The Sad Tale of William James Sidis - The Smartest Man Who Ever Lived | Random Thursday

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  • Опубликовано: 29 сен 2024
  • What were you doing at age 6? William James Sidis was writing books in 7 different languages. Once a nationally known child prodigy, William Sidis disappeared and lived a life of obscurity. What happened to the smartest man who ever lived?
    Special thanks to Jason at JTheory for his help writing this video!
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Комментарии • 9 тыс.

  • @yourHandleShouldBeAtLeast3...
    @yourHandleShouldBeAtLeast3... 3 года назад +4176

    Haha they clearly never met the RUclips comment section filled with the smartest people who are never wrong.

    • @yonibennett6201
      @yonibennett6201 3 года назад +45

      😆🤣😂😅😁😅🤣😂

    • @SJ-cl4wq
      @SJ-cl4wq 3 года назад +39

      RUclips comments section may have geniuses,don't discard any thing so lightly.

    • @isthatujeebus
      @isthatujeebus 3 года назад +134

      @@SJ-cl4wq They tend to hide it so well though.

    • @maestropyro927
      @maestropyro927 3 года назад +18

      Sir, this is one of the best comments EVER in RUclips.
      Thank you

    • @elimanning7257
      @elimanning7257 3 года назад +6

      Wow your a genius

  • @johnb2649
    @johnb2649 4 года назад +853

    “Talent is usually envied, whereas genius very often to be pitied.:” Oliver Wendell Holmes Sr

    • @rustyboi5402
      @rustyboi5402 4 года назад +2

      •_•

    • @b3at2
      @b3at2 4 года назад +47

      The smartest man on earth stated that the problem with the world is religion and capitalism.... It doesn’t take a genius to figure that out but him being so just further confirms it... and this was 1910 not 2020z

    • @rustyboi5402
      @rustyboi5402 4 года назад +1

      @@b3at2 •_•

    • @locohobo1925
      @locohobo1925 4 года назад +47

      Talent hits the target no one else can hit; genius hits the target no one else can see.
      - Schopenhauer

    • @Cuplex1
      @Cuplex1 4 года назад +10

      Nah, yes its not uncommon to come with the side effects in the form of mental disorders. But what if you had a truly perfect mind, far beyond what we think of is possible for a human to develop? But it did, where he had plenty of time to spend time with the usual geniuses, like Einstein when the both lived in the institute of advanced studies in Princeton. And long before being a part of the Manhattan Project and further more the thermonuclear bomb. There are countless stories of whom these extraordinary scientists for one couldnt understand how Von Neumann could be an expert in so many fields and with a perfect recall. Like rain man but better. Everything he skimmed through he would only need to read once. After he could literally retell the entire book exactly correct and answer which page a section of text was taken from given it was unique. He would spend a few minutes to relax and for fun and memorize phone books and then challenge anyone for the name and address of a phone number, reverse which phone numbers correlated to zip codes and names etc. His list of contributions to the world is beyond staggering. The list of prizes and medals is amazing considering he died from today treatable cancer in the prostate. Even at the age of 6 he had taught himself to divide two eight-digit numbers in his head and could converse in Ancient Greek.
      He basically accelerated science generations in his lifetime. Developing ground breaking fields in mathematics, logic, physics puh just about everything. Even economics. Which are the foundation of the computer revolution.
      He was surrounded by the most brilliant people who lived in the 20th century, yet so many accounts remain of very famous scientist's amazement of his mind and how far ahead of any human known he was in any subject basically. A true polymath.
      A small quote from wiki. Just a fraction... Makes you wonder if not the leap was similar to homo sapiens compared to chimps. (Not by the small text alone but by studying much more details!)
      Nobel Laureate Hans Bethe said "I have sometimes wondered whether a brain like von Neumann's does not indicate a species superior to that of man", and later Bethe wrote that "[von Neumann's] brain indicated a new species, an evolution beyond man". Seeing von Neumann's mind at work, Eugene Wigner wrote, "one had the impression of a perfect instrument whose gears were machined to mesh accurately to a thousandth of an inch." Paul Halmos states that "von Neumann's speed was awe-inspiring." Israel Halperin said: "Keeping up with him was ... impossible. The feeling was you were on a tricycle chasing a racing car." Edward Teller admitted that he "never could keep up with him". Teller also said "von Neumann would carry on a conversation with my 3-year-old son, and the two of them would talk as equals, and I sometimes wondered if he used the same principle when he talked to the rest of us

  • @starvoyager7313
    @starvoyager7313 3 года назад +128

    He wasn't weird! He was tired of being used/seen as a "show pony." Wanting to live life on his own terms was among the💡 "smartest" things he ever did! 💯💫

  • @zasherakhan6957
    @zasherakhan6957 4 года назад +54

    Tomorrow is his birthday so happy Birthday to the smartest man who ever lived and then eventually died

    • @mechadonia
      @mechadonia 3 года назад

      Unlike the smartest man living right now who is presumably immortal until proven otherwise

  • @Ceej3
    @Ceej3 4 года назад +19

    “Where you end up in life has very little to do with your intelligence” a good reminder to not be too hard on yourself :) was to me at least

    • @davidho2977
      @davidho2977 4 года назад +2

      I heard someone did a study and they found that 70-80% of where you end up is due to social skills or lack thereof.

  • @thedevil1667
    @thedevil1667 2 года назад +1

    I first learned about this story when I was reading the books of the first year psychology of athens. A friend had given them to me when I was like 11. I remember they introduced him like a very interesting person. Especially cause he was unremarkable and normal. He didn't want to become a doctor. He felt like he was a failure. He once went to the Amazon too to learn pharmacology.

  • @Optamizm
    @Optamizm 5 лет назад +5321

    "You're the smartest person in the world, you're going to make the world a better place"
    "But I can't, the world is full of morons who won't listen to me"

    • @TeleNikon
      @TeleNikon 5 лет назад +13

      Marianne 2020

    • @johnmonk66
      @johnmonk66 5 лет назад +145

      can the smartest goldfish improve the world for goldfish? no, because they won't listen

    • @roymadison5686
      @roymadison5686 5 лет назад +241

      I'm normal, of average intelligence ....I'm surprised at how many dumb people are out there lacking common sense.. I think low I.Q. is the number one reason for poverty in the world. "You can't fix stupid". Its beyond government.

    • @TeleNikon
      @TeleNikon 5 лет назад +29

      @@roymadison5686 - Hard to argue with that.

    • @johnmonk66
      @johnmonk66 5 лет назад +72

      @@roymadison5686 every low IQ country is poor, and they all come here trying to make this a low IQ socialist government just like the one they fled...stupid

  • @fitzhugh7463
    @fitzhugh7463 4 года назад +3793

    I hope that when I die, they make a video about me, “the man who survived with a negative iq”

  • @barbaras6792
    @barbaras6792 3 года назад +974

    My cousin was classified as ‘highly intelligent’. His parents tried to push him too far. He rebelled and ended up working as a bakery assistant. He was happier, too. It was like he put his mind in a sling, like a broken arm and let it rest.

    • @michaelhawk-fitz7563
      @michaelhawk-fitz7563 2 года назад +24

      @Erkinus and now here you are belittling him from your high horse..

    • @michaelhawk-fitz7563
      @michaelhawk-fitz7563 2 года назад +51

      if you're smart you just have more work thrown your way..dumb people get away with basically dong nothing..

    • @jaredjones1752
      @jaredjones1752 2 года назад +54

      Though I'm not intelligent by any measure, I can relate to your cousin. I have a Bachelor's degree in Math, yet I think I would be happiest working as a short-order cook in a fancy restaurant. I love when people I cook for at home enjoy the food I made for them and I like coming up with creative twists to old recipes. I wish I could go back in time and resist the pressure my parents put on me to go to college, and go to cooking school instead. College was the most unhappy time of my life.

    • @FS-me8mj
      @FS-me8mj 2 года назад +7

      could have done great things to help humanity if his parents didn't pressurize him

    • @L.K.48
      @L.K.48 2 года назад +19

      @@FS-me8mj but it's exactly that thought that puts pressure on those people. Most of the time it doesn't matter too much if someone actively puts pressure on them. Them knowing that other people perceive their heightened potential and the possibilities and expectations that automatically go with this is enough to drive people insane, even if no one is actually pushing them to achieve great things. It's like building the best super computer that ever existed and then telling it that it's the most competent ever and therefore should try to solve all of the biggest problems known to mankind as fast as possible. If computers were anything like people that computer's processor would generate enough heat to compete with the sun. Weird comparison, I know. I guess you get what I mean.

  • @chester1851
    @chester1851 6 лет назад +5396

    Nothing went wrong. He lived the life he wanted, realizing correctly that he was under no obligation to do anything extraordinary.

    • @LetsGoSomewhere87
      @LetsGoSomewhere87 6 лет назад +160

      The life he wanted? I doubt he was ever asked, its the life he was thrown in, writing books would pretty much be his best outlet, which is what it seems he did a lot of....

    • @LetsGoSomewhere87
      @LetsGoSomewhere87 6 лет назад +19

      @@dickartist that makes sense. This video is the first time I had ever jear of this guy, it just seemed like a sad life. Thanks for the link!

    • @Crazywaffle5150
      @Crazywaffle5150 5 лет назад +12

      @@KimmyQueen Yes he does.

    • @Crazywaffle5150
      @Crazywaffle5150 5 лет назад +71

      @@KimmyQueen Genius has nothing to do with accomplishments lol..

    • @Crazywaffle5150
      @Crazywaffle5150 5 лет назад +77

      @@KimmyQueen Not accomplishing anything has nothing to do with his level of intelligence. There is not much do debate. That would assume that higher intelligence should and should not be used in a specific way. It's like hypothetically being the fastest runner in the world and not joining the olympics or running any races. You can still be clocked as the fastest without actually using said talent. Using an ability is not the same thing as having the ability. I feel your original argument is from insecurity, not logic.

  • @michaelcox5166
    @michaelcox5166 4 года назад +4021

    So a guy, incidentally a genius, decides he wants to live in seclusion and be happy, and it's somehow a huge mystery. Seems to me that says more about us than about him. Why do we think he owed us anything?

    • @neilpeartspurplenose8739
      @neilpeartspurplenose8739 4 года назад +529

      The capable are always expected to carry the burdens of the incapable on their backs. When the capable reject that notion, they are shunned by society. The dunces get to enjoy their hollow lives, and the smart are expected to toil away theirs. You've got to be damned to be truly free.

    • @Nellosphere
      @Nellosphere 4 года назад +81

      I would say he intentionally became a genius. I want to know his parents teaching methods.

    • @Nellosphere
      @Nellosphere 4 года назад +37

      At least he recorded his thoughts so we could work out his hypothesis. Did he produce any patents?

    • @WaterPidez
      @WaterPidez 4 года назад +7

      70th like mouhahahahahahahahhahahaga

    • @kosztaz87
      @kosztaz87 4 года назад +16

      @@WaterPidez What is funny about that?

  • @MrThrib
    @MrThrib Год назад +216

    Living a quiet anonymous life is not failure.

    • @CJR-lx4el
      @CJR-lx4el Год назад +2

      👍

    • @jordanphilipperris
      @jordanphilipperris 7 месяцев назад +1

      👍

    • @Backinblackbunny009
      @Backinblackbunny009 4 месяца назад +1

      Being a hermit and dying at 44 seems less than ideal

    • @palestar828
      @palestar828 3 месяца назад

      How? Please tell me that. I struggle with this. I really have lived that life like for real. Most don't even know I exist. Isolation and loneliness can be a blessing and a curse. It's not always a blessing. It's painful

    • @palestar828
      @palestar828 3 месяца назад +1

      ​@@Backinblackbunny009thank you for the validation

  • @haimause9797
    @haimause9797 5 лет назад +3114

    "If he's so smart, how come he's dead?"
    -Homer Simpson

    • @chad6846
      @chad6846 5 лет назад +46

      Hai Mause people say hes so smart but he wasnt able to parry death. Pff what a newb

    • @Favour135
      @Favour135 5 лет назад +29

      Granted this is a joke but it reflects a danger of society where the smartest people are often the most shunned and no one knows of their existence till they died

    • @NWOTheories
      @NWOTheories 5 лет назад +27

      Intellectuals can't live in a world full of anti-intellectualism.

    • @phd1313
      @phd1313 5 лет назад +14

      Hai Mause He isn’t dead. He found out how to transfer to the 4th dimension. The rest of us though...

    • @nigonkouk1770
      @nigonkouk1770 5 лет назад +1

      Because he wasn't Mighty Mouse yo''.

  • @engrumarkhan
    @engrumarkhan 4 года назад +1326

    Twist in story: he faked his death so he can live peacefully 🤔

    • @bobsagetisepic1197
      @bobsagetisepic1197 4 года назад +50

      Maybe..... or maybe not.

    • @AsfandiarTesla
      @AsfandiarTesla 3 года назад +14

      That makes him still alive😂

    • @superdupersketchy4524
      @superdupersketchy4524 3 года назад +46

      @@AsfandiarTesla that makes him dead

    • @fezzik7619
      @fezzik7619 3 года назад +79

      @@AsfandiarTesla still alive at 122 years old. Did you think that through?

    • @ram5ramen582
      @ram5ramen582 3 года назад +24

      @@fezzik7619 he will turn 123 this year on April first

  • @lemonade2473
    @lemonade2473 4 года назад +1844

    Imagine how frustrated he must have been, being surrounded by people who didn't understand him, and being controlled by them.

    • @aerrae5608
      @aerrae5608 3 года назад +45

      More like the fact that he was cognizant of that. That's literally the life we all lead now, maybe we always did.

    • @MichaelWaisJr
      @MichaelWaisJr 3 года назад +37

      I dealt with that a lot. Now as a 40 year old man I am completely convinced that the educators I had in kindergarten and the 1st grade, as well as the individuals who performed my Individual Education Plans, have received their careers and credentials by performing some of the greatest blowjobs!

    • @MichaelWaisJr
      @MichaelWaisJr 3 года назад +8

      Case in point: Franklin School (which was supposed to be SUCH a prestigious elementary school) was a school with a 1st grade teacher who was enormously celebrated named Mrs. Bernstein! Not only did she humiliate me by imitating me in class when I wasn’t speaking up around all the other students. She also was such a fantastic teacher that my mother saw her literally slap a child she begged to take into her class who was ADD!! Anyway, I like to believe that she lost her house and became homeless after contracting terminal rectal or brain cancer!! But hey, Franklin School right??!! Perfect school to enroll your kids into if you want them to become streetwalkers or flip burgers for a living in 18 years!! What an Ivy League school that clearly gives a shit about their goddamn students!! So you can see because of her teaching style that she had jiu-jitsu Orange or red belt cocksucking skills to be credentialed and allowed to be a teacher!!!!!

    • @athenstar10
      @athenstar10 3 года назад +6

      Agree. I'm no genius but I even get frustrated being around imbeciles,😆

    • @lizardog
      @lizardog 3 года назад +8

      @@aerrae5608 it's always been like that.

  • @Ghost_0418
    @Ghost_0418 3 года назад +478

    I think it’s hard for people with such high IQ’s to relate to other people and form deep meaningful connections. Must be very lonley

    • @phyokyawkhaing2251
      @phyokyawkhaing2251 3 года назад +41

      I would say that this attitude is why he felt so bothered. Not a personal attack or anything but you can see from the comment that Sidis was put on a pedestal. "He has a higher IQ, therefore he must be different from us" Even if the original commenter didnt mean it that way, it's the sort of message that's conveyed.
      "He is not that same as I" "He must live a (insert either positive or negative adjective) life"
      Because he was treated so differently, like a foreign royalty or exotic zoo animal, i would reckon it affected him in a negative way. It would've been best to just treat him like any other person, to make him feel like he fits in. That would've been best in my opinion.

    • @chadwaldron3568
      @chadwaldron3568 3 года назад +11

      You have no idea.

    • @NetralFN
      @NetralFN 3 года назад +1

      @@phyokyawkhaing2251 he call you stupid in his mind

    • @wendyglatt5287
      @wendyglatt5287 2 года назад +5

      A lot of them find partners..that’s how he was born

    • @TheUniversesDaughter
      @TheUniversesDaughter 2 года назад +4

      reminds me of the book flowers for algernon

  • @TKMRacer28
    @TKMRacer28 3 года назад +641

    James at 11: Got into Harvard
    Me at 33: Can’t find the tomato sauce in the fridge but someone comes along and finds it immediately

    • @Hexanitrobenzene
      @Hexanitrobenzene 3 года назад +12

      Do some research about "tunnel vision".

    • @jamesb2187
      @jamesb2187 3 года назад +12

      @@Hexanitrobenzene 9 months late buddy

    • @Ford-dc9mu
      @Ford-dc9mu 2 года назад +5

      @@jamesb2187 have you saw a comment and said hey imma reply oh nevermind it's to old I do that alot but here lately I say screw it and reply until now thank you.

    • @jaredluo
      @jaredluo 2 года назад +1

      8* accepted at 11 lol

    • @pooksterwookster
      @pooksterwookster 2 года назад +1

      @@jaredluo *9 if you’re gonna correct somebody make sure you get it right lol-

  • @zzulm
    @zzulm 5 лет назад +2114

    The fact that geniuses quit on society says a lot.

    • @Nellosphere
      @Nellosphere 4 года назад +53

      People want to be told what to believe and publicity shapes peoples' opinions without them making much of an effort to establish the validity of the authors claims.

    • @simonscardino6597
      @simonscardino6597 4 года назад +16

      They know a lot about to being roasted for no reason all time by dangerous idiots...!
      Haha...! 😂 😂 😂

    • @techstuf4637
      @techstuf4637 4 года назад +28

      You ever heard of Plato, Aristotle, Socrates? Morons.

    • @simonscardino6597
      @simonscardino6597 4 года назад +7

      @@techstuf4637 what team are they playing?

    • @simonscardino6597
      @simonscardino6597 4 года назад +14

      @@techstuf4637 okay, just kidding..!
      I heard a lot about old greeks, but sometimes philosophy becomes another religion.
      And estupid ppl usually kill others because some of them are just following contrary ideas.
      Anyway... 😂
      Philosophy should be the defense of a better quality of life. 😂 😂 😂
      Not a scam..! 😂

  • @chegeny
    @chegeny 4 года назад +2471

    “The public is wonderfully tolerant. It forgives everything except genius.”
    ― Oscar Wilde

    • @bellamckinnon8655
      @bellamckinnon8655 4 года назад +4

      mm, nice

    • @dataexpunged6969
      @dataexpunged6969 4 года назад +74

      Because genius shows how discrepant they themselves are, and their ego won't allow it.

    • @delrasshial7200
      @delrasshial7200 4 года назад +1

      @@dataexpunged6969 .

    • @caioporto9234
      @caioporto9234 4 года назад +55

      @@dataexpunged6969This is something I learned early in life. Being the son of a mathematician, I was somewhat more advanced for my age and eventually learned that I should feign ignorance if I wanted to have friends.

    • @Anti-Alphabet_Mafia
      @Anti-Alphabet_Mafia 4 года назад +7

      And they love everything except Jesus.

  • @mdtalhaansari1096
    @mdtalhaansari1096 4 года назад +719

    "What went wrong?"
    Oh, I don't know, maybe that his parents turned him into a living circus at the age of 5 or 6, that he got exposed to crowds far too young? You know how crowds can be... You have seen youtube comments, right?

    • @laguanhayes214
      @laguanhayes214 4 года назад +37

      That is very, very insightful. The comment section is sometimes as uplifting as what you see in a toilet bowl.

    • @AngelCruz-kg5uw
      @AngelCruz-kg5uw 4 года назад +1

      Unlikely

    • @AngelCruz-kg5uw
      @AngelCruz-kg5uw 4 года назад +1

      Answer

    • @AngelCruz-kg5uw
      @AngelCruz-kg5uw 4 года назад +2

      Is it only I who hates these specficers?

    • @alexcerullo3143
      @alexcerullo3143 4 года назад +1

      Angel Cruz me too they’re so annoying

  • @mattbritzius570
    @mattbritzius570 5 лет назад +2083

    You can't declare his life a failure unless you can prove he didn't enjoy it.

    • @TheFamousMockingbird
      @TheFamousMockingbird 5 лет назад +68

      Even if he didn't enjoy it, the stuff he did mention is that of an unbelievably successful man. Lecturing at ivy league as a child, getting swaths of books on a amazingly broad amount of subjects. Having the government fear you for leading a protest lm beat js essentially the backbone of the society. He seems to have been quite successful. If he views this as unsuccessful then I can't imagine how he views his own life, because having a RUclips channel with a good amount of subscribers does not even come close.

    • @janchovanec8624
      @janchovanec8624 5 лет назад +7

      The trouble is, one can enjoy doing bad things. So who and how do you measure it? What if I would find joy in destroying mankind?

    • @mattbritzius570
      @mattbritzius570 5 лет назад +8

      @@janchovanec8624No need to get too relativistic in this instance. I wasn't saying his life was a success only on the condition he enjoyed it.

    • @macmcleod1188
      @macmcleod1188 5 лет назад +1

      @@mattbritzius570 It also leads to the situation where there is no standard for a successful life. So then you lose the ability to make any statement about how successful someone's life is. Which is really ludicrous.
      Perhaps with more qualifications: "By societies standards of wealth, status, sexual satisfaction, reproduction, and fame- he lead a "successful"/"unsuccessful" life."
      Whether he felt his life was successful doesn't matter by that standard. Some mass shooters may feel they lead a successful life as they are successfully murdering a dozen people.
      Most of us would disagree.

    • @mattbritzius570
      @mattbritzius570 5 лет назад +12

      @@macmcleod1188 Why should we have the ability to make any statement about how successful someone's life was? Who determines failure or success?
      Suppose there is a serial killer who really enjoys killing truck drivers. It gives him more pleasure than anything in the world. His reward center just lights up like a Christmas tree. And he gets away with it too. He kills around 30 dudes, retires, and fondly reminisces about his conquests. Then he dies peacefully of old age. Was his life a success?
      It doesn't seem like one to you or me, because murder is incongruous with our sensibilities.
      But who issues the final word? Is it "common sense?"
      Which is to say some collective sense derived from the subjective sentiment of the species.
      Or is it objective? And if so, by what mechanism is the quality of someone's life objectively determined?

  • @piggy201
    @piggy201 5 лет назад +1798

    So they created a superintelligent person and when he grew up his reaction was to basically log off the human society and live anonymously... Says a lot.

    • @arleybarrios2233
      @arleybarrios2233 5 лет назад +70

      VPN

    • @RadenWA
      @RadenWA 5 лет назад +275

      The smarter you are, the more you hate society and the system, who would've guessed.

    • @meteor09
      @meteor09 5 лет назад +9

      Damn. When you put it that way...

    • @IDontReadReplies42069
      @IDontReadReplies42069 5 лет назад +138

      @@meteor09 Ahhh the human mind, so great at creating patterns (read Michael shermer - the believing brain). Alot of these super smart freakish people hide away from the public, and most non critical people will usually interpret it as
      Smart = hate society
      Smart person hate society?
      Society = bad
      Antisocial = smart
      Probably because that's poetic, and gives some confirmation on their own anti-social behaviors. But has it ever occurred to you that these super smart freakish people are PESTERED constantly in the public eye with huge expectations? You're turned into a circus attraction, which is why they probably want to be secluded.

    • @marthajf73
      @marthajf73 5 лет назад +28

      Human societies really suck

  • @katakana1
    @katakana1 3 года назад +206

    "He blamed all of society's problems on religion and capitalism"
    I don't care how controversial this is, but... *Boy was he ahead of his time.*

    • @stohess
      @stohess 3 года назад +10

      Well that is to be expected from the man with the highest IQ ever

    • @maxw9833
      @maxw9833 3 года назад +4

      I'm not so sure about religion, that's a bit more touchy, but 100% on capitalism

    • @JohnCena-lh4zb
      @JohnCena-lh4zb 3 года назад +9

      Yh it’s not like the world has any other problems before capitalism. You are absolutely correct

    • @user-hi6uh8sb3m
      @user-hi6uh8sb3m 3 года назад +7

      @@maxw9833 religion is capitalism you give ur money to the church just like you give ur money to the state. people like you are so worked up on the definition of “faith” that has been taught to y’all. that you cant see that religion is a cult that you pay for. You or your parents have already been brainwashed by the cult leaders so you think your supposed to go to church every Sunday and give them 10% of your check you got on Friday. For hope or faith that you’ll be rewarded at the end of your life. But that church still got your money.
      It’s just like going through your day to day life where the state taxes the money that you work for in the hope or the faith that they will have your back in the end but neither the church or the state cares about your well-being they want that money.

    • @maxw9833
      @maxw9833 3 года назад +2

      @@user-hi6uh8sb3m we just have different cultures and circumstances, in my country you're not obliged to give money to the church. All they do is put a box there and if you want to, just put money in there. But trust me, if i had to guess maybe 10% put money there, bc the pastor is already well off. In addition to that, people could give any amount of cash they want, the most I've given is 5 dollars.
      But in a way i see why u think it gives "cult vibes", but u need to know that not all churches are actually good
      Me personally, i dont even go to church nowadays, i only identify as a Christian as a safety net if there is such a Creator out there.

  • @TrainTsarFun
    @TrainTsarFun 6 лет назад +4128

    He never got a chance to be a kid. So sad for his childhood.

    • @ordinarytree4678
      @ordinarytree4678 6 лет назад +49

      Train Tsar Fun being an adult is way more fun than being a kid.

    • @アメリカやイギリスを英語だ笑い方
      @アメリカやイギリスを英語だ笑い方 6 лет назад +197

      Ordinary Tree Not in every case.

    • @NatsGhost
      @NatsGhost 6 лет назад +90

      ? Depends on your idea of fun. I barely wanted to socialize and just wanted to read and study and I was happy. Of course I'm a complete loser now, so maybe you have a point...

    • @hatoftricks7132
      @hatoftricks7132 6 лет назад +5

      Being a kid back then wasn't the greatest? He might of enjoyed his childhood.

    • @htoodoh5770
      @htoodoh5770 6 лет назад +19

      Well, once you are a adult at the time there will be a lot of social pressure. So being a kid can be good and fun but that depend on their parent.

  • @tomfitzgerald8150
    @tomfitzgerald8150 5 лет назад +668

    I think by age 6 I finally stopped pissing my pants....

  • @budgethitman2212
    @budgethitman2212 6 лет назад +335

    He may have simply gotten tired of explaining shit to people.

    • @joyl7842
      @joyl7842 6 лет назад +1

      I get tired of doing that basically after doing it the 3rd time. So doing that for so many years is still very impressive! Much respect for the ultra-smart and teachers.

    • @christianvitroler5289
      @christianvitroler5289 6 лет назад +1

      Dealing with the idiocy around you can indeed be very taxing on you. I can totally relate to that and I am not a prodigy, just way above the average. Being as intelligent as those people, though, it must become really painful to deal with.... let's say... politicians or leftists or feminists or... feel free to fill in your own nemesis!

    • @memamagdy307
      @memamagdy307 6 лет назад +1

      from good will hunting

    • @funnyanimalshorts643
      @funnyanimalshorts643 6 лет назад +1

      He wasn't taught the right things. Read Rich Dad Poor Dad. It explains how education does not equal success. If you are busy learning 7 languages, but aren't learning how to keep good credit or learning how to deal with people socially, your future will not be a fun one.

    • @LordPrometheous
      @LordPrometheous 6 лет назад +2

      Christian Vitroler sometimes dealing with average people can feel like being surrounded by idiots. Sometimes I think that average is the new idiot. It does not require interfacing with beings of a particular political disposition; there are plenty of idiots to go around.

  • @mel2000
    @mel2000 2 года назад +277

    "So much potential and yet he remains nothing more than a historical footnote." That's an unfair assessment of a highly accomplished author and intellectual who is still being discussed to this day.

    • @lashlarue7924
      @lashlarue7924 2 года назад +11

      True. Nobody is ever going to remember my dumb ass when I’m gone.

    • @musazwane6049
      @musazwane6049 2 года назад +9

      The last 8 words: historical footnote😐

    • @naninuna7440
      @naninuna7440 2 года назад +7

      Nobody has to suffer for the world, he owes society nothing if it made him miserable.

    • @lashlarue7924
      @lashlarue7924 Год назад +1

      @@ploopploopploopboop1887 True dat. I don't wanna be remembered.

    • @octilli
      @octilli Год назад

      @@musazwane60498 words? what are you talking about? do you mean 2? are you incapable of telling the difference between 2 and 8?

  • @johnnygraz4712
    @johnnygraz4712 4 года назад +1662

    We see this a lot today: parents turning their kids into lab rats as an extension of their own ego.

    • @bbHoodski
      @bbHoodski 4 года назад +20

      Where do we see this alot today?

    • @etooamill9528
      @etooamill9528 4 года назад +20

      @@bbHoodski Alternative medicine

    • @Nik.No.K
      @Nik.No.K 3 года назад +60

      In my view all children are an extension of their parents ego but not all to this extent

    • @KShiro-xb7sj
      @KShiro-xb7sj 3 года назад +32

      @@bbHoodski i immediately thought of the many prodigy child musicians I’ve seen lately on IG and RUclips, not exactly “lab rats” but I imagine there’s a similar kind of encouragement and pressure

    • @Fritz9672
      @Fritz9672 3 года назад +1

      @@KShiro-xb7sj Nowhere near

  • @otto16121970
    @otto16121970 4 года назад +711

    Today i was looking for my reading glasses while holding them in my hand

    • @sandilou2U
      @sandilou2U 4 года назад +65

      I have used the flashlight on my phone to try to find my phone.

    • @yashkaliapiano
      @yashkaliapiano 4 года назад +12

      Happens to us all

    • @otto16121970
      @otto16121970 4 года назад +2

      Stephanie Logan probably :-)

    • @markhirstwood4190
      @markhirstwood4190 4 года назад +4

      That just means you're lacking in some awareness or have a miswired connection somewhere. You can fix that. Nothing to do with super smart or super dumb.

    • @louisblazejewski7884
      @louisblazejewski7884 4 года назад +9

      At least you weren't wearing them

  • @thundrthediety9292
    @thundrthediety9292 4 года назад +2126

    James Sidis at 6: *Writing books in 7 different languages*
    Me at 6: *Closing the fridge slowly to see when the lights turn off*
    Edit: Thanks for the likes guys!

    • @sandilou2U
      @sandilou2U 4 года назад +57

      Slow development does not always equate to lower intelligence when someone becomes an adult. Keep trying to figure the refrigerator light dilemma. You will find the answer one day (when you do message me, my electric bill has been breaking my budget)🤪

    • @blackdogslivesmatter1568
      @blackdogslivesmatter1568 4 года назад +7

      @@sandilou2U Take the bulb out😂

    • @kyrlics6515
      @kyrlics6515 4 года назад +7

      Also you: couldn't make an original comment.
      funny

    • @K4inan
      @K4inan 4 года назад +8

      I remember thinking that the speed of light must be when the light turns on from being off when I flip the switch. After doing that for a while and noticing the timing always varied, I thought that the speed of light must be when the light turns on and it hits me. After like 10 minutes of trying to calculate how fast that was I just thought "it must be super fast" and then I asked my dad a million questions.

    • @jwvandegronden
      @jwvandegronden 4 года назад +5

      All I read is two inquiring minds. So cool and so cute. I did the same thing :D
      My son recently educated me; I just explained the other day to him what symmetry was. Next day we are in a Lego shop and we both built our own vehicle for some contest. We took pictures to upload onto the site and he asked me: is your vehicle symmetrical? Yes, I replied. Than we could have taken photos of just one side...
      Damn!! 5 yo smartypamts.
      Inquiring minds. Got to love them!

  • @iosaturnalia
    @iosaturnalia Год назад +57

    I was considered a “prodigy” at several points throughout my life - I taught myself how to read at a very young age, was already reading full books by kindergarten, started taking college courses at age 12 and graduated university at age 19. The only good it’s ever done me is people looking shocked and saying “wow, you must be a genius.” My mom always told me that she skipped me ahead because I was constantly bored with the material I was learning, but now that I have an ADHD diagnosis it’s easy for me to see why I was so understimulated - and my obvious neurodivergence was never evaluated as a kid because my parents believed I was a genetically flawless supergenius and there could be nothing wrong with my brain. Nowadays, I find it very hard to be motivated to do anything outside of what I need to do, because I needed to do so much growing up. I’m a classic example of the “gifted kid burnout.”
    I’ve recently started regaining a love of learning through videos like yours, though. I feel like I want to learn as much as possible. Thank you.

    • @mobydick1316
      @mobydick1316 Год назад +2

      Mom spaghet

    • @emilysmith2965
      @emilysmith2965 Год назад +5

      Yeah, why is that? Why is the default response to high intelligence this repulsive othering? “Ha ha, you must read the dictionary for fun. You’re, like, not even human!” If everyone could PLEASE stop doing this, we would all be a lot happier.
      Beautiful people don’t get treated like crap, even though some people may feel insecure around them. The perceived positive nature of their traits outweighs most people’s spite or nastiness towards them. So why isn’t it the same way for intelligence?
      We obviously NEED intelligence to survive in social groups and solve problems. And yet everyone in the wake of someone intelligent seems to fall all over themselves in some self-imposed quest for one-upsmanship.
      Maybe it’s because everyone can convince themselves they’re beautiful “in their own unique way” but you can’t really do the same thing with intelligence. You either know what you’re talking about, or you don’t.
      I don’t know where I’m going with this, except to say that I had similar childhood experiences and they’ve mostly made me feel alienated for no good reason at all. Everyone in the world doesn’t NEED to fit this role, but some of us do… and we just want to be appreciated and thanked once in a while, like anybody else.

    • @brb4903
      @brb4903 Год назад +1

      everybody can graduate theology at 19 or be taking theology college courses at the age of 12..

    • @johnvianny_official
      @johnvianny_official 3 месяца назад

      Its time to learn about spiritual things. And to fix your brain with Transcendental Meditation which can make your brain more harmonic and makes you enjoy the life more, scientifically proven.

    • @steveflorida5849
      @steveflorida5849 3 месяца назад

      ​@@johnvianny_officialthere is a beauty of understanding when one connects science with the intelligent living designer, implementer, and sustainer of Life, Consciousness, and the laws of nature.
      Personality adventure in discoveries and seeking a relationship with God and the heavenly spiritual family.

  • @TrumanGN
    @TrumanGN 5 лет назад +749

    He wasn't weird. He just knew life was short and he wanted peace and quiet.

    • @tacituskilgore9838
      @tacituskilgore9838 5 лет назад +2

      Bruh

    • @tracienatalie673
      @tracienatalie673 4 года назад +7

      That's what I think to, but if everybody isn't like everybody else, or bounces around working crappy jobs they ARE labeled as weird!

    • @jeffreyyoungblood7438
      @jeffreyyoungblood7438 4 года назад +5

      I've read his biography. I would describe him as eccentric. And yes. He did want peace and quiet.

    • @neilpeartspurplenose8739
      @neilpeartspurplenose8739 4 года назад +2

      @@jeffreyyoungblood7438 Of course he did. His mind was probably always so busy, he needed seclusion to bring him any semblance of peace of mind.

    • @duggydugg3937
      @duggydugg3937 4 года назад +1

      Truman Green
      we are all crazy it's just a matter of degree

  • @brzpicnic
    @brzpicnic 5 лет назад +1535

    Sounds like he really was the smartest man who ever lived.....rejected society and didn’t like people....

    • @Aqib2
      @Aqib2 5 лет назад +24

      ALEXANDER SMITH Wtf

    • @thelastmanstanding3369
      @thelastmanstanding3369 5 лет назад +109

      ALEXANDER SMITH you just proved his point.

    • @zacktuchannelboogaloo5632
      @zacktuchannelboogaloo5632 5 лет назад +6

      Original Unabomber

    • @donniequalls9693
      @donniequalls9693 5 лет назад +2

      @Amis Amis After seeing your sentence structure and punctuation, I can promise you that isn't the case. :)
      Edit : Punctuation ;)

    • @donniequalls9693
      @donniequalls9693 5 лет назад

      @Amis Amis lul nice, I was hoping you'd have a sense of humor.

  • @zsofiaszekeres197
    @zsofiaszekeres197 5 лет назад +337

    A few years ago I watched an online video about a math prodigy, and the kid's mother told a story about how her child, after a mathematics competition just looked at her and said:
    "I'm so much more than this. I'm not all about solving math problems."

    • @BigCroca
      @BigCroca 5 лет назад +12

      Sad

    • @nicholasreid1836
      @nicholasreid1836 5 лет назад +10

      On this sad case, it is good to read Amy Wallace's biography of Sidis called "The Prodigy". You can read s review of it at the following link, and it is good to read the comments section under the review, where there are comments by a distant cousin of Sidis. reidsreader.blogspot.com/search/label/THE%20PRODIGY%20%E2%80%93%20A%20Biography%20of%20William%20James%20Sidis

    • @mangot589
      @mangot589 5 лет назад +3

      Good for him!

    • @c.s.70
      @c.s.70 4 года назад +5

      Kid is right. Yet narcissistic parent and society treat them like tools and send the message that your only value as a human being is if you’re a tool for others. So sad.

    • @TheSultan1470
      @TheSultan1470 Год назад

      Like what

  • @seanvassar1117
    @seanvassar1117 Год назад +51

    You completely skipped over how he got out of jail, and how his parents kidnapped him and kept him their asylum for a year, traumatizing him for the rest of his life. Never speaking of his father again and never speaking of his mother unless it was about his hate for her.

    • @gladitsnotme
      @gladitsnotme Год назад +5

      Yikes

    • @Anonymous99816
      @Anonymous99816 Год назад

      oh damn, so they kidnapped him so he could be their lab rat again? talk about toxic parents.

    • @overjoyed4505
      @overjoyed4505 11 месяцев назад +3

      Dude was a full on highly intelligent and rather moral person. And society shit on him for that...

    • @invalidaccount6147
      @invalidaccount6147 3 месяца назад

      Whaat!? 😐
      Any other thing he missed out?

  • @MrJmazing1
    @MrJmazing1 4 года назад +447

    He never "Freaked Out"
    He made a decision to live a private life. There's nothing wrong with that.

    • @catinthehat906
      @catinthehat906 4 года назад +16

      The neurotypicals will never fully understand.

    • @sasukenarutolucas3526
      @sasukenarutolucas3526 4 года назад +9

      @@catinthehat906 stop it, get some help

    • @catinthehat906
      @catinthehat906 4 года назад +7

      @@sasukenarutolucas3526 You may not realise but I AM the help.

    • @bird2034
      @bird2034 4 года назад +2

      sasuke
      aruto\lucas
      bruh

    • @ronaldvasquez6488
      @ronaldvasquez6488 3 года назад

      @@catinthehat906 everyone has the same neurological structure... expected for a genius.

  • @codacreator6162
    @codacreator6162 4 года назад +298

    Einstein's greatest gift was a high functioning imagination paired with genius for maths. Shakespeare's linguistic Intelligence was also paired with tremendous imagination. There are innumerable examples of this. Genius is one component. Smart is only as valuable as its willingness to explore the novel for innovation is where progress lives.

    • @Shinobubu
      @Shinobubu 2 года назад +7

      THIS.. it's not enough that you are smart. You need to create as well have the capacity to explain said creation.

    • @LMICUK
      @LMICUK 2 года назад

      Wow love this 💙

    • @idontwantahandlethough
      @idontwantahandlethough 2 года назад +2

      Very well said! Also: motivation is another important factor. I'm sure there are a lot of geniuses who just simply have zero desire to do what most of us would probably want them to do with their lives.. so we'll probably never know about them.

    • @nenmaster5218
      @nenmaster5218 2 года назад +3

      Elon Musk is literally called in each comment-section the smartest Man alive,
      which shows that his marketing-department worked as intended.
      Still, it's hilarious to most; and hilarious to all Experts; that people really think this.
      Truly a very fascinating social study has been done here and surely, people only care who's famous
      and can present himself well. Reality does not have to disagree or Reality will be thrown outta the window; ok.

    • @jout738
      @jout738 2 года назад +1

      Yes I also had good imagination as child, when intresting imagination could amuse me as child without nobody knowing what I even imagine. Yes some people are genious, but some got the passion to imagine the stuff their genious about.

  • @roblockhart6104
    @roblockhart6104 5 лет назад +829

    "He wrote that there are regions of space where time goes in reverse and would not emit light." Sounds to me like he was on the threshold of discovering black holes. The man was simply way ahead of his time. Too bad he couldn't live long enough to see the world begin to catch up and understand his genius.

    • @johnmonk66
      @johnmonk66 5 лет назад +14

      a black hole is gravity so strong nothing escapes, it doesn't go in reverse, if it did it would go back to the big bang and have destoryed us all long ago

    • @DameionC
      @DameionC 5 лет назад +102

      @@johnmonk66 All know laws of physics breakdown beyond the event horizon of a black hole, there are many theorys & even more unknowns that happen inside one. Time very well could be contained & running backwards for all any human knows right now.

    • @johnmonk66
      @johnmonk66 5 лет назад +4

      @@DameionC well your jabbering of science fiction theory has proved it... not.
      PROVE IT

    • @DameionC
      @DameionC 5 лет назад +67

      @@johnmonk66 I wasn't writing fiction, I was quoting facts of a knowledge we just don't have yet by smarter people than I. So unless you got the facts on something the rest of us don't, have a good day.

    • @johnmonk66
      @johnmonk66 5 лет назад +3

      You can't just say it is a fact and run away.
      Your a moron, I am not writing fiction, I was quoting facts of knowledge that you are an idiot told to me my someone a lot smarter than you, so until you can prove your 'facts', have a good day in your safe space.

  • @haveaday1812
    @haveaday1812 2 года назад +62

    The more I learn about geniuses going into seclusion and railing against technology, the more I realize they are probably on to something.

    • @hurricane3518
      @hurricane3518 Год назад +7

      ted kaczynski

    • @JG-yk6ny
      @JG-yk6ny Год назад

      He primarily railed against capitalism and religion, which he saw as great evils. He was probably on to something.

  • @Spoon80085
    @Spoon80085 5 лет назад +582

    As the smartest person on earth, I can say the pressure is immense

    • @Bgrosz1
      @Bgrosz1 5 лет назад +63

      Why are you wasting your time on comments! Go find the cure for cancer!!!

    • @Bialy_1
      @Bialy_1 5 лет назад +12

      @@Bgrosz1 It is kinda funy that you admiting that someone is smarter than you and in the same time you think that your decisions are the best and the smartest guy on the planet should folow them...

    • @Bgrosz1
      @Bgrosz1 5 лет назад +72

      ​@@Bialy_1,
      Well, obviously that is just a joke reply to a joke comment. I have no idea how smart or not Clumsy Captain actually is.
      But also:
      Having intelligence and using intelligence are two separate things.

    • @philip6419
      @philip6419 5 лет назад +2

      @ Bryon. I am.. Its called 'CAPSOL-T'. Pass it along.

    • @butchbrewer4923
      @butchbrewer4923 5 лет назад

      Yas bitch

  • @BReal-10EC
    @BReal-10EC 5 лет назад +500

    I had several friends that were the smarted kids in my school. They were /heavily/ pressured by their parents, and were constantly told "we expect you to do amazing things" by everybody. The valedictorian got his doctorate, got married, then killed himself. Others burned out in college or shortly after (job politics), but remained alive and employed.. usually turning back to teaching to get out of the business rat-race.
    So yeah, one can easily burn out. Ambition must be tempered with mental health.
    Sometimes you just want to stop thinking.
    Our "success = wealth" culture definitely doesn't help our metal health.

    • @dreggory82
      @dreggory82 5 лет назад +18

      This comment is extremely good.

    • @EngelbertHumperdinck86
      @EngelbertHumperdinck86 5 лет назад +11

      Metal health will drive you mad.

    • @jdenmark1287
      @jdenmark1287 5 лет назад

      selection bias buddy. look it up

    • @omarabuaita3858
      @omarabuaita3858 5 лет назад +4

      @@ploopploopploopboop1887
      "MANY more people deserve praise for reletivity"
      Got into Caltech but doesn't even know how to spell "relativity". Nice bait.

    • @keirfarnum6811
      @keirfarnum6811 5 лет назад

      Omar Abuaita
      You mean “riletvity”?

  • @cosminblk8359
    @cosminblk8359 6 лет назад +1326

    Unfourtunatley, he shares the same birthday with the man with the lowest IQ in recorded history: Logan Paul
    IQ: probably under the level of the sea

    • @azarishere6442
      @azarishere6442 5 лет назад +21

      Anubis its over 9000 metars under the sea
      But honestly i dont think that those two are dumb, they probebly dis all of it on perpuse to get viral and rich. And the way that they act in thair videos is just an act

    • @ghanimkanugrahan7948
      @ghanimkanugrahan7948 5 лет назад +36

      Thanos would be proud. It's a balance you know.

    • @ruthikrysiak6155
      @ruthikrysiak6155 5 лет назад +9

      Don’t you know that iq is an absolute gimmick made by a French kindergarten teacher in the 1800s to see if the children knew what they were supposed to know

    • @bibtebo
      @bibtebo 5 лет назад +7

      Logan and jake share a birthday?

    • @liamobrien9451
      @liamobrien9451 5 лет назад +18

      If jake Paul was an idiot he wouldn't be so successful. He might be a sociopath with a knack for taking advantage of kids, but he is certainly not dumb

  • @PeachysMom
    @PeachysMom 2 года назад +29

    If his dad went to medical school, he was not a psychologist, he was a psychiatrist. Just a pet peeve of mine, as a psychiatrist

    • @mrjamsherable
      @mrjamsherable Год назад

      How does that make you feel, please go on. *pops pen in corner of mouth*

    • @joeycee2585
      @joeycee2585 Год назад +1

      ​@@jamieramone8216 😁

    • @briancase6180
      @briancase6180 Год назад +1

      Yes, it appears this detail is wrong; he was not an MD.

  • @jaywyse7150
    @jaywyse7150 4 года назад +137

    When you know uncommon knowledge, it is hard to relate to common people socially

  • @briefcaseblues6061
    @briefcaseblues6061 4 года назад +670

    When asked "how's it feel being the smartest man alive"? Einstein said "Idk, when you see Tesla ask him.

  • @tonydamiani8029
    @tonydamiani8029 4 года назад +359

    Imagine being surrounded by children your entire life. Folks who simply cannot understand you as much as they might want to, yet, being adults, they aren’t afraid to argue with you even though their ideas are to you idiotic. Humans aren’t wired to be alone, but this guy truly was alone even when surrounded by people.

    • @mndlessdrwer
      @mndlessdrwer 2 года назад +11

      Welcome to the entire premise of Flowers for Algernon. A story about a man brought out of the cave of idiocy to reach intellectual heights far beyond his fellow man, only to find that in brilliance lies a deep and pervasive loneliness, as nobody is truly capable of understanding you. It's a good, if incredibly sad, novel. It also has one of the more interesting narrative devices, in that it is written journalistically as a parallel frame narrative from the point of view of Charlie, the main character in the plot, and from the journal entries from the scientists operating the study which granted him his intellectual prowess through their experiments.

    • @logicss2893
      @logicss2893 2 года назад

      Most teachers in a nutshell

    • @cricticalthinking4098
      @cricticalthinking4098 2 года назад +8

      ​@ayy lmao This is kind of off topic, but you'll probably be happier watching birds than building spaceships. Everyone I know that can be considered "above average" in intelligence, not even necessarily genius, ends up struggling with the ramifications of their intelligence. "Your mind is a cruel master" is the words my therapist would use, and I agree with him. You will struggle to find brilliant historical figures who don't suffer from problems related to their mind. Heck, take it from me, your counterpart (also USA), who was also evaluated at a "12th grade reading level" in elementary school. In fact, all I did was read during my waking hours, so it makes sense that I would quickly master it. I suffer from high levels of anxiety (enough to give me panic attacks in the middle of the night), have no friends because of how I am socially, and insomnia because of how my mind won't turn off at night. And I only consider myself slightly above average, I perform well in school (college) with minimal effort, but I would say I lack creativity and motivation. I'm happiest when I'm relaxing over a good book, enjoying nature (don't discount birdwatching so quickly as a recreational activity!), and spending time with my family. I could be like Mr. William described in the video, and have been pressured by my parents, but luckily I wasn't. I have enough problems mentally without that on top of everything else!
      Here's my advice to you.
      1) Don't worry about how "smart" you are at this point in time. If you want to explore spaceflight, then go explore it. Hobbies are often more enjoyable than learning in a school setting, and my own strongest skills are things I learned on my own. Would you rather have been given some meaningless research assignment in the third grade instead?
      2) Don't overvalue intelligence. If anxiety disorder has taught me anything, it's that intelligence (thoughtfulness, problem solving, and learning ability) doesn't come without cost. The thinking part of you is only a small part of the whole, whether you like it or not. Finally, even if someone is very intelligent, there are still people that can do everything that person can do, and better. Remember that compared to the 7.9 billion people on this planet, you are but a frog at the bottom of the well.
      3) Try watching the birds sometimes. It's relaxing and can teach you how small you are compared to the everyday happenings on this planet. From your comment I can tell that you feel a bunch of resentment towards society as it stands today. If you've watched this video through, you'll find that being unhappy with the current state of things is a common mark of intelligence. However, society is out of your control as 7.9 billion other people make up human society as a whole. Apply your mind towards something you can control, rather than ruminate towards the things you can't, else you may find yourself in the same situation as me when your mind has been sufficiently trained to ruminate 24/7.

    • @solonada9602
      @solonada9602 2 года назад

      I wish I could become a genius. The ability to understand how the society is broken is actually good; you can use it to benefit yourself, to formulate new ideas. For example, I have created my own ideology, because I had realised how flawed our society is. I know I am more intelligent than the average person, but only by a few points, not by 2 whole standardized deviations. But I wish I was.

    • @RandyVidz
      @RandyVidz 2 года назад

      @@solonada9602 Well nobody is gonna understand you and we humans are social animals. We need people to understand us, we humans got our intelligence by walking on land getting more dominant instead of hiding in the trees eating fruits, we liked being in bands of 30-50 people. If one of those people in the band were significantly intelligent compared to the rest he would feel like they are really dumb and this will ofc create problems, like imagine the first person to ever use tools and then trying to explain it to the other people who basically have no deep understanding of knowing the physics of everyday objects enough to think that you can use them as tools. They don't even know what a tool is. I think it's a little depressing not being like the rest. You don't wanna be alone with your brain what's the point of it all then, what's the point in having a brain when nobody can understand it.

  • @phil4986
    @phil4986 Год назад +44

    William Sidis did not fail. As he constructed his revelations, he made sure he cataloged them in books and published them. William had an understanding that access to the information was more important than credit. It would be a fascinating project to track down all his books and especially any of his dissertations about fourth dimension theory he lectured on while in college.

    • @swiftycortex
      @swiftycortex 8 месяцев назад +1

      Sure would

    • @cringevidshub3767
      @cringevidshub3767 6 месяцев назад

      Regardless of what anyone says about him wasting potential he was a very peculiar person who only appeals to very peculiar people, and he made his name known among those people

  • @UATU.
    @UATU. 6 лет назад +531

    His intellect was his own, he didn’t owe humanity any performance or narrative satisfaction.

    • @funnyanimalshorts643
      @funnyanimalshorts643 6 лет назад +8

      No, but he owed himself a little success. Plus its sad his genetics couldn't be passed on.

    • @jfitz3133
      @jfitz3133 6 лет назад +31

      If you equate money with success, your vision is skewed.

    • @StopFear
      @StopFear 6 лет назад

      Allison how would you know that it was what he thought?

    • @animation1234111
      @animation1234111 5 лет назад +1

      Allison I wonder if he would’ve agreed with that. I mean he tried to change society for (at least what he though was) the better and got arrested for his troubles.

    • @animation1234111
      @animation1234111 5 лет назад +2

      Allison I mean he didn’t let a sense of obligation rule his life, but he tried to some extent.

  • @thenewtalkerguy496
    @thenewtalkerguy496 5 лет назад +271

    Who says anything went wrong? Just because you are smart means you have to devote your life to studying? Wth?

    • @nicholasreid1836
      @nicholasreid1836 5 лет назад

      On this sad case, it is good to read Amy Wallace's biography of Sidis called "The Prodigy". You can read s review of it at the following link, and it is good to read the comments section under the review, where there are comments by a distant cousin of Sidis. reidsreader.blogspot.com/search/label/THE%20PRODIGY%20%E2%80%93%20A%20Biography%20of%20William%20James%20Sidis

    • @TheRSFelon
      @TheRSFelon 5 лет назад +3

      Nicholas Reid How many times you gonna copy paste that? Is it a phishing link? Lol

    • @Arknio
      @Arknio 4 года назад +1

      It's his and anyone elses choice, but I believe if you have a gift that no one else has the right thing to do is use it to help everyone else.

    • @Loki-cd9nu
      @Loki-cd9nu 4 года назад +1

      @@TheRSFelon most likely a stolen link using grabify and he is taking people's ip would not click on if i was you

    • @jeffreyyoungblood7438
      @jeffreyyoungblood7438 4 года назад

      @@nicholasreid1836 I read his biography about 20 years ago. He lived a sad life. Love to read his relatives take on it.

  • @IvanNOFX
    @IvanNOFX 5 лет назад +480

    I went down into the comment section, came back up with cuts all over my body. So edgy down there, better be careful.

    • @IvanNOFX
      @IvanNOFX 5 лет назад +18

      Selim Sultan Akbar case in point...

    • @IvanNOFX
      @IvanNOFX 5 лет назад +17

      @Selim Sultan Akbar Thank you :) that's the first on RUclips.

    • @Pootisman213
      @Pootisman213 5 лет назад +36

      So many mega high IQ Rick and Morty fan Socialist nihilists in the comments, it's almost like I'm back in the 9th grade.

    • @evelynjordan2902
      @evelynjordan2902 5 лет назад +2

      That's too darn funny!!

    • @warpartyattheoutpost4987
      @warpartyattheoutpost4987 5 лет назад +4

      Delusions of grandeur galore!

  • @terrifictomm
    @terrifictomm 2 года назад +42

    Josh Waitzkin, the boy whose chess journey was featured in the movie, "Searching for Bobby Fisher," dropped out of chess and took up martial arts, primarily because he wanted to get out of his head.
    Wise kid. Not just smart.

  • @fuhkutube
    @fuhkutube 5 лет назад +537

    Leonardo da Vinci was great in the Titanic.

    • @logophile611
      @logophile611 5 лет назад +10

      fuhkutube lol

    • @gravewalker1632
      @gravewalker1632 5 лет назад +22

      I believe most of his paintings and inventions sunk with the Titanic but somehow he survived changing his name to play a part in the movie.

    • @captainzoltan7737
      @captainzoltan7737 5 лет назад +32

      ik so many people get him mixed up with the real genius and amazing inventor leonardo di caprio

    • @Michael-cg4un
      @Michael-cg4un 5 лет назад

      How can he said Leonardo da Vinci was one of the smartest? He was a fraud. He never invented anything, only draw some non functional doodles. Dumbass.

    • @bugzyhardrada3168
      @bugzyhardrada3168 5 лет назад +22

      @@Michael-cg4un
      Dude maybe you should take a look at history one more time
      Seems like, perhaps alot of the pages got stuck together when you glanced through it the last time.....

  • @geneticepistomology
    @geneticepistomology 4 года назад +405

    I grew up with a prodigy. I can remember our “graduation” from primary school, where he had to leave early because he was also receiving his bachelors in mathematics.from Duke the same day.

    • @DogDogGodFog
      @DogDogGodFog 4 года назад +9

      Wow tell me more?

    • @geneticepistomology
      @geneticepistomology 4 года назад +10

      Torbulentin What you like to know?

    • @qurrrat-ul-ain
      @qurrrat-ul-ain 4 года назад +14

      @@geneticepistomology where is that prodigy now? 🤔😳

    • @geneticepistomology
      @geneticepistomology 4 года назад +47

      A N N I E A professor at a major university (still too young for tenure, these days anyway). Many peer reviewed articles published. 40ish

    • @turkeyguy0
      @turkeyguy0 4 года назад +13

      That's not exactly a prodigy, That's just anyone who got sick of the slow pace of school and started studying on their own.

  • @RandomStuff-Nemo
    @RandomStuff-Nemo 4 года назад +325

    The smart people are the most confused. They have questions without answers.

    • @Andytlp
      @Andytlp 4 года назад +1

      @@kittystar4874 If thats u.s .... they eat like pigs and the food is awful. Youre supposed to prepare your own meals and it doesnt cost more than fast food garbage.

    • @pravinrao3669
      @pravinrao3669 4 года назад +1

      @@Archives007 Dude we simply exist why should there be a reason for existence. I mean our existence should have a different reason than a rocks existence.

    • @Oliver-bn7jt
      @Oliver-bn7jt 4 года назад +3

      @@Archives007 sociopathy overload

    • @archiedaga933
      @archiedaga933 4 года назад

      They have the answer without the question

    • @AZ-dp4ht
      @AZ-dp4ht 4 года назад +8

      @@kittystar4874 yeah you lost me at basic psychology, you should work on not sounding like a complete degenerate thats trying to come off as smart.

  • @bklaw1234
    @bklaw1234 Год назад +17

    My mother's mother, and William Sidis, were first cousins. My mother said he was always referred to in the family, as "Billy Sidis". She said his life was marked by great promise as well as much sadness.

    • @scottwarren4998
      @scottwarren4998 2 месяца назад

      did he solve any known math problem? what do you know about him?

  • @TonyChev
    @TonyChev 4 года назад +307

    Being more intelligent than others makes one feel isolated. You feel like you're living with children who can't understand your ideas.

    • @J.Millhouse
      @J.Millhouse 4 года назад +19

      A smart man is an idiot without humility. Figure out where you lie.

    • @NICEFINENEWROBOT
      @NICEFINENEWROBOT 4 года назад +24

      Living with ignorant children is not the worst. The crowds of ignorant adults spoil the soup.

    • @albatross1688
      @albatross1688 4 года назад +6

      @@NICEFINENEWROBOT Don't bother talking to Trump supporters. They really aren't worth your time and effort. I guess I can take pride in being more intelligent and articulate than the President of the United States in spite of by no means being a genius, but...that thought scares me more than anything.

    • @funkymunky7935
      @funkymunky7935 4 года назад +26

      @@albatross1688 Ok, bigot

    • @alexcerullo3143
      @alexcerullo3143 4 года назад

      Pat Broadbent a smart man is a smart man and an idiot is an idiot. That’s it.

  • @dgrando202
    @dgrando202 Год назад +6

    I like how you forgot to mention that Ted was a test subject for the Cia and under the watch of the educational institute to which he attended. Theodore didn't just go mad

  • @vermin5367
    @vermin5367 4 года назад +222

    *James at age 17:* bloody genius
    *Me at age 17:* _why is a hamburger called a ham-burger if it's made out of beef?🤔_

    • @devbali-q6f
      @devbali-q6f 4 года назад +26

      It's because it's from Hamburg

    • @freddybenelli9100
      @freddybenelli9100 4 года назад +3

      Who is James?

    • @marcruslytorralba2765
      @marcruslytorralba2765 4 года назад +5

      I made mine at home

    • @WatchfulHunter
      @WatchfulHunter 4 года назад

      Dead bull flesh did not sell many burgers. Excusing it saying it's from hamburg is an intentional deception. We know burgers. And this is known as a ham-burger. We also have cheeseburgers. Not Hamburgers with cheese. And it is not a sandwich from Hamburg, Germany.

    • @yxyz8150
      @yxyz8150 4 года назад +2

      what about hot-dog?

  • @kaisacat
    @kaisacat 4 года назад +349

    "Until 1919, when he was arrested for holding a political demonstration... which I didn't think you could be arrested for...?" Oh 2018, you sweet summer child.

    • @maskedmarvyl4774
      @maskedmarvyl4774 3 года назад +3

      I'm going to appropriate your phrase "sweet summer child"....

    • @mariusvanc
      @mariusvanc 3 года назад +5

      @@maskedmarvyl4774 "sweet summer of love child"

    • @patchr5491
      @patchr5491 3 года назад +2

      Lol people get arrested for that all the time. Jane Fonda did not to long ago and she's 82.

    • @paccawacca4069
      @paccawacca4069 3 года назад +1

      You still can't. Ditz

  • @RealTechZen
    @RealTechZen 6 лет назад +363

    I think it most likely that William Sidis found dealing with average people to be horribly tedious, and yet not worth the conflict of telling them so.
    Back around 1971, David Frost interviewed a man who was speculated to have the highest IQ of anyone then living. He asked if the fellow had faced difficulties as a child because he was so much smarter than those around him. The guest got a sort of peculiar expression and said, "I've never considered it from that point of view before! I always thought I had problems because everyone around me was so abjectly stupid!"

    • @Tsumami__
      @Tsumami__ 5 лет назад +9

      John Battey Similar to a line Vivien Leigh utters as Cleopatra in the film Cleopatra. Its not that I'm smart, it's that everyone else is so stupid! Lol

    • @King_Trakx
      @King_Trakx 5 лет назад +10

      So... as a kid, he didn't think of himself [as being smarter], but of others [how dumb they were; yet not in comparison, but simply that they were]? Interesting.
      Most people see life through their own perspective first and foremost, especially in adolescents.

    • @Sunnnnnnyyyyyyyyyy
      @Sunnnnnnyyyyyyyyyy 5 лет назад

      John Battey M

    • @diavolacciosatanasso
      @diavolacciosatanasso 5 лет назад +15

      Indeed the true curse of high intelligence is a world around you that looks hopelessly stupid. Which eventually sends you into seclusion.

    • @elgintv
      @elgintv 5 лет назад +1

      @Highland Kingman Nasty! But I guess you were borne too loose. (one of my girlfriends' trampstamps - I keep offering to correct the spelling, but she strangely demurs)

  • @joonasnaski9513
    @joonasnaski9513 3 года назад +66

    Smartness does not come with happiness.And this man is a perfect example.

  • @tarareneekennedy
    @tarareneekennedy 4 года назад +241

    I am by no means a genius, but was raised constantly being told that I was “gifted”, as I was always above my peers in school. I spent much of my elementary years in a “gifted and talented” program away from the other kids. When I moved on to middle school, again I was in one of these programs. In high school, I was pressured to take on college level courses and AP classes. I ended up intentionally dropping out of school at 16 and joining the work force instead because too much was being asked of me.
    I am turning 25 in a few days and my second son will be born around the end of this month. Only in the last few years have I finally gotten to the point of not feeling like a failure for not “living up to my potential”. My only goal now is to live a happy live and instill good values and confidence in my children, no matter what they decide to do or what society tells them.

    • @nepadron
      @nepadron 4 года назад +15

      Yes, MANY children (including myself) were accepted into the TAG program. In my opinion, way too many.
      Unfortunately, the open-ended program didn't produce much success. So you are far from alone, when describing that you didn't live up to this self-percieved benchmark of success. There are many elements that are involved in being both a gifted child, and a successful adult. Many, many gifted children become entitled and lazy, and continue that path towards adulthood. Some reject the title completely.

    • @zeroquanta4252
      @zeroquanta4252 4 года назад

      You couldn't have been too smart NOT to know that the Government scooped the guy up,,,,,

    • @andrewc1036
      @andrewc1036 4 года назад +12

      Be a good dad and you're a success

    • @chauxsitty
      @chauxsitty 4 года назад +4

      Thank you for this post. I have the same issue and I feel like a failure every day. . .

    • @jamessullivan1348
      @jamessullivan1348 4 года назад

      Happy belated birthday 🎂!

  • @darthsavage4025
    @darthsavage4025 6 лет назад +414

    My boss came up to my desk as I was watching this. He stuck around for a few minutes
    He says you should keep up the good work... and that I should actually start doing some work

    • @aleatoriac7356
      @aleatoriac7356 6 лет назад +9

      If someone tries that kind of psychological warfare nonsense you could show them this:
      alifeofproductivity.com/exactly-how-long-your-work-breaks-should-be/

    • @genericasian5699
      @genericasian5699 6 лет назад +28

      Aleatoriac The entire article sounds like the ramblings of the unemployment line. It's not psychological warfare. He was watching a video during work.

    • @darthsavage4025
      @darthsavage4025 6 лет назад +33

      haha yep, I was watching the video during work, so my boss's comment was 100% legit
      As was my comeback: "Calm down, you don't pay me by the hour." :)

    • @sertaki
      @sertaki 6 лет назад +5

      +Morbius, [insert ridiculous "insult" here]

    • @aleatoriac7356
      @aleatoriac7356 6 лет назад +7

      Generic Asian
      Dominance hierarchy is psychological warfare 101.
      Argumentum ad baculum coupled with naturalistic fallacy. It's short-sighted, irrational, and almost barely cognitive.
      Regarding the other comment about merit - the only merit that is rewarded in any of our cultures is abusive, ape-primitive dominance games. Then again, this is the usual equivocation of "merit" that I've come to expect in these kinds of conversations.

  • @dylandaw8610
    @dylandaw8610 4 года назад +191

    "True knowledge exists in knowing that you know nothing"
    -Socrates

    • @nodozhit
      @nodozhit 4 года назад +4

      Objectivity versus subjectivity

    • @phyl1283
      @phyl1283 4 года назад +6

      Socrates was a pessimist.

    • @72marshflower15
      @72marshflower15 4 года назад +11

      Intelligence is relative as everyone is stupid in their own ways...

    • @ZackScroggins
      @ZackScroggins 4 года назад +3

      "All we are is dust in the wind, dude"
      -Ted "Theodore" Logan

    • @NICEFINENEWROBOT
      @NICEFINENEWROBOT 4 года назад

      "... know not much" would have done, too.

  • @opalsirius8484
    @opalsirius8484 3 года назад +62

    5:40
    It's not about living up to expectations. Intelligent people make everyone around them feel inadequate and awakens a dark competitiveness that can be very hard for the genius to overcome if it's e v e r y person they know. Really smart people learn to keep their high intelligence under the radar but even so it's very lonely and the lack of stimulation from peers can drive them crazy. It's horrible for every remark made to be met with a sneer and eye roll; it's not just lonely, it's torture

  • @WJRHalyn-jw2ho
    @WJRHalyn-jw2ho 6 лет назад +137

    03:45 - Sounds like he was describing black holes, decades before they were acknowledged.
    He must've been a hell of an interesting conversationalist when he chose to be.

    • @christopherhall5361
      @christopherhall5361 5 лет назад +3

      black holes are just dense regions of space where gravity is so powerful light can't escape, just because time slows down the closer you get to the event horizon doesn't mean time moves backwards beyond it, all physics breaks down at that point and time becomes irrelevant

    • @fionatanzer5270
      @fionatanzer5270 5 лет назад +5

      Christopher Hall - but perhaps he was right and time does move backwards once in the black hole

    • @christopherhall5361
      @christopherhall5361 5 лет назад +1

      @@fionatanzer5270 well since we can't observe anything beyond the event horizon, we'll never know, but i'm willing to bet it doesn't

    • @wiczus6102
      @wiczus6102 5 лет назад +1

      you dont know what lorentz transform is. And black holes were acknowledged before he was born. chu chu hype train, lets get excited over nothing.

    • @demonemperor424
      @demonemperor424 5 лет назад

      general theory of relativity was published in 1915 so black holes were already within the minds of many scientists.

  • @drewpalmer5190
    @drewpalmer5190 5 лет назад +35

    Lmao learning 6 weeks worth of math in 3 days. Me every damn calc 2 mid term

  • @asgerms
    @asgerms 6 лет назад +128

    Imagine being that smart. No real "peers" to hang with. Everybody else is at the stage of an "8 year old" compared to you, constantly calling you weird because you're interested in music and astronomy; not spitting-contests. Hang with them or go do your own thing? (alone, ie. "weird recluse")

    • @DeeegerD
      @DeeegerD 6 лет назад +2

      I can relate - a world full of dimwits.

    • @muhammadabdullahhanif8860
      @muhammadabdullahhanif8860 6 лет назад +3

      When you are very smart no one can see what you see. You cannot become yourself if you socially interact with people. Because you afraid losing oneself and cannot connect with people you Will develop social anxiety and despise the people because you anxious when near people. If you want to become a great smart person you must able explain your knowledge and logic with simplicity so that people can understand you and you can help them become a smarter and better person.

    • @asgerms
      @asgerms 6 лет назад +5

      VIKDR : Your friends IQ is definately super high, but no so high as to rule out him join Mensa (or the like) where the IQ-requirements are in his ball-park (I think). Thus getting a level crowd that could carry a decent conversation with him. I believe that is why such organizations exist, not for snob-factor but to make life bearable for these individuals. But that Sidis guy with 250IQ? Well, if 100 is normal and 150 is genius. Try scaling it! I'm a normal 100IQ guy, but if I were in Sidis shoes that would put 99% of people at 40IQ (totally retarded) and even the Mensa crowd at 60IQ. Talk about being in solitary confinement for life!

    • @VIKDR1
      @VIKDR1 6 лет назад +5

      asgerms, if you saw my comment on another post, it looks like Sidis, while smart, was exaggerated, and there is no record of any IQ test. One comment about his IQ may have actually been his placement in a civil service exam. He fell at 251, which shouldn't have been the case with such a high IQ.
      There are actually higher IQ groups than Mensa. Mensa is an IQ of 130, or the top 2%. (98th percentile) He actually qualifies for the Prometheus Society. (99.997th percentile, or the top 0.003%)
      But I doubt he would be interested. He would be the type of person who would make fun of people who "pay to join a group that tells you that you are smart."

    • @101m4n
      @101m4n 6 лет назад +10

      Imagine feeling that way for your entire life. Trapped in a badly designed world, powerless to make a difference.

  • @mndlessdrwer
    @mndlessdrwer 2 года назад +74

    Welcome to the entire premise of Flowers for Algernon. A story about a man brought out of the cave of idiocy to reach intellectual heights far beyond his fellow man, only to find that in brilliance lies a deep and pervasive loneliness, as nobody is truly capable of understanding you. It's a good, if incredibly sad, novel. It also has one of the more interesting narrative devices, in that it is written journalistically as a parallel frame narrative from the point of view of Charlie, the main character in the plot, and from the journal entries from the scientists operating the study which granted him his intellectual prowess through their experiments.

    • @davidirizarry6216
      @davidirizarry6216 2 года назад +4

      I love that book from Daniel Keys.

    • @lucykinski
      @lucykinski 2 года назад +13

      I’m going to bring this down to my level of intelligence and ask you all to watch the episode of the Simpsons where they discover Homer has been living with a crayon wedged up his nose since he was little. They remove the crayon and he can’t deal with the repercussions so eventually has the crayon 🖍 put back. There really is a Simpsons episode for everything.

    • @mndlessdrwer
      @mndlessdrwer 2 года назад +8

      @@lucykinski Don't forget about the episode of SpongeBob where the top of Patrick's head comes off and they accidentally replace it with a chunk of Brain Coral. Patrick's personality changes completely as the brain coral makes him extremely intelligent, but he misses the more innocent friendship he had with SpongeBob, and decides to recreate the accident that made him smart. They end up finding that his head couldn't have been where he picked up the brain coral, and locate it, allowing Patrick to abandon his massive intellect to save his friendship with SpongeBob.

    • @2msvalkyrie529
      @2msvalkyrie529 2 года назад +3

      And great film with Cliff Robertson . .very moving ! I defy
      you not to tear up at the end.

    • @davidkugel
      @davidkugel 2 года назад +6

      I taught "Flowers for Algernon" to a Middle School English class over 20 years ago. The novel blew me away. "This brilliant book is too good to waste on 13-year-olds."
      I think of the writer of Ecclesiastes who said, ""The greater my wisdom, the greater my grief. To increase knowledge only increases sorrow."

  • @bix6139
    @bix6139 5 лет назад +84

    Poor man, he was treated like circus attraction =(
    And there's a crime that still remains undercover: social murder.

    • @TommyMedal
      @TommyMedal 5 лет назад +4

      I wish shitty parenting was a crime

    • @evanbrown6923
      @evanbrown6923 5 лет назад +1

      Social murder? Sounds like a new buzz word to make people even bigger pussies than they already are.

  • @mummyhuihui
    @mummyhuihui 4 года назад +75

    Child geniuses doing child geniuses stuff
    Me as a child : Booger taste salty

    • @mindmy609
      @mindmy609 3 года назад

      HAHAHA made my night never ate them but I flicked them

  • @Locut0s
    @Locut0s 6 лет назад +60

    This is sadly not that usual. Well this level of intelligence may have been but the phenomenon of unrealized potential is not at all. I am no genius what so ever, trust me I’m not lol. But I am smart, and I’ve struggled most of my life with emotional difficulties that have held me back. I know I have, or had, the potential for much more but instead I’ve worked retail jobs off and on over the years, when I was able to work. Don’t get me wrong I am not complaining, my life is good, many have it much harder. I simply mention my example to throw light on the fact that it takes much more than raw intelligence to succeed in this world. Much of that has to due with the harsh realities of what this world is like. It’s not a kind world. And so many of us are emotionally fragile. Equally as important as raw intelligence is emotional stability, a caring and loving support network, financial support, and honestly pure luck. Luck that one was not born in one of the world’s thousands of slums, luck that one didn’t have abusive parents, luck that one was loved and supported. Just think of how many Einsteins we have lost to the everyday cruelties and absurdities that constitute human life :-(

    • @soypepegarzacabrones5695
      @soypepegarzacabrones5695 6 лет назад +1

      Locut0s Lol it's a bit ironic that you have Brian from Family Guy. As he is considered to be stupid by both Stewie and Quagmire. Lol

    • @mightymystery9204
      @mightymystery9204 6 лет назад

      T. F. 32 Auto-correct often butchers words within a text, right as the author sends his document.

    • @mightymystery9204
      @mightymystery9204 6 лет назад +1

      Locut0s Add also, the negative energy many will send toward anyone who is different. Sometimes the social perception is greater than we acknowledge. Compare it to someone with a hangover in the presence of ordinary sounds.

    • @riptaway
      @riptaway 6 лет назад

      "I'm smart" you're pseudo smart. You think you're smart. Smart people think you sound like a hyperactive child

    • @litestuf
      @litestuf 5 лет назад

      You are quite intelligent. You write beautifully and have a great vocabulary. You are obviously well read. If there were more people like you on these W3 comment sections, it would be worth the time. Be happy.

  • @kitcutting
    @kitcutting 2 года назад +11

    "It takes great skill and talent to conceal one's skill and talent."
    - Francois de la Rochefoucauld

  • @lewisharbo2439
    @lewisharbo2439 6 лет назад +154

    notice really smart people don't seem to like other people?

    • @walden6272
      @walden6272 6 лет назад +10

      Thus I was told. My limit is 4 people at a time. JR makes excellent observation.

    • @christiantaylor1495
      @christiantaylor1495 6 лет назад +16

      JR Ah you must think you're very smart.

    • @iannordin5250
      @iannordin5250 6 лет назад +21

      You seem to have this idea that genius people fit the mold of introverted misanthropes, when in reality geniuses have a wealth of different personalities. Many well know geniuses lived full social lives and craved attention, devoted their lives to a cause, ect.

    • @frogman007
      @frogman007 6 лет назад +31

      The smarter you are, the fewer people you can relate to..

    • @ct92404
      @ct92404 6 лет назад +27

      No. But I have noticed a lot of special snowflake Millennials who think they're smart and love to claim they have "high functioning autism" but are actually just anti-social freaks.

  • @tasheemhargrove9650
    @tasheemhargrove9650 6 лет назад +104

    "What went wrong"?
    - Society. Society isn't structured with intelligence, and the use of it, as the highest priority. This is evident in how he was treated. Considered weird and crazy. Treated like a foreign object in the eyes of the media and pop culture.

    • @christiantaylor1495
      @christiantaylor1495 6 лет назад +8

      Tasheem Hargrove He made lots of money and was a successful inventor and author. Seems like society enabled him to meet every goal he went for to me.

    • @King_Trakx
      @King_Trakx 5 лет назад +2

      @Steve Ala So... you relate because you feel like an outcast due to the business certificates you achieved with your high IQ?
      Was your goal to become a meter man (there's nothing wrong with that) or are you still striving toward your goal?
      If you're willing to share, I'm genuinely interested.

    • @neomeg2232
      @neomeg2232 5 лет назад +4

      He grew up sharing a planet with several billion people that had an IQ 100 lower than him. Imagine the world calling you crazy for knowing how to tie your shoes because they all had down syndrome.

  • @Crazeddingo
    @Crazeddingo 4 года назад +85

    Imagine being told you were one of the smartest people the when you try to fix society no one listens.

    • @nickkerinklio8239
      @nickkerinklio8239 3 года назад +5

      No political movement will fix all of societies problems.

    • @nickkerinklio8239
      @nickkerinklio8239 3 года назад +2

      @ayy lmao if you can’t even keep composed while writing a RUclips comment, I can’t imagine what it’s like trying to have a discussion with you. Nobody cares who you hate.

    • @jesspavlichenko5745
      @jesspavlichenko5745 3 года назад +1

      @@nickkerinklio8239 Sure, but we don't need to choose ones that exasperate our problems. Capitalism had its chance and it has destroyed our planet and society

    • @nickkerinklio8239
      @nickkerinklio8239 2 года назад +1

      @@jesspavlichenko5745 what do you propose as a solution? Capitalism isn’t going to go away so long as humans can trade things of value

    • @jesspavlichenko5745
      @jesspavlichenko5745 2 года назад +3

      @@nickkerinklio8239 capitalism isn't "trading things" lol

  • @asahk7419
    @asahk7419 3 года назад +28

    "He blamed all societies problems on religion and capitalism" - YUP, this guy is a genius.

  • @eds6755
    @eds6755 4 года назад +85

    When you're really smart it's too easy to realize it's all a joke.

    • @linebeck1000
      @linebeck1000 3 года назад +5

      Underrated comment

    • @mariusvanc
      @mariusvanc 3 года назад

      It's really easy to get red pilled these days.

    • @disregardingsanity7005
      @disregardingsanity7005 3 года назад

      Aaand cue Eric Idle singing Always Look On The Bright Side Of Life.

    • @neilpeartspurplenose8739
      @neilpeartspurplenose8739 3 года назад +1

      "And what exactly, is a dream?..and what exactly is, a joke?" Syd Barrett

    • @barbaras6792
      @barbaras6792 3 года назад +1

      Being too clever, too beautiful, too rich, too much of anything can be destructive. People who are of average looks, wealth and intelligence are usually so much happier. They can have friends who just like them for being themselves.

  • @michaelhendry781
    @michaelhendry781 5 лет назад +137

    Douglas Adams got it right: “It startled him even more when just after he was awarded the Galactic Institute's Prize for Extreme Cleverness he got lynched by a rampaging mob of respectable physicists who had finally realized that the one thing they really couldn't stand was a smartass.” Most people don't like others that are smarter than they are. Smart people tend to get isolated (at least they don't get burned at the stake as much anymore).

    • @davidbeppler3032
      @davidbeppler3032 5 лет назад

      True, but on the other end, low IQ people can't find menial work jobs and end up being a huge drain on our government.

    • @MickeytheTorch
      @MickeytheTorch 5 лет назад

      @@davidbeppler3032 Jordan Peterson nails this aspect of it. They are the ones who's jobs are being automated away.

    • @marthajf73
      @marthajf73 5 лет назад +15

      Correct. This jealousy puts these geniuses outside our social norms. They simply can't function under the stupid confines of society

    • @Widestone001
      @Widestone001 5 лет назад +1

      "as much"... sadly, true.

    • @starrjean
      @starrjean 5 лет назад +3

      42

  • @stucrucify9774
    @stucrucify9774 5 лет назад +109

    Doesn't seem that strange to me that an exceptionally intelligent individual living within a broken system might experience social discomfort and even conflict within that brilliant psyche of theirs.

    • @foxleo6729
      @foxleo6729 5 лет назад +1

      Shows that at the highest levels of intelligence we tend to value our simplest instincts the most and our external societal pressures lose meaningful value.

    • @cdreid99999
      @cdreid99999 5 лет назад +1

      There is literally nothing people hate more than knowing youre smarter than they are. Which is why people with extraordinary iq's often learn to hide it. You ask others opinions. You allow people to make mistakesm you heap praise on people for doing things you are more capable of. Becausr its really not worth being hated for

    • @cdreid99999
      @cdreid99999 5 лет назад

      @@foxleo6729 where did you get that take from?

    • @foxleo6729
      @foxleo6729 5 лет назад +1

      @@cdreid99999 one of my own takes from the free behavioral health 101 class posted by Stanford University and seminars lectured by Robert Sapolsky

    • @cdreid99999
      @cdreid99999 5 лет назад

      @@foxleo6729 from having a genius level iq..

  • @johne5543
    @johne5543 3 года назад +31

    Trying to raise a child to know absolutely everything about everything and be the perfect human being in every possible way, what could go wrong?

  • @greencertifiedweb
    @greencertifiedweb 6 лет назад +54

    One problem people overlook with regard to intelligence is the loneliness... The lack of people who can stimulate you in conversation or even understand what you're thinking or talking about at the same level of consciousness.
    This point was touched on briefly in "Good Will Hunting" when he got angry at his instructor for not understanding that the math the instructor was so challenged by was like breathing for Will! It would also explain why he was so willing to work construction and drink with his buddies. In that situation, he could turn it off, the benign chatter wouldn't challenge him but it wouldn't frustrate him either.

    • @jeffwillsea6757
      @jeffwillsea6757 5 лет назад +1

      My uncle drank so that common life wouldn't bore him either. Problem was that through it he also lost his morals.

    • @gablo1089
      @gablo1089 5 лет назад

      @@jeffwillsea6757 Are you just commenting this on every post god damn lol.

  • @Luna3141592
    @Luna3141592 4 года назад +39

    The kind of pressure put on William Sidis is EXACTLY the sort of thing to break someone. Being raised to believe he's the single most extraordinary person on the planet might sound like a great life, but it's been significantly proven that "golden children" grow up to have high rates of depression, anxiety, substance abuse, and to be generally unstable because no one ever taught them how to just be a person.

  • @rhess10
    @rhess10 4 года назад +44

    As you sit alone contemplating, be assured you're the smartest person in the room.

    • @sandilou2U
      @sandilou2U 4 года назад +2

      Thanks. I needed that.

    • @tosvus
      @tosvus 4 года назад

      LOL - That's funny. My main frustration is that if I am in a room with 499 other people, there is one person that is as smart, or smarter than me. Drives me bonkers.. (of course that is a statistical average, and in this comment section, there are surely several that are smarter, unlike virtually ALL OTHER RUclips CHANNELS.

    • @ThaSandwitch
      @ThaSandwitch 4 года назад +1

      That's why I never leave my room! :P

    • @macklinillustration
      @macklinillustration 4 года назад +1

      But I have a plant in the room

    • @lick28
      @lick28 4 года назад +1

      @@macklinillustration that plant might have figured out most things that exist in the universe, don't fall behind.

  • @aswania305
    @aswania305 2 года назад +2

    The fact that the smartest man who ever lived was born on April 1st *April fool's day* :)

  • @wernhardbierbauerthefourth2476
    @wernhardbierbauerthefourth2476 6 лет назад +148

    Sidis is such a cool last name. Sounds like a sith lord or some kind of deadly disease...

    • @latrellsprewell653
      @latrellsprewell653 6 лет назад +5

      Wernhard Bierbauer The Fourth he was a Sith Lord. It's been proven by top scientists.

    • @FireworksAndHurricanes
      @FireworksAndHurricanes 5 лет назад +10

      Plus, his last name is palindromic. Meaning, it's spelled the same backward as it is forward. Pretty short but neat surname.

    • @irisfainberg7623
      @irisfainberg7623 5 лет назад +3

      Im israeli, never thought of it that way since i hear that family name alot :)

    • @dillondrozario1613
      @dillondrozario1613 5 лет назад +5

      Lord sidious

    • @HumanimalChannel
      @HumanimalChannel 5 лет назад +1

      @@FireworksAndHurricanes thanks Edward for remembering what I couldn't...palindrome...I woulda for there eventually but you saved me the frustration!

  • @MattsCollection
    @MattsCollection 6 лет назад +159

    Super Geniuses...like Wile E. Coyote.

    • @Lakermallow3
      @Lakermallow3 6 лет назад

      That's EXACTLY what I thought when he said that! I laughed so hard I cried.

    • @robertplatt643
      @robertplatt643 6 лет назад +1

      How much start-up money would Acme Labs get today in Silicon Valley? They'd probably be millionaires!

    • @LordPrometheous
      @LordPrometheous 6 лет назад +1

      Matt C he was smart enough to acquire countless delivery packages and never had a paying job to cover the expenses. I assume rocket engines are very expensive, and he had many of these.

    • @marthajf73
      @marthajf73 5 лет назад

      Perfect

  • @neohippe1
    @neohippe1 4 года назад +15

    Smartest man that you know of!-).
    There are even smarter genius’ that are usually hermits. Hermits because they are smart enough to stay away from all the neuronorms!-)

  • @Trillyana
    @Trillyana 3 года назад +53

    This is probably how I was seen when I was able to read and comprehend the New York Times in preschool and full novels in Kindergarten. I was tested at a 5th grade reading and math level before I started Kindergarten, but sadly the more time went on the more my peers caught up. Probably because I left my education up to my schooling and didn't try to learn on my own. I would go to classes, do my homework, and study a tiny amount for exams and that was it. Feels like a waste now.

    • @mndlessdrwer
      @mndlessdrwer 2 года назад +6

      I fell into a similar rut, but came to the understanding that my intellectual capacity simply doesn't allow me to dive into the finer minutiae of any given subject. Instead, I am doomed to understand the surface level concepts by which things operate, and be able to quickly assimilate and synthesize information, only for said knowledge to quickly fade from memory and the remnants are not particularly useful. I believe that most of my problems stem from a lack of motivation and poor long-term memory conversion. I just don't find joy in learning the non-applicable underpinnings of various fields, and my memory is too poor for things like programming, chemistry, etc. I guess this is why I succeed so well in literary analysis instead of mathematics or physics or chemistry. I made it through four levels of Calculus and a class on the Theory of Mathematics before hitting my wall on the subject. I made it to Modern Physics and Optical physics before encountering the same problem. Chemistry, well, that I had the good sense to give up before I made it to Organic Chemistry, since there only madness lies.

    • @BradPwnsU
      @BradPwnsU 2 года назад +2

      Hahahaha you were seen as the smartest person ever? Mm ok anime profile picture. Lmao

    • @mobydick1316
      @mobydick1316 Год назад +1

      I hope your mom cooks good spaghetti for you man. 🙂

  • @shizukamori6755
    @shizukamori6755 4 года назад +36

    I only have average intelligence, but I'm smart enough to realize I can't change the world, or fix humanity's problems, or whatever. So I just live my life in peace and quiet, doing what I love and minding my own business.

    • @gbaker9295
      @gbaker9295 4 года назад

      That's right. Do what you can and be kind to people. Can't carry the weight of the world alone

    • @phyl1283
      @phyl1283 4 года назад +1

      ...nothing wrong with that. If you aspire to nothing, you seldom fail.

    • @whatsupbudbud
      @whatsupbudbud 4 года назад +5

      I would consider my intelligence to be above average but I've come to the same conclusion. What I've found is that people like being ignorant. The only driving force for people is self-interest, so anything and anyone who comes in the way will be the enemy. Powerful people know this very well, hence they're in power and the stupidity of the world continues. Sadly, the older I get the more I seem to accept that L value in the Drake equation tends to tilt towards zero.

    • @cantthinkofnameyeah7249
      @cantthinkofnameyeah7249 4 года назад +1

      Every prerson hes many daily problems that could be solved by simple inventions and every so often one of those problems is significantly commonplace to others also. If every person looked to save a couple thousand to pay for a patent we live in a highly efficient world

    • @cantthinkofnameyeah7249
      @cantthinkofnameyeah7249 4 года назад

      *has

  • @brynstarkiller7419
    @brynstarkiller7419 4 года назад +6

    His head literally exploded

  • @Nobe_Oddy
    @Nobe_Oddy 5 лет назад +52

    I was considered a child prodigy when I was umm, well, a uh, child. I was always top of my class, in a very selective program called "Project Think" and surpassed all the other in there. I excelled in science and math, and was always told how smart I was and was constantly pushed to be the "smartest" guy in the room. Well after realizing that my peers felt differently about me than other (I think I may have talked down to everyone and didn't realize it)I decided that I didn't want to be "smart" anymore. I stopped doing my homework in order to hangout with the few friends I did have. I stopped attending the top classes in favor of easier, more intermediate subjects that were more "fun" I chose a social life over an intellectual one.
    Well I ended up hanging out with the "wrong" crowd and started trying drugs. This lead to trying ALL the drugs and eventually turned into "the all to common" opiate addiction. I am now 38 years old, still living with my elderly parents, jobless, on welfare, 1 years into methadone treatment, a soon-to-be grandparent, no social life, and FULL of regrets.
    So their are probably MANY stories of people just like Mr. Sidis here. Not too many, but a DECENT AMOUNT of stories similar to Einstein, Newton, Hawking, and Musk. Unfortunately there are WWAAAYYYY TOO MANY tales that end up like mine, with A LOT of them turning into something much worse end with death. But we can say that there are only a handful that wound up as perverted and pathetic as Petty Little Teddy's. (he doesn't deserve a cool name like the Unibomber)
    So child prodigies come in all shapes and sizes. Most turn out to be good success stories. Other, ehhhh... not so much. But if you ever come across one in your travels, then please try to give them a lil push in the right direction - you never know how much good you may have just done.
    :)

    • @lbovee
      @lbovee 5 лет назад +6

      Tweedle My brother-in-law’s story is similar to yours. I was always a little envious of his abilities. Long story short, he lived most of his life homeless in Hawaii. Haven’t been able to make contact in several years. Pretty sure he is deceased. Thanks for sharing your story.

    • @onesciencedad
      @onesciencedad 5 лет назад +19

      You're 38. Life is not over. Use the compound effect to your benefit starting now. Let the first half be the warning and the second half the example and Inspiration. You're going to have to work hard to regain neural plastsity (think 30K Vit D3) and set a plan. Dont bow to your past don't wish to be who you could be. Realize who you are and build a better world. We're counting on you.

    • @mikakorhonen5715
      @mikakorhonen5715 5 лет назад +11

      "If you are smartest in the room, you are in the wrong room." -Jordan Peterson

    • @thathobbitlife
      @thathobbitlife 5 лет назад +1

      Recovery person here, just wanted to say great job on your recovery!! I realize everyone's road to recovery is different, and nobody's is the same. So I try to get others to remain open, especially when it comes to MAT like methadone or subutex. I'm just passed 9 years clean using the MAT (medicated assisted therapy) to stay sober. Anyways, I'm 36, we are never too old to start over 😁

    • @onesciencedad
      @onesciencedad 5 лет назад +2

      @veronica carlson Learning to find the sweet lesson in our bitter mistake memories are our recipe for the future. We cannot change our past, only where we decide to shine the most light. Yeah, and other aphorisms, too.

  • @anthonyd8997
    @anthonyd8997 2 года назад +2

    Shows you intelligence doesn’t mean much, some of the wealthiest billionaires aren’t the smartest people they just had great ideas 💡

  • @tomorowsnobodys
    @tomorowsnobodys 3 года назад +13

    Not surprising that the smartest person ever thought capitalism was ruining society.

    • @stroys7061
      @stroys7061 3 года назад

      Not surprising that he was dysfunctional, too.

    • @tomorowsnobodys
      @tomorowsnobodys 3 года назад

      Thanks Michael Colons

    • @TetraSamurai
      @TetraSamurai 3 года назад

      Also doesn’t take a genius to realize communism won’t ever work due to human nature

  • @rag_llm
    @rag_llm 6 лет назад +851

    What was I doing at age 6? At age 5 I successfully created the first time machine. I traveled back to the days of the Vikings and had a wonderful time with Olaf the Conqueror attacking villages and drinking tons of ale (they even made me a little battle ax and tiny armor!). Unfortunately someone mistook me for a ammunition and launched me with a catapult. I landed badly on my head (but at least I wiped out several enemy sheep). Due to that brain injury I became profoundly stupid. Fortunately, the time machine was programmed to automatically return me to the present time but due to a misplaced semi-colon in the code, self-destructed taking the design plans with it so I have no proof. I lived out the rest of my life as an ordinary computer programmer until last year when I died during a bad flamingo racing accident. Even on my last day, I still had a fond passion for pillaging.

    • @vtlman
      @vtlman 6 лет назад +44

      Sorry to hear that.

    • @Rose_Harmonic
      @Rose_Harmonic 6 лет назад +32

      and now zombie you just prowls the youtube comments :P

    • @rag_llm
      @rag_llm 6 лет назад +2

      lol. Are you a fellow Cryptozombies fan?

    • @Rose_Harmonic
      @Rose_Harmonic 6 лет назад +2

      no actually. that was just the sort of remark I chose to make. It's funny how we can accidentally reference something you might not know about.

    • @jeremymahrer1832
      @jeremymahrer1832 6 лет назад +1

      Asterix and The Goths........thats the book you need.

  • @kukifitte7357
    @kukifitte7357 5 лет назад +141

    He would've loved Rick and Morty....

    • @gr8645
      @gr8645 5 лет назад +1

      Or be a RL Rick!

    • @saeedsaeed6818
      @saeedsaeed6818 5 лет назад +7

      Nah the absolute opposite would happen he will hate the show

    • @blakegriffin384
      @blakegriffin384 5 лет назад +6

      Its really not that profound. If you were to propose a few tired sci-fi tropes in some novel way in a work of fiction, you too could be viewed unjustly as a genius. Stripped of Its glossy veneer, its an entertaining cartoon that makes use of some of the more mundane elements of your average high school or college level philosophy course, but because most people have never been exposed to the subject matter in any meaningful way, they react to it like primates being visited by aliens.

    • @grrmonkey
      @grrmonkey 5 лет назад +3

      How did no one get the joke

    • @bryhtstar
      @bryhtstar 5 лет назад +3

      grrmonkey It’s a dead meme

  • @LMICUK
    @LMICUK 2 года назад +11

    When you're smart (in what ever form that may be) it's hard to switch your mind off.. he sounds like he was a brilliant man but when you that aware of the world you will always be haunted by the bad parts of human nature as it's only logical to do so✌🏾

  • @jackalnerf6230
    @jackalnerf6230 4 года назад +19

    Poor guy, I dealt with a plethora of mental problems throughout my childhood because of the pressure I got for my intelligence, I can't imagine dealing with that he did.

  • @MrBluemanworld
    @MrBluemanworld 6 лет назад +38

    Never heard of him, very sad. It's something to think about

    • @TheVariableConstant
      @TheVariableConstant 5 лет назад +1

      Wow that's impressive you havent but probably expected. His godfather and uncle was William James, one of the most intelligent and influential American academics in history...

  • @JavierCR25
    @JavierCR25 6 лет назад +30

    So much pressure on a child probably wasn’t good. While his intellect was far advanced his emotional capacity wasn’t anywhere near developed. Certain environments don’t only require intellect but rather the emotional rationale only given by experience. Just my 2 cents.