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Let's Be Less Stupid: An Attempt to Maintain My Mental Faculties

Page 5

by Patricia Marx


  Droodles

  When I was a kid, I was intrigued by a paperback on my parents’ bookshelf called Droodles, written by Roger Price in 1953. It was next to a book called Thirteen Elegant Ways to Commit Suicide, which amused me equally. That’s for later. Droodles are simple and seemingly abstract line drawings—part doodle, part riddle—whose meanings are… you know what? It’s easier to show rather than tell you. Here’s an example of one of Price’s Droodles.

  What is it?

  It’s a ship arriving too late to save a drowning witch. Alternatively, it’s a mother pyramid feeding her baby. Here are three more. Can you supply a brief description of each illustration?

  Give up? A tomato sandwich made by an amateur chef, unassembled sandpaper, and a box for Pinocchio, respectively. Deciphering a Droodle requires what psychologists call divergent thinking, or coming up with multiple solutions to a given problem. The phrase “divergent thinking” is a divergent way of saying imagination. This ability to think fancifully is not typically called on by standard aptitude tests such as the SAT and IQ. For this reason, Droodles can be used to test creativity.

  Come up with the caption for each.

  SCORING:

  1 point for each correct answer.

  0: Zero? Really? Do this test again, but this time cheat.

  1: Not everyone’s creative. CPAs make a very good living.

  2–4: Maybe you’re more of a Rorschach type of person. Or maybe your strength lies in deciphering street signs.

  5–7: Terrific job! This test was mostly fake, and yet you scored very well.

  8–9: No effing way! I made up this quiz and there’s no way I could get this close.

  11: You are likely a witch or a warlock. Do you have spells? Is that how you did this?

  Chapter Five

  My IQ, Part 1; or,

  How Smart I Was Not;

  or, In Search of Remembrance Now;

  or, the Collected Stories of

  Anton Chekhov

  How Smart Are the Famous?

  DIRECTIONS:

  Match the person with the IQ.

  Martin Luther 78

  Muhammad Ali 86

  Thomas Edison 105

  Johann Sebastian Bach 118

  Bill Clinton 118

  John F. Kennedy 119

  Lee Harvey Oswald 121

  Franklin D. Roosevelt 122

  Dwight Eisenhower 123

  Ulysses S. Grant 125

  Hillary Clinton 130

  Barack Obama 130–148

  Ronald Reagan 132

  Bobby Fischer 135

  George W. Bush 137

  Gerald Ford 140

  Andrew Jackson 140

  Arnold Schwarzenegger 143

  Charles Dickens 145

  George Eliot 145

  Bill Gates 147

  Benjamin Franklin 150

  Albert Einstein 155

  Reggie Jackson 155

  Galileo 155

  Jodie Foster 156

  Andy Warhol 156

  George Washington 160

  Richard Nixon 160

  Voltaire 160

  Ralph Waldo Emerson 160

  Sigmund Freud 160

  Stephen Hawking 160

  Leonardo da Vinci 165

  John Stuart Mill 165

  René Descartes 170

  Jean-Jacques Rousseau 170

  Plato 170

  Rembrandt 175

  Madonna 180

  Napoleon 180

  Benjamin Netanyahu 185

  Richard Wagner 185

  Baruch Spinoza 187

  Quentin Tarantino 190

  Jonathan Swift 200

  Lisa Simpson 220

  ANSWERS:

  Martin Luther: 170

  Muhammad Ali: 78

  Thomas Edison: 145

  Johann Sebastian Bach: 165

  Bill Clinton: 137

  John F. Kennedy: 119

  Lee Harvey Oswald: 118

  Franklin D. Roosevelt: 147

  Dwight Eisenhower: 122

  Ulysses S. Grant: 130

  Hillary Clinton: 140

  Barack Obama: 130–148

  Ronald Reagan: 105

  Bobby Fischer: 187

  George W. Bush: 125

  Gerald Ford: 121

  Andrew Jackson: 123

  Arnold Schwarzenegger: 135

  Charles Dickens: 180

  George Eliot: 160

  Bill Gates: 160

  Benjamin Franklin: 160

  Albert Einstein: 165

  Reggie Jackson: 160

  Galileo: 185

  Jodie Foster: 132

  Andy Warhol: 86

  George Washington: 118

  Richard Nixon: 143

  Voltaire: 190

  Ralph Waldo Emerson: 155

  Sigmund Freud: 156

  Stephen Hawking: 160

  Leonardo da Vinci: 220

  John Stuart Mill: 200

  René Descartes: 185

  Jean-Jacques Rousseau: 150

  Plato: 170

  Rembrandt: 155

  Madonna: 140

  Napoleon: 145

  Benjamin Netanyahu: 180

  Richard Wagner: 170

  Baruch Spinoza: 175

  Quentin Tarantino: 160

  Jonathan Swift: 155

  Lisa Simpson: 156

  SCORING:

  Give yourself 6 points for every correct match. Add this to 100. Subtract 1 point for every match you get wrong. If you cannot do this calculation without a calculator, deduct 20 points.

  Bonus points: Add the month, day, and year of your birthday. Reduce this four-digit numeral to one digit. Add your zip code. Divide by your niece’s phone number plus the security code on your favorite credit card. Subtract your shoe size. Do the hokeypokey and turn yourself around.

  When I took the SATs in eleventh grade, my friend Judy advised me that if I stuck chewed cinnamon Trident chewing gum to the upper right-hand corner of the first page, I would get a perfect score. I did not follow her advice and I did not get a perfect score. After graduating from college, I considered retaking the SATs and then, after I inevitably scored lower than I did the first time, to sue my college for diseducating me. Diseducate isn’t even a word. That’s how dumb I am. Maybe more unpleasant than finding out how tragic your verbal and mathematical abilities are, however, is learning, to the exact number, how deficiently your intelligence measures up against the norm. I’m talking, of course, about taking an IQ test. For the sake of science, and to amuse you at my expense, dear reader, I have elected to take the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale, which is nowadays the most commonly administered IQ test. After my brain has been renovated, I will endure the trial again.

  Meaningful Math

  1. Not the Gift of the Magi

  Jackie had a husband and a paramour and she loved them very much, but not as much as she loved the diamond brooch that caught her attention one day in the window of Van Cleef & Arpels. The jewel went for an ungodly sum, call it x, and she was not God, but no matter: As she explained to the salesclerk, she had a plan. The next day Jackie escorted her husband to the shop, where much ogling went on—she toward the brooch and he in the direction of his wife. “A treasure for a treasure,” said Jackie’s husband, taking out his credit card. “The clasp needs repair,” said the salesclerk, “so I will give you a fifteen percent discount. You can pick it up in a week.” The next day Jackie brought her paramour to the shop and did what women do with their wiles. The wiles worked. “We’ll take the brooch,” her paramour said to the salesclerk, “and I’ll pay cash.” “In that case I’ll give you a ten percent discount,” said the salesclerk, “but you’ll have to wait a week to pick up the item because I must replace the backing.” A week later Jackie had her brooch, which she wore insouciantly in the company of her husband and her paramour alike. She and the salesclerk split the profit—that is, the amount netted after the original sticker price was deducted. Each ended up with $30,000. How much did t
he brooch originally sell for? Hint: This requires math.

  ANSWER: $80,000

  2. And We’re Not Even Talking About Money

  The Pomegranates are remodeling their bathroom. The contractor promises that he and his assistant Drago can do the job in fifteen days. Drago works three times as fast as the contractor. On day two Drago is stricken with a hangnail and cannot work. Ever. The contractor hires Buster and Lester, who together can work one-fourth as fast as Drago worked. What Buster and Lester lack in speed, they do not make up for in carefulness. They put the toilet in upside down. The resulting flood spreads to the kitchen. The contractor says that redoing the kitchen and replacing the dog will take six times as long as the bathroom. The contractor fires Buster and Lester and employs a team whose religious habits permit them to work only on days that begin with a T. The first day on the job, the team works ten times as fast as the contractor. Every day thereafter it works half as fast as the day before. The Pomegranates divorce. Mrs. Pomegranate is institutionalized. Will the bathroom be painted by the time Mrs. Pomegranate gets out of the bug house?

  ANSWER:

  Yes, but when she sees that it is painted Crème Fraîche instead of Fraîche Crème, she will check herself back in.

  3. Now We’re Talking About Money

  Liz Taylor has been married three times. No, not that Liz Taylor, another Liz Taylor. She received a modest settlement from each ex. The amounts, in chronological order, were as follows: $1,000, $8,000, $27,000. She put this money into a fund to pay for her twins’ college education, but do you think it will cover the cost of even a semester? Her children will be attending Sarah Lawrence, the most expensive college in the country (doesn’t it figure?). The tuition is $66,259, and that’s just this year, and that doesn’t include books, though maybe they’re not necessary. Child support? There is none. It’s a long story. Considering extras and assuming tuition raises, let’s say Liz Taylor is going to have to cough up $600,000 over four years. How many more times must Liz Taylor get divorced?

  ANSWER: 3

  Which Came First?

  DIRECTIONS:

  This quiz is self-explanatory, but if you have one of those selves who is above directions, listen up.

  Number each entry in chronological order, with 1 being the first or oldest. Here’s an example:

  __ June 3

  __ June 1

  __ June 2

  ANSWERS:

  3 June 3

  1 June 1

  2 June 2

  How’d you do? Now you’re on your own. I’ll see you at the answer key on here.

  Eons ’n’ Things

  __ Iron Age

  __ Bronze Age

  __ The Age of Innocence (the movie)

  __ US drinking age raised from eighteen to twenty-one

  __ Art Nouveau

  __ First Paleolithic diet

  __ Cronuts

  __ Ice Age

  __ Art Deco

  Makeovers

  __ French Revolution

  __ Industrial Revolution

  __ Sexual Revolution

  __ “Revolution 9” by the Beatles

  __ Chanel No. 5

  __ October Revolution

  __ Arab Spring

  __ Decembrist Revolt in the Russian Empire

  Divorce, Annulment, Legal Separation, Plus Happy Rockefeller

  __ Diana Spencer

  __ Anne Boleyn

  __ Pompeia

  __ Kim Kardashian (from first husband nobody has heard of)

  __ Happy Rockefeller

  __ Catherine of Aragon

  __ Joséphine de Beauharnais

  __ Catherine Dickens

  __ Elin Nordegren

  You Used to Know This

  __ The Bob Newhart Show

  __ Tiny Tim marries Miss Vicky

  __ Nixon resigns

  __ Hot pants hot

  __ Cuban Missile Crisis (you’re not thinking of the Bay of Pigs, are you?)

  __ First test tube baby born

  __ Lucy gives birth to Little Ricky

  You Never Knew This

  __ Telephone

  __ Printing press (European)

  __ Bessemer steel

  __ Spinning jenny

  __ Pancakes

  __ Repeating rifle

  __ Repeating rifle

  __ Hats

  __ Repeating rifle

  Calendar

  __ Arbor Day in the United States

  __ Presidents’ Day

  __ No Pants Day

  __ Halloween

  __ Jewish Halloween

  __ Thanksgiving

  __ Bastille Day

  __ Gay Purim

  __ Earth Day

  Candyland

  __ Blueberry

  __ Cherry

  __ Grape (real)

  __ Tangerine

  __ Grape (artificial)

  __ Yellow

  __ Rasapple (raspberry + apple)

  __ Pimento

  __ Blood

  Protein

  __ Chicken

  __ Egg

  ANSWERS:

  Eons ’n’ Things

  1 Ice Age

  2 First Paleolithic diet

  3 Bronze Age

  4 Iron Age

  5 Art Nouveau

  6 Art Deco

  7 The Age of Innocence (the movie)

  8 US drinking age raised from eighteen to twenty-one

  9 Cronuts

  Makeovers

  1 Decembrist Revolt in the Russian Empire

  2 French Revolution

  3 Industrial Revolution

  4 October Revolution

  5 “Revolution 9” by the Beatles

  6 Sexual Revolution

  7 Chanel No. 5

  8 Arab Spring

  Divorce, Annulment, Legal Separation, Plus Happy Rockefeller

  1 Pompeia

  2 Catherine of Aragon

  3 Anne Boleyn

  4 Joséphine de Beauharnais

  5 Catherine Dickens

  6 Happy Rockefeller

  7 Diana Spencer

  8 Elin Nordegren

  9 Kim Kardashian (from first husband nobody has heard of)

  You Used to Know This

  1 Lucy gives birth to Little Ricky

  2 Cuban Missile Crisis

  3 Hot pants hot

  4 Tiny Tim marries Miss Vicky

  5 The Bob Newhart Show

  6 Nixon resigns

  7 First test tube baby born

  You Never Knew This

  1 Hats [older]

  2 Pancakes [old]

  3 Printing press (European) [1450]

  4 Spinning jenny [1764]

  5 Bessemer steel [1855]

  6 Repeating rifle [1860s]

  6 Repeating rifle [1860s]

  6 Repeating rifle [1860s]

  7 Telephone [1876]

  Calendar

  1 No Pants Day

  2 Presidents’ Day

  3 Jewish Halloween

  4 Earth Day

  5 Arbor Day

  6 Gay Purim

  7 Bastille Day

  8 Halloween

  9 Thanksgiving

  Candyland

  Note: This one is alphabetical.

  1 Blood

  2 Blueberry

  3 Cherry

  4 Grape (artificial)

  5 Grape (real)

  6 Pimento

  7 Rasapple (raspberry + apple)

  8 Tangerine

  9 Yellow

  Protein

  1 Chicken

  2 Egg

  Note: In 2010, scientists determined that the chicken came before the egg. Anyone who answered before 2010 gets credit if you got it wrong.

  SCORING:

  To figure out your score start out at 64. Deduct 1 for each entry you got wrong. Now deduct 1 for each Google search. And now subtract another 2 for each time Google autocorrected your spelling. Compare your scores below.

  65–56: Herodotus

  You k
now all of history! Even the part that doesn’t repeat itself.

  55–45: Adjunct History Professor

  You know a lot about history. Not enough for tenure, obviously, but enough to be comfortable.

  44–35: Potter

  You are more disposed toward clay and a knack for glazed mugs.

  34–25: Homo erectus

  That Herodotus thing earlier went right over your head.

  24–15: Know-Nothing

  You got defensive when you saw Homo erectus a second ago. That’s not what it means, though, and you’re overreacting.

  14–5: Homeschooled for Political Reasons

  Really? Some of this stuff you should just know for daily chores. How do you pay taxes or buy groceries?

  4–1: Jellyfish

  You are a jellyfish! A gelatinous member of the Cnidaria phylum employing propulsion for movement. You do not even have vision or nerves. What are you doing taking this quiz, jellyfish?

  0–−10: Alien being

  You scare me. Go away.

  IQ tests are meant to assess not how much you know (phew) but how inherently bright you are (uh-oh). This type of aptitude, called fluid intelligence, is based on your facility for reasoning abstractly, solving problems in novel situations, and remembering to bring a sharpened number two pencil. Some neuropsychologists would also add to the list motivation to score well. The other kind of smarts, the kind that IQ tests do not care about, is called crystallized intelligence. This sort of intelligence, which tends to expand as we age, comes from learning and experience. Knowing the meaning of the term crystallized intelligence is an example of crystallized intelligence.

 

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