Hello,
Yet more precision about more philosophy about what means: "I think i am smart like a genius"..
I have to ask a smart question:
Why am i below taking the "Exceptionally" gifted in smartness as human smartness of a genius?
Is it the right measure ?
I think it is the right measure because it is measured relatively to what we call average human smartness, and since we have to avoid the extremist view that i think is not correct thinking, so we have to
be pragmatism since the "Exceptionally" gifted in smartness is viewed as smartness of a genius by the average human smartness, thus i think it is the right measure so that to not be extremism. So reread my thoughts to understand:
I have just read the following about:
What Is a Genius IQ Score?
https://www.verywellmind.com/what-is-a-genius-iq-score-2795585
So i think i have just made a little mistake, because the very near human smartness of a human smartness of a genius starts at 145 IQ, because we call it "Highly" gifted in smartness, so if we take the "Exceptionally" gifted in smartness as smartness of a genius, we call the Highly gifted in smartness: "very near" smartness to the smartness of a genius. So i correct my little mistake below, so read my thoughts again:
I just said the following:
--
Notice in my previous writing that i am saying about me the following:
"I think i am smart like a genius"
So notice that in the dictionary the "Like" means "Similar"
and "Similar" means: looking or being almost, but not exactly, the same.
So hope you are understanding it correctly.
--
But notice that the "almost" means in the dictionary: "very near"
But you have to be smart because you have to know how to measure it,
so how do you think you can measure it? is it in relative or in absolute ? i think that it is relative to the other levels of human smartness,
so we can for example say that an IQ of 145 is also very near to
smartness of a genius when you measure it relatively to the other levels of human smartness, because notice that we are not saying "strictly" that it is the most nearer smartness to a smartness of a genius, so you are noticing that the "almost" can be, as in our example above, an interval.
Thank you,
Amine Moulay Ramdane.