Think you're smart? 12-year old astrophysics prodigy....

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • kwame k
    TOASTMASTER GENERAL
    • Feb 2008
    • 11302

    Think you're smart? 12-year old astrophysics prodigy....

    In some ways, Jacob Barnett is just like any other 12-year-old kid. He plays Guitar Hero, shoots hoops with his friends, and has a platonic girlfriend.

    But in other ways, he's a little different. Jake, who has an IQ of 170, began solving 5,000-piece jigsaw puzzles at the age of 3, not long after he'd been diagnosed with Asperger's syndrome, a mild form of autism. A few years later, he taught himself calculus, algebra, and geometry in two weeks. By 8, he had left high school, and is currently taking college-level advanced astrophysics classes—while tutoring his older classmates. And he's being recruited for a paid researcher job by Indiana University.

    Now, he's at work on a theory that challenges the Big Bang—the prevailing explanation among scientists for how the universe came about. It's not clear how developed it is, but experts say he's asking the right questions.

    "The theory that he's working on involves several of the toughest problems in astrophysics and theoretical physics," Scott Tremaine of Princeton University's Institute for Advanced Studies—where Einstein (pictured) himself worked—wrote in an email to Jake's family. "Anyone who solves these will be in line for a Nobel Prize."

    It's not clear where Jake got his gifts from. "Whenever I try talking about math with anyone in my family," he told the Indianapolis Star, "they just stare blankly."

    But his parents encouraged his interests from the start. Once, they took him to the planetarium at Butler University. "We were in the crowd, just sitting, listening to this guy ask the crowd if anyone knew why the moons going around Mars were potato-shaped and not round," Jake's mother, Kristine Barnett, told the Star. "Jacob raised his hand and said, 'Excuse me, but what are the sizes of the moons around Mars?' "

    After the lecturer answered, said Kristine, "Jacob looked at him and said the gravity of the planet ... is so large that (the moon's) gravity would not be able to pull it into a round shape."
    "That entire building ... everyone was just looking at him, like, 'Who is this 3-year-old?'"

    Link
    Last edited by kwame k; 03-29-2011, 04:25 PM.
    Originally posted by vandeleur
    E- Jesus . Playing both sides because he didnt understand the argument in the first place
  • kwame k
    TOASTMASTER GENERAL
    • Feb 2008
    • 11302

    #2
    Wow, I'm just happy if I can find my car keys
    Originally posted by vandeleur
    E- Jesus . Playing both sides because he didnt understand the argument in the first place

    Comment

    • Dan
      DIAMOND STATUS
      • Jan 2004
      • 12194

      #3
      Originally posted by kwame k
      Wow, I'm just happy if I can find my car keys
      And The G-Spot.
      First Roth Army Kiwi To See Van Halen Live 6/16/2012 Phoenix Arizona.

      Comment

      • kwame k
        TOASTMASTER GENERAL
        • Feb 2008
        • 11302

        #4
        Originally posted by vandeleur
        E- Jesus . Playing both sides because he didnt understand the argument in the first place

        Comment

        • Seshmeister
          ROTH ARMY WEBMASTER

          • Oct 2003
          • 35205

          #5
          I've come to the conclusion that to be really good at mathematics you have to have something wrong with your personality.

          Comment

          • Anonymous
            Banned
            • May 2004
            • 12749

            #6
            Originally posted by Seshmeister
            I've come to the conclusion that to be really good at mathematics you have to have something wrong with your personality.
            He's an autistic with an IQ of 170.

            He's bound to excel at his areas of interest.

            Just think - the combined unnatural & obsessive concentration of an autistic with the IQ of a genius. I don't envy that kid, not one bit.

            Cheers! :bottle:

            Comment

            • kwame k
              TOASTMASTER GENERAL
              • Feb 2008
              • 11302

              #7
              Originally posted by Seshmeister
              I've come to the conclusion that to be really good at mathematics you have to have something wrong with your personality.

              So Ace is a mathematical genius
              Originally posted by vandeleur
              E- Jesus . Playing both sides because he didnt understand the argument in the first place

              Comment

              • Anonymous
                Banned
                • May 2004
                • 12749

                #8
                Originally posted by kwame k
                Wow, I'm just happy if I can find my car keys
                Well...

                No. It's just too easy. I can't. I shan't.

                What is it that you play again?

                I feel so dirty.

                Cheers! :bottle:

                Comment

                • Anonymous
                  Banned
                  • May 2004
                  • 12749

                  #9
                  Originally posted by kwame k
                  So Ace is a mathematical genius
                  You mustn't mention Those That Don't Matter.

                  Cheers! :bottle:

                  Comment

                  • binnie
                    DIAMOND STATUS
                    • May 2006
                    • 19145

                    #10
                    Originally posted by Seshmeister
                    I've come to the conclusion that to be really good at mathematics you have to have something wrong with your personality.
                    With that kind of logic you must be the kind of person for whom 2 + 2 = 5.
                    The Power Of The Riff Compels Me

                    Comment

                    • PETE'S BROTHER
                      DIAMOND STATUS
                      • Feb 2007
                      • 12678

                      #11
                      didn't russel crowe have the same problem one time?
                      Another one of those classic genius posts, sure to generate responses. You log on the next day to see what your witty gem has produced to find no one gets it and 2 knotheads want to stick their dicks in it... Well played, sir!!

                      Comment

                      • Seshmeister
                        ROTH ARMY WEBMASTER

                        • Oct 2003
                        • 35205

                        #12
                        Originally posted by binnie
                        With that kind of logic you must be the kind of person for whom 2 + 2 = 5.
                        I'm talking really good. Like professor and beyond into those people that live in mathematics camps and go on to win Nobel prizes.

                        I know a mathematics professor pretty well and lived next door to a lecturer for a while as well as doing it as an undergraduate myself for a bit.

                        All a bit anecdotal but there seems to me to be a connection between the really good ones and having what these days is called a degree of high functioning Aspergers or Autism. Or you get these people that can do amazing things like repeat PI to thousands of decimal places but have synesthesia.

                        I didn't mean to belittle anyone like that, in fact I find it all amazing but when I've met these kinds of people they usually will display some pretty odd character traits socially. Maybe it just goes with being driven, there are some odd doctors and surgeons out there too but the mathematicians seem to be a special case.

                        Are you one?

                        Comment

                        • Seshmeister
                          ROTH ARMY WEBMASTER

                          • Oct 2003
                          • 35205

                          #13
                          Originally posted by PETE'S BROTHER
                          didn't russel crowe have the same problem one time?
                          I think that was a character in a movie but it illustrates my point.

                          Nash was nuts but also won the Nobel prize, I think for game theory stuff which I know very little about.

                          Comment

                          • chefcraig
                            DIAMOND STATUS
                            • Apr 2004
                            • 12172

                            #14
                            Originally posted by Seshmeister
                            I've come to the conclusion that to be really good at mathematics you have to have something wrong with your personality.
                            Or, if you merely have something wrong with your personality, have a relative who is good with numbers.










                            “The greatest enemy of knowledge is not ignorance, it is the illusion of knowledge.”
                            ― Stephen Hawking

                            Comment

                            • SunisinuS
                              Crazy Ass Mofo
                              • May 2010
                              • 3301

                              #15
                              23*3. Well not in THAT relative sense.
                              Can't Control your Future. Can't Control your Friends. The women start to hike their skirts up. I didn't have a clue. That is when I kinda learned how to smile a lot. One Two Three Fouir fun ter thehr fuur.

                              Comment

                              Working...