>Everyone will hit a wall where learning becomes a struggle, whether you're a literal retard or a genius. I don't believe that for a second. Certainly everyone reaches an age where they no longer learn as fast as when they were younger or encounter a subject that they don't intuitively grasp at first but if they are truly intelligent they will still excel at it after a while.
Kasparov has been beaten by younger players many times by now but he's still smarter than 99.999% of chess players in the world. He might not be as sharp as he used to be but he's still better than almost everyone alive. As long as you stay healthy your IQ is for life.
Austin Russell
Kasparov is only a 135 IQ.
Which is actually a 122.5 IQ in terms of rarity.
But he's the chess king.
Brandon Sullivan
>135 IQ That still puts him ahead of 99% of the human population. >actually only 122.5 IQ in terms of rarity ... What? >he's the chess king Correction; Used to be. He's still good but nowhere near the best anymore.
Brandon Taylor
I mean, he is the product of a 94 IQ Armenian female and a 110 IQ Jewish snake dad race-mixing. He is only on the 102 IQ bell-curve.
Julian Long
This has nothing to do with genius chess players. I am arguing against the claim that someone will never struggle academically in their life, even if they get 140+ meme points. That only happens if you stop studying before you find the thing that you struggle with, because if you keep studying you will find it one day.
Jackson Johnson
A healthy adult white male that exercises everyday, does intermittent fasting, and takes omega 3 and vitamin D (either naturally or through supplements) and a multivitamin will have an IQ of 112.5
Garry Kasparov is only 135 IQ, Max, despite this.
He is literally just a very strong man that memorized chess
Evan Cox
He is literally a gay, crazy man that was so powerful and intelligent and gay that he wins at chess.
Hudson Howard
>memorized chess absolute brainlet I bet you think chess is a solved game too
Logan Bailey
I'm not joking. He memorized hundreds of common, difficult positions and let his IQ of 135 and laser-sharp attention carry him through the rest of the game.
That's why he was god-like.
Sebastian Gray
You know what I mean. Sure, maybe you can find some obscure niche area of quantum mechanics or abstract math that you can't quite wrap your head around but in general day to day life you will never struggle to excel in whatever endeavors you devote yourself to. There's no academic job that you couldn't do if you applied yourself. >Subtracting points because the guy works out and eats his vitamins Yeah no. IQ is supposed to be measure when you're at your best since it's supposed to reflect your maximum potential. So if anything that just makes his result even more reliable. >strong man that memorized chess Chess does require memorizing patterns but it's so much more than that. It requires you to improvise new strategies on the spot, sometimes in split seconds. Those strategies have to be good enough to hold against an opponent that thinks 10-20 steps ahead in every direction as you're playing against them. Memorizing some old tactics isn't even enough to make you a candidate master, much less an international master or grandmaster.