The Fine Line Between Madness & Genius
The Fine Line Between Madness & Genius
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Al Gorithum

Original Poster:

5,006 posts

232 months

Wednesday 21st September 2022
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I watched an interview of Tim Berners-Lee (inventor of the internet) on Bloomberg at the weekend. Seemed to me that the Gentleman is more than a little "odd" - perhaps Aspergers, Bi-Polar or something?

That got me thinking about other people I know who wouldn't be considered to be "normal". One is client who's a sub-contractor for DARPA who is definitely on the spectrum although excellent in his field, and a colleague who's Bi-Polar who has a very high level of intelligence but is a serious problem when the meds aren't managed well. Many other examples too.

So I wondered whether it actually takes people who are "different" to significantly advance human knowledge, and that "normal" people (like me) contribute very little.

Any thoughts or examples?

bigandclever

14,248 posts

262 months

Wednesday 21st September 2022
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He didn’t invent the internet for a start smile

Al Gorithum

Original Poster:

5,006 posts

232 months

Wednesday 21st September 2022
quotequote all
bigandclever said:
He didn’t invent the internet for a start smile
Stop trying to be big and clever biggrin


RDMcG

20,606 posts

231 months

Wednesday 21st September 2022
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I think there are many on there standard spectrum who contribute as much as those who are different.

That being said, I have met a number of the best known people in the the tech world in direct business meetings and the most successful are quite often trending to Aspergers- I think the term "nerd" is often really referring to Aspergers people. Impatient, impolite, no eye contact, excitable are some of the things I observed compared to what we see as the "normal " people.

Silvanus

6,905 posts

47 months

Wednesday 21st September 2022
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Al Gorithum said:
I watched an interview of Tim Berners-Lee (inventor of the internet) on Bloomberg at the weekend. Seemed to me that the Gentleman is more than a little "odd" - perhaps Aspergers, Bi-Polar or something?

That got me thinking about other people I know who wouldn't be considered to be "normal". One is client who's a sub-contractor for DARPA who is definitely on the spectrum although excellent in his field, and a colleague who's Bi-Polar who has a very high level of intelligence but is a serious problem when the meds aren't managed well. Many other examples too.

So I wondered whether it actually takes people who are "different" to significantly advance human knowledge, and that "normal" people (like me) contribute very little.

Any thoughts or examples?
How would you tell from an interview if someone was bipolar, unless they said they were? Aspergers or autistic maybe possible.

KarlMac

4,616 posts

165 months

Wednesday 21st September 2022
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If you want a close to home example of madness vs genius just go to the bit of the forum where the guy has spent 10 years building a Lexspace. Or when mwstewart built the worlds best fiesta.

No one needed these, they are mad, but you can’t argue that the respective builders are anything other than geniuses to see the projects through.

On the flip side there’s that weird thread that pops up every now and again from the Eastern European dude that keeps saying he’s re-invented the combustion engine. He’s insane.

Al Gorithum

Original Poster:

5,006 posts

232 months

Wednesday 21st September 2022
quotequote all
Silvanus said:
How would you tell from an interview if someone was bipolar, unless they said they were? Aspergers or autistic maybe possible.
Didn't become apparent until the meds were changed.

wildoliver

9,233 posts

240 months

Wednesday 21st September 2022
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I often find in the world of inventing there are those who are genuinely good inventors, they have an idea and find a way to make it work. Sometimes it's desirable other times it's not. Sometimes the same person can do both, think Clive Sinclair with the spectrum and the C5.

Then you get the salesman inventors, Musk has to be the ultimate example, they come up with a load of ideas, some stick, some don't. They are basically the first person but they have more drive and ability to sell their product. If Musk came up with the C5 the teslerati would be falling over themselves to buy it whether it was any good or not.

Then you have the charlatans and nutters. They sometimes believe in their product, but all too often they just want to take a quick buck from a few gullible investors, disappear and reroll when the cash runs out. Plenty of them too. The nutters are the ones who genuinely believe in it, see perpetual motion machines, engines running on water, snake oils etc.

DodgyGeezer

47,047 posts

214 months

Wednesday 21st September 2022
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wasn't there John McAfee - seemed a little flakey at the end

Silvanus

6,905 posts

47 months

Wednesday 21st September 2022
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Al Gorithum said:
Silvanus said:
How would you tell from an interview if someone was bipolar, unless they said they were? Aspergers or autistic maybe possible.
Didn't become apparent until the meds were changed.
confused

StevieBee

14,942 posts

279 months

Wednesday 21st September 2022
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John Deloran was another. Complete lack of (genuine) empathy, narcissistic to levels off the chart....

I've long thought that Senna displayed traits that would today be recognised as being on the spectrum at some degree.

If the subject is of interest, I highly recommend Jon Ronson's book 'The Psychopath Test' which looks at wether there is need to poses psychopathic traits to succeed in politics, business, etc..

TwigtheWonderkid

48,193 posts

174 months

Wednesday 21st September 2022
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My mate speaks 10 languages fluently. Which he learnt, he wasn't brought up bilingual. Couldn't master learning to drive though. Never passed, gave up years ago.

Plymo

1,238 posts

113 months

Wednesday 21st September 2022
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Exceptional people are rarely well-rounded, and well-rounded people are rarely exceptional!

Punctilio

827 posts

47 months

Wednesday 21st September 2022
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There are plenty of savants that were happily not mad or prone to trouserlessness.

Statistics will tell us that the percentage of eggheads, nerds, inventors, scientists,
writers, academics, crossword compilers will have developmental disorders,
statistics will also tell us the vast majority don't .

While it's correct to point out that e.g. AlanTuring probably had Aspergers,
the majority of his equally brilliant colleagues at Bletchley Park did not have
such or similar conditions.


gotoPzero

20,117 posts

213 months

Wednesday 21st September 2022
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DodgyGeezer said:
wasn't there John McAfee - seemed a little flakey at the end
A little..... thats one way of putting it.


julianm

1,695 posts

225 months

Wednesday 21st September 2022
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Spike Milligan teetered on the dividing line. Check out any of the `Q` series on Youtube.

Caddyshack

14,223 posts

230 months

Wednesday 21st September 2022
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My cousin got some award from Cambridge, he got double 1sts, took A levels around age 14 and got something like 9 A’s. He went on to edit FHM magazine and published some books…he was known as a boy genius….had a proper break down and now runs retreats based around mindfulness, I am pretty sure he is on some spectrum.

He has been offered pills to make life more normal for him but doesn’t feel he should dull his main thoughts etc.

LordLoveLength

2,303 posts

154 months

Wednesday 21st September 2022
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Watch ‘only connect’ - like a magnet for people on the line.

mwstewart

8,403 posts

212 months

Wednesday 21st September 2022
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Being a Starseed myself I completely relate to this.

Punctilio

827 posts

47 months

Wednesday 21st September 2022
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mwstewart said:
Being a Starseed myself I completely relate to this.
Had to look that one up, I had thought it was a gay term for something beastly.