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Genius isn't really a measure of IQ (although a high IQ helps) — genius is an extreme form of insight. I like to think of it in terms of perspective and thus measure it by how rare and valuable a perspective is.

The thing Jobs and Einstein had in common was an insatiable curiosity that helped them get to a place where they could see the world in a way that few others do. Jobs saw the connections between technology and humanities and relentlessly worked toward making his vision reality.

Einstein became a genius because he would relentlessly explore a problem, following it out farther than anyone had taken it before. This allowed him to see how the universe connects in a way that no one had seen before, and his discoveries were valuable to humanity.

Getting to these rare perspectives is usually a product of building up a mental framework and then seeing patterns in- and making associations or connections among seemingly unrelated phenomena. True genius is seeing associations among things previously unseen. A high IQ gives you more ability to build the mental framework needed to see these associations, and a genius has actually applied it.



'Extreme form of insight'? Maybe, maybe not. http://www.kk.org/thetechnium/archives/2009/08/progression_o...

> Yet talent is unequally distributed. Some innovators (like Edison, or Newton, or Kelvin) are simply better than others. But if genius is not jumping ahead of the inevitable, where do the "greats" fit in? Simonton discovered that the higher the prominence of a scientist (as determined by the number of pages their biography occupies in encyclopedias) the greater number of simultaneous discoveries they are involved with. Kelvin was involved in 30 sets of simultaneous discoveries. Great discovers not only contribute more than the average number of "next" steps, but are heavily involved in those steps that have greatest impact, which naturally are the areas of investigation that attract many other players, and so produce multiples. If discovery is a lottery, the great buy lots of tickets.


Steve is a great business man. He knows how to manage,manipulate and bring out the best from his designers and engineers. He didn't design and he didn't code. He didn't invent ipods or iphones or ipads. Sure he approves it and demands it.But he didn't create any of those things. He is not an inventor. He is a great CEO. Comparing him with Einstein just disgust me. I'd feel better if he was compared to Jesus.(not an inventor either but knows how to influence people). And Bill Gates would be much closer to Einstein since both of them have high IQ.


Would you say that Warren Buffet is a financial genius? And would you say the thing that separates Buffett from the rest of us is that he has a high IQ, or is because he sees all of the dynamics and intricacies of the financial world in a way that few others do?

You can control your environment if you see and understand its connections. Whatever Jobs saw and understood enabled him to create Apple, NeXT, and Pixar, and ultimately build Apple back to the most valuable technology company in the world.


cant remember the exact amount, but im pretty sure he had 300+ patents......I think he has a bit more imput into the above items than your aware of.....




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