首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
How Geniuses Work In 1905, Albert Einstein developed the theory of special relativity. He also proved that atoms exist and f
How Geniuses Work In 1905, Albert Einstein developed the theory of special relativity. He also proved that atoms exist and f
admin
2012-04-09
57
问题
How Geniuses Work
In 1905, Albert Einstein developed the theory of special relativity. He also proved that atoms exist and figured out that light behaves as both a particle and a wave. To top it all off, he developed his famous equation E=mc2, which describes the relationship between matter and energy, the same year. He was only 26 years old.
Without a doubt, Einstein was a genius. So was Isaac Newton — as any fan of "Star Trek: The Next Generation" can tell you, he invented physics. He also played a big role in the development of calculus, which some people have trouble comprehending even after extensive classroom study. Another genius, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, started composing music when he was 5 years old. Mozart wrote hundreds of pieces before his death in 1760 at age 35.
According to conventional wisdom, geniuses are different from everyone else. They can think faster and better than other people. In addition, many people think that all that extra brainpower leads to eccentric or quirky behavior. And although geniuses are fairly easy to spot, defining exactly what makes one person a genius is a little trickier. Figuring out how that person became a genius is harder still.
There are two big things that make it difficult to study genius:
The genius label is subjective. Some people insist that anyone with an intelligence quotient (IQ) higher than a certain value is a genius. Others feel that IQ tests measure only a limited part of a person’s total intelligence. Some believe high test scores have little to do with real genius.
Genius is a big-picture concept. Most scientific and medical inquiries, on the other hand, examine details. A concept as subjective as genius isn’t easy to quantify, analyze or study.
So, when exploring how geniuses work, it’s a good idea to start by defining precisely what a genius is. For the purpose of this article, a genius isn’t simply someone with an exceptionally high IQ. Instead, a genius is an extraordinarily intelligent person who breaks new ground with discoveries, inventions or works of art. Usually, a genius’s work changes the way people view the world or the field in which the work took place. In other words, a genius must be both intelligent and able to use that intelligence in a productive or impressive way.
Genius and the Brain
Your brain regulates your body’s organ systems. When you move around, it sends impulses along your nerves and tells your muscles what to do. Your brain controls your senses of smell, taste, touch, sight and hearing, and you experience and process emotions using your brain. On top of all that, your brain allows you to think, analyze information and solve problems. But how does it make you smart?
Scientists haven’t figured out exactly how all the gray matter in your brain works, but they do have an idea of which part lets you think. The cerebral cortex (大脑皮层), which is the outermost part of your brain, is where thought and reasoning happen. These are your brain’s higher functions — the lower functions, which relate to basic survival, take place deeper in the brain.
Your cerebral cortex is the largest part of your brain, and it’s full of wrinkles and folds that allow it to fit in your skull. If you removed and stretched out an adult human’s cerebral cortex, it would be about as large as a few pages of a newspaper. It’s divided into several lobes, and different regions within these lobes handle specific tasks related to how you think.
In spite of all those challenges to see the brain inside and how it works, researchers have figured out a few things about how the brain affects intelligence. A 2004 study at the University of California, Irvine found that the volume of gray matter in parts of the cerebral cortex had a greater impact on intelligence than the brain’s total volume. The findings suggest that the physical attributes of many parts of the brain — rather than a centralized "intelligence center" — determine how smart a person is.
Genius and Intelligence
Like genius, intelligence can be difficult to quantify. Psychologists and neuroscientists study intelligence extensively. An entire field of study, known as psychometrics, is devoted to studying and measuring intelligence. But even within that field, experts don’t always agree on exactly what it is or how best to analyze it. And while intelligence is central to genius, not all geniuses score well on intelligence tests or perform well in school.
Intelligence testing has existed for thousands of years. Chinese emperors used aptitude testing to evaluate civil servants as early as 2200 BC. The tests we know as IQ tests got their start near the end of the 19th century. Today, IQ tests generally measure a person’s memory as well as language, spatial and mathematical abilities. In theoretical terms, these tests measure a concept or factor known as g. You can think of g as a unit of measure or a way of expressing the amount of intelligence a person has.
IQ tests are also standardized so that most people score between 90 and 110. When placed on a graph, the IQ test scores of a large group of people will generally resemble a bell curve, with most people scoring in the average range. A common perception is that anyone scoring above a certain number — often 140 — is automatically a genius. But in spite of the existence of high-IQ organizations, many scientists caution that there is no such thing as a genius-level IQ.
Many educators and researchers feel that, in general, standardized IQ tests do a good job of predicting how well a child will perform in school. Schools often use these tests to determine which children to place in gifted or special education classes. Most colleges and universities and some employers also use standardized tests as part of their application processes.
Creativity and Genius
There’s a big difference between being really smart and being a genius. While geniuses tend to be exceptionally intelligent, they also use imagination and creativity to invent, discover or create something new within their field of interest. They break new ground rather than simply remembering or reciting existing information.
Geniuses do not usually operate in isolation, either — nearly all of them analyze the work of other great minds and use that information to make new discoveries. Self-taught geniuses, on the other hand, often explore information in unexpected or inventive ways, due in part to their lack of formal training. In either case, the ability to imagine new possibilities is as important as general intelligence.
Like intelligence, creativity and imagination can be difficult to isolate, quantify or explain. Some researchers believe that creative people have less latent inhibition than other people. Latent inhibition is the unconscious ability to ignore unimportant stimuli. Researchers theorize that creative people either receive more stimuli from the world around them or ignore less of it. This may also explain why creative people seem to be more prone to mental illness. People who are both unable to filter stimuli and emotionally unstable are more prone to psychosis.
Creativity also seems to have some traits in common with bipolar disorder. During an episode of mania, a person with bipolar disorder experiences increases in energy, the ability to focus and motivation. Bipolar disorder is more common among writers and artists than in the general population, but scientists have not found a cause-and-effect relationship between the two.
The creativity of geniuses also relates to productivity and hard work. Sometimes, the most dramatic examples of genius involve people who produce their best work at a very young age. However, not every genius produces exceptional work early in life the way Einstein and Mozart did. Some, like Ludwig von Beethoven, do their best work later in life.
The author cites______as an example of geniuses who produced exceptional work later in life.
选项
答案
Ludwig von Beethoven
解析
这句提到,然而,不是所有天才都像爱因斯坦和莫扎特那样在年轻时就创造出卓越的成就。有一些天才,像贝多芬,就是在晚年才缔造出杰作的,故答案为Ludwig von Beethoven。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/P1E7777K
0
大学英语六级
相关试题推荐
A、It’soverpriced.B、Itmakespeoplecrazy.C、It’sdifferentfromothercoffeehouses’coffee.D、AllthecoffeeisfromBrazil.
A、Goforaswim.B、Makebetteruseoftime.C、Followtheofficialprocedure.D、Watchtelevision.C语义替换题。女士建议男士要通过正规渠道来停修课程,所以C(遵
Peopledonotanalyzeeveryproblemtheymeet.Sometimestheytrytoremembera【B1】______fromthelasttimetheyhadasimilar
A、Whenthereisaheavyrain.B、Whenfineweathercontinues.C、Whenthereisafog.D、Whenwetweatheriscoming.D文中关键句为“Manyp
A、Problemswithlivinginanapartment.B、Thechancetofindapart-timejob.C、Thecostofrentnearuniversities.D、Asearchf
A、TheFederalgovernment.B、Individualschools.C、Respectivestates.D、Localcommunities.C根据原文andeachstateisresponsiblefor
Forme,scientificknowledgeisdividedintomathematicalsciences,naturalsciencesorsciencesdealingwithnaturalworld,and
AmazinglyfortheBritish,wholovequeues,thereisnoformalline-up--thebarstaffareskilledatknowingwhoseturnitis.
Mostvolcanoesarequiet.Theyrest【B1】______forhundredsofyears.Noonepaysmuchattentiontothem.MountSt.Helenswason
随机试题
水蛭最主要的性状特征是()。
微量营养素包括_______。
咯血患者的关键护理措施是
下列选项属于实际征地费用中转移支付费用的有()。
甲股份有限公司(以下简称甲公司)系一家上市公司,2012年至2014年对乙股份有限公司(以下简称乙公司)股权投资业务的有关资料如下:(1)2012年5月16日,甲公司与乙公司的股东丙公司签订股权转让协议。该股权转让协议规定:甲公司以5400万元收
公文中的数字,除成文日期、部分结构层次序数和在词、词组、惯用语、缩略语、具有修辞色彩语句中作为词素的数字必须使用汉字外,应当使用阿拉伯数字。()
以下是在农村住房安全检查工作中乡镇干部和检查人员的一段对话。检查人员:“住房安全工作推进得怎么样了?”乡镇干部:“每个人我都检查过,都有安全住房。”检查人员:“都检查过了吗?”乡镇干部:“还有老张一户没有解决。目前他
供给侧改革的意义在于,通过制度变革、结构优化和要素升级,在供给侧放松管制,激发活力,释放创造力,充分发挥市场在资源配置中的决定性作用,进而为中国经济培育新主体,开发新产业,打造新动力。以下措施不是供给侧改革所提倡的工作重点的是()。
设f(x)在(-∞,+∞)上可导,[f(x)-f(x-1)],则a=_______.
PeopleintheUnitedStateslovetheirdogsandtreatthemwell.Theyusemanyexpressionswiththeword"dog".Herearesomeex
最新回复
(
0
)