I haven’t found any such individual, but I think doing so suffices to discredit some of the psychometric study conclusions as long as they didn’t include that particular individual
Well, only if the individual would falsify the study. My claim is that the folks at the end of the power law will have these properties. I think of it as a filtering mechanism: first you filter by the first order factors, then the second order, and so on, each one doing less work than the last (for example, filtering by >2 SD IQ will cut you to <5% of the population, but once you’re just down to the best 0.01% then the third order factors will help you pick out the peak, even though those factors wouldn’t have cut down the world very much to start with).
Well, only if the individual would falsify the study. My claim is that the folks at the end of the power law will have these properties. I think of it as a filtering mechanism: first you filter by the first order factors, then the second order, and so on, each one doing less work than the last (for example, filtering by >2 SD IQ will cut you to <5% of the population, but once you’re just down to the best 0.01% then the third order factors will help you pick out the peak, even though those factors wouldn’t have cut down the world very much to start with).