Gladwell Chapter 3 Summary

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At the beginning of chapter three, Gladwell tells the story of two extremely intelligent people who have high IQs — Christopher Langan, who many call the smartest man in America, and Lewis Terman, a professor of psychology of Stanford University and his group of young geniuses called “Termites.” A special thing about Langan that Gladwell talks about is, if Einstein has an IQ of one fifty, Chris has an IQ of one ninety-five. He has become the public face of genius in American life, he gets invited on many news, shows, and he has been the subject of a documentary by the filmmaker Errol Morris, all because of his brain. Once, a neuropsychologist gave Langan an IQ test, and his score was literally off the charts — too high to be accurately measured. He was speaking at six months of age. When he was three years old, he would listen and follow the announcer read …show more content…

He worked his way through Principia Mathematica at the age of sixteen. Gladwell has pointed to the misconceptions of many people about genius through the story of Lewis Terman. After he met and tested IQ of a remarkable boy named Henry Cowell, Terman was fascinated when he found out that Cowell had an IQ of above 140, which is near genius level. He began to look for other “diamonds,” and he found so many more genius, his “Termites.” But, Terman made an error, he was wrong about his Termites, and he didn’t understand what a real outlier was. Gladwell explains Terman’s error at the end of this chapter, he also highlights the special tests for geniuses, such as Raven's Progressive Matrices — it requires no language skills or specific body of acquired knowledge, it's a measure of abstract reasoning skills through pictures, a typical Raven's test consists of forty-eight items, each one harder than the one before it, and IQ is calculated based on how many items are answered

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