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MatPlus.Net Forum General T. R. Dawson - the lost genius |
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| | (1) Posted by Sarah Hornecker [Friday, Jun 13, 2008 22:23]; edited by Sarah Hornecker [08-06-13] | T. R. Dawson - the lost genius Dawson - see http://www.bcps.knightsfield.co.uk/trd-biogr.html - was a great genius. For example:
QUOTE In his spare(!) time he showed a taste for light literature and it was quite normal for him to read from fifteen to twenty books a month.
This is a overhuman time, I think. More than 6000 of his problems were published, too. And - QUOTE He graduated with 1st Class Honours in Chemistry at Leeds University in 1913.
Well, I suggest you read the linked article. There is one thing I wonder: Was Dawson a savant? Or what was his secret?
PS: Sorry, I can't even come near to my admiration for Dawson in the few sentences here. | | (2) Posted by [Tuesday, Jun 17, 2008 13:32] | >There is one thing I wonder: Was Dawson a savant?
Absolutely not.
That term is (or perhaps was) generally applied to people inside a psychiatric
system as patients, but who displays some traits or capabilities that do not
fit the general idea of how such patients should behave. I believe the
original term is 'idiot savant', and indicates people of low intellectual level
who nevertheless are able to do things generally thought to need a very high
mental ability, such as feats of arithmetic, art, etc.
I have read a bit about an Swedish baron who was committed to closed psychiatric
treatment for alcoholism. During his time as a patient he translated Persian and Hebrew
religious works, published them, and was involved in a fairly extensive
correspondence with European academics on the finer points of the translations, as well
as his publishers.
His doctors viewed him with considerable surprise: he did not fit any stereotype
pattern (of the time) of how an alcoholic consigned to a mental asylum should behave.
As regards the applicability of the term 'savant' to Dawson, you have only found the unexpected
or unusual ability. You will also need to find the considerably-below-normal performance before
the question of applying the label even arises.
What's wrong with 'genius' plain a simple? | | (3) Posted by Steven Dowd [Tuesday, Jun 17, 2008 14:16] | SH is correct:
Savant (from the French savant "knowing", English since the 18th century):
An expert or wise person
There are illnesses, such as Savant syndrome, but that does not change the basic meaning of the word. | | (4) Posted by Sarah Hornecker [Tuesday, Jun 17, 2008 20:10] | Please look here for a more detailed article I wrote.
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MatPlus.Net Forum General T. R. Dawson - the lost genius |
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