IMO, (certain tests) (are) far more useful to society as a criterion for disqualifying idiots from being allowed to squat in high places — 180 Proof
"deplorable state of many developed societies (re: climate change, WMD proliferation, human trafficking, neoliberalization, etc) — 180 Proof
I've heard that Von Neumann was to brilliant people as brilliant people are to normal people, and it's the brilliant people who said so (and who else would be in a position to do so?).
Probably Von Neumann would or did destroy an IQ test, but that's trivial compared to the work he did, which is what surely impressed those brilliant people who could half-understand him (or rather understand him by taking much longer than he did to arrive at the thought.) — hanaH
That is probably true, although we cannot get them to do a test. I have read that Einstein's IQ was "only" about 160, but I don't know if he was tested or if it is an estimate. — Janus
I suggest you take a look a Chris Langan's "CTMU Theory". The highest IQ in the world, or at least in the US.
It's quite remarkable. — Manuel
Then why your glum OP? — baker
the philosophy of the Stoics isn't the philosophy of someone who has given up on life, it's not quietism; it's also not the philosophy of someone who is simply trying to develop a soothing narrative for their troublesome life. No, it's the philosophy of someone who is proactive; someone who seeks to be in control, but who also recognizes the limits of it. And who never gives up. The best description I can think of for this is "ambitious".
(This also seems to be the aspect of Stoicism that is so appealing to modern enterpreneurs among whom the philosophy of Stoicism has a mesure of popularity.) — baker
As you were/are/will be. — Amity
If Shawn registers - might be interesting to compare thoughts. — Amity
Stoicism occurs naturally when all passion is spent, (...) — unenlightened
Well you are the expert in this, but you don't read satisfied. — unenlightened
Desire and fear are the push-me-pull-you pet of the failed stoic; they relate to the future. To be fearful of desire, or desirous of escaping fear is to be caught up in the world. — unenlightened
Be caught up in the world, therefore, while you can. There will be time enough to be a stoical corpse. — unenlightened
Are you trolling me? — TonesInDeepFreeze
What? .999... is not a sequence. It's a number. That number is 1. — TonesInDeepFreeze