…a hypothetical
source of individual differences in general ability, which
represents individuals’ abilities to perceive relationships and to derive
conclusions from them. The general factor is said to be a basic ability that
underlies the performance of different varieties of intellectual tasks, in
contrast to specific
factors, which are alleged each to be unique to a single task. Even
theorists who posit multiple mental abilities have often suggested that a
general factor may underlie these (correlated) mental abilities… [postulated
in 1904 by Charles Spearman].
American
Psychological Association
One of the most
striking findings in psychology is that almost all cognitive abilities are
positively related – on average, people who are better at a skill like
reasoning are generally also better at a skill like vocabulary. This fact
allows scientists and educational practitioners to summarize people’s skills on
a wide range of domains as one factor – often called ‘g’, for ‘general
intelligence’. Despite this, the mechanisms underlying ‘g’ and its development
remain somewhat mysterious.
“What this so-called
‘g-factor’ means is still very much up for debate,” explains researcher Rogier
Kievit of the Cognition and Brain Science Unit at the University of Cambridge.
“Is it a causal factor, an artefact of the way we create cognitive tests, the
result of our educational environment, a consequence of genetics, an emergent
phenomenon of a dynamic system or perhaps all of these things to varying
degrees?” “
Association for
Psychological Science, “Cognitive
Abilities Seem to Reinforce Each Other in Adolescence”
Thanks to work
pioneered by Charles Spearman, we know that in Western populations performance
on a range of mental tasks seems to reflect a more basic mental ability, a
“general intelligence” or simply g.
You can’t see g –
it’s a statistical reality more than anything else, but it’s very robust, and
modern research suggests that the g factor accounts for roughly half the
variability in performance within and between people on all kinds of mental
tests. Being strong verbally doesn’t guarantee you will be mathematical too,
but it tips the odds strongly in your favour…
…The analysis
covered nearly 100 datasets from 31 cultures including Thailand, Uganda, Papau
New Guinea, Guyana – from every inhabited continent and world region save
Europe and Australia. The median sample size was 150, but due to some very
large samples Warne and Burningham were working with 50,000 participants in
all. They wanted to explore which cultures and which sets of tasks featured
performance variation that could be reduced down to one factor akin to g, and
which would firmly resist…
…Using Warne and
Burningham’s rules, between three quarters and four-fifths of the datasets
immediately yielded just one factor that explained variability in participants’
performance across different tests. In other cases, two underlying factors
emerged, but these were similar enough to also end up reducing to one factor in
a second round of analysis, saving one single exception.
British
Psychological Association, “New
cross-cultural analysis suggests that g or “general intelligence” is a human
universal” (Alex Fradera)
Intelligence remains
a fascinating topic for some, while intelligence quotient or IQ continues its
decades-long slide into cultural minor relevance, if not irrelevance, to most
of the public. Nonetheless, from time to time, there emerges a number of
popular writings on the subject. These can include listings of the who’s who in
the history of IQ or the smartest such-and-such at a particular there-and-then.
The purpose of this article is to provide some clarification based on the
reportage done. In turn, this particular article is for journalists.
One of the more relevant facts is the diminishment within the popular discourse about IQ. Another is the potential for mistakes in the reportage or a conflation of a number of different factors about IQ as estimated about historical figures and of contemporary people. If looking at historical figures, especially far historical figures, an important point for journalists in this domain are the considerations of the estimations of the historical figures versus real measurements.
Which is to say,
historical figures cannot have been measured, by and large, because they
existed before the era of formal IQ testing. As well, even if they lived in the
era of the heights of respect and drive for IQ testing, they may not have been
measured. Both seem as if relevant and important considerations here. Similarly,
we can take the cases of the modern measurements of individuals with the claims
to the highest recorded IQ scores. Some important items to consider, including
terminology. On terms, there exist expert and reliable professional association
views on the subject matter.
The ones relevant here include Assessment of Intelligence, Deviation IQ, Intelligence, IQ, Measures of Intelligence, Percentile, Population Standard Deviation, Ratio IQ, Stanford–Binet Intelligence Scale (SB), Standard Deviation, Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale (WAIS), Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children (WISC), and Z-Score/z-score. Although, the American international diminution continues apace and, in consequence, its institutions. The American Psychological Association remains a respected organization in psychology. All definitions from the American Psychological Association (APA) dictionary:
Assessment of
Intelligence: the administration of standardized tests to determine an
individual’s ability to learn, reason, understand concepts, and acquire
knowledge.
Deviation IQ: the absolute measure
of how far an individual differs from the mean on an individually administered
IQ test. This is the approach now most commonly used in standard IQ tests. A
reported deviation IQ is a standard score on an IQ test that has a mean of 100
and a standard deviation specific to that of the test administered, usually 15
or 16 for intelligence tests. The test scores represent a deviation from the
mean score rather than a quotient, as was typical in the early days of IQ
testing.
Intelligence: n. the
ability to derive information, learn from experience, adapt to the environment,
understand, and correctly utilize thought and reason.
Intelligence
Quotient: a standard measure of an individual’s intelligence level based on
psychological tests. In the early years of intelligence testing, IQ was
calculated by dividing the mental
age by the chronological
age and multiplying by 100 to produce a ratio IQ. This
concept has now mostly been replaced by the deviation IQ, computed as a
function of the discrepancy of an individual score from the mean (or average)
score. The mean IQ is customarily 100, with slightly more than two thirds of
all scores falling within plus or minus 15 points of the mean (usually one
standard deviation). More than 95% of all scores fall between 70 (two standard
deviations below the mean) and 130 (two standard deviations above the mean).
Some tests yield more specific IQ scores, such as a verbal IQ, which measures verbal intelligence,
and a performance IQ, which measures nonverbal intelligence.
Discrepancies between the two can be used diagnostically to detect learning
disabilities or specific cognitive deficiencies. Additional data are often
derived from IQ tests, such as performance speed, freedom from distractibility,
verbal comprehension, and perceptual
organization indices. There are critics who consider the concept of IQ
(and other intelligence scales) to be flawed. They point out that the IQ test
is more a measure of previously learned skills and knowledge than of underlying
native ability and that many participants are simply not accustomed to sitting
still and following orders (conditions that such tests require), although they
function well in the real world. Critics also refer to cases of
misrepresentation of facts in the history of IQ research. Nevertheless, these
problems seem to apply to the interpretation of IQ scores rather than the
validity of the scores themselves.
Measures of
Intelligence: a series of norm-referenced tests used to determine an individual’s
ability to learn, reason, understand concepts, and acquire knowledge.
Percentile: the location of
a score in a distribution expressed as the percentage of cases in the data set
with scores equal to or below the score in question. Thus, if a score is said
to be in the 90th percentile, this means that 90% of the scores in the
distribution are equal to or lower than that score.
Population Standard
Deviation: (symbol: σ) a value indicating the dispersion of scores in a
complete population of
interest, that is, how narrowly or broadly the scores deviate from the mean. In many research settings, the
population standard deviation is estimated from the sample standard deviation,
but when information about the full set of units is known, it can be calculated
directly.
Ratio IQ (from
“Intelligence Quotient”): In the early years of intelligence testing, IQ was
calculated by dividing the mental
age by the chronological
age and multiplying by 100 to produce a ratio IQ. This
concept has now mostly been replaced by the deviation IQ, computed as a
function of the discrepancy of an individual score from the mean (or average)
score.
Standard Deviation: a measure of the
variability of a set of scores or values within a group, indicating how
narrowly or broadly they deviate from the mean. A small standard deviation
indicates data points that cluster around the mean, whereas a large standard
deviation indicates data points that are dispersed across many different
values. The standard deviation is expressed in the same units as the original
values in the sample or population studied, so that the standard deviation of a
series of measurements of weight would be in pounds, for example.
Stanford–Binet
Intelligence Scale (SB): a standardized assessment of intelligence and
cognitive abilities for individuals of ages 2 to 89 years. It currently
includes five verbal subtests and five nonverbal subtests that yield Verbal,
Nonverbal, and Full Scale IQs (with a mean of 100 and a standard deviation of
15) as well as Fluid Reasoning, Knowledge, Quantitative Reasoning,
Visual-Spatial Processing, and Working Memory index scores. The Stanford–Binet
test was so named because it was brought to the United States in 1916 by Lewis
M. Terman, a professor at Stanford University, as a revision and extension of
the original Binet–Simon Scale (the first modern intelligence test) developed
in 1905 by Alfred Binet and French physician Théodore Simon (1873–1961) to
assess the intellectual ability of French children. The present Stanford–Binet
Intelligence Scale (SB5), developed by U.S. psychologist Gale H. Roid (1943– )
and published in 2003, is the fourth revision of the test; the first and second
revisions were made by Terman and U.S. psychologist Maud Merrill (1888–1978)
and published in 1937 and 1960, respectively; and the third revision, by U.S.
psychologists Robert L. Thorndike (1910–1990), Elizabeth P. Hagen (1915–2008),
and Jerome M. Sattler (1931– ), was published in 1986.
Wechsler Adult
Intelligence Scale (WAIS): an intelligence test for individuals 16 to 90 years
of age. The WAIS was originally published in 1955 (revised in 1981) as a
modification of and replacement for the Wechsler–Bellevue Intelligence
Scale (WBIS, 1939), which consisted of subtests that yielded
separate verbal and performance IQs as well as an overall IQ. The third edition
(WAIS–III, 1997) included seven verbal subtests (Information,
Comprehension, Arithmetic, Similarities, Digit Span, Vocabulary, Letter–Number
Sequencing) and seven performance subtests (Digit Symbol, Picture Completion,
Block Design, Picture Arrangement, Object Assembly, Matrix Reasoning, Symbol
Search). Depending on the specific combination of subtests administered, the
test yielded a Verbal Comprehension, a Perceptual Organization, a Processing
Speed, and a Working Memory index score; a Verbal IQ, a Performance IQ, and a
Full Scale IQ with a mean of 100 and a standard deviation of 15; or both index
scores and IQs. The current version, WAIS–IV (2008), retains
most of the subtests of the WAIS–III but has modified some and added three new
ones (Visual Puzzles, Figure Weights, and Cancellation). Irs core battery of 10
subtests yields a Full Scale IQ and index scores on the same four domains of
cognitive ability (verbal comprehension, perceptual organization, processing
speed, and working memory). [David Wechsler]
Wechsler
Intelligence Scale for Children (WISC): an intelligence test
developed initially in 1949 and standardized for children of ages 6 years to 16
years 11 months. It currently includes 10 core subtests (Similarities,
Vocabulary, Comprehension, Block Design, Picture Concepts, Matrix Reasoning,
Digit Span, Letter–Number Sequencing, Coding, Symbol Search) and five
supplemental subtests (Word Reasoning, Information, Picture Completion,
Arithmetic, Cancellation) that measure verbal comprehension, perceptual
reasoning, processing speed, and working memory capabilities, yielding index
scores for each as well as a Full Scale IQ with a mean of 100 and a standard
deviation of 15. The most recent version of the test is the WISC–IV, published
in 2003. [David Wechsler]
Z-Score, or z-score: the standardized score that
results from applying a z-score transformation to raw data. For
purposes of comparison, the data set is converted into one having a
distribution with a mean of 0 and a standard deviation of 1. For example,
consider a person who scored 30 on a 40-item test having a mean of 25 and
standard deviation of 5, and 40 on an 80-item test having a mean of 50 and a
standard deviation of 10. The resulting z scores would be +1.0 and
–1.0, respectively. Thus, the individual performed better on the first test, on
which he or she was one standard deviation above the mean, than on the second
test, on which he or she was one standard deviation below the mean.
Most IQ tests have
an average or a mean set at 100. The standard deviations, typically, include
one of 15, 16, or 24. To be 2 standard deviations above the average or mean of
100, this would be IQs of 130, 132, or 148, respectively. Journalistic
reportage should differentiate between these terms and the meanings. If, for
example, a confusion between an IQ of 130, 132, and 148, as if on a standard
deviation of 15, then the rarities would be the differences between 1 out of 44
people, 1 out of 61 people, and 1 out of 1,455 people. The difference between 1
out of 44 people and 1 out of 1,455 people is large, easily noticeable in
rarities, but not if confusing the standard deviations and the numbers.
Another common
confusion is the degree to which alternative tests become confused with
mainstream intelligence tests. For the mainstream intelligence tests, these are
developed by professional psychologists and measure general intelligence better
than alternative tests by a large margin, for the most part. Some alternative
tests may garner titles as alternative intelligence tests in some
future, as in measuring a scientific construct or psychological construct
called general intelligence, or g.
Mainstream
intelligence tests tend to reasonably measure g between IQs of 40 and
160 on an SD or standard deviation of 15, which means 1 out of 31,560 people in
the not-so-gifted to the gifted ranges, respectively, incorporating the regular
range or most people. Alternative tests, typically, become interesting to the
high-IQ communities in the ranges above 160 on an SD of 15. Some will measure
in SDs of 15, others 16, still others 24. These remain cautionary notes.
The alternative tests can be found in domains of specialized measurement, e.g., verbal, numerical, and spatial tests, or some admixture, and, often, untimed tests, even timed tests, too. In addition, as far as I know, most or all alternative tests are online, through mail (e.g., USPS), and/or non-proctored or without a qualified and trained professional to observe the person. Some tests are taken under pseudonyms or fake names, several times.
The mainstream
intelligence tests can be found in domains of timed, proctored, multi-factorial
examinations based on large sample sizes running through decades and decades of
rigorous methodological administration, analysis, restructuring based on analysis,
and re-administration in new and improved forms. The alternative landscape is
vast while the mainstream intelligence test landscape seems smaller
while being decent in size. Some posit the gold standards of the mainstream
intelligence test world in the Wechsler Intelligence Scales and the
Stanford–Binet Intelligence Scales with an apparent stronger preference for the
former of the two.
Another difference
should be made between ratio IQs/childhood IQs and adult IQs/deviation IQs. The
definitions of which remain above, where the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale
(WAIS) measures deviation IQ, Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children (WISC)
measures ratio IQ, and Stanford–Binet Intelligence Scale (SB) can measure both,
presumably, if measuring from ages “2-89.” A critique about single scores
claimed, as in IQ scores, measuring everything about a person retains a
semblance of another common misunderstanding about intelligence tests. In that,
the multi-component ones, as in the aforementioned mainstream intelligence
tests, measure a variety of strengths and weaknesses of a person to come to the
final IQ score, which means a composite is the IQ score.
Which is to
interpret, an IQ score represents multiple mental factors coming to a
multi-variable composite called the IQ score, where the sub-tests measure
particular factors of cognition commonly linked by the general factor in
intelligence, g. Thus, an IQ score is anything but solely singular, when
comprehending the full-scale mainstream intelligence test scores meaning both a
multiple factors test and then made into a singular composite, the IQ score.
People can have
average composite IQs while having extraordinary strengths in verbal ability
and extraordinary weaknesses in mathematical ability, such is the nature of
human nature expressed in cognitive battery tests of the most reliable and
valid kinds. Unfortunately, some inherit deficits across all cognitive domains
requiring an expression of g; others, if lucky, come with congenital
strengths in all relevant domains requiring an expression of g. Both
kinds of cases are uncommon if not rare.
Even if finding the
test taken, knowing the person took an IQ test, took an alternative test versus
a mainstream intelligence test, a good rule of thumb is to examine if the test
was the first time or the second time, or nth time, taking it. A second attempt
or nth attempt on a test provides feedback to the test-taker about the goodness
or badness of the scores for them. They adjust, think more, and send in the new
answers to the test constructor. Invariably, these scores turn out higher more
often than not, where second attempts, third attempts, and more, on, in
particular, alternative tests lead to highly inflated scores on the
examination, which leads individuals to claim IQ scores not belonging to them.
In and of themselves, alternative tests tend to create, in general, inflated
scores. Another cautionary note to the general chary tale.
In addition, the sources of information can be tainted, e.g., Wikipedia, which remains decent while not overwhelming in quality. There can be conflicts of interest in attempts to claim a placement in the Wikipedia system, including in relevant articles of IQ, whether societies or personalities, or in theme. As reported in “World Intelligence Network Sigma 1.33 to 7.00 Addendum II – Defunct Societies,” the five main reliable high-IQ societies appear to be Mensa International, Intertel, Triple Nine Society, Prometheus Society, and Mega Society.
Wikipedia seems as if a decent resource. Although, individuals want to be a part of societies and try to cheat on tests. As shown in the United States, parents want their kids to do well, so pay for admissions officers to help their kids cheat into the top schools in their country. This was a national scandal quickly erased from public consciousness in America. This shortness of cultural memory remains part of the reason for its relative diminishment.
Similarly, others want to place their organizations alongside societies with longer-term histories. In “World Intelligence Network Sigma 1.33 to 7.00 Addendum II – Defunct Societies,” I stated:
Looking again,
United Sigma Intelligence Association, formerly United Sigma Korea, has been
newly listed on the Wikipedia listing for high-IQ societies.
However, the webpage
link appears defunct based on the webpage being created by, and the inclusion
of the United Sigma Intelligence Association or USIA on the high-IQ societies
webpage by, an account associated with the United Sigma Intelligence
Association: ‘Usiassociation.’
As a Conflict of
Interest stated on the record, the “draft article” was removed by an ‘Arjayay.’
While, the dead link statement continues on the main high-IQ society webpage.
This may have happened on Wikipedia before with others, as Wikipedia is old
now.
Thus, the linked
articles fairly placed on the Wikipedia listing, without a COI called out or
illegitimate listing because of a conflict of interest, include, as before,
Mensa International, Intertel, Triple Nine Society, Prometheus Society, and Mega
Society.
Those are the safe
bets.
[Ed. December 12
2020: ‘58.227.250.85’ edited the “High-IQ society” article listing on
Wikipedia immediately before ‘Usiassociation’ and after the COI or Conflict of
Interest claimed by ‘Arjayay.’ Given ‘58.227.250.85’ exists, and
‘Usiassociation’ was deleted immediately after the COI claim, there may be a
link to ‘Usiassociation’ and ‘58.227.250.85,’ as ‘58.227.250.85’ has existed
since February 4, 2020, and only edited articles including “High-IQ
society,” “Prometheus Society,” “Kim Ung-Yong,”
“Ronald K. Hoeflin,” “Christopher Langan,” “Youngsook
Park,” and then, recently, “High-IQ society,” again. It would
appear reasonable to assume a connection to ‘Usiassociation’ and, thus, USIA in
this case too, or a link between ‘58.227.250.85,’ ‘Usiassociation,’ and
USIA/United Sigma Intelligence Association. Furthermore, ‘58.227.250.85’ is a
South Korean IP address.]
[Ed. December 26
2020: On December 21 to December 24 2020, the same pattern, in spite, of
repeated COI claims continued only by the same IP Address from South Korea
editing solely or purely for United Sigma Intelligence Association (USIA),
formerly United Sigma Korea (USK), to force its content onto the listing. On
December 21 2020, ‘202.78.236.194’ and ‘Kinu’ reverted to the original five
high-IQ societies: Mensa International, Intertel, Triple Nine Society,
Prometheus Society, and the Mega Society. On December 22 2020, the same
‘58.227.250.85’ reverted to add the United Sigma Intelligence Association or
USIA back to the listing of “High-IQ society.” ‘Kinu,’ the same day,
reverted the edits from ‘58.227.250.85.’ On December 23 2020, ‘58.227.250.85’
reverted the edits the day prior to the same additions of the United Sigma
Intelligence Association or USIA. The same day, ‘Kinu’ reverted them. On
December 24 2020, ‘58.227.250.85’ reverted to add the United Sigma Intelligence
Association or USIA once more. ‘Nieuwsgierige Gebruiker’ reverted, so as to
remove United Sigma Intelligence Association or USIA, on the same day. On
December 24 2020, ‘Kinu’ blocked ‘58.227.250.85’ “with an expiration time
of 1 week (anon. only, account creation blocked).”]
There can be a deep desire for the placement in these listings; hence, the incessant attempts at inclusion on the listing in Wikipedia. That’s on editorial attempts at manipulation in a persistent manner ignoring COI claims and requests to stop with a ban required to halt it. On factual matters, some pages have apparent wrong information with recent placement repeated through them, e.g., in regards to a personality entitled “C. Minor,” who, as far as I know, doesn’t exist and cannot be found in high-IQ communities or listings. In the article entitled “Ronald Hoeflin,” it states:
The Guinness book of
World Records has since retired the category of “highest IQ” after
concluding that IQ tests are not consistent enough to designate a single world
record holder. Note now while a 15-year-old C. Minor is the only one to
complete The Mega Test and Titan Test flawlessly, and to perfectly and
ethically pass either one in a single attempt, conservatively implying a
correspondence at or well above IQ 199-208 and the highest global level of
fluid intelligence – without any age-correction and prior to any precision
norms or protonorm extrapolations whatsoever – simultaneously, the High-Range
IQ Tests of at least two other reputable authors suggest that one to possibly
two other individuals are too close to the same IQ range to differentiate
without further testing innovations, and are subject to change in relative
ranking over time. One such individual of former World Record acclaim, Marilyn vos Savant –
also one of Ronald Hoeflin’s highest scorers – with Minor, was additionally
profiled in New
York magazine. This article also discusses Hoeflin and the Mega
Society (the author of the Esquire article, Mike Sager, later used it
as part of a book.) The Mega Test has been criticized by professional reviewers
of psychological tests. In 1990, Hoeflin created the Titan Test, also
published in Omni. After Rick Rosner used
several eponymous and pseudonymous submissions to become the first to find a
complete score on this test early on, it would be well over a decade before a
teenaged C. Minor would surpass Rosner by clearing the test on a first-attempt
basis without rule violations.
In the page entitled
“Rick Rosner,” it states:
Rick completed
Hoeflin’s Titan Test and is the first individual to have answered all 48
questions correctly, with a 15-year-old C. Minor later having done the same,
thereby becoming the only individual to match Rosner’s Titan and surpass his
Mega scores in a single attempt. He achieved an IQ score of 192 in the
high-range IQ test Mathema by answering 13 of 16 questions correctly, as
well as 190 on the CIT – Form 3E by answering 76 of 78 questions correctly,
ranking him second in the United States and third globally behind Minor, as
well as Dr. Katsioulis of Greece – even without inclusion of either age
corrections or any additional IQ 200+ results, of which Minor is the singular
global proprietor in any data stratum.
These kinds of Wikipedia manipulations (lies) can make fact-checking difficult in addition to ensuring robust presentation to the public. Indeed, as with some trust cases based on recommendations for interviewees within the high-IQ communities, as this happened to me, Guillermo Alejandro Escarcega Pliego of the Hall of Sophia recommended an interviewee, which became a multi-part interview for a non-peer-reviewed journal, In-Sight: Independent Interview-Based Journal, the IQ score was not verified by Pliego (as admitted by Pliego later), where this became a need to compile, re-edit, and then singularly publish and qualify the publication offsite in Medium, in “Interview with Jaime Alfonso Flores Navas on Mexican and American Identity, IQ, Prostitution, Theory of Life, Women’s Rights, and Morality, and Love, Life, Death, and Meaning.” In the article, I prefaced:
*Compiled interviews
from the Summer, 2020.*
Jaime Alfonso Flores
Navas interview recommendation from Guillermo Alejandro Escarcega
Pliego, the Founder of the Hall
of Sophia, originally published through In-Sight Publishing.
However, the claimed IQ score was not confirmed, while the accepted
recommendation based on standards of trust came with this presentation as an
assumption or that an IQ score was confirmed by Guillermo, so the publications
were respectfully removed from In-Sight Publishing after acknowledgment of this
fact by Guillermo, i.e., the scores never confirmed in the first place, at all.
To respect scores of others who confirmed or had a public listing of a score,
the interview is published, with further editorial work on it, here, rather
than In-Sight Publishing’s main platforms; this seems as if a reasonable
balance between the promise for an interview to Navas and the unconfirmed
score, and to others with publicly available test scores and interviews. It
shall remain here. If you wish to support the work of Pliego, then you can send
an email to noetiqsociety@icloud.com or
submit Mexican Pesos — potentially, other currency — to PayPal at https://www.paypal.com/paypalme/LuzPliego,
which is under the name “María de la Luz Escarcega Pliego,” presumably
Guillermo’s mother, even grandmother, or guardian. Navas talks about his
experiences and views here.
However, some
reportage can have changes, too. In that, positive contributions to the
journalistic archives can have positive developments to the communities in
which one orbits. For example, as a non-member of these communities, after
writing “The
High-IQ Rankings: or, the High-IQ Directories, Listings, Rankings,” some
praised the work. In one case, there was the creation of not only one, but
three, new “registries” or rankings with different criteria in as little as
five days after publication, by Domagoj Kutle/Domagoj Domo Kutle of CatholIQ High IQ Society and VeNuS Society.
Those were the World Genius Registry/WGR – I/WGR, the World Genius Registry – II/WGR – II, and the World Genius Registry – III/WGR – III, where their total set, as presented to community, includes World Genius Registry, VeNuS, 2 x 3, ToTem, VeNuS-S, WGR – II, WGR – III. These seem like positive contributions to their respective communities, as thousands continue to value and participate in high-IQ communities around the world for intellectual camaraderie or a sense of distant belonging. Indeed, as with other efforts, In-Sight: Independent Interview-Based Journal of In-Sight Publishing was the template for the USIA Research Journal of United Sigma Intelligence Association, formerly United Sigma Korea, where I am the former Executive Director and Editor-in-Chief of the association based on a formal resignation in 2020.
Similarly, Deus Vult of CatholIQ High IQ Society/Catholiq – with interviews, the format in double columns, bold interviewer text and non-bold interviewee text, even font and font size may be the same, including some of the same interviewees in its issues – appears to have taken some of its essence, its deep nature, outside of restriction of freedom of expression via restriction of heretical (to Roman Catholicism) content in it, from In-Sight: Independent Interview-Based Journal of In-Sight Publishing. Individuals practicing the occult or Freemasonry should not apply, as the organization discriminates against them in admissions. It’s a Christian-only (all denominations) organization[1]. Similar to the defunct AtheistIQ Society, a high-IQ society, apparently, only for atheists in the high-IQ communities at the time.
Thus, the publication or newsletter, Deus Vult, remains partially adherent to freedom of expression (written communication without heretical content) and dependent on Christian, Roman Catholic in particular, standards, rather than independent, based on the anti-masonic “Declaration on Masonic Associations” stipulated in the admissions criteria for Catholiq from November 26 1983 by Joseph Card. Ratzinger, then-prefect, and Fr. Jerome Hamer, O.P., then-Titular Archbishop of Lorium Secretary, which harkens back to the Roman Catholic Church’s hostility to Freemasonry formally instantiated in 1738 running into the present. To this day, the Freemasons permit Roman Catholics to become brothers in the craft; whereas, the Roman Catholic Church does not permit Roman Catholics to become Freemasons.
Anyhow, knowing some
of the norms and setting standards for consideration of the scores can be
important, too, the baseline considerations of the qualitative strength of
confidence in claims. There are relevant examples examined before. Two
claimants to the highest IQ in the world: Iakovos Koukas and Evangelos
Katsioulis. Koukas from Greece. Katsioulis from Greece. The scores claimed
seemed extraordinary. Thus, an eventual analysis in “The
High-IQ Rankings: or, the High-IQ Directories, Listings, Rankings”:
In short, even if
verified as accurate scores, as a premise of assuming trust in the scores
claimed, the scores themselves, by individuals, can be claimed as inflated
beyond the real metrics. Indeed, when on psychometric validity and reliability
grounds, these remain alternative tests.
As such, these
alternative tests lack the depth of reliability and validity found in the
mainstream intelligence tests developed over decades and decades, even more
than a century, so alternative tests compared to mainstream intelligence tests,
including, as was noted to me, an alternative test (NVCP, NVCP-E, NVCP-R) made
into a mainstream intelligence test.
Which is to say, as
was described succinctly by one individual, the French branch of Harcourt
Assessment acquired Pearson Education and made the NVCP-E, in particular, into
the EPC, while the one highest-IQ claimant claims the score on the NVCP-R, not
the NCVP-E. Both from Dr. Xavier Jouve; both test constructor and tested knew
one another.
Indeed, Katsioulis
took the NVCP-E twice and the NVCP-R twice for a first attempt and a second
attempt on both tests as stated in “General information“:
IQ 205 ,
sd 16, NVCP-R [Rasch equated raw 49/54] • 2002
IQ
196 , sd 16, Qoymans Multiple Choice #3 [ceiling] •
2003
IQ
192 , sd 16, NVCP-E [Rasch equated raw 35/40] • 2002
IQ
186 , sd 16, NVCP-R [Fluid Intelligence Index Score]
• 2002
IQ
183 , sd 16, NVCP-E [Fluid Intelligence Index Score]
• 2002
IQ
183 , sd 16, Cattell Culture Fair III A+B [ceiling-1]
• 2003
IQ 180+ sd
16, Bonnardel BLS4 – 2T [ceiling] • 2003
IQ
180+ sd 16, WAIS-R [extrapolated full scale] • 2002
Thusly, and if
assuming a reasonable principle of first attempts resulting in lower scores,
one comes to the first attempt on the NVCP-E at an IQ of 183 (S.D. 16) and on
the NVCP-R at an IQ 186 (S.D. 16), and a second attempt on the NVCP-E at an IQ
of 192 (S.D. 16) and on the NVCP-R at an IQ of 205 (S.D. 16).
In turn, as with the
WAIS-R and the Bonnardel BLS4 – 2T scores listed above, and if assuming the
seriousness in the effort of the experimental psychologist, Dr. Xavier Jouve,
while ignoring relational conflict of interest between the two of them, we can
come to the IQ scores from the mainstream intelligence tests at 175+ (S.D. 15),
on the WAIS-R and the Bonnardel BLS4 – 2T, to 177.81 (S.D. 15) to 180.63 (S.D.
15), on the NVCP-E (first attempt) and NVCP-R (first attempt), respectively.
Since done by an
experimental psychologist, this seems more serious than the MATRIQ and the
score of Iakovos Koukas, though a first attempt on the MATRIQ.
One can see some of
the highest claimants with WAIS, or a trusted mainstream intelligence test,
score at 164 (S.D. 15), or 4.27-sigma, for Dr. Iakovos Koukas and 175 (S.D.
15), or 5.00-sigma, for Dr. Evangelos Katsioulis, while each, individually,
claims a sigma of 6.93-sigma on MATRIQ and a 6.53-sigma on NVCP-R,
respectively.
However, the WAIS-R
scores for Katsioulis match the NVCP-E and NVCP-R first attempt scores far more
than the MATRIQ first attempt and the WAIS score for Koukas.
Nonetheless, the N on
all tests remains too low. Those with specific psychometric reliability and
validity relate to the mainstream intelligence tests, as in aimed at
measurement of the proposed scientific construct or psychological construct of
general intelligence.
Thus, you see the
massive differential between alternative tests and mainstream intelligence test
scores for two of the highest-IQ in the world claimants.
Also, prior
reportage can become obsolete slowly, or rapidly. In an original second-part of
an interview with Mega Society member and Giga Society member, Dr. Heinrich
Siemens, we both, in “Conversation with Dr.
Heinrich Siemens on 195 IQ (S.D. 15), CIT5, Cooijmans, Conscientiousness,
Mennonites, Plautdietsch, God, the Three Sonnets Test, and Tweeback Verlag:
Linguist (2),” wrote:
Scott Douglas
Jacobsen: Some news since the previous coverage. As noted in the prior
interview, on the legendary Titan Test, you scored 45/48. Furthermore, you have
“performed very well on HRIQ tests of Ronald K. Hoeflin, Paul Cooijmans,
Jonathan Wai, Theodosis Prousalis, and others” with “some results… above 5
sigma or 5 standard deviations.” With the recent news, as stated on the World
Genius Directory [Ed. Ranking], you scored 195 S.D. 15 on the Cooijmans
Intelligence Test 5 or the CIT5, which corresponds to a score of 28 out of 40.
A cognitive rarity of 1 in 8,299,126,114 based on the preliminary (September
2020) norms statistics on the CIT5. Any early feelings on the achievement?
Dr. Heinrich
Siemens: It feels great. To be honest, I do not believe in statistics in
these high ranges. What does it mean that I have outscored 8,299,126,113 of the
adult population, when there are only 7,800,000,000 people living on earth, including
many non-adults? The problem is not the lack of data, but the fact that a
priori there is not enough data to make significant statements. But even
if Paul should change the norm, the raw score of 28/40 on an extremely hard
test and the membership in the Giga society will remain and I am proud of that.
Note, the September 2020 timing of the norm statistics for the CIT5/CIT-5. As the test norms became more established, Dr. Siemens retained the same 28 out of 40 raw score on the CIT5, naturally, while the score would change in accordance with further data for the test, in the new norms.
In that, the
previous IQ 195 on an S.D. of 15 before becomes an IQ of 190 on an SD of 15
based on December 21 2020 norms rather than September 2020 preliminary norms. Both
scores qualify for the Giga Society membership. While an IQ of 190 on an SD of
15 becomes 1 out of 1,009,976,678 people in the general population, and an IQ
of 195 on an SD of 15 becomes 1 out of 8,299,126,114 people in the general
population. It’s a noticeable difference in the statistics. Indeed, as Dr.
Siemens cautioned, he doesn’t believe in the statistics in the high-range (“To
be honest, I do not believe in statistics in these high ranges.”), as per some
of the aforementioned reasons.
In turn, as with
conflicts of interest, multiple attempts, alternative tests versus mainstream
intelligence tests, or simply changes in the norms, we come to different scores
for the individuals. These seem as if fair points of caution and care in the
popular reportage of scores and information harvesting for journalistic work.
Furthermore, there exist a number of controversies within the history of the
high-range testing community and in the high-IQ societies.
Some earlier reportage seemed as if a good placement for some analysis of the Mega Test of the Mega Society[2], the Mega Society (East)/Mega Foundation (also Ultranet, Mega International), and some of the controversy seen in the popular reports there. By far, the most controversial figure to emerge out of the Mega Test was Keith Raniere or “Vanguard” of NXIVM. Any popular reportage, now, can cover the cult founded by Raniere and fallout with the potential for life imprisonment for his crimes, including sexual trafficking.
This “earlier
reportage” becomes an analysis with some minimal standards, as given or implied
above. When reporting, a good set of principles is working to find the
mainstream intelligence tests, first attempts, under the real names, proctored
if possible, and looking for up-to-date norms with large sample sizes. In the
case below, in “Second
Pass of the World Intelligence Network 3.13-4.8 Sigma Societies,” it’s an
alternative test based on individuals with minor fame tied to first and second
attempts, pseudonyms/fake names used, on an SD of 16, and so on.
Unfortunately, there
was significant controversy within the Mega Society leading to the Mega Society
suing for stoppage of the use of their name many years ago based on the
requisite legal documentation. The evidence and outcome is in the legal
documents available on the Mega Society website.[10] Another aspect of the Mega
Society with some potential for cold water required at this time because of
widespread misinformation. Some individuals took the Mega Test, in particular,
under pseudonyms or fake names & real names for two attempts rather than
once. The reality of the matter, the most legitimate test scores should be the
real name and the first attempt on any given test, especially in consideration
of experimental or alternative tests. Over the Mega Test, several individuals
garnered minor fame for the scores: Marilyn vos Savant, Rick Rosner/Rick G.
Rosner, Chris Langan/Christopher Michael Langan, John H. Sununu/John Henry
Sununu, Keith Raniere, and Solomon W. Golomb. The individuals who took the test
twice while using fake names for one of the attempts were Rick Rosner posing as
“Richard Sterman” and Chris Langan/Christopher Michael Langan presented as
“Eric Hart.” Rosner/“Sterman” scored 44/48 on the first attempt on the Mega
Test. Langan/”Hart” scored 42/48 on the first attempt on the Mega Test.
Marilyn vos Savant scored 46/48 on the first attempt on the Mega Test – higher
than anyone on the first attempt and under the real name. Thus, there is no
king of the Mega Test; there is the Queen, though: Marilyn (Mach) vos Savant.
The scores on the Mega Test on the sixth norming for Langan/“Hart,”
Rosner/“Sterman,” and vos Savant, for the 42/48, 44/48, and 46/48, would be, on
S.D. 16, IQs of 174, 180, and 186, respectively. Subsequently, in issue 206 of
Noesis: The Journal of the Mega Society, David Redvaldsen published an article
or republished an article entitled “Do the Mega and Titan Tests Yield Accurate
Results? An Investigation Into Two Experimental Intelligence Tests.” In it, he
produced a different set of norms of the Mega Test and the Titan Test.
Redvaldsen’s norms would earn Langan/“Hart,” Rosner/“Sterman,” and vos Savant,
IQs of 163, 167, and 170+, respectively, on an S.D. of 16. Therefore, on the
Mega Test scores, and on an S.D. of 16, between the Redvaldsen norming and the
sixth Hoeflin norming, the first attempts – the truer scores on the Mega Test,
even ignoring the use of a fake name and the status of an alternative test and
not a mainstream test, though a higher quality one – would yield IQs between
163 to 174 for Langan/“Hart,” 167 to 180 for Rosner/“Sterman,” and 170+ to 186
for vos Savant, respectively. Other scores claimed in the 190s, 200s, or even
210, would amount to irresponsible/naive journalism and media hype in mostly
minor and medium-sized media outlets in regards to the Mega Test. Redvaldsen
reviewed the Titan Test, too, as per the title of the republication. Wikipedia
is an unreliable source of information in some, even many, cases.
With the change for Langan/“Hart,” Rosner/“Sterman,” and vos Savant, to an SD of 15, the IQ score ranges, in actuality, become 159.0625 to 169.375 for Langan/“Hart,” 162.8125 to 175 for Rosner/“Sterman,” and 165.625+ to 180.625 for vos Savant, on the Mega Test on an SD of 15. If rounding for them, then IQ 159-169 for Langan (rather than 195-210, no S.D. stipulated, as reported in Wikipedia, which comes mostly from a self-report of Langan in First Person with Errol Morris in which he claims an IQ between 190 and 210), 163-175 for Rosner, and 166+-181 for vos Savant on an S.D. of 15. In terms of cognitive rarity range, this means, on the Mega Test IQ, on the first attempt and real name: 1 out of 23,863 to 1 out of 472,893 people for Christopher Langan; 1 out of 74,883 to 1 out of 3,483,046 for Richard Rosner; and, 1 out of more than 184,606 to 1 out of 29,943,596 for Marilyn (Mach) vos Savant. Therefore, and as shown before, no king exists for the Mega Test, but a queen does on some of the more minimal standards.
Out of the three,
only Rosner took the Titan Test, as far as I know only on the first attempt
(against what appears misinformation on Wikipedia based on interpolation of a
narrative about “C. Minor”), which would provide a different score, or range of
scores, if taking both the Hoeflin and Redvaldsen norms into account at the
same time. Rosner would be the king of the Titan Test with a perfect score.
However, these are some of the better tests in the alternative test domain. One
can see similar distortions in the historical record via popular media about
William James Sidis who showed precocity, came into and left the world bright
as these aforementioned, while a mythology formed around him, too. He was
merely a man if you look closely enough.
Hence, in consideration of the world’s highest IQ, the world’s highest measured IQ, we can place skepticism in the claims, especially in more popular journalistic reportage about the smartest person in the world, smartest man in the world, smartest woman in the world, and so on. Among the highest in the world may be justifiable if stipulating the reasons for considering as such, including reasonable filters to come to such a conclusion, as provided above. Similarly, as noted in some of the rankings article, when compiled, the number of 6-sigma scores (IQ 190 on SD 15) or higher is far higher than statistically expected by a long shot, as noted in “The High-IQ Rankings: or, the High-IQ Directories, Listings, Rankings”:
The rarities out of the general population implied by the sigmas including and after 6.00 to, for example, 6.80-sigma would mean the following, as examples:
- 6.00-sigma is 1 out of 1,009,976,678 people in the general population.
- 6.07-sigma is 1 out of 1,525,765,721 people in the general population.
- 6.13-sigma is 1 out of 2,314,980,850 people in the general population.
- 6.20-sigma is 1 out of 3,527,693,270 people in the general population.
- 6.27-sigma is 1 out of 5,399,067,340 people in the general population.
- 6.33-sigma is 1 out of 8,299,126,114 people in the general population.
- 6.40-sigma is 1 out of 12,812,462,045 people in the general population.
- 6.47-sigma is 1 out of 19,866,426,228 people in the general population.
- 6.53-sigma is 1 out of 30,938,221,975 people in the general population.
- 6.60-sigma is 1 out of 48,390,420,202 people in the general population.
- 6.67-sigma is 1 out of 76,017,176,740 people in the general population.
- 6.73-sigma is 1 out of 119,937,672,336 people in the general population.
- 6.80-sigma is 1 out of 190,057,377,928 people in the general population.
And so on, given the rarity past somewhere between 6.67-sigma to 6.73-sigma, and given the number of people who have lived on the planet in the history of the species, even in the present day, the scores on alternative tests compared to mainstream intelligence tests become inflated by the nature of the rarities claimed in addition to the number of individual test-takers claiming scores above or at 6-sigma.
Therefore, these imply an inference of inflation of scores at the high-end or in the high-range alternative tests on the assertion of the premise of measuring g.
The various
directories, listings, and rankings were analyzed with the compiled ranking as
follows, incorporating “ESOTERIQ Society
of Masaaki Yamauchi (incorporative of some of the Giga Society of Paul
Cooijmans), GENIUS High IQ
Network of Dr. Iakovos Koukas, GFIS
IQ List/Dinghong Yao IQ Ranking List of Dinghong Yao, GIFTED High IQ Network of Dr.
Iakovos Koukas, Hall of IQ Scores
of Konstantinos Ntalachanis, Hall of Sophia of
Guillermo Alejandro Escárcega Pliego, HRIQ
Ranking List of Qiao Hansheng, Mahir Wu Ranking List of
Mahir Wu, Real IQ Listing of Dr. Ivan
Ivec, Svenska
IQ-Listan of Hans Sjöberg and Alexi Edin, VeNuS
Ranking List of Domagoj Kutle/Domagoj Domo Kutle, WIQF
Listing[2] of Marco Ripà and Dr. Manahel Thabet, World Famous IQ Scores of Dr. Ivan
Ivec, World Genius Directory of Jason
Betts, and World Highest IQ Scores of
Mislav Predavec”:
Compilation Ranking
- William James Sidis at unmeasurable sigma (no test named)
- Konstantinos Ntalachanis at 8.67-sigma on D.O.S. and at 6.00-sigma on Monster IQ Test
- Wen Luo at 7.73-sigma on RIDDLES
- Dr. Iakovo Koukas/Iakovos Koukas at 6.93-sigma on MATRIQ
- Dr. Evangelos Katsioulis/Evangelos Katsioulis at 6.53-sigma on NVCP-R and at 6.06-sigma on Cooijmans Multiple-Choice #3
- Dr. Heinrich Siemens/Heinrich Siemens at 6.31-sigma on CIT-5
- Yukun Wang at 6.31-sigma on RIDDLES
- Tor Arne Jørgensen at 6.27-sigma on MATRIQ
- Rick Rosner at 6.13-sigma on Mathema
- Mislav Predavec at 6.13-sigma on Logicaus Strictimanus 24 (LS24)
- Dr. Christopher Harding/Dr. Christopher Philip Harding at 6.06-sigma on Stanford-Binet
- Junxie Huang at 6.00+-sigma on FREE FALL (Part II) and at 6.00+-sigma on Challenger
- Tanxi Yu at 6.00+-sigma on Numerus
- José González Molinero/Jose Gonzalez Molinero at 6.00+-sigma on FREE FALL (Part II)
- Matthew Scillitani at 6.00-sigma on Psychometric Qrosswords
- Mahir Wu at 6.00-sigma on Silent Numbers
- Kenneth Ferrell at 6.00-sigma on Hieroglyphica
- Dany Provost at 6.00-sigma on PIGS1°
- Wen-Chin Sui at 6.00-sigma on Numerus Classic
- Marios Prodromou at 6.00-sigma on MACH
- Thansie Yu at 6.00-sigma on N-World
- Dong Kha Cuong/Cường Đồng at 6.00-sigma on Numerus
- Thomas R. A. Wolf at or above 6.00-sigma (no test named)
- Andrea Gunnarsson at or above 6.00-sigma (no test named)
- Scott Ben Durgin at or above 6.00-sigma (no test named)
- Rolf Mifflin at or above 6.00-sigma (no test named)
- Paul Johns at or above 6.00-sigma (no test named)
- Christopher Harding at or above 6.00-sigma (no test named)
- Kevin Langdon at or above 6.00-sigma (no test named)
—
Former ESOTERIQ
Members
- (YoungHoon Kim/YoungHoon Bryan Kim at 6.00-sigma or higher, potentially, formerly a member; no longer on the listing.)
- (Cavan Cohoes at 6.00-sigma or higher, potentially, formerly a member; no longer on the listing.)
- (Tanxi Yu at 6.00-sigma or higher, potentially, formerly a member; no longer on the listing.)
- (Luca Fiorani at 6.00-sigma or higher, potentially, formerly a member; no longer on the listing.)
- (Jose Molinero at 6.00-sigma or higher, potentially, formerly a member; no longer on the listing.)
- (Junxie Huang at 6.00-sigma or higher, potentially, formerly a member; no longer on the listing.)
- (Sanghyun Cho at 6.00-sigma or higher, potentially, formerly a member; no longer on the listing.)
- (Dawid Skrzos at 6.00-sigma or higher, potentially, formerly a member; no longer on the listing.)
As you can see, some
members aren’t a part of ESOTERIQ anymore. Some norms changed sigmas or the
interpreted IQ scores, as with Dr. Siemens. Others were on the list, but appear
on the list under a different pronounceable name, e.g., Tanxi Yu versus Thansie
Yu (also known as Tianxi Yu). The same issues will arise in the reportage.
However, if more boundaries and standards are internally placed in journalistic
processes, then the reportage can improve over time, in terms of accuracy and
performing an important public service in democratic societies. One need simply
look at a sampling of the articles available online to note this. Simply
looking, and as a final note, at the number of individuals who write on the
subject, there are many, indeed – happy researching and writing to you:
- Natasha Bertrand wrote “The 40 smartest people of all time” in Business Insider.
- Marissa Laliberte wrote “8 People with Higher IQs Than Einstein” in Reader’s Digest.
- Timothy J. Legg, Ph.D., CRNP wrote “What IQ Measurements Indicate — and What They Don’t” in Healthline.
- Tibi Puiu wrote “What is the highest IQ in the world (and should you actually care?)” in ZME Science.
- Maryn Liles wrote “Who Has the Highest IQ in the World? 35 People Who Are Even Smarter Than Einstein” in Parade Magazine.
- Kendra Cherry (reviewed by Amy Morin, LCSW) wrote “What Is a Genius IQ Score?” in VeryWellMind.
- Harsh Gupta wrote “What Is The Highest IQ In The World Ever Recorded?” in Science ABC.
- Duncan Madden wrote “Ranked: The 25 Smartest Countries In The World” in Forbes.
- “IQ compared by countries” was written in WorldData.Info.
- Michele Debczak wrote “An 11-Year-Old Just Earned the Highest IQ Score Possible” in MentalFloss.
- Osien Kuumar wrote “Here Is A List Of The 27 Smartest People On The Planet” in ScoopWhoop.
- “Ramarni Wilfred tops Bill Gates and Einstein with his IQ” was written in BBC News.
- Avi Selk wrote “Trump says he’s a genius. A study found these other presidents actually were.” in the Washington Post.
- James Smart wrote “Of All Things: Which president had the highest IQ?” in The Review.
- “14 of the highest IQs on television” was written in RadioTimes.
- Danny Dukker wrote “15 NBA Players with the Highest Basketball I.Q.” in Bleacher Report.
- Harry Shukman wrote “Experts have worked out which majors have the highest IQ” in The Tab.
- Amanda Woods wrote “Genius British girl, 10, has higher IQ than Albert Einstein and Stephen Hawking” in the New York Post.
- Benjamin VanHoose wrote “8-Year-Old Mexican Girl, Who Was Bullied and Labeled ‘Weird,’ Has Higher IQ Than Einstein: Report” in People Magazine.
- Esther Trattner wrote “The Smartest and Least Brainy Presidents, by IQ Scores” in MoneyWise.
- Nicholas Pace wrote “Study Determines Which Gamers Have the Highest IQ” in Gamerant.
- Ari Feldman wrote “The Man With The World’s Highest IQ, Christopher Langan, Is Gaining A Following On The Far Right” in the Forward.
- “Meet the 11-year-old Indian girl who’s smarter than Albert Einstein and Stephen Hawking” was written in YourStory.
- Katie Serena wrote “Meet Marilyn Vos Savant, The Woman With The World’s Highest IQ” in All That’s Interesting.
- “No Dumb Blonde: Fair-Haired Women Have the Highest IQ” was published in Men’s Journal.
- Bridgett McCusker wrote “The 13 Presidents with the Highest IQ Scores” in MSN.
- Dana Givens wrote “MEET THE 16-YEAR-OLD GENIUS WHOSE IQ IS HIGHER THAN BILL GATES AND ALBERT EINSTEIN” in Black Enterprise.
- Tiffany Silva wrote “THESE THREE LITTLE BLACK GENIUSES HAVE HIGHEST IQ’S IN WORLD” in BCKOnline.
- “SERIAL KILLERS’ IQS RANKED” was published in Crime and Investigation.
- Patrick J. Kiger wrote “What Was Albert Einstein’s IQ?” in Biography.
- Timothy L. O’Brien wrote “Trump Has the Highest IQ. He Says So Himself.” in Bloomberg Opinion.
- Jamila Gandhi wrote “The World’s Highest IQs” in Forbes.
- Andrew Restucci wrote “Trump fixates on IQ as a measure of self-worth” in Politico.
- Sophie Tanno wrote “Primary schoolgirl, 10, gets highest possible IQ score in Mensa test – beating Albert Einstein and Stephen Hawking” in the DailyMail.
- Sam Becker wrote “10 Jobs Where Employees Tend to Have the Highest IQs” in CheatSheet.
- “Who Has The Highest IQ Alive? Smartest Person In The World” was written in The CEO Magazine.
- “Dr Evangelos Katsioulis has the World’s Highest IQ” was written in Greek City Times.
- Zachary Crockett wrote “The Time Everyone “Corrected” the World’s Smartest Woman” in Priceonomics.
- “Top 10 people have highest IQ scores in the World (P.2)” was written in IQ-Test.Net.
- Laura Dorwart wrote “6 YouTube Channels That Can Help You Find a Job During the Coronavirus Outbreak” in CheatSheet.
- Damian Carrington wrote “Children raised in greener areas have higher IQ, study finds” in The Guardian.
- Scott Barry Kaufman wrote “Can Intelligence Buy You Happiness?” in Scientific American.
- Juan Ramos wrote “Here Is The Highest Possible IQ And The People Who Hold The World Record” in ScienceTrends.
- “What is a “genius?” The 10 highest IQs alive today” was written in ScalarLearning.
- Zameena Mejia wrote “As leaders in DC squabble over who’s smarter, here’s the IQ score Warren Buffett says is all you need to succeed” in CNBC.
- Carole Fader wrote “Fact Check: How smart is President-elect Donald Trump? IQ score isn’t official” in The Florida-Times Union.
- Casey Leins wrote “The Smartest States in America” in U.S. News.
- Bill Murphy, Jr. wrote “We Compared the Average IQ Scores in All 50 States, and the Results Are Opening” in Inc.
- “The Smartest Man In The World – IQ 200 – Is Convinced The U.S. Election Was Stolen” was written in the National Pulse.
- “Highest IQ in the world” was written in LOVE Air Coffee.
- Jacob Hancock wrote “Wonderlic scores in the NFL: Highest, lowest test scores in Combine history” in SportingNews.
- Alaa Elassar wrote “A 3-year-old boy has just become the youngest member of Mensa UK, the largest international high IQ society” in CNN.
- “The 50 Greatest Living Geniuses” was written in TheBestSchools.
- Caroline Picard and Blake Bakkila wrote “The 10 Smartest Dog Breeds That Would Ace Any IQ Test” in GoodHouseKeeping.
- Mike Sager wrote “The Smartest Man in America” in Esquire Magazine.
- James Williamson wrote “Rainbow Six Siege & Among Us Players Allegedly Have The Highest IQ” in ScreenRant.
- Dwain Price wrote “TYRELL TERRY USES HIS RECORD-BREAKING BASKETBALL IQ TO HIS ADVANTAGE” in Maverick.
- Jon Bitner wrote “Recent Study Reveals PC Gamers Are Smarter Than Console Gamers (But Rainbow Six Siege Players Are Smartest Of All)” in the Gamer.
- Sam Lehman-Wilzig wrote “The Totally Taboo Topic: Why Are American Jews So Successful?” in The Times of Israel.
- Chris Leitner wrote “Does high IQ make a better investor?” in Livewire.
- “Top 10 celebrities with highest IQ as of 2020” was written in Tuko.
- Shana Lebowitz wrote “Do You Have a High IQ? 17 Signs That Say You Do” in Business Insider.
- Brian Resnick wrote “IQ, explained in 9 charts” in Vox.
- “Countries by IQ – Average IQ by Country 2020” was written in World Population Review.
- David Robson wrote “Has humanity reached ‘peak intelligence’?” in BBC News.
- “10 People With The Highest IQ Ever Recorded” was written in O, Pish Posh!.
- Aiden Mason wrote “20 Celebrities with Ridiculously High IQs” in TVOM.
- “This bird has higher IQ level than apes” was written in India Today.
- “Court OKs Barring High IQs for Cops” was written in ABC News.
- Ellen Littman, Ph.D. wrote ““I’m Smart, So I Should Be Able to Overpower ADHD. Right?”” in Additude.
- “Stars with high IQs” was written in CBS News.
- Robert Johnson wrote “The 19 Smartest People The World Has Ever Seen” in Business Insider.
- “30 Smartest People Alive Today” was written in SuperScholar.
- Jim Dykstra wrote “THESE ARE THE SMARTEST LIVING PEOPLE IN THE WORLD RIGHT NOW” in Grunge.
- Paul Ratner wrote “24 of the smartest people who ever lived” in BigThink.
- Shikha Goyalwrote “Top 10 most intelligent people on Earth” in Jagran Josh.
- “Who Are the Smartest People in the World?” was written in Mindflash.
- Fiona MacDonald wrote “This Controversial Infographic Lists The 10 Smartest People in The World” in ScienceAlert.
- “The Story of the Smartest Man Who Ever Lived and Why You Haven’t Heard of Him” was written in BrightSide.
- “13 Most Intelligent People In The History Of The World” was written in FinancesOnline.
- Lisa Kremer wrote “The Smartest Person In the World Refuses To Be Trapped By Fate” in Do It.
- Dina Spector and Shlomo Sprung wrote “The 16 Smartest People on Earth” in Yahoo!Finance.
- Rachel Seigel wrote “45 Brainy Facts About The World’s Smartest People” in Factinate.
- Maria Gabriela wrote “Top 10 Smartest People 2019” in Strangelist.
[1] Its main page states: “Catholiq is exclusive 99.9% high IQ society founded in 2017, on Pentecost. Catholiq is open to Christian individuals of all denominations who have an Intelligence Quotient in the top 99.9% of the general unselected adult population (I.Q. 147 sd15). Membership or participation in Masonic and Occult associations is forbidden for members of Catholiq.”
Its President and Founder is Domagoj Kutle. Its vice presidents are Dalibor Marincic, Kirk Raymond Butt, Philip Power, Patrick O’Shea, Mislav Predavec, Stephan Wagner Damianowitsch, Iakovos Koukas, and Thomas Hally.
[2] Footnote [9] of
“Second Pass of the World Intelligence Network 3.13-4.8 Sigma
Societies” states:
Some of its listed members and qualifiers, and/or contributors (running back to early 2000s) to Noesis: The Journal of the Mega Society, Circle, Titania, and Titanic in the past several years include Werner Couwenbergh, Marcel Feenstra, YoungHoon Kim, Kevin Langdon, Richard May or “May Tzu,” Daniel Shea, Jeff Ward, Rick Rosner, Ken Shea, Mark Kantrowitz, Chris Cole, Marilyn vos Savant, John H. Sununu, (the late) Solomon W. Golomb, Brian Wiksell, Chuck Sher, David Seaborg, Kevin Kihn, Jeffrey Matucha, James Kulacz, Jadzia Bashir, Tal Brooke, Rex Hubbard, Ray Faraday Nelson, Andrew Beckwith, Sam Thompson, Ruediger Ebendt, Carl Masthay, David Minster, Miriam Berg, Darien De Lu, Howard Schwartz, Jay Wiseman, Marcel Feenstra, Ron Yannone/Ronald M. Yannone, Wallace (Dusty) Rhodes/Wallace Rhodes, Bob Griffths, Richard Badke, Tal Brooke, Richard Ruquist, Charles Schwartz, Garth Zietsman, Michael Edward McNeil, R. Fred Vaughan, Patt Wilson McDaniel, Brian Schwartz, Chris Harding, Joseph Chieffo, Albert Clawson, Dale Adams, Tom Hutton, Rev. Dr. George Byron Koch, Ian Williams Goddard/Ian Goddard, Frank Nemec, Daniel Heyer, Robert Dick, Karyn Huntting Peters, A.W. Beckwith, Valerie Zukowski, Michael C. Price, Glenn Morrison, Glen Wooten, Edward O. Thorp, Lenore Langdon, Nicholas C. Hlobeczy, John Ostendorf, Dean Inada, Christopher Harding, Lee, Charles W. Trigg, Joe Griffith, Myrna Reid Grant, GFS, NPR, Fred Metcalf, Paavo Airola, David Niven, John Burrows, Joe Griffith, Eugene Jackson and Adolph Geiger, Alfred S. Posamentier and Ingmar Lehmann, Ed Harshman, Des MacHale, Paul Sloane, Dai Takeuchi, Linda S. Gottfredson, Neil J. A. Sloane, John J. Watkins, Nancy Melucci, Marcus Hanke, N. E. Genge, Joe Griffith, Rand Lewis, Arthur S. Hulnick and Oleg Kalugin, Stephen J. Spignesi, Joey Green, Laura Bush, Nadya Labi, Jill Perry (Caltech Media Relations), Robert W. Allen, Lorne Greene, and George Henry Moulds, Patric Hadenius, Betsy Hills Bush, Rhonda Hillbery, James Bamford, Don C. Johnson, Ellen Simon, Don Walsh, Bryan Curtis, Michael Holt, H.W. Corley, J. R. O’Neil, Michael Erard, Holbrook L. Horton, Lewis R. Aiken, Jean Kumagai, Jim DeBrosse, Colin Burke, Ron Knott, Gerald E. Bergum, David von Drehle, Layman E. Allen, Russell Ash, Joseph S. Madachy, Albert Frank, Mac Anderson, Rob Fess, Jerzy Luberda, Yaron Givli, Bill Corley, Miodrag Petkovic, Eugene Ehrlich, Albert Frank, Brian Schwartz, Chris Langan, Jeffry R. Fisher and Karen Ferrara, Nikos Lygeros, Gary Sockut, Grady Tower, Jim Ferry, Mike Hess, Sol Waters, Charles Petrizzi, Charles Tart, Robert Low, Miriam Berg, Hank Pfeffer, Celia Joslyn, James Randi, Darryl Miyaguchi, Paul Cooijmans, Bob Park, Celia Manolesco, Paul Maxim, Cyril Edwards, Anthony Robinson, Ludmilla Stukalina, Melih Yalcinelli, Robert Hannon, William Sharp, Alan Aax, Peter Schmies, H. Scott Morris, Pete Pomfrit, LeRoy Kottke, D.H. Ratcliffe, Clive Price/Mike Price/ M. C. Price, Norman Hale, Marcel Feenstra, Kevin L. Schwartz, Philip Bloom, Geraldine Brady, Anthony J. Bruni, Chris Cole, Robert Dick, George Dicks, Eric Erlandson, Marcel Feenstra, James D. Hajicek, Ron Hoeflin, Kjeld Hvatum, Johan Oldhoff, A. Palmer, Dr. P. A. Pornfrit, Carl Porchey, Keith Raniere, Steve Sweeney, S. Woolsey, Jeff Wright, Carlos Biro, N. Harvey Lavery, Kevyn Vander Jeenius, Geraldine Brady, Robert D. Russell, Norman Hale, Carlos Biro, N. Harvey Lavery, Kevyn Vander Jeenius, Geraldine Brady, Robert D. Russell, Norman Hale, Jeffrey Wright, M.N. van der Riet, Ken Wood, Donald Scott, Marshall Fox, Daryl Inman, John Mathewson, Andrew Egendorf, Louis K. Acheson Jr., John McAdon, William H. Archer, H. Herbert Taylor, Johannes D. Veldhuis, H. W. “Bill” Corley, Arval Bohn, Donald E. Frank, Hughes Gervais, Dirk E. Skinner, Donald Scott, Ferris Alger, Carl J. Porchey, Cedric Stratton, ‘James Tetazoo,’ Phillip Bloom, Avrom A. Rosen, John Springfield, Stefan Giesecke, Ray Wise, Karl G. Wikman, Edgar M. Van Vleck, Avrom A. Rosen, William I. Hacker, William Sharp, Steve Hoberman, A. Palmer, Willy W. van Roosbroeck, Steve Sweeney, Peter Adrian Wone, William H. Archer, Jane Clifton, Bill Irvin, Grace LeMonds, Dean L. Moyer, Gina Kolata, Andy Soltis, Darlene Wade, Donald McFarlane/McFarlan, Roland S. Phelps, Robert D. Russell, Barry Kington, Eugene H. Primoff, Daniel L. Pratt, Marvin Lee, Gary H. Memovich, Joshua Taylor, Rush Eikine, Christine E. Splan, Uri Wilensky, Keith Andrew Tuson, Joseph O’Rourke, William Hacker, Leonard R. Weisberg, Sherry Haines, David W. Kelsey, Jane V. Clifton, Francis Simon, Ferris E. Alger, Laura van Arragon, Norris McWhirter, and others, probably, who I missed – with some as co-authors, article submitters, or letter writers to Noesis: The Journal of the Mega Society, Circle, Titania, and Titanic (working with the resources available). Also, some organizations republished or published materials in there, too.
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