What does it mean to be a member of Mensa?
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Each national organization has their own tests, and qualifying tests can be very different. About seven years ago, I took the American Mensa proctored test rather than a "standard" IQ test. It started out with a passage being read to us, then several tests that measured our ability to decypher patterns, perform basic computational skills, work logic puzzles and the like, then a final test about what we remembered from the read passage we heard about an hour and a half earlier.
I'm not sure that memory should be a part of IQ metrics although I don't reject the importance of memory. My IQ is about 20 points higher than my boss' but he has a better memory. It seems to serve him well enough since he makes more money than me. On the other hand I used to have a roommate who claimed 170 and I make more money than she does. It's not an indicator of ability to succeed. IMS, IQ tests were developed in France as a means to cull out the lower class from being able to attend public schools. Some people pooh-pooh the idea of IQ tests as being culturally slanted but I'm not so sure that holds in a society where television tends to flatten the cultural barriers. I do question exposure to the use, and subsequent understanding of their meaning, of some words in conversations within sub-cultures but everyone certainly has access to the same exposure in today's technologically oriented world.
I'm not a programmer but I play one at the office
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It means they can pass some IQ tests which generally mean nothing; having a high IQ does not make people intelligent.
Unrequited desire is character building. OriginalGriff
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I am a member of American Mensa. All it "means" to be a member is that I have a qualifying test score (national organizations have varying lists; here is the US list[^]) that places me in the 98th or 99th percentile. In general, Mensans have a kind of intellectual ADD: if you listen to a group of us talking, the conversation might well start out about cars, then move to the theory of interstellar space travel, to cosmology, to stellar physics, to nuclear power, to global warming and back to cars, all in about ten minutes time. It is a given that sex and food will be mentioned several times during that same ten minutes. This doesn't mean we're "retarded", just that our discussions are given more lead to wander where they will. A lot of people find such conversations difficult to follow; to be honest, we feel just as frustrated talking you. The result is that many high IQ people (Mensans and not) tend to be socially maladjusted: we don't get the kind of practice and positive feedback that you get for being social. That is why Mensa exists, to be a social organization that makes it easier for us to meet one another and engage people at our level.
Gregory.Gadow wrote:
A lot of people find such conversations difficult to follow; to be honest, we feel just as frustrated talking you
I'll have to agree with that. Despite having a 155 score (but never joined) I get into conversations with one of my co-workers who's mental processes seem to work on more than one level at a time. Conversing with him is difficult because he can't focus on the conversation we're having without interjecting his thoughts on whatever else is occupying his thoughts.
I'm not a programmer but I play one at the office
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Gregory.Gadow wrote:
A lot of people find such conversations difficult to follow; to be honest, we feel just as frustrated talking you
I'll have to agree with that. Despite having a 155 score (but never joined) I get into conversations with one of my co-workers who's mental processes seem to work on more than one level at a time. Conversing with him is difficult because he can't focus on the conversation we're having without interjecting his thoughts on whatever else is occupying his thoughts.
I'm not a programmer but I play one at the office
The mind often finds solutions to the problem at hand by wandering in totally unrelated fields... How many times have you gone to bed only to think of a solution to some problem you had during the day? I think the same happens on a lower scale. If I try to concentrate on the problem, I can make logical conclusions towards a solution. But if I let my mind poke around, I can be creative and invent new solutions that I wouldn't have thought of otherwise. Or I might just waste a few hours thinking about how generalized anesthesia works (it's quite interesting actually).
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Apparently, you only have to be in the top 2% to be in Mensa. I'd like to chat with some of the members of Mega Society. High IQ societies. Mega Society.
Somebody in an online forum wrote:
INTJs never really joke. They make a point. The joke is just a gift wrapper.
So for a group of 1-in-1000000 people, they can't produce anything better than the most basic of websites? This always intrigues me...
Don't forget to rate my post if it helped! ;) "He has no enemies, but is intensely disliked by his friends." "His mother should have thrown him away, and kept the stork." "There's nothing wrong with you that reincarnation won't cure." "He loves nature, in spite of what it did to him."
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I'm not sure that memory should be a part of IQ metrics although I don't reject the importance of memory. My IQ is about 20 points higher than my boss' but he has a better memory. It seems to serve him well enough since he makes more money than me. On the other hand I used to have a roommate who claimed 170 and I make more money than she does. It's not an indicator of ability to succeed. IMS, IQ tests were developed in France as a means to cull out the lower class from being able to attend public schools. Some people pooh-pooh the idea of IQ tests as being culturally slanted but I'm not so sure that holds in a society where television tends to flatten the cultural barriers. I do question exposure to the use, and subsequent understanding of their meaning, of some words in conversations within sub-cultures but everyone certainly has access to the same exposure in today's technologically oriented world.
I'm not a programmer but I play one at the office
"Intelligence" is pretty nebulous: even experts in the field cannot agree on what they are actually studying. Most definitions include the ability to learn and process new information, so many IQ tests have a memory portion. As for history, modern IQ tests were developed on the then novel theory that there were inherent differences in people's intellectual capacity. The idea wasn't to prevent the lower classes from being able to attend public school; the idea was to create a meritocratic society where people better able to learn got an education regardless of class, and where people less able to learn were directed into vocational training better suited to their abilities. This approach remains to this day, in the form tests like the SAT, ACT and other standardized tests. It was in the United States, during the very popular eugenics movement of the early 1900s, that IQ scores were used to cull the population; thousands of people, mostly poor African Americans, were sterilized against their will solely on the basis of test scores in a horrifically misguided attempt to "purge" mental retardation from society.
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Gregory.Gadow wrote:
A lot of people find such conversations difficult to follow; to be honest, we feel just as frustrated talking you
I'll have to agree with that. Despite having a 155 score (but never joined) I get into conversations with one of my co-workers who's mental processes seem to work on more than one level at a time. Conversing with him is difficult because he can't focus on the conversation we're having without interjecting his thoughts on whatever else is occupying his thoughts.
I'm not a programmer but I play one at the office
Like I said, intellectual ADD :laugh: It gets annoyi... SQUIRREL!! ... annoying at time for us, too.
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For me it was only puzzle/logic sequences. No algebra or listening or anything else. It was about 7 or 8 years ago. Perhaps the tests have changed to cover broader skills, which makes perfect sense to me, as intelligence cannot be exclusively mathematical/logical/etc. IMO.
Intelligence can't be quantified, IMO.
Don't forget to rate my post if it helped! ;) "He has no enemies, but is intensely disliked by his friends." "His mother should have thrown him away, and kept the stork." "There's nothing wrong with you that reincarnation won't cure." "He loves nature, in spite of what it did to him."
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Surely they have better things to do than trifle around with HTML. :rolleyes:
Somebody in an online forum wrote:
INTJs never really joke. They make a point. The joke is just a gift wrapper.
So play around with CSS! :laugh:
Don't forget to rate my post if it helped! ;) "He has no enemies, but is intensely disliked by his friends." "His mother should have thrown him away, and kept the stork." "There's nothing wrong with you that reincarnation won't cure." "He loves nature, in spite of what it did to him."
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So for a group of 1-in-1000000 people, they can't produce anything better than the most basic of websites? This always intrigues me...
Don't forget to rate my post if it helped! ;) "He has no enemies, but is intensely disliked by his friends." "His mother should have thrown him away, and kept the stork." "There's nothing wrong with you that reincarnation won't cure." "He loves nature, in spite of what it did to him."
Surely they have better things to do than trifle around with HTML. :rolleyes:
Somebody in an online forum wrote:
INTJs never really joke. They make a point. The joke is just a gift wrapper.
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What does it mean to be a member of Mensa? Not a lot really.
Forgive your enemies - it messes with their heads
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Being member of Mensa just proves that you are highly intelligent. However, it's often overlooked that intelligence has nothing to do with how smart/wise you are - many of us (inside and outside Mensa) are too dumb to use our brain to the full potential.
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No, being intelligent gives you a high IQ. :) Maybe IQ tests measure your potential to cope.
I'm not a programmer but I play one at the office
I have taken Mensa tests and I am quite satisfied they don't measure anything useful. And no, that is not sour grapes because I got a low score; according to Mensa my IQ is (was) 148. It still means nothing.
Unrequited desire is character building. OriginalGriff
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It means you passed a test to qualify for membership. This test supposedly tells you your IQ. I'm a member, for the record. I looked through the membership directory at one point long ago and saw that Piers Anthony[^] was also a member. Of course, the people that have posted insults probably consider him a loser too, despite his dozens of best selling novels. I'd be willing to bet there are many respectable geeks that are members. The best thing about membership is being able to talk to other intelligent people that don't feel important by insulting people on message boards.
It's interesting that even among those typically considered "nerds" like some of us programmers, that there is a subgroup who catches flak. You'd think we would, as a whole, understand that we don't like it and therefore not do it to ourselves. You can see it in other groups too, like wargamers making fun of D&D players, who in turn make fun of LARPers, etc.
Machaira wrote:
The best thing about membership is being able to talk to other intelligent people that don't feel important by insulting people on message boards.
Well really though, who's to say trolling forums isn't a form of escapist entertainment? I'm pretty sure a lot of otherwise intelligent people do that. I imagine getting back at the people who make fun of you IRL would be pretty satisfying. I know there are people on other sites not-to-be-mentioned that get away with it, either via anonymity or sock-puppeting. Not that I do or would do that, mind you. I get my anger-kicks by winning (or helping my team win) at online video games while the other team is busy typing insults and getting agitated all on their own. Nothing better than to play all game without responding to a single insult, and then win, and know that they're eating a big old slice of humble pie. Just an alternative viewpoint! I like to remind people: be nice to nerds, because you'll probably work for one! :)
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I have a colleague who is a member of this organization. However, I think the ID cards got mixed up because this person is actually retarded. So I ask of you members of the project that is code, what does it mean to be a member of Mensa? In case you haven't heard of it[^]
Just along for the ride. "the meat from that butcher is just the dogs danglies, absolutely amazing cuts of beef." - DaveAuld (2011)
Being a member means you convinced your country's Mensa Association that you have an IQ in the top 2% of the population. IQ tests do not measure intelligence, social skills, congeniality, culture, manners or any other aspect of personality that are actually useful to the person and society. They measure the capacity to perform on IQ tests... I am sure a lot of members of Mensa are actively engaged in their various programmes and charities. They are probably the salt of the earth and all that. The card-waving ones, I play poker with when I am low on beer money. They get an expensive but valuable lesson in Probabilities and Applied Psychology.
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I am a member of American Mensa. All it "means" to be a member is that I have a qualifying test score (national organizations have varying lists; here is the US list[^]) that places me in the 98th or 99th percentile. In general, Mensans have a kind of intellectual ADD: if you listen to a group of us talking, the conversation might well start out about cars, then move to the theory of interstellar space travel, to cosmology, to stellar physics, to nuclear power, to global warming and back to cars, all in about ten minutes time. It is a given that sex and food will be mentioned several times during that same ten minutes. This doesn't mean we're "retarded", just that our discussions are given more lead to wander where they will. A lot of people find such conversations difficult to follow; to be honest, we feel just as frustrated talking you. The result is that many high IQ people (Mensans and not) tend to be socially maladjusted: we don't get the kind of practice and positive feedback that you get for being social. That is why Mensa exists, to be a social organization that makes it easier for us to meet one another and engage people at our level.
Gregory.Gadow wrote:
In general, Mensans have a kind of intellectual ADD: if you listen to a group of us talking, the conversation might well start out about cars, then move to the theory of interstellar space travel, to cosmology, to stellar physics, to nuclear power, to global warming and back to cars, all in about ten minutes time. It is a given that sex and food will be mentioned several times during that same ten minutes. This doesn't mean we're "retarded", just that our discussions are given more lead to wander where they will.
I doubt pretty much all of the assumptions in there. Some of them that are wrong. 1. That intelligence has has anything to do with diversity of topics. 2. That frequency of topic change has anything to do with it. 3. That intelligent people do not focus on single subjects for long periods of time.
Gregory.Gadow wrote:
A lot of people find such conversations difficult to follow; to be honest, we feel just as frustrated talking you.
If person A is claiming to be more 'intelligent' than person B then person A is responsible for any problems that might arise from any communication. And even more so if person A is claiming to be significantly more 'intelligent'. If person A is incapable of doing that then they not more 'intelligent'.
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0bx wrote:
Having a high IQ doesn't mean you're smart. It just means you're good at some things most people are really bad at.
It it's that, really. Most people have either an in-depth knowledge of one or two fields (just football, or just gardening, or just computer coding), or they have a dabbling interest in many fields (they'll cook, knit, play World of Warcraft and strum a guitar, but only a little bit in all of these.) In my experience, Mensans tend to have a strong interest in and knowledge of many fields: they might be great cooks, have an excellent flower garden, be active in the local dodgeball league, read several books every week and sit on a couple of charity boards. It is not that we are good that things that most people are really bad at; its that we typically have more things that we are good at than is typical. Mind you, though, that doesn't mean we are good at everything, even though a lot of us like to pretend that we are. :rolleyes: We may have more fields of expertise, but outside of those we're just as ignorant as everyone else.
Gregory.Gadow wrote:
In my experience, Mensans tend to have a strong interest in and knowledge of many fields: they might be great cooks, have an excellent flower garden, be active in the local dodgeball league, read several books every week and sit on a couple of charity boards. It is not that we are good that things that most people are really bad at; its that we typically have more things that we are good at than is typical.
First I doubt it is "many". Second I doubt what 'good' means in context. There are probably hundreds of thousands of areas in which one might become interested. Being interested in 10 versus 4 is not significant in that context. Second there is the conclusion that what they are interested in makes them 'good' at it. I suspect there are very few people that maintain an 'interest' in anything to which they also feel that they are 'bad' at it. They either think they are at least average or better than average at it. Regardless of their actual abilitity. Given that exactly how many olympic gold medal winners with their own network cooking shows, national gardening prizes, book review columns and publicly recognized charity contributors do you really know? And how many are also holding down a full time job (besides the cooking show and review column), managing a long time relationship and raising children at the same time? Although perhaps succeeding at thoses is not considered 'intelligent'?
Gregory.Gadow wrote:
...even though a lot of us like to pretend that we are
I would suspect that a non-trivial number suffer from elitism as well.
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It means you passed a test to qualify for membership. This test supposedly tells you your IQ. I'm a member, for the record. I looked through the membership directory at one point long ago and saw that Piers Anthony[^] was also a member. Of course, the people that have posted insults probably consider him a loser too, despite his dozens of best selling novels. I'd be willing to bet there are many respectable geeks that are members. The best thing about membership is being able to talk to other intelligent people that don't feel important by insulting people on message boards.
Machaira wrote:
I'd be willing to bet there are many respectable geeks that are members
Which means nothing. There is no filter that differentiates between 'respectable' and non-respectable (but still intelligent in terms of the limited measurement of the test.)
Machaira wrote:
The best thing about membership is being able to talk to other intelligent people that don't feel important by insulting people on message boards.
Sorry? Exactly what part of the test precludes intelligent people that do that? Or are you claiming that 'intelligent' people don't ever insult anyone? Or perhaps they insult them but that they do not do it to make themselves feel self important? And does this mean that you never insulted anyone? (Given that you are a member.)
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I have a colleague who is a member of this organization. However, I think the ID cards got mixed up because this person is actually retarded. So I ask of you members of the project that is code, what does it mean to be a member of Mensa? In case you haven't heard of it[^]
Just along for the ride. "the meat from that butcher is just the dogs danglies, absolutely amazing cuts of beef." - DaveAuld (2011)
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I have a colleague who is a member of this organization. However, I think the ID cards got mixed up because this person is actually retarded. So I ask of you members of the project that is code, what does it mean to be a member of Mensa? In case you haven't heard of it[^]
Just along for the ride. "the meat from that butcher is just the dogs danglies, absolutely amazing cuts of beef." - DaveAuld (2011)
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It means you have convinced a bunch of charmless losers that you should hang out with them doing logic problems instead of getting a life! They really are a sad collection of introverted tossers, I have never met a mensa member who is more interesting than the table the group is named after.
------------------------------------ I will never again mention that I was the poster of the One Millionth Lounge Post, nor that it was complete drivel. Dalek Dave CCC Link[^] Trolls[^]
Joke: How do you know if someone is a Mensa member? They tell you.