@ismaelibanez9545 the things people say with certainty is shocking sometimes.

    • @calebghormley2322
      @calebghormley2322 Год назад +3

      The only thing I know, is that I know nothing.

    • @Unknown-jt1jo
      @Unknown-jt1jo Год назад

      Yup, and this is related to the Dunning-Kruger effect: truly competent people are aware of their own limitations.

  • @KarlisVR
    @KarlisVR 4 года назад +64

    So it is basically a halo effect - because we like one part of their personality or achievement, we assume that everything they do is brilliant, even if it is not. Daniel Kahneman wrote about it in his book "Thinking, Fast and Slow" - Part I. Two Systems, Chapter 7. A Machine For Jumping to Conclusions

    • @junweiau4601
      @junweiau4601 4 года назад +3

      Pls reply to this comment so I can "bookmark" this haha

    • @lebronramsay13
      @lebronramsay13 3 года назад +1

      @@junweiau4601 yo haha

    • @junweiau4601
      @junweiau4601 3 года назад

      @@lebronramsay13 thanks man I totally forgot about this lol

  • @doublev1513
    @doublev1513 4 года назад +49

    *"Everyone wants people they like to be right. That's why popular people are f**k**g dumb."* - Rick Sanchez

  • @diamondinvr
    @diamondinvr 4 года назад +23

    "Excellent singers aren't excellent poker players"

  • @flick6291
    @flick6291 4 года назад +215

    So in a nutshell, me putting a can of baked beans in the oven could still mean I'm a genius?

    • @hairohukosu433
      @hairohukosu433 4 года назад +4

      Yep.

    • @11FBA11
      @11FBA11 4 года назад +27

      Yes, but only a genius with beans. Feel free to call yourself "bean genius" from now on.

    • @fredmorrison2635
      @fredmorrison2635 4 года назад +4

      Depends on whether you remove the beans from the can.

    • @nuclearcatbaby1131
      @nuclearcatbaby1131 4 года назад +1

      I stuck a wire in an electrical outlet. It caught fire and made a funny smell but luckily nobody got gravely injured and no houses got burned down.

    • @pkbatavia
      @pkbatavia 4 года назад

      Yessssssss

  • @matrinoxtm
    @matrinoxtm 4 года назад +333

    It’s the difference between intelligence and wisdom. Wisdom is knowing the limits of your abilities while intelligence alone will never reveal to you your blind spots

    • @PalladiumAlchemist
      @PalladiumAlchemist 4 года назад +60

      And that's why intelligence and wisdom are seperate stats in D&D.

    • @voyd2911
      @voyd2911 4 года назад +12

      That’s why a wizzard in the party doesn’t prevent them of doing stupid shenanigans

    • @Miranox2
      @Miranox2 4 года назад +24

      Yes, many people confuse intelligence and wisdom. They are related but they are not the same thing. There is too much focus on intelligence and very little on wisdom.

    • @Clartred
      @Clartred 4 года назад +3

      Please stop writing bullshit like this.

    • @talonflorig7169
      @talonflorig7169 4 года назад +2

      That's why Thimblefur knows which berries are poison but can't count them.

  • @erickrosas2702
    @erickrosas2702 4 года назад +17

    The fact that only men are historically considered as geniuses (and the ones that were mentioned in this video too) tells you a lot behind the myth of genius.

    • @pilzening2810
      @pilzening2810 4 года назад +3

      Not quite. Historically, women were as a disadvantaged and often didn't even get opportunities to pursued higher education or challenging careers. Of course it would primarily be men who rise to power, of whom a select few then gets considered genuis. It's not a patriarchal concept as you seem to imply, nor the result of patriarchy-it's simply a concept that had limited application due to historical circumstances.
      We've had our share of female geniuses in recent times. Consider Ayn Rand or Marie Curie, think of the inventive works by Agatha Christie, and keep in mind the numerous female experts in all fields of study (who, admittedly, don't quite fit the bill).

    • @marianaramirez738
      @marianaramirez738 4 года назад +1

      Yes. I think girls are still socialized to remain silent about our ideas , and most of us wouldn't dare step out of our field of expertise the way these so called geniuses do.
      You know how those obnoxious people on college class that don't seem to shut up are predominantly men? That. It's excessive confidence and a lack of shame. But I live in Mexico, where machismo is incredibly pervasive, so maybe that's just my perspective.

    • @erickrosas2702
      @erickrosas2702 4 года назад

      @@marianaramirez738 de acuerdo. Saludos y abajo el patriarcado.

    • @elineverstraeten1872
      @elineverstraeten1872 4 года назад

      @@pilzening2810 wouldn't you say it was difficult for women to get higher education, challenging careers and power, because of the patriarchy?

    • @pilzening2810
      @pilzening2810 4 года назад

      @@elineverstraeten1872
      It was. But that has nothing to do with the concept of genius, which would have developed regardless of the academic demographics.

  • @timothybell5698
    @timothybell5698 2 года назад +1

    I always find contemporary polymaths where I least expect them, like Bruce Dickinson singing for Iron Maiden. Meanwhile:
    "Dickinson's interests and non-musical activities include writing, broadcasting, fencing (at which he has competed internationally, placing 7th in Great Britain,[128] and has founded a fencing equipment company under the brand name "Duellist"),[129] beer brewing and aviation."

  • @steveo10861
    @steveo10861 4 года назад +758

    So essentially, "genius" is really just a place card holder for "expert in their field"

    • @chelseaaneke
      @chelseaaneke 4 года назад +14

      Perfectly said

    • @mahadomar2146
      @mahadomar2146 4 года назад +78

      Nah more like a person who pushes The bounderies of that said field. There have been many expertis at a given field but only a handfull of Them are called geniuses cuz they stand out amongst The other by doing something that was not thought or believed to be possible

    • @steveo10861
      @steveo10861 4 года назад +27

      @@mahadomar2146 I see your POV, however I would argue that simply pushing the boundaries would not be enough to qualify for the distinction. There are countless people who no doubt pushed against the boundaries of what was known of their field but were ultimately incorrect in their theories or results. I would hesitate to call each of them genius. Which I guess points to my favorite quote regarding the topic.
      "Genius is insanity, right up until the point that it works"

    • @hornedgoddess8191
      @hornedgoddess8191 4 года назад +2

      You can be a genius in anything.

    • @hermitcard4494
      @hermitcard4494 4 года назад +1

      Perfection requires addiction to the art/science.

  • @Milubee
    @Milubee 4 года назад +283

    Ok, i'm more baffled by how anyone would assume genius person would be good at everything.
    Common sense should be enough to realise a genius is only genius in a certain lane, not an authority on everything.

    • @niteshprabhu6791
      @niteshprabhu6791 3 года назад +9

      Sherlock Holmes

    • @andreydoronin6995
      @andreydoronin6995 3 года назад +31

      Genious is heavily associated with polymath because a lot of scientists and philosophers of the past were skilled in "everything", like Aristotle and Albrecht Duerer. But people do not take into accound that:
      1) being talented at everything was "easier" than today because the information and knolwdge available in each specific field was much narrower.
      2) famous people's abilities can often be exaggerated because of stereotypes, misrepresentation in media or lack of reliable information in the first place.

    • @ANTSEMUT1
      @ANTSEMUT1 3 года назад +1

      @@andreydoronin6995 eh but the achievements "outside of tyeir lane" of those two examples you mentioned are overstated.

    • @nicki4515
      @nicki4515 3 года назад +13

      It's called the Halo Effect "the tendency for an impression created in one area to influence opinion in another area." Since people have the tendency to think of genius/IQ scores as the general propensity to be good at whatever that person puts effort into.
      People tend to think if someone used their genius intellect to become very successful in a particular area, maybe if they focus their genius intellect in a different area they'll quickly grasp the basics and see something no one else sees. Like how we'll elect presidents for their successes in military or business backgrounds because we think they'll bring their outside perspective and their inner genius to succeed.
      Also Halo Effect happens not just for intellect, but for people in the entertainment industry who we think their inherent "talent" will work across music/acting/modeling and the face palming movies and music we've gotten from that false assumption.

    • @BygoneT
      @BygoneT 3 года назад +3

      No, this is the modern castrated understanding of the term. Our society is specialized too much so that's what happens, geniuses have to be good at "Everything" which is a code word for a whole lot of stuff.

  • @aniksamiurrahman6365
    @aniksamiurrahman6365 4 года назад +43

    When the thumbnails put Einstein, Elon Musk, and Mark Zuckerberg on a par .. ... .... we immediately get a glimpse where the problem is.

    • @aniksamiurrahman6365
      @aniksamiurrahman6365 4 года назад +22

      @Eric Miret You are being unfair to Elon Musk. He needs to leave the thumbnail too and he too is here for memez. I know you're going to snap at me. But Elon has very little original contribution - Tesla, he just bought the company, SpaceX was basically NASA's plan to privatize space. Mr. Musk's actual contribution here is his excellent business leadership. Yes, Elon Musk is probably a business genius. But not even close to the level of Einstein. Mr. Bill Evil Genius Gates or Mr. Sergei Brin might be better candidates for that. Cos besides being good businessmen they actually have few original contribution to their field.

    • @dl2839
      @dl2839 3 года назад

      Musk is more correct than Wisecrack about Covid. Being right or wrong isn't determined by who you are, it is determined by how right or wrong your beliefs are.

    • @aniksamiurrahman6365
      @aniksamiurrahman6365 3 года назад +10

      @@dl2839 Nope. As a Biochemist, I assure you that Musk owes a public apology for what he said and did about COVID-19. That one moment showed that in the inside, Musk is barely better than Donald Trump.

    • @dl2839
      @dl2839 3 года назад

      @@aniksamiurrahman6365 We should have never had a lockdown or mask mandate, they violate our God given rights. Covid is not nearly as deadly as is reported. And the lockdown is killing people.

    • @aniksamiurrahman6365
      @aniksamiurrahman6365 3 года назад +10

      @@dl2839 44 milion+ deaths later, only a Genuine Christian like you will claim that it wasn't that deadly. want to know how things would've turned out without any lockdown? Go to Brazil. Things there went so bad that people had to be buried in mass graves in the Black Plague style. Even though only

  • @abrahamzayed7399
    @abrahamzayed7399 Год назад +6

    I feel like putting elon musk and Mark Zuckerberg next to einstain is an insult.

    • @dreamlandnightmare
      @dreamlandnightmare Год назад

      Absolutely. Not only are they far less intelligent than Einstein, they are reprehensible people

  • @benhac
    @benhac 4 года назад +293

    IMPORTANT NOTE:
    The head of state in Israel is the prime minister. The presidency is more of a ceremonial position.
    Hence the offering of it to einstein.

    • @maxpayne930
      @maxpayne930 4 года назад +4

      If u wana wipe out most pple from ethnic point just give them state:)

    • @marcelguillen9235
      @marcelguillen9235 4 года назад +18

      also i doubt that einstein being a socialist would ever want to be a settler state's president

    • @josemariagomez6212
      @josemariagomez6212 4 года назад +5

      Besides hun , Israel's not a real state

    • @DanRyzESPUK
      @DanRyzESPUK 4 года назад +2

      Head of State represents the state
      Head of Government represents and runs the government.
      Sometimes they're mixed, sometimes it's one person (POTUS is an example), but that's the principle to see.

    • @NecroAngelDeclaresWar
      @NecroAngelDeclaresWar 4 года назад

      Wanto to be president of this country?
      what country?

  • @0fg4
    @0fg4 4 года назад +311

    Comparing Musk to Einstein is somewhat of a stretch, though.

    • @Vekikev1
      @Vekikev1 3 года назад +58

      @GREATLIFESUCKS GREAT You're right. It's not a stretch. It's an absurdity so enormous it could cover the Grand Canyon.

    • @maniac50ae14
      @maniac50ae14 2 года назад +15

      Fuck yes! The guy is definitely smart, disciplined and determined but hes never actually discovered anything new

    • @ogungou9
      @ogungou9 2 года назад +3

      0fg4: it's worst than that. Elon is a fraud: ruclips.net/video/c-FGwDDc-s8/видео.html

    • @ogungou9
      @ogungou9 2 года назад +2

      @@maniac50ae14 : No he is not, this a myth: ruclips.net/video/c-FGwDDc-s8/видео.html

    • @alice_in_wonderland42
      @alice_in_wonderland42 2 года назад +3

      He's a genius is his own field tho
      U cannot go that forward if u don't understand the stuff

  • @mezzopayne3571
    @mezzopayne3571 4 года назад +13

    For anyone who's further interested in these concepts, I would recommend Peak by Robert Pool. He spends a lot of time delving into the myths of genius and how to attain intellectual performance in your chosen field. Also, at around 13:15, The Dark Knight Rises was credited, when in fact it was The Dark Knight, and yes I have rewatched that movie too many times.

  • @jonkukski7185
    @jonkukski7185 4 года назад +10

    Imho, genius is partly the ability to intuitively "leap" to a solution as well as to intuitively "see" the next step in some, particular, area. AND, "see" the steps it will take to get there. Therefore, it is, usually, limited to areas in which that "gift of intuition" or "sight" resides. Some, as you pointed out, are gifted with the "sight", or "sound" of music. Others, the sensibilities of wording, and yet others, technological understanding of paths into the future. HOWEVER, it must be nurtured. Both by the environment in which the person resides, as well as the people that surround them. All systems tend to attempt to push outliers to the "norm". Underachievers are pushed to do "better" and, I believe, so too "geniuses" are pushed to reside below their true capacity. Hence, possibly, why the kids that scored those high IQs tended to end up as "normal" people. But, every once in a while, someone like Musk, or Wozniak, or Einstein, buck the system. They deny the power of the system that attempts to push them to normalcy. And, that is how we get the breakthroughs that they provide.

    • @seanells2333
      @seanells2333 3 года назад +1

      How has Musk actually changed the system? Like caused real change. His “environmental” cars are luxury and cost a ridiculous amount

  • @that_artsy_boy675
    @that_artsy_boy675 4 года назад +324

    "If people never did silly things, nothing intelligent would ever be done" ~ Ludwig Wittgenstein
    Sums it up pretty nicely imo

    • @djoakeydoakey1076
      @djoakeydoakey1076 4 года назад +2

      The founding of penicilin was done by doing a stupid. Aspartame to make sugar free food and drinks was found by the guy tasting the result of his mistake.

    • @MephLeo
      @MephLeo 4 года назад +8

      Yet, when you double down on your stupidity even in the face of evidence of it's danger, you shouldn't be celebrated uncritically.

    • @rudylabsilica2286
      @rudylabsilica2286 4 года назад +2

      That’s true to a certain point; Kanye had said stupid things, that doesn’t make him intelligent.

  • @Unpopularopinionbutitsok
    @Unpopularopinionbutitsok 4 года назад +147

    Another way of putting it, just because you’re good at one thing or more, that doesn’t mean you know everything you have an idea about.

    • @marcoantino2920
      @marcoantino2920 4 года назад +2

    • @johnlewis8934
      @johnlewis8934 4 года назад +16

      Haha yeah this is something that is so easy to fall into, especially with America’s view of the world and how we idolize wealthy people and expect them to know everything, when in fact no one can know everything. Most of us know very little and the ones who are geniuses in one aspect of life got there because of hard work and dedication and it would take the same amount of time of hard work and dedication to pull the same thing off in a different field of study.

    • @marcoantino2920
      @marcoantino2920 4 года назад +1

      @@johnlewis8934 so refreshing been a while since i saw a comment section so lucid

    • @cevcena6692
      @cevcena6692 4 года назад +3

      You wouldn’t ask Mozart to help you with Algebra or Newton to translate cantonese.

  • @Randopatchi
    @Randopatchi 3 года назад +4

    Dmitri Mendeleev was a genius as the father of the periodic table of elements, possessing an intuitive understanding of how to organize periodicity, changing the world of chemistry forever.
    *The man also did not believe in atoms.*

  • @nykeejune
    @nykeejune 4 года назад +13

    am I the only one who uses this channel as an English learning course?

    • @camelopardalis84
      @camelopardalis84 3 года назад

      A lot of people do so unintentionally at least. I sure know my English skills improved a lot during my first few years of watching youtube videos.

  • @devanshrastogi6305
    @devanshrastogi6305 4 года назад +64

    interviewer- what should be the title of you autobiography ?
    Magnus Carlsen- i am not a genius.
    interviewer- and the first line.
    Magnus Carlsen- I am a chess genius.

  • @jimpachi98
    @jimpachi98 4 года назад +192

    *Parent own an emerald mine, invests emerald money into an electric car company, gets very lucky* "Wow, what a genius!
    *Grows up poor but works hard, becomes an engineer and makes Tesla cars actually work* "Who are you?"

    • @let_there_be_dark
      @let_there_be_dark 4 года назад +28

      Man, I wish more people were pointing this out.

    • @KateeAngel
      @KateeAngel 4 года назад +2

      You got it!

    • @nuclearcatbaby1131
      @nuclearcatbaby1131 4 года назад +37

      The real geniuses are the people who actually invent the electric cars but their patents belong to the corporation so they don’t get recognized.

    • @Willz828
      @Willz828 4 года назад +10

      his money came from paypal

    • @dexdrako
      @dexdrako 4 года назад +32

      @@Willz828 and the money he had to found paypal came form his parents blood emerald mine.

  • @Fadilanse
    @Fadilanse 2 года назад +2

    the genius worshiping problem is such a main theme in my life it's like a curse in my brain
    I just love massive talent, and I'm endlessly fascinated by it, but I'm also crippled by it

  • @cyberdelicxp9125
    @cyberdelicxp9125 4 года назад +11

    Describing Kanye as a Genius....did I just have a stroke?

    • @bunniiiko5737
      @bunniiiko5737 4 года назад

      He kind of is. He has a very high IQ. I don’t like him, but he technically is.

  • @Morganistalking
    @Morganistalking 4 года назад +257

    Compassion and emotional intelligence is not valued enough in our society.

    • @frocco7125
      @frocco7125 4 года назад +19

      Empathy is based.

    • @AxeKick80
      @AxeKick80 4 года назад +19

      Sadly very true. We’re bred to be competitive and individualistic 🙄

    • @hellojari07
      @hellojari07 4 года назад +1

      agreed

    • @frocco7125
      @frocco7125 4 года назад +30

      @@AxeKick80
      Not really. I'm pretty sure ancient cave man societies would have collapsed without collaboration.

    • @rockabye274
      @rockabye274 4 года назад +19

      @@frocco7125 But then capitalism came along.

  • @G1337wa
    @G1337wa 4 года назад +413

    People act like Musk is Tony Stark and he looks like he's let it go to his head

    • @avicarnonbagel279
      @avicarnonbagel279 4 года назад +38

      He acts like tony stark if he never changed since the beginning of iron man 1

    • @nataschavisser573
      @nataschavisser573 4 года назад +50

      But Musk is a money guy, not an engineer. Tony Stark he aint.

    • @avicarnonbagel279
      @avicarnonbagel279 4 года назад +12

      I meant in terms of personality, he obviously is not as good as a fictional superhuman science man.

    • @mekullag
      @mekullag 4 года назад +16

      Avicarnon Bagel until you listen to him speak under pressure, then you realize he has none of the charisma RDJ has, he‘s just a successful nerd 😄

    • @paulinski011
      @paulinski011 4 года назад +10

      @@nataschavisser573 except he's the chief engineer at spaceX

  • @jonwesick2844
    @jonwesick2844 4 года назад +4

    Linus Pauling gave a talk on nuclear physics at Indiana University. I asked my physics professor what he thought of it. He replied, "Linus Pauling is a great chemist."

  • @thecomradegeneral6375
    @thecomradegeneral6375 Год назад +4

    Today's definition of genius reeks of sexism, racism, and classism. Is it genius, or is it wealth? Is it genius, or is it considered such because it's coming from a confident man?

  • @NEETmoreAnime
    @NEETmoreAnime 4 года назад +39

    I feel like this has nothing to do with being a "genius" or being dumb. I think the problem is that their ego gets too inflated which gets them on very grandiose and contrarian thoughts. For some people this probably highly fluctuates, especially when you have bipolar tendencies.

    • @HamHamHampster
      @HamHamHampster 4 года назад +1

      It's all politics. People who are quick to criticize Musk on covid will never mention how wrong Fauci's prediction was. Or Al Gore on climate change.

    • @suezuccati304
      @suezuccati304 4 года назад

      @@HamHamHampster and so what? every single person that criticizes anything needs to criticize other things in order for it to be valid criticism?

    • @jgreen3473
      @jgreen3473 4 года назад +1

      @@HamHamHampster they were presented with new information and changed their views on just that. That's what makes a person smart, the ability to adapt. If he stick to his views even if he is wrong that's silly and dumb as hell.

    • @HamHamHampster
      @HamHamHampster 4 года назад

      @@jgreen3473 ​So how much adjustments have you made with "new information"? Now that you know it's not nearly as deadly as first advertised?
      I follow the story from Hong Kong, Taiwan, and South Korea back in February. Turns out they were more right than all the western politicians, media, and experts.

  • @jwilhel5
    @jwilhel5 4 года назад +162

    Robert Sternberg was the president of my University, for 5 months. He started in July, fired nearly every college dean and provost on campus, and was asked to resign by November. But I guess he did get the university to buy him out of the rest of his contract so getting 18 months of a six-figure salary to not go to work is pretty genius.

    • @DMWayne-ke7fl
      @DMWayne-ke7fl 4 года назад +16

      Sternberg's theories are rejected by the mainstream intelligence researchers. That is the grand irony of wisecrack's video.

    • @TrenchantAtheist
      @TrenchantAtheist 4 года назад +5

      @@DMWayne-ke7fl Who would the mainstream researchers be? What are the leading theories? I've been pretty unimpressed with most of the books and articles I've found on the subject.

    • @atomshizz8630
      @atomshizz8630 4 года назад +2

      @@TrenchantAtheist en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mainstream_Science_on_Intelligence

    • @kassandrapatrick9064
      @kassandrapatrick9064 4 года назад +4

      @@atomshizz8630 Oh, you mean the paper that gives stalk to the idea that there is a genetic cause for intelligence disparities between races, was highly and pubicly criticized even at the time it was published, and is now over two decades old and therefore only "modern" in the barest sense of the word? I'm not saging Sternberg is automatically right, but this paper certainly wouldn't convince me he's wrong. Over half the scientists asked to sign it before publication refused! It's not reliable.

    • @jakefoster5611
      @jakefoster5611 4 года назад

      @Aaron Smith Sort of like the husband who claims he doesn't know how to run a dishwasher to get out of doing the dishes, though he is actually more than capable?

  • @deadman746
    @deadman746 2 года назад +1

    The definition of _genius_ that appeals to me is the ability to see something in a radically different way and communicating it. Intelligence _per se_ does not enter into it other than a certain amount is required to communicate effectively. The word is related to _genus,_ and a genius is _sui generis._ Einstein is a great example. People had known the math of special relativity for a long time, but they thought it was a result of something they called _the luminiferous aether._ Einstein saw it as a simple fact of the geometry of spacetime and was able to communicate it with the Pythagorean Theorem. This is genius.

  • @scottk1525
    @scottk1525 4 года назад +42

    Not so much a myth as a misunderstanding. Genius exists. It's just not what a lot of people think it is.

    • @EKIANandWolvesGaming
      @EKIANandWolvesGaming 3 года назад +4

      I've seen it often be simplified to simply having a high IQ but truth be told that's only a small necessary factor. It's a personality profile that has increased statistical likelihood of making incredibly novel leaps of progress in a specific domain. Geniuses are rare because you need an individual to manifest an above average IQ (the efficiency of your thought )(about 120 is the lowest thought it can still manifest from), high trait openness (to come up with outside the box ideas and connections), low agreeableness ( to be able to be confident in ones ideas and rebel against common consensus), conscientiousness and neuroticism levels link to whether a genius will be in the artistic or scientific domains (heavy emotional vs hard logistical thinking tendencies). If somebody happens to have that trait profile they could be considered to have only some chance of genius. The rest of it is pure environment and luck based on location and time. As you can see there's a certain level of narcissism that can creep in if you over inflate your self confidence.

    • @blackbaron2572
      @blackbaron2572 3 года назад +1

      True. One of the few accurate comments.

    • @michaelh13
      @michaelh13 3 года назад

      That’s an authoritative statement for a subjective opinion. There’s no evidence to suggest genius exists

    • @scottk1525
      @scottk1525 3 года назад +2

      ​@@michaelh13 So Einstein, Beethoven, Stephen Hawking, or Da Vinci are not evidence of genius?

    • @michaelh13
      @michaelh13 3 года назад

      @@scottk1525 You've just listed 4 people, that's not evidence of anything

  • @MJ-mp1fx
    @MJ-mp1fx 4 года назад +190

    Honestly, I really needed this. I was a "gifted" kid, but never amounted to much. Maybe I didn't waste my potential.

    • @bunnyben5607
      @bunnyben5607 4 года назад +43

      What people don't commonly talk about is that IQ or "giftedness" in the preteens isn't really that predictive of adult IQ. There's some (about .2), but really the only way you're going to know if someone's intelligent as an adult is to test them as an adult. The main reason being that children have yet to experience the majority of their neural development. Sorry to burst your bubble, but being intelligent as a kid amounts to relatively little in the context of the rest of your life.

    • @MJ-mp1fx
      @MJ-mp1fx 4 года назад +14

      @@bunnyben5607 that's good to know. I'd rather have an accurate view of myself, TBH.

    • @wrinkleintime4257
      @wrinkleintime4257 4 года назад +33

      Bunny Ben thank you! I was tested as “gifted” in 3rd grade ... which then I didn’t even know what that logic test was haha
      I studied education at uni and what we learned about giftedness testing is just a way to track students into those deemed to have potential and those deemed to not. So that more effort is put into “smart” students rather than supporting students who struggle. All to keep up the disparities. They’re changing the ways to determine intelligence, including emotional and artistic intelligence etc. But I really think we should do away with all intelligence testing ... let children be children, meet their needs and pay their teachers decently. Really the school system fails everyone, gifted and not.
      What it did for me was convince myself that I had the potential to go to college. But in reality we are still part of a capitalist system that lies to us that if we work hard enough or are intelligent enough we can be successful.
      I’ll soon be a teacher myself, and I don’t want to try to label students. All kids have potential, nothing is guaranteed in life, so why waste (already very limited) resources intelligence testing kids when we could be using that money and time to actually educate kids!!!! I swear schools will spend money on everything except what they actually need to spend money on ...

    • @absurdist5938
      @absurdist5938 3 года назад +3

      @Mike Smith wrong intelligence is some way account by birth but they are also influenced by environment and education.. If u are talking in terms of IQ then u should rethink what is definition of intelligence..

    • @MJ-mp1fx
      @MJ-mp1fx 3 года назад

      @RandomName oh ok

  • @ervinpucchi6951
    @ervinpucchi6951 4 года назад +322

    "Genius originally referred to as an individual spirit that protects a person at birth thereby determining their character."
    So basically Stands?

    • @nicolasrealMD
      @nicolasrealMD 4 года назад +20

      A man of culture i see

    • @DogDogGodFog
      @DogDogGodFog 4 года назад +33

      Stand name: Math and physics
      Stand user: Albert Einstein

    • @philv2529
      @philv2529 3 года назад +6

      wtf are stands?

    • @DogDogGodFog
      @DogDogGodFog 3 года назад +9

      @@philv2529 Jo Jo reference

    • @philv2529
      @philv2529 3 года назад +7

      @@DogDogGodFog Who the fuck is JoJo?

  • @oidaz8402
    @oidaz8402 Год назад +3

    Well this aged perfectly in my opinion

  • @michaelcallahan8412
    @michaelcallahan8412 3 года назад +3

    Love the quote from Tao! For those of you that don't know, Terence Tao is arguably the most successful mathematician of recent decades, possibly ever. I enjoy the fact that he and Einstein were reasonably doubtful of their own abilities.
    But in any case, I would hazard a guess that there's a bit of difference between people who cling to their perceived intelligence as a way to maintain their celebrity status, and those who earn celebrity status by as a natural result of their accomplishments and don't cherish the fame but rather regard it as perfunctory coincidence.

  • @schtuff.8207
    @schtuff.8207 4 года назад +279

    "Poopity Scoop." - A Musical Genius

    • @kungfubrandon6886
      @kungfubrandon6886 4 года назад +8

      Fax

    • @ishanstuff
      @ishanstuff 4 года назад +7

      sCOOPDIDY W0op

    • @kungfubrandon6886
      @kungfubrandon6886 4 года назад +2

      @@ishanstuff that song is fire

    • @Baelor-Breakspear
      @Baelor-Breakspear 4 года назад +9

      Scooptity poop poopidie scoop poop. Ahhh the self proclaimed voice of our generation. True genius in this enchanted lyrics.

    • @rainbowcity911
      @rainbowcity911 4 года назад +3

      Poopity scoop, loop de loop. Animal crackers in my soup.

  • @marisa1637
    @marisa1637 4 года назад +17

    Yessss! This needs to be emphasized! I am a neuroscientist which means I work with countless "smart" people. But the most common indicators of success are always their ambition, determination to succeed, and most importantly, luck.
    And let's be clear, the people who seem most intelligent in certain areas are always lacking in others. I have never met a person who is a "genius" in all things and I doubt I ever will.

  • @ViralWatchMedia
    @ViralWatchMedia 2 года назад +3

    Oscar isaac is getting so many new movie roles and I love it. He's so insanely talented. Good to see he's getting the spotlight he deserves. Absolutely loved him in moon knight recently.

  • @trouts4
    @trouts4 4 года назад +62

    New to the channel. My guy, narrator, you gotta stop washing your hair everyday in shampoo with sulphate. You're drying out your hair. Swap to washing once or every 7 days or so with just silicone free conditioner and you'll find your hair doesn't have to look like hay. Look up "co-washing". I've been where you are. Cheers.

    • @slushu_6865
      @slushu_6865 3 года назад +5

      I haven’t watched the video and let’s just say I’m very confused by this comment

    • @OhMajnun
      @OhMajnun 3 года назад +8

      hey counterpoint: shut the fuck up about how someone needs to act to physically appease you

    • @iaprofessional7986
      @iaprofessional7986 3 года назад

      Nobody asked my guy

    • @yrfvidi0t
      @yrfvidi0t 3 года назад +1

      @@OhMajnun counter point to your counter point: he's not saying this so that he could appease to HIM but to have better taken care of/looking hair.

  • @yumemilee
    @yumemilee 4 года назад +186

    I’ve been putting this off - Jared needs to moisturize his hair!! Get a leave in conditioner or a hydrating product for after washing.
    Great video, as always!

    • @dudeist_priest
      @dudeist_priest 4 года назад +18

      He would become too powerful.

    • @Im-the-greatest
      @Im-the-greatest 4 года назад +2

      Fine the way he is

    • @TotallyNotRedneckYall
      @TotallyNotRedneckYall 4 года назад +1

      I have jared hair 😭

    • @Kuja55
      @Kuja55 4 года назад +2

      He is achieving those "homeless/philosopher" vibes from his hair.
      He may not be a genius but he is sure getting some power level cosmetics

    • @alarcon99
      @alarcon99 4 года назад +1

      Unfortunately Jarred’s genius does not extend to the aesthetics of personal grooming 😭or it is simply a signifier of his humility, much like Einstein 😁

  • @recon441
    @recon441 4 года назад +111

    Can confirm, I live an exceedingly average life and I was considered "gifted" back in school, ask anyone who's ever been tested "gifted" really.

    • @GeahkBurchill
      @GeahkBurchill 4 года назад +37

      Rosana Econg I agree entirely. Being told all through childhood I was a Genius created an incredibly labyrinthine complex of neurosis and imposter syndrome that I can often spend a week failing to complete even basic tasks because every mundane action might be a ‘waste of my talents’. Needless to say, I haven’t accomplished any of the lofty expectations from teachers and relatives that it seemed everyone was so sure I’d produce.

    • @kharynj6629
      @kharynj6629 4 года назад +34

      Being classified as gifted just made me afraid to try new things. Fear of failure is the story of my life now.

    • @thefishking7582
      @thefishking7582 4 года назад +14

      "Genius" and ambition are not directly correlated. By the archaic IQ test standard I was shown to have a genius intellect. In truth I just have a wonderful memory. That being said, I am an auditor in a mid-size corporation. I am a cog in the machine. I have never been motivated by money and found that I can be happy with just about any job. I am good with numbers so auditing is a nice fit. Being a genius has little to do with how I live my life.

    • @dontmisunderstand6041
      @dontmisunderstand6041 4 года назад +14

      Well, isn't an exceedingly average life kinda the perfect life? Doesn't really take a genius to see that too much money causes just as many problems as not enough... same with everything else. Too much pressure, too much stress, too much love, too much intelligence, too much variety. Nah, an average life is the ideal... you might be more gifted than you give yourself credit for.

    • @kharynj6629
      @kharynj6629 4 года назад +2

      @Dont Misunderstand I like that theory

  • @pmolyneaux27
    @pmolyneaux27 4 года назад +11

    This reminded me of the podcast "My Year in Mensa" which had a similar take.

  • @thegod2291
    @thegod2291 3 года назад +2

    What ur trying to make einstein and musk at the same pool , oh ur dead wrong .

  • @pat7504
    @pat7504 4 года назад +31

    Of course he had limitations and had a significant amount of help from his wife but Einstein changed our understanding of the universe. For him to be lumped in alongside Musk is brutal.

    • @TinyShaman
      @TinyShaman Год назад +2

      I saw it more as demonstrating a strong contrast between the supposedly similar items, roughly speaking. After all, Einstein was also emotionally intelligent enough to not allow his incredible world-wide fame carry him away into the belief that he was somehow a god who could say or do no wrong. Which is something that has very much happened to many famous people, including the ones mentioned in the video.

    • @pat7504
      @pat7504 Год назад +4

      @@TinyShaman I don't disagree I just don't think Elon Musk is an overtly intelligent person. He is a person who started with inherited wealth who has demonstrated a knack for shrewd investments and works the system (see carbon tax scheme) like any ruthless capitalist, though even those powers seem to be deserting him.

    • @TinyShaman
      @TinyShaman Год назад +4

      @@pat7504 Well, I can agree in the sense that Musk doesn't strike me as a Great Visionary, if that's what you mean. 🙂 But I wouldn't get into a serious discussion about the measure of relative intelligence of the two. There are too many factors at play, and while I definitely see Einstein's achievements as far greater than Musk's, it would be too simplistic to say that it's all due to Mr E's superior intelligence. Besides, there's the "apples and oranges" thing going on. How many meters of advanced maths skills are equal to one kilo of investment shrewdness? 😄🤷🏻‍♂

    • @pat7504
      @pat7504 Год назад +3

      @@TinyShaman yeah that's fair enough

  • @ffitzpaty13
    @ffitzpaty13 4 года назад +13

    When I think of genius, I think of the Richard Feynman interview when he talks about people who push the boundary of their field. So similar to the Roman concept, but not just a mastery of your discipline, but being able to take it to the next level.

  • @djn5035
    @djn5035 Год назад +1

    This video has aged exceptionally well, and think for reasons they explain in video

  • @vvolfbelorven7084
    @vvolfbelorven7084 4 года назад +12

    Isn’t genius from jin, an Arabic word?
    Also, someone read Outliers by Malcolm Gladwell. Great book, btw.

  • @paskowitz
    @paskowitz 4 года назад +22

    Geniuses rarely make lightning. More often than not, they just capture it.

    • @markonit
      @markonit 4 года назад +1

      Great observation!!

    • @AxeKick80
      @AxeKick80 4 года назад

      Great quote!
      Did you make it or did you capture it? 😂

  • @TheShaylaNguyen
    @TheShaylaNguyen 4 года назад +139

    I thought i was the only one that thought the billionaire “genius’s” we’re acting like complete idiots, it frustrates me because so many people “worship” these guys like Kanye west and Elon musk and believe they’re godly and revolutionary. When they’re only just the faces of what their billions truly represent. People don’t think deeper than treating musk and west like the smartest men alive. The shit they’ve been putting on social media is absolutely ridiculous and there’s definitely more things to have trending rather than useless news like Kanye 2020 when he had no paperwork filled out. An absolute waste of time >:(

    • @Flip877
      @Flip877 4 года назад +5

      Elon and Kanye get a lot of attention because they're celebrities and their opinions are often controversial, not because they're geniuses. There are plenty of uninteresting geniuses that get no traction on social media. I'd also be very hesitant to compare Elon's and Kanye's genius with each other. I imagine Elon is a genius in the traditional sense (incredible IQ), whereas I'd be more surprised to learn Kanye's genius can be measured in the same way.

    • @Kerm88
      @Kerm88 4 года назад

      I think you have your commas and periods mixed.

    • @titus17
      @titus17 4 года назад +17

      @The Iguana You mean the actual engineers and physicists working for him will get us to mars. What you said is like saying Bill Gates needs to give us better windows 10 updates.. Bill Gates doesn't do shit like that anymore and neither does Musk. They're just CEO chairmen now.

    • @justalostlocal
      @justalostlocal 4 года назад +2

      @The Iguana "us" lol probably only rich people in the first two centuries because inventions always benefit the privileged first and sometimes only them.

    • @CMR10500
      @CMR10500 4 года назад +1

      The Iguana I hope you are sarcastic...

  • @teresaellis7062
    @teresaellis7062 3 года назад +1

    I think the idea of a Renaissance Man also muddles the waters of what a genius is capable. Once it was possible to be and expert in multiple fields, but now we have so much more information about the world that it isn't possible to do so.

  • @Valandor_Celestial_Warlock
    @Valandor_Celestial_Warlock 2 года назад +1

    Niacin is also a prescription medication. Amounts far in excess of the recommended dietary intake for vitamin functions will lower blood triglycerides and low density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C), and raise blood high density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C, often referred to as "good" cholesterol).

  • @joshuachesney7552
    @joshuachesney7552 4 года назад +56

    My grandpa basically thinks Linus Pauling is god and I was raised on vitamins being the be all end all. It was so hard to try to deconstruct my conspiracy theory mom and grandpa and figure out what is actually true.

    • @googleplexian2036
      @googleplexian2036 4 года назад +4

      You earn my deepest respect, trying to get to the bottom of this, even though you were teched from the begining, that that is just true. I would love to have such an sceptical mindset.

    • @nuclearcatbaby1131
      @nuclearcatbaby1131 4 года назад +1

      You need more than just vitamins. You need to eat the whole dang fish!

    • @madhatt3r93
      @madhatt3r93 4 года назад +1

      But you did it. Congratulations 😊

  • @aepstein824
    @aepstein824 4 года назад +21

    I'm so convinced that Jared both is a pilot and loved that game for its flying details.

  • @thetwelfth9987
    @thetwelfth9987 4 года назад +7

    IQ is pretty stupid. When default of intelligence is us everything else seems dumb, but pigeons don’t need to light fires or build tools to survive because what they have is enough, in the end they compete with humans as one of the most adaptable species.

    • @ciCCapROSTi
      @ciCCapROSTi 4 года назад

      Compete is a strong word. They don't compete, they coexist. There are fancy biological words for every kind of coexistence, this is the one where it's neutral for us, beneficial for them.
      And IQ or intelligence is not about survival, we (as in, humans) are pretty much past survival concerns. Pigeons are not so.

    • @thetwelfth9987
      @thetwelfth9987 4 года назад

      @@ciCCapROSTi from the biological standpoint no we’re not in conflict I know, I was thinking about the ‘what’s the most successful species scale’. The term to describe our relationship with pigeons would be ‘commensalism’. I don’t wanna put intelligence and IQ on the same level because one doesn’t prove the other and it’s inefficient. We are yet to determine what intelligence actually is since the world doesn’t revolve around us anymore, but we can say that it’s the ability to take advantage of the resources of one’s environment and adapt to new situations\modify it. Humans can shape environment, so can chimps to some extent because they build stuff instead of giving up on unaccessible food. Archer fish live in mangroves So the water level changes and they can’t reach insects, so they learn to spit high-pressured water to make them fall. Even crows know how to crack nuts by waiting for cars to break them. Intelligence is usually a result of scarcity and the ‘dumbest’ individual die out eventually unless their habitat keeps to sustain them, evolution also plays a big role in the success of a species, but if humans never mastered rock-sharpening we’d still be struggling to have that bite of meat with much more suited predators (we’re omnivores btw) so our brains wouldn’t have grown enough to allow us to invent toilet paper.

  • @davmpls
    @davmpls 3 года назад +3

    I think you're overlooking something big: promotion and advertising. These people are regarded as genius because we've been fed the concept that these people are geniuses. There's no real evidence of this besides financial success. Financial success is not a measure of genius. You said it yourself when you pointed out that people behind the scenes of these high profile business people are probably smarter yet unknown. You don't automatically get fame for being a genius. Fame is it's own thing and that's what this video is about: image. There's no paradox. Consider the source of where we got the idea that they are geniuses: we heard it from them.

    • @andrewyang7385
      @andrewyang7385 3 года назад

      The idea that reaching a level of mastery in one field makes you an expert in all others still stands as a myth.

  • @OlGregDraws
    @OlGregDraws 4 года назад +45

    As an artist, I always wondered why there wasn't a section on ACT & SAT tests towards the accuracy of drawing something, how to balance & better a budget, basic & advanced knowledge of music scales/music theories, how to write & show up properly for a job interview, understanding taxes, etc. All of these require a form of solving patterns within everyday society & problem solving as a whole. Sadly, the true genius is the one who fine tunes their talent as said in the video, and the one who didn't include any of those on the tests.

    • @goblinfacegraphics2298
      @goblinfacegraphics2298 4 года назад +5

      Speaking as a fellow artist I agree. The arts train perception, spacial reasoning, pattern recognition, and even task completion and problem solving. Yet they are still considered frivolous when discussing school budgets

    • @hi-gf5yl
      @hi-gf5yl 4 года назад +7

      What would be the point? The SAT and ACT test college readiness, not other skills. While some of the above skills could help one save and earn money and graduate on time and with less debt, it isn't totally necessary as colleges only care about grades, not whether you can afford to attend. The SAT, when used in conjunction with high school gpa is already a good predictor of how well you'll do in college, so there isn't a real need to test additional skills. And those skills might make the test a worse predictor of college success instead of being more accurate.

    • @quintessenceSL
      @quintessenceSL 4 года назад +3

      I'll go one better and state the handmaiden to genius, creativity, isn't measured at all.
      While there is certainly something to be said about intelligence, there are several bright people who are rather dogmatic in their thinking and approaches. While you are certainly going to get further refinement in established models from them, synthesis is often a weak point.
      On the other hand, you also have very inventive people who lack a knowledge base to inform their musings. I wouldn't even necessarily criticize Pauling for orthomolecular medicine. He simply lacked the knowledge base to see the problems with it (or do something interesting with it).
      This is further compounded by the overt specialization in the modern world. Gone are the days of the generalist. And instead of thinking that people from several different disciplines might have something to add in understanding and solving a problem, we instead have a culture of "experts" who besides often disagreeing with each other even though they are the most knowledgeable in their fields, are unaware of what they don't know.
      Even worse- "creative thinking" exercises which, more often than not, are just seeing if you can mimic what someone else did to work through a problem.

    • @angelcalderon5680
      @angelcalderon5680 4 года назад +8

      @@hi-gf5yl SAT is actually a really poor predictor of future college success. GPA is a much better indicator, SAT scores only really tell you if they could afford tutoring

    • @alext.9033
      @alext.9033 4 года назад +2

      @@hi-gf5yl Sorry dude, maturity has to do well with college success. So does mental well-being.

  • @MelancholyCrypto
    @MelancholyCrypto 4 года назад +537

    Spot on! Genius worshiping is not healthy.

    • @johnlewis8934
      @johnlewis8934 4 года назад +20

      It’s really not especially when we expect one person to know everything, when we shouldn’t. We should go to the experts in that field to tell us how we should handle that situation. Not someone who has never work or studied in that field before.

    • @walangchahangyelingden8252
      @walangchahangyelingden8252 4 года назад +16

      Agreed, their good work yes but they're not to be treated as gods. Agreeing with everything they say and do isn't healthy at all. Terrence Tao's statement of a Genius as the combination of talent and proper refinement is very accurate.

    • @sasshole8121
      @sasshole8121 4 года назад +14

      There is only one genius we should worship: Genius Christ.

    • @walangchahangyelingden8252
      @walangchahangyelingden8252 4 года назад +5

      @@sasshole8121 Ooo stinky one

    • @Krusesensei
      @Krusesensei 4 года назад +18

      no worship is healthy. But to be inspired by a "genius" is not the dumbest thing

  • @zachmcintire2189
    @zachmcintire2189 2 года назад +1

    Maybe it is not so much the myth of genius is false, but through someone’s genius you see their hobbies and habits.

  • @icanhasutoobz
    @icanhasutoobz Год назад +1

    Speaking as someone with a post-genius IQ (no, really), I agree with this video. Setting aside how contextually-dependent intelligence is, we don't even have a broadly shared definition of what 'intelligence' even means. Without that, anything else we do with this "measure" is speculation, not valid inference.

  • @nihilnohana
    @nihilnohana 4 года назад +32

    Awesome video! This fetishization of intelligence really bothers me. It puts unnecessary pressure on everyone. I tested for a pretty high iq in elementary school and I always had this feeling that I had to prove how smart I was to everyone. It made me annoying and restless and also condescending (which I am very ashamed of). I think curiosity and passion are much more important than any iq ever. Also, the history of genius smells like patriarchal bullshit to me.

  • @SpiralCee
    @SpiralCee 4 года назад +344

    I was classified as a genius as a child...I've done sh*t with my life. My genius lies in wasting my potential. 😊

    • @ArunKumar-dv8zw
      @ArunKumar-dv8zw 4 года назад +70

      Nah man. Taking pressure of expectations is what damages people. If you stop thinking that you have to do something great because society claims you as genius, life would be a lot better.

    • @ViniSocramSaint
      @ViniSocramSaint 4 года назад +17

      Hello there fellow infant prodigy that grew up doing so many genius stuff people wonder how we managed to get a job and still aren't dead yet. How's life?

    • @ciCCapROSTi
      @ciCCapROSTi 4 года назад +8

      Tests taken at childhood are very much meaningless, your IQ correlates more with your genetic predetermination the older you are. So children fluctuate, but will set somewhere along becoming adults.

    • @valentinbonnarde9345
      @valentinbonnarde9345 4 года назад

      Genius is probably not the word that was used though.

    • @anjassharma1166
      @anjassharma1166 4 года назад +2

      Then u yourself admit that u are a "dumbass"

  • @ptolemyhenson6838
    @ptolemyhenson6838 3 года назад +1

    Intelligence by itself does not guarantee correct conclusions. To call someone "dumb" after presenting a false claim is missing this. The real measure of intelligence is how we use our information and the methodology behind our conclusions.

  • @SpringfieldCynic
    @SpringfieldCynic Год назад +1

    Really guys, it’s not that hard. Genius is at its root creative. In order to be creative you 1- don’t think like other people and 2- despite remembering a lot don’t quite remember in right and so are able/forced to connect seemingly unrelated things. So in this situation they will make mistakes on lots of things. Everyone just expects them to be right and we cherry pick both the successes and the failures (mostly on the positive because of historical effect and on the negative to make us feel better). A better question is what should their place in society be. Considering their errors they can’t be obeyed; because of their successes they shouldn’t be ignored.

  • @moatplay
    @moatplay 4 года назад +122

    You have to talk about accumulative intelligence whenever talking about genius. So much of the progress today comes from people collaborating over time. People building off the work that came before. A lot of progress seems to come from one person but, really there were thousands if not millions of people working on it and the “genius” was just the lucky person who managed to publish his work first. Darwin sat on Origin of a Species for 25 years and only published it when someone else was about to publish the same theory. There were thousands of people working on the airplane for over a 100 years when the Wright brothers took their first flight. Most of them only made minor tweaks to their design to get it to work because of the wright brothers. If Alexander Graham Bell hadn’t invented the telephone Elisha Grey would have gotten the patent for it. I think the myth of genius leads us to think that if these geniuses never existed we wouldn’t have that progress we have today. That is wrong. That is so wrong. Progress would happen with or without them.

    • @kaushiks4607
      @kaushiks4607 4 года назад +10

      goddamn you just dropped a massive mind fuck on me , this changed my perspective a lot.

    • @TheOsamaBahama
      @TheOsamaBahama 4 года назад +10

      A genius is better recognized when he or her can make multiple breakthroughs, not just one. Like Newton and Einstein did. That shows us they really were geniuses, not just men who were lucky to get one breakthrough after standing in the shoulders of giants.

    • @josephde-haan1074
      @josephde-haan1074 4 года назад +9

      Also especially in modern society it is a massive amount of real time collaboration across the globe. Those at the top are more about self promotion and hijacking credit. Elon Musk is the worst for that. The internet on numerous occassions have solved seemingly impossible problems by using as mass or ordinary minds from all over the world.

    • @scottlin3024
      @scottlin3024 4 года назад +3

      I mean there are individuals who just saw further than anybody else by themselves. Like calculus would be here even if Newton didn't develop it, but people have been seeing apples fall from trees for all of human existence. Newton discovered gravity, not because he stood on the shoulders of giants, but because he was taller than the rest of humanity combined

    • @josephde-haan1074
      @josephde-haan1074 4 года назад +3

      @@scottlin3024 You are using an apocraphyl story to support your point. Wierd.

  • @mangofruitblast
    @mangofruitblast 4 года назад +42

    This video is brought to you by Mac from It's Always Sunny: "Science is a liar! ...sometimes."

    • @dexdrako
      @dexdrako 4 года назад +4

      science is never a liar but a scientist can be.

    • @mangofruitblast
      @mangofruitblast 4 года назад

      @@dexdrako Pretty much

    • @andrewrice9362
      @andrewrice9362 4 года назад

      sigh.....unfortunately not everyone ^^^ will catch the Sunny reference

    • @flytrapYTP
      @flytrapYTP 4 года назад

      @@andrewrice9362 the comment literally says where the reference is from, stop being condescending.

  • @nannettefreeman7331
    @nannettefreeman7331 3 года назад +1

    I am a genius. At least according to a WISC-R test administered to me back in 1978 at school in California. I began attending University (part time, still attending middle/high school during the day) at the age of 11, graduated high school at age 14 & receiving my bachelor's degree at age 17. I got an early start in the rat race, & due to my creative prowess, excelled in my career of choice, graphic design. I had a fulfilling & lucrative career, & the respect of my peers & those for/with whom I worked. Pause. There is no significant BENEFIT from being smarter than most of the people around you, & I'll explain why. The World operates on a certain level, a level that MOST people are capable of operating at. Therefore, regardless of how smart you are, you spend the majority of your life operating at THAT level. You MUST operate at that level because we live in societies, where you must work within a framework that accommodates the capabilities of the majority of its members. You MUST operate at THEIR level because they are not CAPABLE of operating at yours. Often you can't even get them to understand what makes your ideas "good" simply because it is outside their scope of understanding, & your "genius" goes unutilized. I attribute my "success" during the 1st half of my life to my willingness to not take credit for my ideas or efforts, but moreover, my ability to convince those above me that MY ideas were actually THEIR ideas, then praise them for their "genius." This approach saw more of my ideas executed than had I presented them as my own to people who weren't operating on my level. My rate of success was more closely tied to my own fear of failure. I never put anything out there that I wasn't fairly sure was correct. So the companies/staffs/projects which I was a part of, were for the most part successful. Hence, I was capable of making the natural progression of moving on to greater things. My point is that because of the social nature of our species, development of superior SOCIAL intelligence results in far greater benefits than having a superior intellect. Being "smarter" means that you are more keenly aware of how the World around you works, & that, ultimately, makes you sad, because regardless of how well you learn to play their games, you're still inescapably trapped in a system that is limited in its success by the abilities of those who are running it, & spend most of your life frustrated with & disappointed by the human race. Now I'm homeless, living in a van. Genius.