Originally posted by fred harvey
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Trump
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Re: Trump
Originally posted by Mavros Whissell View PostAll he's done is increase his culpability for slander.
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Re: Trump
Originally posted by fred harvey View PostAs a disinterested observer, I would say he's done a pretty good job of calling you out as a rather nasty racist!
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Re: Trump
Originally posted by ben daswani View Post...says the guy who was goaded into wasting an hour writing online IQ tests.Last edited by Sid Belzberg; Sunday, 7th May, 2017, 05:19 PM.
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Re: Trump
Originally posted by Mavros Whissell View PostHilarious!
There is an even bigger waste of time lurking on this site: clicking on the name "Ben Daswani" in any thread.
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Re: Trump
Hilarious!
There is an even bigger waste of time lurking on this site: clicking on the name "Ben Daswani" in any thread.
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Re: Trump
http://www.cbsnews.com/news/gop-cong...o-health-care/
"Nobody dies because they don't have access to health care." -- some conservative "thinker"
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Re: Trump
Originally posted by Sid Belzberg View PostGet a life man!
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Re: Trump
Originally posted by Paul Bonham View PostFirst of all, I will second your opinion Sid that an ability to see patterns outside the norm isn't a definitive measure of intelligence, although it is a good quality to have. It can certainly lead to great success in many fields, even technical fields.
But secondly, I have news for you about the specific question you mention above. Both you and Mensa apparently have it wrong.
You see, the capital letter K in most fonts is NOT vertically symmetrical. If you flip it upside down in most fonts, it does NOT look the same. That breaks the whole question.
( The question read:
What letter is in the two cells marked * ?
M I X A Y O *
D C O X K I *
The choices were A, H, C, D, E, F or "I don't know". The correct answer, as evidenced by Sid getting 30/30, is "H". But the logic is faulty and makes the whole question faulty.
And by the way, the whole test is also faulty because one isn't told whether an answer of "I don't know" can be the correct answer, or is in fact any different from answering with a wrong choice. )
I took a screen shot of this post as I was writing it, because in the font used here, the capital letter K looks vertically symmetrical. But I pasted it into a paint program, isolate the letter K, enlarged it many times, and.... it is not vertically symmetrical. It appears to be so on the screen at normal size, but when enlarged, there is a very slight discrepancy. I did the same thing with the font used in the online Mensa test. Same result: vertically asymmetrical, even more noticeable than with the font used here.
Mensa didn't think about this. I did think about it as soon as I saw the letter K used in the question.
So does that make me "more intelligent" because I noticed it? No, that's not my point. My point is that even Mensa can distort the meaning of intelligence.
And in another aspect of the same topic, I don't think chess comes close to completely measuring intelligence. Poker involves many skills that don't even come into play in chess, and those skills are also part of overall intelligence.
Everyone talks about getting chess into school programs because of its benefits in developing young minds.... true enough. But poker can also teach skills that chess falls woefully short on.... skills that have much importance in the business world. Life is full of probabilities, and chess teaches virtually nothing on that, but poker is all about managing probabilities and risks with limited resources in a world where every move or play has very uncertain results.
Despite this, I don't think we will ever see poker as part of a school program. And yet if we did, I would bet.... indeed, I'd go "all in".... that we would produce more and better entrepreneurs as a result.
Addendum: I just realized that in the Mensa question I've mentioned, the capital letter Y is not horizontally symmetrical in many fonts. Here in this font, it looks like it may be, but in many fonts, capital Y is using a slanted upwards line met by a slanted downwards line -- not horizontally symmetrical.Last edited by Sid Belzberg; Sunday, 7th May, 2017, 01:31 PM.
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Re: Trump
Originally posted by Sid Belzberg View PostOn the Mensa Test about 1/3 of my time was spent finding the word Banalities. That was about the only thing in that test that was really hard. The other test had two rows of letters where the top row of letters shared an attribute that if you turned the letters around sideways they looked the same and the bottom row of letters had an attribute that if you turned the letters upside down they were the same. You were then asked to find the next letter that would work for both rows. That question took me a while and then I noticed that the choice H shared both these attributes. I suspect that would be the only one you would have got wrong. About the only thing the tests prove is one's ability to look for patterns that might be outside of the norm. In my view that does not signify much at all.
...
But secondly, I have news for you about the specific question you mention above. Both you and Mensa apparently have it wrong.
You see, the capital letter K in most fonts is NOT vertically symmetrical. If you flip it upside down in most fonts, it does NOT look the same. That breaks the whole question.
( The question read:
What letter is in the two cells marked * ?
M I X A Y O *
D C O X K I *
The choices were A, H, C, D, E, F or "I don't know". The correct answer, as evidenced by Sid getting 30/30, is "H". But the logic is faulty and makes the whole question faulty.
And by the way, the whole test is also faulty because one isn't told whether an answer of "I don't know" can be the correct answer, or is in fact any different from answering with a wrong choice. )
I took a screen shot of this post as I was writing it, because in the font used here, the capital letter K looks vertically symmetrical. But I pasted it into a paint program, isolate the letter K, enlarged it many times, and.... it is not vertically symmetrical. It appears to be so on the screen at normal size, but when enlarged, there is a very slight discrepancy. I did the same thing with the font used in the online Mensa test. Same result: vertically asymmetrical, even more noticeable than with the font used here.
Mensa didn't think about this. I did think about it as soon as I saw the letter K used in the question.
So does that make me "more intelligent" because I noticed it? No, that's not my point. My point is that even Mensa can distort the meaning of intelligence.
And in another aspect of the same topic, I don't think chess comes close to completely measuring intelligence. Poker involves many skills that don't even come into play in chess, and those skills are also part of overall intelligence.
Everyone talks about getting chess into school programs because of its benefits in developing young minds.... true enough. But poker can also teach skills that chess falls woefully short on.... skills that have much importance in the business world. Life is full of probabilities, and chess teaches virtually nothing on that, but poker is all about managing probabilities and risks with limited resources in a world where every move or play has very uncertain results.
Despite this, I don't think we will ever see poker as part of a school program. And yet if we did, I would bet.... indeed, I'd go "all in".... that we would produce more and better entrepreneurs as a result.
Addendum: I just realized that in the Mensa question I've mentioned, the capital letter Y is not horizontally symmetrical in many fonts. Here in this font, it looks like it may be, but in many fonts, capital Y is using a slanted upwards line met by a slanted downwards line -- not horizontally symmetrical.
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Re: Trump
Originally posted by Peter McKillop View PostGood luck in Chicago.
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Re: Trump
Originally posted by Vlad Drkulec View PostBefore proceeding down this path of his choosing it would probably make sense to insist that he rewrite these tests as they only provide a standardized score to compare the pool of current test takers.
Did any of the non-dummies have trouble gathering that or was it just these two conservative "scholars" over here.
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Re: Trump
In today's edition of "Belzberg Can't Read"...
Originally posted by Sid Belzberg View PostAll well and good except that you gave me this long story about the GMAT and LSAT being a better test and that testing facilities were more widely available for this particular test.This was simply an attempt to con me into entering an unwinnable bet.
Additionally, I said the only tests I know of where they issue the same test in multiple testing sites are the LSAT and the GMAT. This is simply a fact. Those are the only two I know of. Are there others? You haven't mentioned any. Understand that I'm talking about writing the exact same test simultaneously in different cities, not simply writing the same type of test simultaneously in different cities.
But most importantly, trying to con you? I admitted my bias up front.
Originally posted by ben daswani View PostI'm admittedly biased
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Re: Trump
Originally posted by Sid Belzberg View PostDon't bother with the sample IQ tests, I have no interest into entering into a wager with a con artist.
He says in love and war all is fair
But he's got cards he ain't showing- ISLEY BROTHERS "Sunshine"
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Re: Trump
Originally posted by Sid Belzberg View PostI know a young woman in New York who scored perfect on her GMAT's and she now makes a very nice living tutoring kids in practicing this test who did not do well on it. All of the kids she tutored scored near perfect on these tests so it shows that with practice one can do well on these tests and again does not signify anything at all.
Recent research has shown that almost any skill can be achieved with "mindful learning" and practice. The idea of inate talent is baloney.
One of the more famous experiments was where a student was selected at random in a population of volunteers for the following test. He was asked to repeat back seven digits rapidly spoken out. The number was then increased to eight. If he was successful in that then nine were spoken out. When the subject was out of his comfort zone (say nine digits) they then went back to eight digits and only went back to nine when ti was clear he was ok with eight. After a year of this process he could repeat back 82(!) digits spoken to him. He did not display any particular talent for this before the test and they also later on found that anyone could do this.
The same is true of chess, with proper techniques in mindful learning one can indeed improve.
So a higher rating simply proves that you have more patterns that you have stored away. Basically ten minutes of mindful practice is more important then two hours of mindless practice. So for example if i were to attempt Ben's challenge of the GMAT i would probably enlist the young women in New York to train me.
I would assume Ben's score was perfect ( he chided Vlad for having a less then perfect score)
so the bet would be a complete waste of time as the best outcome is break even.
I suspect that is why he wanted GMAT or LSAT instead of an IQ test.
The IQ test would also be a waste of time albeit I would be interested to know what score I would need to beat before considering such a bet. Information that Ben has not yet disclosed. In any event Ben has been claiming how he is so much smarter then the rest of us and I find that to be obnoxious.
I also find his statement that he is an Atheist but "he does not believe in the non existance of a God" to fall under the definition of agnostic.
In my opinion if the only value one place's on someone is how well they have learned to write a test or play a game of chess then they have missed the boat when it comes to life.
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