The Unofficial Stephen Jay Gould Archive. Unofficial SJG Archive... tephen Jay Gould (1941-2002) was among the best known and widely read scientists of the... www.stephenjaygould.org/
You're welcome, but you should be made aware that that conversion table is simply the result of a simplistic formula that Rodrigo de la Jara came up with by comparing the SAT scores accepted as minimal requirements for various high-IQ societies with the actual IQ scores those societies accept as minimum.
Woldry wrote: On the SAT (which, when I took it in the late 1970's, lined up fairly well with IQ test results) I got 1330, which translates roughly to a 133 IQ.
She caught up with her peers within two years of being rescued and was found to have a normal IQ. Apparently her brain continued developing normally in the absence of intellectual stimulation in the dark attic.
Dire Bonobo wrote: It also means (again, assuming 40 variant boys) that those two kids personally accounted for almost 10% of the summed IQ in the group
IQ is a quantification of variance within a population. It does not sum.
IQ and alcoholism are indeed correlated. See the bullet lists "Variables correlated with g" and "Variables inversely correlated with g" at the following link:
You said xylitol "will kill all the good bacteria in your intestines." That does not seem to be the case, firstly because people who eat it do not drop dead, and secondly because these PubMed abstracts reports measurements of faecal flora after xylitol dosing that do not seem to be consistent with a killing off of all of the good gut bacteria:
All animals were capable of adapting to 20% dietary xylitol and an accompanying enhancement of the ability of caecal and faecal flora to utilize xylitol was observed.
hyc wrote: The granular xylitol is kinda dangerous stuff. The label says you can use it as a 1:1 replacement for sucrose, but really if you take more than about a teaspoon at one time it will kill all the good bacteria in your intestines, and that will be a very unpleasant experience. (Trust me on this, you really don't want to find out firsthand.)
I eat at least an ounce every day. I have eaten a quarter pound at a time in the past. I don't think I had any problems with the higher amounts other than loose stools.
WindBourne: China loses 30000 mine workers a year? You are implying that they died from mining accidents or job-related sickness.
s
China loses 6,000 coal miners per year at the jobsites (in the mineshafts).
http://www.google.com/search?q=china+mining+death
timeOday wrote: My T40 has served well for 2 1/2 years, and is starting to get a bit creaky. The left mouse button has to be pushed extra hard
a ptop+trackpad
I never use my mouse buttons on my laptop. I double-tap the pad to left-click.
http://www.google.com/search?q=%22double-tap%22+l
http://www.google.com/search?q=stephen+j+gould
Anonymous Coward wrote: Jensen did not publish his rebuttal until Gould died. Can we say smear campaign? I think so.
Jensen's review of Gould's "The Mismeasure of Man" was published in Contemporary Education Review in Summer 1982.
http://www.debunker.com/texts/jensen.html
Gould died in 2002.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stephen_Jay_Gould
Gould had 20 years to respond to Jensen and never did.
You asked which one you should say is your IQ. Your full-scale IQ score is your IQ score for that particular instance of taking the WAIS-III.
On which tests did you receive the scores that you reported above?
paulsgre wrote: I would be interested to see longitudinal data of IQ tests repeated across a varied population over time
http://www.google.com/search?q=nlsy+bell+curve
evenprime wrote: > IQ does not change significantly after age 7 or so.
Got a reference handy?
The g Factor.
Woldry wrote: On [...] nonverbal tests [...] I test significantly lower (~125) than on the ones geared specifically to test verbal IQ
I have never heard of a standardized "verbal IQ" test. What specific test or tests are you referring to?
You're welcome, but you should be made aware that that conversion table is simply the result of a simplistic formula that Rodrigo de la Jara came up with by comparing the SAT scores accepted as minimal requirements for various high-IQ societies with the actual IQ scores those societies accept as minimum.
Woldry wrote: On the SAT (which, when I took it in the late 1970's, lined up fairly well with IQ test results) I got 1330, which translates roughly to a 133 IQ.
137.78 Wechsler IQ. 140.29 Stanford-Binet IQ.
http://members.shaw.ca/delajara/oldSATIQ.html
ThinWhiteDuke: minimum wage [...] $3 per hour
http://www.dol.gov/esa/minwage/america.htm
brain development won't occur if people aren't _challenged_ to think.
t ic%22+iq
An illegitemate child named Isabelle was locked in a dark attic for years with her deaf and mute mother and no toys.
http://www.google.com/search?q=%22locked+in+an+at
She caught up with her peers within two years of being rescued and was found to have a normal IQ. Apparently her brain continued developing normally in the absence of intellectual stimulation in the dark attic.
Here are more things IQ has been found to correlate with:
http://www.childrenofmillennium.org/science.htm
Dire Bonobo wrote: It also means (again, assuming 40 variant boys) that those two kids personally accounted for almost 10% of the summed IQ in the group
IQ is a quantification of variance within a population. It does not sum.
how is it that [...] my SISTER and I both scored THE SAME
Perhaps you both performed equally well on the test.
Jensen responded and Gould never responded in turn:
http://www.debunker.com/texts/jensen.html
the phenomenon of a genetics-mediated drop in IQ is called dysgenics.
http://www.childrenofmillennium.org/eugenics.htm
IQ and alcoholism are indeed correlated. See the bullet lists "Variables correlated with g" and "Variables inversely correlated with g" at the following link:
http://www.childrenofmillennium.org/science.htm
trout0mask wrote: 3. The meaning of IQ in this sense, as even the inventor of IQ tests said, is really just "what IQ tests measure".
s e_frm/thread/f601ef89c1b46761/3ce8b211af42a62d?lnk =st&q=%22what+the+tests+test%22+boring&rnum=1&hl=e n#3ce8b211af42a62d
Edwin G. Boring did not invent the IQ test.
http://groups.google.com/group/rec.org.mensa/brow
being black or asian [...] has nothing to do with the ability to use the internet.
Blacks, as a hereditary racial trait, have low g-factor strengths (low IQs). Therefore, blacks are poorly adapted to the task of employing technology.
It takes less road to carry bike traffic, and bikes do less damage to the road.
That is illegal.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?CMD
hyc wrote: The granular xylitol is kinda dangerous stuff. The label says you can use it as a 1:1 replacement for sucrose, but really if you take more than about a teaspoon at one time it will kill all the good bacteria in your intestines, and that will be a very unpleasant experience. (Trust me on this, you really don't want to find out firsthand.)
I eat at least an ounce every day. I have eaten a quarter pound at a time in the past. I don't think I had any problems with the higher amounts other than loose stools.
at_18 wrote: What "inexhaustible supply of uranium"?
The oceans are continuously replenished with uranium via rivers.