USAFA Facts Of The Day

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RRDTm3
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Re: USAFA Facts Of The Day

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i fucking love this thread
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Re: USAFA Facts Of The Day

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The book report should be interesting, unless the book is on chemistry or mechanical engineering.
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Re: USAFA Facts Of The Day

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Spawn Of Zonk wrote:21 Jan 2009
.........
Fun Fact Of The Day: Chris Langan has an IQ of 195, the highest known IQ in the US. He started talking at 6 months and by age 4 could read and comprehend books. His IQ puts him in the same class as Sir Isaac Newton and Michelangelo. He's in his mid-forties, and he works as a part-time bouncer at a bar and lives in a one-room house on $6,000 a year. He has since won the award for biggest waste of life.....
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christopher_Langan" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
Christopher Michael Langan
Born 1952

Spouse(s) Gina (née LoSasso)
Christopher Michael Langan (born c. 1952) is an American autodidact whose IQ was reported by 20/20 and other media sources to have been measured at between 195 and 210.[1] Billed by some media sources as "the smartest man in America",[2] he rose to prominence in 1999 while working as a bouncer on Long Island. Langan has developed his own "theory of the relationship between mind and reality" which he calls the "Cognitive-Theoretic Model of the Universe (CTMU)".[3][4]

Langan was born in San Francisco and spent most of his early life in Montana. His mother was the daughter of a wealthy shipping executive but was cut off from her family; his father died or disappeared before he was born.[5] He began talking at six months, taught himself to read before he was four, and was repeatedly skipped ahead in school.[6] But he grew up in poverty and says he was beaten by his stepfather from when he was almost six to when he was about fourteen.[7] By then Langan had begun weight training, and forcibly ended the abuse, throwing his stepfather out of the house and telling him never to return.[8]

Langan says he spent the last years of high school mostly in independent study, teaching himself "advanced math, physics, philosophy, Latin and Greek, all that".[9] His brother recalls that "when Christopher was fourteen or fifteen, he would draw things just as a joke, and it would be like a photograph. When he was fifteen, he could match Jimi Hendrix lick for lick on a guitar."[10] After earning a perfect score on the SAT[7] Langan attended Reed College and later Montana State University, but faced with finance and transportation problems, and believing that he "could literally teach [his professors] more than they could teach [him]", dropped out.[9]

He took a string of labor-intensive jobs, and by his mid-40s had been a construction worker, cowboy, forest service firefighter, farmhand, and for over twenty years, a bouncer on Long Island. He says he developed a "double-life strategy", on one side a regular guy, doing his job and exchanging pleasantries, and on the other side coming home to perform equations in his head, working in isolation on his Cognitive-Theoretic Model of the Universe.[9]

Wider attention came in 1999, when Esquire magazine published a profile of Langan and other members of the high-IQ community.[9] Billing Langan as "the smartest man in America", the article's account of the weight-lifting bouncer and his CTMU "Theory of Everything" sparked a flurry of media interest. Board-certified neuropsychologist Dr. Robert Novelly tested Langan's IQ for 20/20, which reported that Langan broke the ceiling of the test. Novelly was said to be astounded, saying: "Chris is the highest individual that I have ever measured in 25 years of doing this."[7]

Articles and interviews highlighting Langan appeared in Popular Science,[11] The Times,[8] Newsday,[6] Muscle & Fitness (which reported that he could bench 500 pounds),[12] and elsewhere. Langan was featured on 20/20,[7] interviewed on BBC Radio[13] and on Errol Morris's First Person,[14] and participated in an online chat at ABCNEWS.com.[15] He has written question-and-answer columns for New York Newsday,[16] The Improper Hamptonian,[17] and Men's Fitness.[18]

In 2004, Langan moved with his wife Gina (née LoSasso), a clinical neuropsychologist, to northern Missouri, where he owns and operates a horse ranch.[19]

On January 25, 2008, Langan was a contestant on NBC's 1 vs. 100, where he won $250,000.[20]

[edit] Ideas, affiliations, and publications
In 1999 Langan and his wife, Gina LoSasso, formed a non-profit corporation called the "Mega Foundation" to "create and implement programs that aid in the development of extremely gifted individuals and their ideas."[21] In addition to his writings at the Foundation, Langan's media exposure at the end of the 1990s invariably included some discussion of his "Cognitive-Theoretic Model of the Universe" (often referred to by Langan as "CTMU"), and he was reported by Popular Science in 2001 to be writing a book about his work called Design for a Universe.[11] He has been quoted as saying that "you cannot describe the universe completely with any accuracy unless you're willing to admit that it's both physical and mental in nature"[12] and that his CTMU "explains the connection between mind and reality, therefore the presence of cognition and universe in the same phrase".[15] He calls his proposal "a true 'Theory of Everything', a cross between John Archibald Wheeler's 'Participatory Universe' and Stephen Hawking's 'Imaginary Time' theory of cosmology."[9] In conjunction with his ideas, Langan has claimed that "you can prove the existence of God, the soul and an afterlife, using mathematics."[7]

Langan is a fellow of the International Society for Complexity, Information, and Design (ISCID),[22] a professional society which promotes intelligent design,[23] and has published a paper on his CTMU in the society's online journal Progress in Complexity, Information, and Design in 2002.[24] Later that year, he presented a lecture on his CTMU at ISCID's Research and Progress in Intelligent Design (RAPID) conference.[25] In 2004, Langan contributed a chapter to Uncommon Dissent, a collection of essays that question unguided evolution and promote intelligent design, edited by ISCID cofounder and leading intelligent design proponent William Dembski.[26]

Asked about creationism, Langan has said:

I believe in the theory of evolution, but I believe as well in the allegorical truth of creation theory. In other words, I believe that evolution, including the principle of natural selection, is one of the tools used by God to create mankind. Mankind is then a participant in the creation of the universe itself, so that we have a closed loop. I believe that there is a level on which science and religious metaphor are mutually compatible.[15]

Langan has said he does not belong to any religious denomination, explaining that he "can't afford to let [his] logical approach to theology be prejudiced by religious dogma."[15] He calls himself "a respecter of all faiths, among peoples everywhere."[15]

He has recently been profiled in Malcolm Gladwell's latest book Outliers: The Story of Success[27], where Gladwell looks at the reasons behind why Langan was unable to flourish in a university environment. Gladwell writes that although Langan "read deeply in philosophy, mathematics, and physics" as he worked on the CTMU, "without academic credentials, he despairs of ever getting published in a scholarly journal".[28]
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Re: USAFA Facts Of The Day

Post by Spawn Of Zonk »

Sorry for the delay, here are three days at once to ease everyone's eager minds. And RangerBob275, I'm not sure if you took the time to look up the picture of the guy but he is massive! Bill Gates gets beat up in high school for being a nerd and takes over the world with computers. Chris Langan gets beat up in high school and turns into a monster.

Super Smart Person of the Day: Chris Langan
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12 NOV 2009

Fun Fact of the Day: A male emperor moth can smell a female emperor moth up to 7 miles away
Today in History: 2001 – American Airlines Flight 587 crashes in Belle Harbor, NY, killing 265, vertical stabilizer failure
Fail of the Day: Image

10 NOV 2009

Fun Fact of the Day: The cruise liner Queen Elizabeth II, moves only six inches for each gallon of fuel that it burns.
Today in History: 1989 – Germans begin demolishing Berlin Wall
Fail of the Day: Image

9 NOV 2009

Fun Fact of the Day: Ketchup was sold in the 1830s as medicine
Today in History: 1989 – East Berlin opens it borders
Fail of the Day:
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Never Falter, Never Fail

"Two roads diverged in a wood, and I-
I took the one less traveled by,
And that has made all the difference."
-Robert Frost

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Spawn Of Zonk
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Re: USAFA Facts Of The Day

Post by Spawn Of Zonk »

(Friday the) 13 NOV 09

Fun Fact of the Day: You can tell from the statue of a mounted horseman how the rider died. If all four of the horse's feet are on the ground, he died of natural causes. One foot raised means he died from wounds suffered in battle. Two legs raised means he died in action

Today in History: 1895 – 1st shipment of canned pineapple from Hawaii

Fail of the Day:
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Never Falter, Never Fail

"Two roads diverged in a wood, and I-
I took the one less traveled by,
And that has made all the difference."
-Robert Frost

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Re: USAFA Facts Of The Day

Post by Spawn Of Zonk »

16 NOV 09

Fun Fact of the Day: The US Interstate road system was designed so that one mile in every five must be straight. These straight sections are usable as airstrips in times of war or other emergencies.

Today in History: 1939 – Al Capone released from Alcatraz jail

Fail of the Day:
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Never Falter, Never Fail

"Two roads diverged in a wood, and I-
I took the one less traveled by,
And that has made all the difference."
-Robert Frost

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