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The Prodigy: A Biography of William James Sidis, America's Greatest Child Prodigy Audible Audiobook – Unabridged
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William Sidis, 1897-1944, was the world's greatest child prodigy. His IQ was an estiamted 50 to 100 points higher than Einstein's, the highest ever recorded or estimated. His father, a pioneer in the field of abnormal psychology, believed that he and his wife could create a genius in the cradle. They hung alphabet blocks over the baby's crib-and within six months little Billy was speaking. At 18 months he was reading The New York Times; at three, Homer in the original Greek. At six he spoke at least seven languages.
Told with flair and insight ... this is his story.
©1986, 2011 Amy Wallace (P)2011 David N. Wilson
- Listening Length10 hours and 27 minutes
- Audible release date9 December 2011
- LanguageEnglish
- ASINB00UZKIVC4
- VersionUnabridged
- Program TypeAudiobook
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Product details
Listening Length | 10 hours and 27 minutes |
---|---|
Author | Amy Wallace |
Narrator | Aze Fellner |
Audible.com.au Release Date | 09 December 2011 |
Publisher | Crossroad Press |
Program Type | Audiobook |
Version | Unabridged |
Language | English |
ASIN | B00UZKIVC4 |
Best Sellers Rank | 178,058 in Audible Books & Originals (See Top 100 in Audible Books & Originals) 1,871 in Unexplained Mysteries 1,893 in Occult (Audible Books & Originals) 2,826 in Biographies of Celebrities & Entertainment Professionals |
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New Age of Barbarism
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The Prodigy - A Biography of William James Sidis.
Reviewed in the United States on 26 January 2011Verified Purchase
_The Prodigy_ (1986, E. P. Dutton) by Amy Wallace is a biography of one of America's greatest child prodigies William James Sidis. This book traces the life of Sidis from his earliest infancy in which his amazing intellectual powers were revealed to his experience at Harvard and eventually his decline and later life. William James Sidis (1898 - 1944) was an American child prodigy who early on revealed uncanny mathematical and linguistic abilities. Sidis was the son of Boris Sidis and Sarah Mandelbaum, two Russian Jewish immigrants. Sidis was to reveal uncanny abilities at an early age and the influence of his psychiatrist father Boris Sidis was to play an important role in his development. Sidis revealed uncanny abilities in mathematics, linguistics, and other areas at a very early age and was thus to achieve widespread notoriety as a child prodigy. Sidis attended Harvard University where he taught advanced math courses and was widely regarded as supremely intelligent. Later Sidis was to teach at Rice University but in later life was to drop out of the educational establishment. Sidis became involved in politics and was to become an influential libertarian, socialist, and pacifist. Sidis also was to write several prominent books and articles including theories regarding cosmology, the Second Law of Thermodynamics, and black holes, American Indian history, and an obscure work on the collection of street car transfers. While Sidis later life was to prove disappointing in terms of his early abilities, he remained a notorious figure and was frequently hounded by women and in the press. The life of Sidis raises issues concerning how prodigies are treated by mainstream society and the role of gifted education. The failure of Sidis asks important questions regarding the failure of many prodigies, although the author maintains that Sidis' life was not a failure by his own standards but rather it became necessary for him to "go underground". The author estimates the I.Q. of Sidis at between 250 and 300 based on his mathematical abilities.
The book includes the following chapters -
The Little Father - explains the early life of Boris Sidis, the father of William James Sidis, and a Ukrainian immigrant to America. Boris Sidis was to attend Harvard where he achieved notoriety in the fields of psychiatry and psychology and was influential in the circle around Josiah Royce, William James, and other famous thinkers. Sarah Mandelbaum was born in Russia and immigrated to America where she met Boris Sidis and was tutored by him. She was to go on to become a medical doctor, though she was never to use her M.D. degree. She became the mother of William James Sidis.
April Fool - describes the birth of William James "Billy" Sidis on April 1, 1898 noting his early uncanny genius and abilities. The author notes the early accomplishments of the infant Sidis in speaking and reading as well as his early education under his father psychiatrist Boris Sidis.
The Little Professor - explains Sidis schooling and his excellent performance in subjects such as mathematics, astronomy, languages, anatomy, map and calendar making, and grammar at the very early age of eight. Notes Sidis uncanny abilities in particular in mathematics and languages and his renown as a "little professor".
Sidis an Avatar? - explains Sidis attendance at Harvard University along with two other prodigies the mathematician Nobert Weiner and the statesman Adolf Berle. Notes the problematic relationships Sidis had at Harvard due to his young age. Explains Sidis astounding performance in a lecture he gave on four-dimensional mathematics. Compares Sidis to other prodigies such as Gauss and John Stuart Mill and notes their accomplishments.
Utopian Dreams - explains the fact that the press was to hound the child prodigy Sidis and when he became sick maintained that he had suffered a breakdown. This hounding of Sidis was to occur for the rest of his life. Considers Sidis' grades at Harvard as well as his early political writings concerning a utopia which he referred to as "Hesperia" and the role of the Constitution in Sidis' political theories. Notes the fact that Sidis was opposed to art and swore never to marry at an early age.
Portsmouth - considers Boris Sidis' researches into Abnormal Psychology and the Sidis Psychopathic Institute. Notes the role of the Sidis family in Portsmouth, New Hampshire as well as the relationship of the family to William James and other important Harvard professors and personalities.
The Perfect Life - explains the problematic relationship of Sidis to women and his vow never to marry. Notes some of the comments made by Sidis on Harvard's anti-Semitism, unconscious intelligence (his dabblings in his father's field of psychology), education, eugenics, and the family.
Rice - explains the experiences of Sidis at Rice and various proposals made there for marriage. Notes Sidis accomplishments but also his difficulties at Rice and notes his early involvement in radicalism and socialism.
Too Radical for the Radicals - explains how Sidis was ridiculed in the press and his relationships with women were brought to public attention; notes Sidis continuing involvement in radical politics at the time of the Russian Revolution. Notes the role of socialism in the political understanding of Sidis and his identification as a radical by the authorities.
May Day - explains Sidis' first job at MIT and his involvement in the May Day riots and his support for Russian radialism. Explains Sidis difficulties with the authorities, his atheism, and support for the Soviet system.
Rebellion, Romance, and Reversibility - explains Sidis' rebellion against his family, his romances, his involvement with radicalism and the American Communist Party, and his writings on cosmology. In particular, Sidis was to write on cosmology in his book _The Animate and the Inanimate_ (1925) which considers theories of the Big Bang and the "Great Collision", noted the role of the Second Law of Thermodynamics and "Fermi's paradox", and explained various issues surrounding black holes. This book was highly praised by Sidis' Harvard classmates Buckminster Fuller and Norbert Wiener.
In Search of Solitude - explains Sidis search for solitude from the prying eyes of the press explaining why he left academic life and his taking up as a clerk running a comptometer, his rebellion against his father, his relationship with Martha Foley, and relates his own experiences to those of another child prodigy John Stuart Mill.
The Peridromophile - explains how Sidis took up the eccentric hobby of collecting street car transfers ultimately writing an obscure book on the topic entitled _Notes on the Collection of Transfers_ (1926). Sidis was to form _The Peridromophile_, a magazine devoted to this hobby and further engaged in radical politics.
The Double Life - explains Sidis further dedication to this hobby and his double life as an operator of the comptometer. Sidis was to attempt to avoid the press who hounded him repeatedly because of his earlier life as a child prodigy.
The Tribes and the States - notes Sidis' involvement with the American Indians and his writings in _The Tribes and the States_ which attempted to discuss American prehistory. Here, Sidis tried to show the influence of the American Indians on the American Founders and their understanding of liberty (which differed from Sidis' earlier political musings about "Hesperia"). Sidis also was to comment on issues of equality, liberty, money, and democracy in these volumes and to support the American Indian involvement in early American history.
Friends and Relatives - notes the role of some of Sidis' friends and relatives and their discussion and relationships including discussion of the ideas in _The Animate and the Inanimate_. This also explains Sidis attempt to lead a quiet life at his job free from the press.
Invasion of Privacy - notes the role of the press in once again invading the privacy of Sidis when his life and job were revealed to the public and his life came under assault from the press who hounded him.
The Pacifist and the Transfer Wars - explains Sidis' support for pacifism during the Second World War and some of the conflicts that developed as a result of this pacifism and support for radical politics.
"America's Greatest Brain" - explains what happened to Sidis after Boris' death and his troubled relationship with Sarah his mother. Notes how new difficulties arose for Sidis in light of his pacifism during the First and Second World Wars which was considered radically un-American. Notes how the FBI under J. Edgar Hoover was to investigate Sidis' "Peridromophilists" and consider them a radical organization. Explains the reaction of Sidis' friends to the press and their attempts to set the record straight about Sidis.
A Superior Spirit - describes Sidis death and the reaction of his various friends and relatives and their support for his memory. Notes the role of "child prodigies" and "child geniuses" in the history of the United States and the reaction of individuals such as Norbert Wiener to that notion. Explains how the treatment of child prodigies and the gifted resulted in unhappiness for Sidis.
Epilogue - argues that William James Sidis did not burn out or decline as was argued but simply was forced to go underground (the author quotes Ayn Rand's novel _Atlas Shrugged_ to show how frequently the man of genius was forced to go underground in the light of a totalitarian society). The author argues that Sidis had an I.Q. estimated between 250 and 300 putting him easily amongst the world's highest I.Q.s ever recorded. The author considers some of the achievements of Sidis and his early talents relating this to Boris and Sarah's child rearing methods. The author shows some of the problems for gifted education and reflects on comments made by Norbert Wiener concerning gifted education and the Quiz Kids. Explains how gifted children must be allowed to grow up in a world supportive of their talents and that does not shun their oddities.
This book offers an interesting biography of a forgotten genius William James Sidis. Sidis was a brilliant child prodigy who excelled in both mathematics and linguistics but was later to leave these fields to pursue menial labor. Sidis was involved in radical politics and had many eccentric ideas concerning politics, the American Indians, cosmology, and other topics as well as the eccentric hobby of collecting street car transfers. This book provides an interesting study of Sidis and demonstrates some of the difficulties and cruelties inflicted upon him by an intolerant society.
The book includes the following chapters -
The Little Father - explains the early life of Boris Sidis, the father of William James Sidis, and a Ukrainian immigrant to America. Boris Sidis was to attend Harvard where he achieved notoriety in the fields of psychiatry and psychology and was influential in the circle around Josiah Royce, William James, and other famous thinkers. Sarah Mandelbaum was born in Russia and immigrated to America where she met Boris Sidis and was tutored by him. She was to go on to become a medical doctor, though she was never to use her M.D. degree. She became the mother of William James Sidis.
April Fool - describes the birth of William James "Billy" Sidis on April 1, 1898 noting his early uncanny genius and abilities. The author notes the early accomplishments of the infant Sidis in speaking and reading as well as his early education under his father psychiatrist Boris Sidis.
The Little Professor - explains Sidis schooling and his excellent performance in subjects such as mathematics, astronomy, languages, anatomy, map and calendar making, and grammar at the very early age of eight. Notes Sidis uncanny abilities in particular in mathematics and languages and his renown as a "little professor".
Sidis an Avatar? - explains Sidis attendance at Harvard University along with two other prodigies the mathematician Nobert Weiner and the statesman Adolf Berle. Notes the problematic relationships Sidis had at Harvard due to his young age. Explains Sidis astounding performance in a lecture he gave on four-dimensional mathematics. Compares Sidis to other prodigies such as Gauss and John Stuart Mill and notes their accomplishments.
Utopian Dreams - explains the fact that the press was to hound the child prodigy Sidis and when he became sick maintained that he had suffered a breakdown. This hounding of Sidis was to occur for the rest of his life. Considers Sidis' grades at Harvard as well as his early political writings concerning a utopia which he referred to as "Hesperia" and the role of the Constitution in Sidis' political theories. Notes the fact that Sidis was opposed to art and swore never to marry at an early age.
Portsmouth - considers Boris Sidis' researches into Abnormal Psychology and the Sidis Psychopathic Institute. Notes the role of the Sidis family in Portsmouth, New Hampshire as well as the relationship of the family to William James and other important Harvard professors and personalities.
The Perfect Life - explains the problematic relationship of Sidis to women and his vow never to marry. Notes some of the comments made by Sidis on Harvard's anti-Semitism, unconscious intelligence (his dabblings in his father's field of psychology), education, eugenics, and the family.
Rice - explains the experiences of Sidis at Rice and various proposals made there for marriage. Notes Sidis accomplishments but also his difficulties at Rice and notes his early involvement in radicalism and socialism.
Too Radical for the Radicals - explains how Sidis was ridiculed in the press and his relationships with women were brought to public attention; notes Sidis continuing involvement in radical politics at the time of the Russian Revolution. Notes the role of socialism in the political understanding of Sidis and his identification as a radical by the authorities.
May Day - explains Sidis' first job at MIT and his involvement in the May Day riots and his support for Russian radialism. Explains Sidis difficulties with the authorities, his atheism, and support for the Soviet system.
Rebellion, Romance, and Reversibility - explains Sidis' rebellion against his family, his romances, his involvement with radicalism and the American Communist Party, and his writings on cosmology. In particular, Sidis was to write on cosmology in his book _The Animate and the Inanimate_ (1925) which considers theories of the Big Bang and the "Great Collision", noted the role of the Second Law of Thermodynamics and "Fermi's paradox", and explained various issues surrounding black holes. This book was highly praised by Sidis' Harvard classmates Buckminster Fuller and Norbert Wiener.
In Search of Solitude - explains Sidis search for solitude from the prying eyes of the press explaining why he left academic life and his taking up as a clerk running a comptometer, his rebellion against his father, his relationship with Martha Foley, and relates his own experiences to those of another child prodigy John Stuart Mill.
The Peridromophile - explains how Sidis took up the eccentric hobby of collecting street car transfers ultimately writing an obscure book on the topic entitled _Notes on the Collection of Transfers_ (1926). Sidis was to form _The Peridromophile_, a magazine devoted to this hobby and further engaged in radical politics.
The Double Life - explains Sidis further dedication to this hobby and his double life as an operator of the comptometer. Sidis was to attempt to avoid the press who hounded him repeatedly because of his earlier life as a child prodigy.
The Tribes and the States - notes Sidis' involvement with the American Indians and his writings in _The Tribes and the States_ which attempted to discuss American prehistory. Here, Sidis tried to show the influence of the American Indians on the American Founders and their understanding of liberty (which differed from Sidis' earlier political musings about "Hesperia"). Sidis also was to comment on issues of equality, liberty, money, and democracy in these volumes and to support the American Indian involvement in early American history.
Friends and Relatives - notes the role of some of Sidis' friends and relatives and their discussion and relationships including discussion of the ideas in _The Animate and the Inanimate_. This also explains Sidis attempt to lead a quiet life at his job free from the press.
Invasion of Privacy - notes the role of the press in once again invading the privacy of Sidis when his life and job were revealed to the public and his life came under assault from the press who hounded him.
The Pacifist and the Transfer Wars - explains Sidis' support for pacifism during the Second World War and some of the conflicts that developed as a result of this pacifism and support for radical politics.
"America's Greatest Brain" - explains what happened to Sidis after Boris' death and his troubled relationship with Sarah his mother. Notes how new difficulties arose for Sidis in light of his pacifism during the First and Second World Wars which was considered radically un-American. Notes how the FBI under J. Edgar Hoover was to investigate Sidis' "Peridromophilists" and consider them a radical organization. Explains the reaction of Sidis' friends to the press and their attempts to set the record straight about Sidis.
A Superior Spirit - describes Sidis death and the reaction of his various friends and relatives and their support for his memory. Notes the role of "child prodigies" and "child geniuses" in the history of the United States and the reaction of individuals such as Norbert Wiener to that notion. Explains how the treatment of child prodigies and the gifted resulted in unhappiness for Sidis.
Epilogue - argues that William James Sidis did not burn out or decline as was argued but simply was forced to go underground (the author quotes Ayn Rand's novel _Atlas Shrugged_ to show how frequently the man of genius was forced to go underground in the light of a totalitarian society). The author argues that Sidis had an I.Q. estimated between 250 and 300 putting him easily amongst the world's highest I.Q.s ever recorded. The author considers some of the achievements of Sidis and his early talents relating this to Boris and Sarah's child rearing methods. The author shows some of the problems for gifted education and reflects on comments made by Norbert Wiener concerning gifted education and the Quiz Kids. Explains how gifted children must be allowed to grow up in a world supportive of their talents and that does not shun their oddities.
This book offers an interesting biography of a forgotten genius William James Sidis. Sidis was a brilliant child prodigy who excelled in both mathematics and linguistics but was later to leave these fields to pursue menial labor. Sidis was involved in radical politics and had many eccentric ideas concerning politics, the American Indians, cosmology, and other topics as well as the eccentric hobby of collecting street car transfers. This book provides an interesting study of Sidis and demonstrates some of the difficulties and cruelties inflicted upon him by an intolerant society.
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John P. Stratis
4.0 out of 5 stars
comprehensive
Reviewed in the United States on 20 April 2023Verified Purchase
It was a pleasure to read a biography of someone who I knew nothing about. It was quite comprehensive and quite surprising that I never heard about Sidis before. The book also expands the subject at various points to include topics of interest that , again I was not familiar with, Transfers Collecting.
tomomori
4.0 out of 5 stars
「アメリカ最高の神童」と言われた少年…ウィリアム・サイディス、IQ250〜300(噂では)。
Reviewed in Japan on 18 June 2023Verified Purchase
名前だけは知ってるけど詳細は全く知らない「アメリカ史上最高の神童」言われたらしい人の伝記を読んでみましょう、と電子版が安いんで手に取ってみた。父はウクライナ系ユダヤ人で母はロシア系ユダヤ人。世紀末、共に故郷のユダヤ人迫害を逃れてアメリカに移民。しかし帝政ロシア当時のユダヤ人の苦しみは凄い。ウクライナ時代のサイディス父のインテリ闘士ぶりなんか紅涙(図々)絞るもんが。ま、そいでこの父はかなり良い人です。一方、母はモーレツな「ユダヤの母」のかなり極端な例で、うーむ、しかし生涯ここまで息子に嫌い抜かれる母ってのも逆にドラマチックってのか、ご本人らには不幸なドラマチックですが。死に際まで母の顔も見たくないって?サイディス氏は母が幼児の頃から自分をフリークショー扱いしたと恨み抜いていた。ちょっと母を庇うと、幼児期から息子がここまでベラボーな知能を披露してれば、母はさすがに平常心ではいられなかったろうって感じは…「母と息子」ってのはDNAレベルで奥深く、難しい。
ともあれ、「おお『加減』を知らんアホな漫画家が作ったキャラみたいな天才」(マイ感想)ってのか、平均値から百万光年外れたよーな天才になっていく息子を両親は自慢しまくり(一日で一ヶ国語を「読める」まで持ってけたとか、結局「趣味で」習得した言語はウン百語とかとか、十一歳でハーバード大学数学科の教授連に四次元数学の講義をしたとか)、カスゴミは好奇の目で追いかけ回し、そして気がついたら………二十歳になる頃には隠遁者道に邁進する相当に変わった青年になっていたのでした。靴紐が結べないとか、身支度が出来ないとか、風呂に入れないとか、これは天才に結構ありがちで、高IQ=ライフスキルでは全くないってこと。逆に、知能が高ければ高いほど一般的ライフスキル度が低くなるという話もある。アインシュタインは車の運転習得も出来なかったそう。
で、この方はよく「失敗した神童」言われる。アテクシのオボロな予備知識もソレだった。後は同じ「神童」出身のノーバート・ウィーナーが同類のサイディス氏を弁護していたとか。ウィーナーはサイディス氏の人生を「名誉ある失敗」と言った。「神童は大成しない」の典型例だとも言われる。無知なアテクシだが、これに関しては常々「失礼な」思っていた。本書読了後も「失礼な」という感慨は同じでございました。
作者は、「両親がカスゴミから息子を守り、カスゴミとは無縁で良好な家庭環境で成長出来ていれば、どんな偉大な功績が残せたことであらう」とか言っている。うーん?我々は幸いにしてだいたいが凡人なんであるが、なんで我々の「成功」の物差しでサイディス氏を計測する?彼は別に「社会」にも「人類」にも借りはない。功績を残さないことが本人の選択だったのなら、別に宜しいじゃないですか。
殺めるも盗むも犯すもせず、国の世話にも誰の世話にもならず、自立した事務員として細々ながら生計を立て、友人も多く、静かに一生を過ごして夭逝したのである。あまりにも重過ぎる頭脳に狂うこともなく、「エキセントリック」程度で調整して。それを失敗とか成功とか、大きなお世話である。「誰の害にもならない」は言うほど簡単ではない。原爆も作っていないし、水爆も作っていない。コンピュータも作っていない。フェイスブックも作っていない。後世に禍根を残すことは何一つ、何一つもしていない。
まあしかし、ここまで功名心皆無ってのも破格な天才故かもって気はしました。フツーの人は、才能がちょっとでもあれば多少は認められたいってのが人情。このように虚栄心ゼロとゆーのも、逆にさっさと虚栄心の先を読んでしまったかなと。「虚空なり」とかなんとか。まあアテクシのIQはきっとサイディス氏の3分一あればラッキーって程度や思われるので、IQ150以上の人の思考は深い謎でしかない。ちなみにアインシュタインのIQは200だったそうだが、功名心は健全だった。だから名を残したと。宇宙人サイディス氏は静かに笑い、多趣味で、自分のオタク的活動(路面電車乗り換え研究マニア…写真記憶で以て全米の路線図と時刻表を苦もなく把握していたとな)には常に多忙、偽名で正体を懸命に隠し、その点は少し成功し少し失敗し、四十四歳で静かに亡くなった。ブラックホールの最初の預言者になった言われたりもする。こういうのもアリでしょう。別にサーカスの仔馬や象ではない。大衆を喜ばす義務などない(仔馬や象にもそれはないけど)。サイディス氏に破格の知能を授けた神の御心は成就したのだ。
ともあれ、「おお『加減』を知らんアホな漫画家が作ったキャラみたいな天才」(マイ感想)ってのか、平均値から百万光年外れたよーな天才になっていく息子を両親は自慢しまくり(一日で一ヶ国語を「読める」まで持ってけたとか、結局「趣味で」習得した言語はウン百語とかとか、十一歳でハーバード大学数学科の教授連に四次元数学の講義をしたとか)、カスゴミは好奇の目で追いかけ回し、そして気がついたら………二十歳になる頃には隠遁者道に邁進する相当に変わった青年になっていたのでした。靴紐が結べないとか、身支度が出来ないとか、風呂に入れないとか、これは天才に結構ありがちで、高IQ=ライフスキルでは全くないってこと。逆に、知能が高ければ高いほど一般的ライフスキル度が低くなるという話もある。アインシュタインは車の運転習得も出来なかったそう。
で、この方はよく「失敗した神童」言われる。アテクシのオボロな予備知識もソレだった。後は同じ「神童」出身のノーバート・ウィーナーが同類のサイディス氏を弁護していたとか。ウィーナーはサイディス氏の人生を「名誉ある失敗」と言った。「神童は大成しない」の典型例だとも言われる。無知なアテクシだが、これに関しては常々「失礼な」思っていた。本書読了後も「失礼な」という感慨は同じでございました。
作者は、「両親がカスゴミから息子を守り、カスゴミとは無縁で良好な家庭環境で成長出来ていれば、どんな偉大な功績が残せたことであらう」とか言っている。うーん?我々は幸いにしてだいたいが凡人なんであるが、なんで我々の「成功」の物差しでサイディス氏を計測する?彼は別に「社会」にも「人類」にも借りはない。功績を残さないことが本人の選択だったのなら、別に宜しいじゃないですか。
殺めるも盗むも犯すもせず、国の世話にも誰の世話にもならず、自立した事務員として細々ながら生計を立て、友人も多く、静かに一生を過ごして夭逝したのである。あまりにも重過ぎる頭脳に狂うこともなく、「エキセントリック」程度で調整して。それを失敗とか成功とか、大きなお世話である。「誰の害にもならない」は言うほど簡単ではない。原爆も作っていないし、水爆も作っていない。コンピュータも作っていない。フェイスブックも作っていない。後世に禍根を残すことは何一つ、何一つもしていない。
まあしかし、ここまで功名心皆無ってのも破格な天才故かもって気はしました。フツーの人は、才能がちょっとでもあれば多少は認められたいってのが人情。このように虚栄心ゼロとゆーのも、逆にさっさと虚栄心の先を読んでしまったかなと。「虚空なり」とかなんとか。まあアテクシのIQはきっとサイディス氏の3分一あればラッキーって程度や思われるので、IQ150以上の人の思考は深い謎でしかない。ちなみにアインシュタインのIQは200だったそうだが、功名心は健全だった。だから名を残したと。宇宙人サイディス氏は静かに笑い、多趣味で、自分のオタク的活動(路面電車乗り換え研究マニア…写真記憶で以て全米の路線図と時刻表を苦もなく把握していたとな)には常に多忙、偽名で正体を懸命に隠し、その点は少し成功し少し失敗し、四十四歳で静かに亡くなった。ブラックホールの最初の預言者になった言われたりもする。こういうのもアリでしょう。別にサーカスの仔馬や象ではない。大衆を喜ばす義務などない(仔馬や象にもそれはないけど)。サイディス氏に破格の知能を授けた神の御心は成就したのだ。
José Huerta Ibarra
5.0 out of 5 stars
Interesantísimo
Reviewed in Mexico on 8 June 2023Verified Purchase
Singular y extraño el destino de este genio mundial. Auténtico prodigio que por extrañas razones no tuvo el desarrollo y cumplimiento de los talentos indudables que demostró en el corto plazo. Prueba de que el adecuado desarrollo simultáneo de la afectividad y relaciones humanas conducen a una productividad demostrativa de la creatividad que se suele asociar con una inteligencia excepcional.
Lance B. Sjogren
5.0 out of 5 stars
fascinating story
Reviewed in the United States on 16 September 2023Verified Purchase
This was a very engaging book about a very interesting and unusual person.
Just one point I would want to make: The author doesn't seem to fault Sidis' parents for his antisocial personality, but it seems to me hard to excuse them. I don't see anything wrong for parents to aggressively develop their child's talents (assuming the child is agreeable to that, which Sidis was). However, the social development of a child is also something parents have a responsibility for. If they tried and it didn't succeed, that's one thing, but nothing in the book led me to believe the parents recognized the need for nor worked on his social skills. The adverse consequences of that were glaringly evident in his later life.
Just one point I would want to make: The author doesn't seem to fault Sidis' parents for his antisocial personality, but it seems to me hard to excuse them. I don't see anything wrong for parents to aggressively develop their child's talents (assuming the child is agreeable to that, which Sidis was). However, the social development of a child is also something parents have a responsibility for. If they tried and it didn't succeed, that's one thing, but nothing in the book led me to believe the parents recognized the need for nor worked on his social skills. The adverse consequences of that were glaringly evident in his later life.