Click here for more articles and past favorites
The Outsiders
©By Grady M. Towers
(From The Prometheus Society's Journal, Gift
of Fire Issue No. 22, April 1987. This article was re-issued
in Issue 72, March 95.)
This
was provided by Robert Dick who says "The Outsiders" is
his favorite Gift of Fire article. As the [former]
Prometheus Society Membership Officer, he recommends "The Outsiders"
as a good view of the high-IQ condition.
His
name was William James Sidis, and his IQ was estimated at between
250 and 300 [8, p. 283]. At eighteen months he could read The
New York Times, at two he taught himself Latin, at three he learned
Greek. By the time he was an adult he could speak more than forty
languages and dialects. He gained entrance to Harvard at eleven,
and gave a lecture on four-dimensional bodies to the Harvard Mathematical
Club his first year. He graduated cum laude at sixteen, and became
the youngest professor in history. He deduced the possibility
of black holes more than twenty years before Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar
published An Introduction to the Study of Stellar Structure. His
life held possibilities for achievement that few people can imagine.
Of all the prodigies for which there are records, his was probably
the most powerful intellect of all. And yet it all came to nothing.
He soon gave up his position as a professor, and for the rest
of his life wandered from one menial job to another. His experiences
as a child prodigy had proven so painful that he decided for the
rest of his life to shun public exposure at all costs. Henceforth,
he denied his gifts, refused to think about mathematics, and above
all refused to perform as he had been made to do as a child. Instead,
he devoted his intellect almost exclusively to the collection
of streetcar transfers, and to the study of the history of his
native Boston. He worked hard at becoming a normal human being,
but never entirely succeeded. He found the concept of beauty,
for example, to be completely incomprehensible, and the idea of
sex repelled him. At fifteen he took a vow of celibacy, which
he apparently kept for the remainder of his life, dying a virgin
at the age of 46. He wore a vest summer and winter, and never
learned to bathe regularly. A comment that Aldous Huxley once
made about Sir Isaac Newton might equally have been said of Sidis.
For the price Newton had to pay for being a supreme intellect
was that he was incapable of friendship, love, fatherhood, and
many other desirable things. As a man he was a failure; as a
monster he was superb [5, p. 2222].
There was a time when all precocious children were thought to
burn out the same way that Sidis did. The man most responsible
for changing this belief was Lewis M. Terman. Between 1900 and
1920 he was able to carry out a study of about a hundred gifted
children, and his observations convinced him that many of the
traditional beliefs about the gifted were little more than superstitions.
To confirm these observations, he obtained a grant from the Commonwealth
Fund in 1922, and used it to sift a population of more than a
quarter of a million children, selecting out all those with IQs
above 140 for further study. That group has been monitored continuously
ever since. Many of the previously held beliefs about the gifted
did indeed turn out to be false. The gifted are not weak or sickly,
and although the incidence of myopia is greater among them, they
are generally thought to be better looking than their contemporaries:
They are not nerds.
Nevertheless, in his rush to dispel the erroneous
beliefs about the gifted, Terman sometimes made claims not supported
by his own data. In fact, in some cases, the data suggests that
exactly the opposite conclusion should have been drawn. Terman's
own data shows that there is a definite connection between measured
intelligence and mental and social maladjustment. The consequences
of misinterpreting these data are so grave that it will pay to
re-examine them in some detail.

Terman's longitudinal research on the gifted included a constant
assessment of mental health and social adjustment. Subjects were
classified into three categories: satisfactory adjustment, some
maladjustment, and serious maladjustment. Terman defined these
categories in the following way.
1. Satisfactory. Subjects classified in this category were essentially
normal; i.e., their "desires, emotions, and interests were
compatible with the social standards and pressures" of their
group. Everyone, of course, has adjustment problems of one kind
or another. Satisfactory adjustment as here defined does not mean
perfect contentment and complete absence of problems, but rather
the ability to cope adequately with difficulties in the personal
make-up or in the subject's environment. Worry and anxiety when
warranted by the circumstances, or a tendency to be somewhat high
strung or nervous--provided such a tendency did not constitute
a definite personality problem--were allowed in this category.
2. Some maladjustment. Classified here were subjects with excessive
feelings of inadequacy or inferiority, nervous fatigue, mild anxiety
neurosis, and the like. The emotional conflicts, nervous tendencies
and social maladjustments of these individuals, while they presented
definite problems, were not beyond the ability of the individual
to handle, and there was no marked interference with social or
personal life or with achievement. Subjects whose behavior was
noticeably odd or freakish, but without evidence of serious neurotic
tendencies, were also classified in this category. 3. Serious
maladjustment. a.) Classified as 3a were subjects who had shown
marked symptoms of anxiety, mental depression, personality maladjustment,
or psychopathic personality. This classification also includes
subjects who had suffered a "nervous breakdown," provided
the condition was not severe enough to constitute a psychosis.
Subjects with a previous history of serious maladjustment or nervous
breakdown (without psychosis) were included here even though their
adjustment at the time of rating may have been entirely satisfactory.
b.) Classified as 3b were those subjects who had at any time suffered
a complete mental breakdown requiring hospitalization, whatever
their condition at the time of rating. In the majority of cases
the subjects were restored to reasonably good mental health after
a brief period of hospital care [6, pp. 99-101].
In 1940, when the group was about 29 years of age, a large scale
examination was carried out. Included in that examination was
a high level test of verbal intelligence, designated at that time
the Concept Mastery, but later re-named the Concept Mastery test
form A. Terman found the following relationship between adjustment
and verbal intelligence. (These are raw scores, not IQs.)
CMT-A [6, p. 115]
|
Men |
Women |
| |
N
|
Mean |
S.D. |
N |
Mean |
S.D. |
| Satisfactory adjustment |
407 |
95.2 |
30.9 |
344 |
92.4 |
28.7 |
| Some maladjustment |
91 |
108.0 |
31.2 |
59 |
98.6 |
25.4 |
| Serious maladjustment |
18 |
119.5 |
23.6 |
17 |
108.6 |
27.1 |
| |
The data show three things. First, that there is
a definite trend for the maladjusted to make higher scores on
the Concept Mastery test. Second, that women show symptoms of
maladjustment at lower scores than men. And third, that 21 percent
of the men and 18 percent of the women showed at least some form
of maladjustment.
During 1950-52, when the group was approximately 41 years old,
another examination was made using a new test, the Concept Mastery
test form T. Test scores were again compared to assessments of
adjustment. (CMT-T scores are not interchangeable with CMT-A scores.
They have different means and standard deviations.)
CMT-T [7, p. 50]
|
Men |
Women |
| |
N
|
Mean |
S.D. |
N |
Mean |
S.D. |
| Satisfactory adjustment |
391 |
136.4 |
26.2 |
303 |
130.8 |
27.7 |
| Some maladjustment |
120 |
145.6 |
26.1 |
117 |
138.1 |
26.4 |
| Serious maladjustment |
40 |
152.8 |
23.8 |
33 |
140.0 |
29.6 |
| |
Similar conclusions can be drawn from these data as well. Again,
there is a definite trend shown for the maladjusted to make higher
scores than the satisfactorily adjusted. Again, women show symptoms
of maladjustment at lower scores than men. But the most alarming
thing of all is that the percentage of maladjustment shown for
both sexes rose in the 12 years since the previous examination.
The percentage of men showing maladjustment having risen from
21 percent to 29 percent, and the figure for women having risen
from 18 percent to 33 percent! Nearly double what it was before!
How did Terman interpret these data? Terman states:
Although severe mental maladjustment is in general somewhat
more common among subjects who score high on the Concept Mastery
test, many of the most successful men of the entire group also
scored high on this test [7, p. 50].
In other words, Terman deliberately tried to give the impression
that the relationship between verbal intelligence and mental and
social maladjustment was weak and unreliable. He did this by misdirection.
He gave a truthful answer to an irrelevant question. Terman failed
to realize that a small difference in means between two or more
distributions can have a dramatic effect on the percentage of
each group found at the tails of the distribution. The relevant
questions should have been "what is the percentage of maladjustment
found at different levels of ability, and does this show a trend?"
Terman's data can be used to find answers to these questions.
The method used to solve this problem is a relatively simple
one but tedious in detail. (See appendix.) The results, however,
are easy to understand. Using CMT-T scores for men as an illustration,
and pooling the data for some maladjustment and serious maladjustment,
the following percentages can be obtained.
PERCENTAGE OF MEN SHOWING SOME OR SERIOUS MALADJUSTMENT
AT SIX LEVELS OF ABILITY
|
CMT-T
|
Percent
Maladjusted
|
|
< 97.8
|
13
|
|
97.8 - 117.1
|
18
|
|
117.1 - 136.4
|
25
|
|
136.4 - 155.7
|
31
|
|
155.7 - 175
|
38
|
|
> 175
|
45
|
By comparison, the Triple Nine Society averages 155.16 on the
CMT-T, and the average score for Prometheus Society members is
169.95 [1, 2]. The implications are staggering, especially when
it is realized that these percentages do not include women, who
show more maladjustment at lower CMT-T scores than men do. Perhaps
this is one of the reasons why super high IQ societies suffer
so much from schisms and a tendency towards disintegration. In
any event, one thing is certain. The currently accepted belief
that verbal intelligence is unrelated to maladjustment is clearly
a myth.
Nevertheless, while Terman's data do provide a prima facie case
for a connection between verbal intelligence and maladjustment,
they fail to explain the causal mechanism involved. To obtain
such insight requires close observation by a gifted observer.
Fortunately, those insights are available to us in Leta S. Hollingworth's
book, Children above 180 IQ. Hollingworth not only observed her
subjects as children, she also continued to maintain some contact
with them after they had reached maturity. So although her book
is ostensibly about children, it is in fact laced throughout by
her observations on exceptionally gifted adults as well.
Before examining Hollingworth's findings, however, it is necessary
to explain how childhood IQs are related to adult mental ability.
As a child ages, his IQ tends to regress to the mean of the population
of which he is a member. This is partly due to the imperfect reliability
of the test, and partly due to the uneven rate of maturation.
The earlier the IQ is obtained, and the higher the score, the
more the IQ can be expected to regress by the time the child becomes
an adult. So although Hollingworth's children were all selected
to have IQs above 180, their adult status was not nearly so high.
In fact, as adults, there's good reason to believe that their
abilities averaged only slightly above that of the average Triple
Nine member. Evidence for this conjecture comes from the Terman
research data. Terman observed the following relationship between
childhood IQs on the Stanford-Binet and adult status on the Concept
Mastery test form T.
CONCEPT MASTERY SCORES ACCORDING
TO CHILDHOOD STANFORD-BINET IQ [7, p. 58]
| IQ |
N |
CMT-T |
| 135-139 |
41 |
114.2 |
| 140-149 |
344 |
131.8 |
| 150-159 |
200 |
136.5 |
| 160-169 |
70 |
146.2 |
| > 170 |
48 |
155.8 |
The average childhood IQ score for those with childhood IQs above
170 was 177.7 for men, and 177.6 for women. That's quite close
to the 180 cutoff used by Leta Hollingworth in selecting her subjects.
Note that Terman's subjects who scored above 170 IQ as children
averaged 155.8 on the CMT-T at age 41, a score quite close to
the 155.16 made by the average Triple Nine member. Such a close
match makes it reasonable to generalize Hollingworth's findings
to members of both the Triple Nine Society and the Prometheus
Society.
Hollingworth identified a number of adjustment problems caused
by school acceleration. As this is rarely practiced in today's
educational system, these are no longer problems and will not
be discussed. There still remain, however, four adjustment problems
that continue to perplex the gifted throughout their lives, two
applying to all levels of giftedness, and two applying almost
exclusively to the exceptionally gifted--i.e. those with childhood
IQs above 170, or adult Concept Mastery test (T) scores above
155.
One of the problems faced by all gifted persons is learning to
focus their efforts for prolonged periods of time. Since so much
comes easily to them, they may never acquire the self-discipline
necessary to use their gifts to the fullest. Hollingworth describes
how the habit begins.
Where the gifted child drifts in the school unrecognized, working
chronically below his capacity (even though young for his grade),
he receives daily practice in habits of idleness and daydreaming.
His abilities never receive the stimulus of genuine challenge,
and the situation tends to form in him the expectation of an effortless
existence [3, p. 258].
But if the "average" gifted child tends to acquire
bad adjustment habits in the ordinary schoolroom, the exceptionally
gifted have even more problems. Hollingworth continues:
Children with IQs up to 150 get along in the ordinary course
of school life quite well, achieving excellent marks without
serious effort. But children above this mental status become
almost intolerably bored with school work if kept in lockstep
with unselected pupils of their own age. Children who rise above
170 IQ are liable to regard school with indifference or with
positive dislike, for they find nothing in the work to absorb
their interest. This condition of affairs, coupled with the
supervision of unseeing and unsympathetic teachers, has sometimes
led even to truancy on the part of gifted children [3, p. 258].
A second adjustment problem faced by all gifted persons is due
to their uncommon versatility. Hollingworth says:
Another problem of development with reference to occupation grows
out of the versatility of these children. So far from being one-sided
in ability and interest, they are typically capable of so many
different kinds of success that they may have difficulty in confining
themselves to a reasonable number of enterprises. Some of them
are lost to usefulness through spreading their available time
and energy over such a wide array of projects that nothing can
be finished or done perfectly. After all, time and space are limited
for the gifted as for others, and the life-span is probably not
much longer for them than for others. A choice must be made among
the numerous possibilities, since modern life calls for specialization
[3, p. 259].
A third problem faced by the gifted is learning to suffer fools
gladly. Hollingworth notes:
A lesson which many gifted persons never learn as long as they
live is that human beings in general are inherently very different
from themselves in thought, in action, in general intention, and
in interests. Many a reformer has died at the hands of a mob which
he was trying to improve in the belief that other human beings
can and should enjoy what he enjoys. This is one of the most painful
and difficult lessons that each gifted child must learn, if personal
development is to proceed successfully. It is more necessary that
this be learned than that any school subject be mastered. Failure
to learn how to tolerate in a reasonable fashion the foolishness
of others leads to bitterness, disillusionment, and misanthropy
[3, p. 259].
The single greatest adjustment problem faced by the gifted, however,
is their tendency to become isolated from the rest of humanity.
This problem is especially acute among the exceptionally gifted.
Hollingworth says:
This tendency to become isolated is one of the most important
factors to be considered in guiding the development of personality
in highly intelligent children, but it does not become a serious
problem except at the very extreme degrees of intelligence. The
majority of children between 130 and 150 find fairly easy adjustment,
because neighborhoods and schools are selective, so that like-minded
children tend to be located in the same schools and districts.
Furthermore, the gifted child, being large and strong for his
age, is acceptable to playmates a year or two older. Great difficulty
arises only when a young child is above 160 IQ. At the extremely
high levels of 180 or 190 IQ, the problem of friendships is difficult
indeed, and the younger the person the more difficult it is. The
trouble decreases with age because as persons become adult, they
naturally seek and find on their own initiative groups who are
like-minded, such as learned societies [3, p. 264].
Hollingworth points out that the exceptionally gifted do not
deliberately choose isolation, but are forced into it against
their wills.
These superior children are not unfriendly or ungregarious by
nature. Typically they strive to play with others but their efforts
are defeated by the difficulties of the case... Other children
do not share their interests, their vocabulary, or their desire
to organize activities. They try to reform their contemporaries
but finally give up the struggle and play alone, since older children
regard them as "babies," and adults seldom play during
hours when children are awake. As a result, forms of solitary
play develop, and these, becoming fixed as habits, may explain
the fact that many highly intellectual adults are shy, ungregarious,
and unmindful of human relationships, or even misanthropic and
uncomfortable in ordinary social intercourse [3, p. 262].
But if the exceptionally gifted is isolated from his contemporaries,
the gulf between him and the adult authorities in his life is
even deeper.
The very gifted child or adolescent, perceiving the illogical
conduct of those in charge of his affairs, may turn rebellious
against all authority and fall into a condition of negative suggestibility--a
most unfortunate trend of personality, since the person is then
unable to take a cooperative attitude toward authority. A person
who is highly suggestible in a negative direction is as much in
bondage to others around him as is the person who is positively
suggestible. The social value of the person is seriously impaired
in either case. The gifted are not likely to fall victims to positive
suggestion but many of them develop negativism to a conspicuous
degree [3, p 260].
Anyone reading the super high IQ journals is aware of the truth
of this statement. Negative individuals abound in every high IQ
society.
Hollingworth distilled her observations into two ideas that are
among the most important ever discovered for the understanding
of gifted behavior. The first is the concept of an optimum adjustment
range. She says:
All things considered, the psychologist who has observed the
development of gifted children over a long period of time from
early childhood to maturity, evolves the idea that there is
a certain restricted portion of the total range of intelligence
which is most favorable to the development of successful and
well-rounded personality in the world as it now exists. This
limited range appears to be somewhere between 125 and 155 IQ.
Children and adolescents in this area are enough more intelligent
than the average to win the confidence of large numbers of their
fellows, which brings about leadership, and to manage their
own lives with superior efficiency. Moreover, there are enough
of them to afford mutual esteem and understanding. But those
of 170 IQ and beyond are too intelligent to be understood by
the general run of persons with whom they make contact. They
are too infrequent to find congenial companions. They have to
contend with loneliness and personal isolation from their contemporaries
throughout the period of their immaturity. To what extent these
patterns become fixed, we cannot yet tell [3, p. 264].
Hollingworth's second seminal idea is that of a "communication
range." She does not state this explicitly, but it can be
inferred from some of her comments on leadership.
Observation shows that there is a direct ratio between the intelligence
of the leader and that of the led. To be a leader of his contemporaries
a child must be more intelligent but not too much more intelligent
than those to be led... But generally speaking, a leadership pattern
will not form--or it will break up--when a discrepancy of more
than about 30 points of IQ comes to exist between leader and led
[3, p. 287].
The implication is that there is a limit beyond which genuine
communication between different levels of intelligence becomes
impossible. To say that a child or an adult is intellectually
isolated from his contemporaries is to say that everyone in his
environment has an IQ at least 30 points different from his own.
Knowing only a person's IQ, then, is not enough to tell how well
he's likely to cope with his environment. Some knowledge of the
intellectual level of his environment is also necessary.
If the optimum range of intelligence lies between 125 and 155
IQ, as Hollingworth suggests, then it follows that 155 can be
thought of as a threshold separating an optimum adjustment zone
below it from a suboptimum range above it. Other psychologists
have also noticed how this score tends to divide people into two
naturally occurring categories. Among these is one of the doyens
of psychometrics, David Wechsler. He comments:
The topics of genius and degeneration are only special cases
of the more general problem involved in the evaluation of human
capacities, namely the quantitative versus qualitative. There
are those who insist that all differences are qualitative, and
those who with equal conviction maintain that they are exclusively
quantitative. The true answer is that they are both. General intelligence,
for example, is undoubtedly quantitative in the sense that it
consists of varying amounts of the same basic stuff (e.g., mental
energy) which can be expressed by continuous numerical measures
like intelligence Quotients or Mental-Age scores, and these are
as real as any physical measurements are. But it is equally certain
that our description of the difference between a genius and an
average person by a statement to the effect that he has an IQ
greater by this or that amount, does not describe the difference
between them as completely or in the same way as when we say that
a mile is much longer than an inch. The genius (as regards intellectual
ability) not only has an IQ of say 50 points more than the average
person, but in virtue of this difference acquires seemingly new
aspects (potentialities) or characteristics. These seemingly new
aspects or characteristics, in their totality, are what go to
make up the "qualitative" difference between them [9,
p. 134].
Wechsler is saying quite plainly that those with IQs above 150
are different in kind from those below that level. He is saying
that they are a different kind of mind, a different kind of human
being.
This subjective impression of a difference in kind also appears
to be fairly common among members of the super high IQ societies
themselves. When Prometheus and Triple Nine members were asked
if they perceived a categorical difference between those above
this level and others, most said that they did, although they
also said that they were reluctant to call the difference genius.
When asked what it should be called, they produced a number of
suggestions, sometimes esoteric, sometimes witty, and often remarkably
vulgar. But one term was suggested independently again and again.
Many thought that the most appropriate term for people like themselves
was Outsider.
The feeling of estrangement, or at least detachment, from society
at large is not merely subjective illusion. Society is not geared
to deal effectively with the exceptionally gifted adult because
almost nothing objective is known about him. It is a commonplace
observation that no psychometric instrument can be validly used
to evaluate a person unless others like him were included in the
test's norming sample. Yet those with IQs above 150 are so rare
that few if any were ever included in the norming sample of any
of the most commonly used tests, tests like the Strong-Campbell
Interest Inventory, the Kuder Vocational Preference Record, the
MMPI and so on. As a consequence, objective self-knowledge for
the exceptionally gifted is nearly impossible to obtain. What
he most needs to know is not how he differs from ordinary people--he
is acutely aware of that--but how he is both like and unlike those
of his own kind. The most commonly used tests can't provide that
knowledge, so he is forced to find out in more roundabout ways.
It is his attempts to find answers to these questions that may
explain the emergence of the super high IQ societies. Where else
can he find peers against which to measure himself?
There appear to be three sorts of childhoods and three sorts
of adult social adaptations made by the gifted. The first of these
may be called the committed strategy. These individuals were born
into upper middle class families, with gifted and well educated
parents, and often with gifted siblings. They sometimes even had
famous relatives. They attended prestigious colleges, became doctors,
lawyers, professors, or joined some other prestigious occupation,
and have friends with similar histories. They are the optimally
adjusted. They are also the ones most likely to disbelieve that
the exceptionally gifted can have serious adjustment problems.
The second kind of social adaptation may be called the marginal
strategy. These individuals were typically born into a lower socio-economic
class, without gifted parents, gifted siblings, or gifted friends.
Often they did not go to college at all, but instead went right
to work immediately after high school, or even before. And although
they may superficially appear to have made a good adjustment to
their work and friends, neither work nor friends can completely
engage their attention. They hunger for more intellectual challenge
and more real companionship than their social environment can
supply. So they resort to leading a double life. They compartmentalize
their life into a public sphere and a private sphere. In public
they go through the motions of fulfilling their social roles,
whatever they are, but in private they pursue goals of their own.
They are often omnivorous readers, and sometimes unusually expert
amateurs in specialized subjects. The double life strategy might
even be called the genius ploy, as many geniuses in history have
worked at menial tasks in order to free themselves for more important
work. Socrates, you will remember was a stone mason, Spinoza was
a lens grinder, and even Jesus was a carpenter. The exceptionally
gifted adult who works as a parking lot attendant while creating
new mathematics has adopted an honored way of life and deserves
respect for his courage, not criticism for failing to live up
to his abilities. Those conformists who adopt the committed strategy
may be pillars of their community and make the world go around,
but historically, those with truly original minds have more often
adopted the double life tactic. They are ones among the gifted
who are most likely to make the world go forward.
And finally there are the dropouts. These sometimes bizarre individuals
were often born into families in which one or more of the parents
were not only exceptionally gifted, but exceptionally maladjusted
themselves. This is the worst possible social environment that
a gifted child can be thrust into. His parents, often driven by
egocentric ambitions of their own, may use him to gratify their
own needs for accomplishment. He is, to all intents and purposes,
not a living human being to them, but a performing animal, or
even an experiment. That is what happened to Sidis, and may be
the explanation for all those gifted who "burn out"
as he did. (Readers familiar with the Terman study will recognize
the committed strategy and the marginal strategy as roughly similar
to the adjustment patterns of Terman's A and C groups.)
If the exceptionally gifted adult with an IQ of 150, or 160,
or 170 has problems in adapting to his world, what must it have
been like for William James Sidis, whose IQ was 250 or more?
Aldous Huxley once wrote:
Perhaps men of genius are the only true men. In all the history
of the race there have been only a few thousand real men. And
the rest of us--what are we? Teachable animals. Without the
help of the real man, we should have found out almost nothing
at all. Almost all the ideas with which we are familiar could
never have occurred to minds like ours. Plant the seeds there
and they will grow; but our minds could never spontaneously
have generated them [4, p. 2242].
And so we see that the explanation for the Sidis tragedy is simple.
Sidis was a feral child; a true man born into a world filled with
animals--a world filled with us.