Should LAN be CFS Quals too?
Comments
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I was waiting for konrad to post
taeyeon that picture is so old I remember you posting that back when you were trolling meKonrad you have earned my respect.
Taeyeon on the other hand should have a perfect score from the mouth he has.AHAHHAHAHAHAHAH
how do you not get an 800 in math
That is outstanding, what school you going to? -
taeyeoNNNNN wrote: »It is the most recent standardized test I have taken.
I don't think I ever mentioned being the best, simply much more intelligent than you.
That is outstanding, what school you going to?
im a junior right now, still havent decided
prob nyu stern -
taeyeoNNNNN wrote: »I don't think I ever mentioned being the best, simply much more intelligent than you.
And I thought you couldn't be more of an idiot. A SAT score doesn't show how intelligent you are you imbecile.michealdrkk wrote: »to be fair i dont think anyone cares about having your respect
Please cheat and get banned again . -
And I thought you couldn't be more of an idiot. A SAT score doesn't show how intelligent you are you imbecile.
Please cheat and get banned again .
If a standardized test does not show how intelligent you are then tell me how does your free online IQ test have to do with anything? -
michealdrkk wrote: »please have down syndrome and keep getting made fun of by everyone .
Down Syndrome really?
Is that the best insult you can come up with? The ****ing old woman that lives down the street comes up with better insults to yell at anyone who walks in front of her house. -
And I thought you couldn't be more of an idiot. A SAT score doesn't show how intelligent you are you imbecile.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intelligence
From "Mainstream Science on Intelligence" (1994), an editorial statement by fifty-two researchers:
A very general mental capability that, among other things, involves the ability to reason, plan, solve problems, think abstractly, comprehend complex ideas, learn quickly and learn from experience. It is not merely book learning, a narrow academic skill, or test-taking smarts. Rather, it reflects a broader and deeper capability for comprehending our surroundings—"catching on," "making sense" of things, or "figuring out" what to do.
From "Intelligence: Knowns and Unknowns" (1995), a report published by the Board of Scientific Affairs of the American Psychological Association:
Individuals differ from one another in their ability to understand complex ideas, to adapt effectively to the environment, to learn from experience, to engage in various forms of reasoning, to overcome obstacles by taking thought. Although these individual differences can be substantial, they are never entirely consistent: a given person's intellectual performance will vary on different occasions, in different domains, as judged by different criteria. Concepts of "intelligence" are attempts to clarify and organize this complex set of phenomena. Although considerable clarity has been achieved in some areas, no such conceptualization has yet answered all the important questions, and none commands universal assent. Indeed, when two dozen prominent theorists were recently asked to define intelligence, they gave two dozen, somewhat different, definitions.
The SAT tests reading, mathematics, and writing. Those three basic subjects all require the ability to reason, plan, solve problems, and think abstractly.
IQ Tests were created in an attempt to asses intelligence. The most common IQ Test for adults use the following sub-tests: Similarities, Vocabulary, Information, Block Design, Matrix Reasoning, Visual Puzzles, Digit Span, Arithmetic, Symbol Search, and Coding.
I've made bold the ones that directly correlate to a higher score on a test such as the SAT. Of the core sub-tests's, 7 of 10 seem directly applicable.
From this it wouldn't be to far of a stretch to assume those with higher SAT scores, would more than likely score higher than the median on IQ Tests. By no means am I saying a higher IQ score is definitive of higher intelligence. Just constantly saying, "There's more to intelligence than ________." without any attempt at quantitative comparison is merely sticking your head in the sand. -
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intelligence
From "Mainstream Science on Intelligence" (1994), an editorial statement by fifty-two researchers:
A very general mental capability that, among other things, involves the ability to reason, plan, solve problems, think abstractly, comprehend complex ideas, learn quickly and learn from experience. It is not merely book learning, a narrow academic skill, or test-taking smarts. Rather, it reflects a broader and deeper capability for comprehending our surroundings—"catching on," "making sense" of things, or "figuring out" what to do.
From "Intelligence: Knowns and Unknowns" (1995), a report published by the Board of Scientific Affairs of the American Psychological Association:
Individuals differ from one another in their ability to understand complex ideas, to adapt effectively to the environment, to learn from experience, to engage in various forms of reasoning, to overcome obstacles by taking thought. Although these individual differences can be substantial, they are never entirely consistent: a given person's intellectual performance will vary on different occasions, in different domains, as judged by different criteria. Concepts of "intelligence" are attempts to clarify and organize this complex set of phenomena. Although considerable clarity has been achieved in some areas, no such conceptualization has yet answered all the important questions, and none commands universal assent. Indeed, when two dozen prominent theorists were recently asked to define intelligence, they gave two dozen, somewhat different, definitions.
The SAT tests reading, mathematics, and writing. Those three basic subjects all require the ability to reason, plan, solve problems, and think abstractly.
IQ Tests were created in an attempt to asses intelligence. The most common IQ Test for adults use the following sub-tests: Similarities, Vocabulary, Information, Block Design, Matrix Reasoning, Visual Puzzles, Digit Span, Arithmetic, Symbol Search, and Coding.
I've made bold the ones that directly correlate to a higher score on a test such as the SAT. Of the core sub-tests's, 7 of 10 seem directly applicable.
From this it wouldn't be to far of a stretch to assume those with higher SAT scores, would more than likely score higher than the median on IQ Tests. By no means am I saying a higher IQ score is definitive of higher intelligence. Just constantly saying, "There's more to intelligence than ________." without any attempt at quantitative comparison is merely sticking your head in the sand.
What I highlighted in red was where I was going with this conversation. SAT nor does an IQ test show if you're more intelligent than someone else, it only shows how strong you are in an certain area. -
Intelligence is a quantitative thing... One simply doesn't have an amount of intelligence.
actually, Einstein disagrees with you....
Get Einstein'd son!
edit: I have no idea where im going with this so I'll just degrade myself by using hashtags
#deep #einstein #e=mcsquared #unnecessarythingsthatdontrelatetoeachother -
Intelligence is a quantitative thing... One simply doesn't have an amount of intelligence.
It cant really be compared or measured. Its like 1 guy can have bigger muscles than another person yet someone else who is smaller can be stronger. -
What I highlighted in red was where I was going with this conversation. SAT nor does an IQ test show if you're more intelligent than someone else, it only shows how strong you are in an certain area.
Intelligence is commonly measured by:
Abstract verbal reasoning
The degree to which one has learned, been able to comprehend and verbally express vocabulary
Degree of general information acquired from culture
Spatial perception, visual abstract processing, and problem solving
Nonverbal abstract problem solving, inductive reasoning, spatial reasoning
Spatial reasoning
Attention, concentration, mental control
Concentration while manipulating mental mathematical problems
Visual perception/analysis, scanning speed
Visual-motor coordination, motor and mental speed, visual working memory
The SAT tests a majority of those. Your strength in those areas is directly comparable to someone else in the same areas. Furthermore since many of the areas are related strength in one could mean strength in another.
Unless you are a virtuoso in a specialty field, it would seem your overall aggregate would be lower.
So are you a virtuoso? -
actually, Einstein disagrees with you....
Get Einstein'd son!
edit: I have no idea where im going with this so I'll just degrade myself by using hashtags
#deep #einstein #e=mcsquared #unnecessarythingsthatdontrelatetoeachother
He also said, "If you can't explain it simply, you don't understand it well enough."
Hey, kelp what is intelligence?
Also I just noticed that the quote you used doesn't contradict my statement and actually backs it... -
Intelligence is commonly measured by:
Abstract verbal reasoning
The degree to which one has learned, been able to comprehend and verbally express vocabulary
Degree of general information acquired from culture
Spatial perception, visual abstract processing, and problem solving
Nonverbal abstract problem solving, inductive reasoning, spatial reasoning
Spatial reasoning
Attention, concentration, mental control
Concentration while manipulating mental mathematical problems
Visual perception/analysis, scanning speed
Visual-motor coordination, motor and mental speed, visual working memory
The SAT tests a majority of those. Your strength in those areas is directly comparable to someone else in the same areas. Furthermore since many of the areas are related strength in one could mean strength in another.
Unless you are a virtuoso in a specialty field, it would seem your overall aggregate would be lower.
So are you a virtuoso?
Ive been called a savant before for problem solving. -
He also said, "If you can't explain it simply, you don't understand it well enough."
Hey, kelp what is intelligence?
I got this, I got this!And I thought you couldn't be more of an idiot. A SAT score doesn't show how intelligent you are you imbecile.An IQ test doesn't necessarily show the amount of intelligence one has.
edit: don't get fooled by the first line of my last post -
I hope you realize being called a savant means you have some form of mental disability...
I have issue with talking verbally. I tend to get locked up while speaking. Its like I think faster than I can say things, and then I forget what I just thought about. If you watch me on stream, you'll see what I mean. -
Hey, kelp what is intelligence?
Intelligence is one of the core attributes for characters in Diablo III. It governs how much Life a character gains from Health Globes and increases Witch Doctor's and Wizard's damage dealt as their mainstat.
Each point of Intelligence grants:
+0.1 per point to Resistances. (Thus 10 points of INT = 1 point of resistance for all classes.)
+1% to Witch Doctor's damage.
+1% to Wizard's damage.
Intelligence is a Character Attribute that appears in Diablo III. Dubbed as Willpower in early development, it replaces the Energy attribute from Diablo II.
It is the primary stat for the Wizard and Witch Doctor classes. Every point in intelligence increase all of their damage by 1% for them. In addition, for all classes, every 10 points in Intelligence increase all resistances by 1 point.
There are no Intelligence requirements for items in Diablo III.
Some active and passive abilities of Witch Doctors can award temporary bonuses to Intelligence. Wizards and Witch Doctors can also gain 5 Intelligence per Core stats points in Paragon, total amount limited only by total number of Paragon levels, and gain 3 Intelligence per level up (other classes gain 1). In addition, one can gain Intelligence from Topaz gems in armor sockets. -
Intelligence is one of the core attributes for characters in Diablo III. It governs how much Life a character gains from Health Globes and increases Witch Doctor's and Wizard's damage dealt as their mainstat.
Each point of Intelligence grants:
+0.1 per point to Resistances. (Thus 10 points of INT = 1 point of resistance for all classes.)
+1% to Witch Doctor's damage.
+1% to Wizard's damage.
Intelligence is a Character Attribute that appears in Diablo III. Dubbed as Willpower in early development, it replaces the Energy attribute from Diablo II.
It is the primary stat for the Wizard and Witch Doctor classes. Every point in intelligence increase all of their damage by 1% for them. In addition, for all classes, every 10 points in Intelligence increase all resistances by 1 point.
There are no Intelligence requirements for items in Diablo III.
Some active and passive abilities of Witch Doctors can award temporary bonuses to Intelligence. Wizards and Witch Doctors can also gain 5 Intelligence per Core stats points in Paragon, total amount limited only by total number of Paragon levels, and gain 3 Intelligence per level up (other classes gain 1). In addition, one can gain Intelligence from Topaz gems in armor sockets.
l00000000000l -
Intelligence is one of the core attributes for characters in Diablo III. It governs how much Life a character gains from Health Globes and increases Witch Doctor's and Wizard's damage dealt as their mainstat.
Each point of Intelligence grants:
+0.1 per point to Resistances. (Thus 10 points of INT = 1 point of resistance for all classes.)
+1% to Witch Doctor's damage.
+1% to Wizard's damage.
Intelligence is a Character Attribute that appears in Diablo III. Dubbed as Willpower in early development, it replaces the Energy attribute from Diablo II.
It is the primary stat for the Wizard and Witch Doctor classes. Every point in intelligence increase all of their damage by 1% for them. In addition, for all classes, every 10 points in Intelligence increase all resistances by 1 point.
There are no Intelligence requirements for items in Diablo III.
Some active and passive abilities of Witch Doctors can award temporary bonuses to Intelligence. Wizards and Witch Doctors can also gain 5 Intelligence per Core stats points in Paragon, total amount limited only by total number of Paragon levels, and gain 3 Intelligence per level up (other classes gain 1). In addition, one can gain Intelligence from Topaz gems in armor sockets.
you diablo 3 new fag
all about d2 -
drop out of school and play crossfire all day
kelp as the next brando?
to be honest my only important exam is advanced functions on the 10th, did econ today, I could play cf all day but it doesn't entertain me as it use to :'(
besides it would take another 1-2 years to get that perma sniper spray without farming
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