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Marilyn blames the compulsory schooling system. She argues that this system: • Creates passive learners • Discourages independent thinking • Inhibits exploration of preferred fields
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Marilyn Vos Savant wasn't your usual kid. By age 10 she: • Memorized entire books • Read all 24 volumes of Encyclopedia Britannica • Had the highest IQ ever recorded (228) She was destined to be a genius. But the reality was different.

“No one paid much attention to me. Mostly because I was a girl, and I accepted that." She attended a regular public school. Left Washington University after 2 years to help run her parents' business. And in 1985, fate took a sharp turn...

The Guinness Book of World Records listed her as "Highest IQ" with a 228 IQ Marilyn was in the spotlight: • Cover of major magazines such as the New York and the Parade Magazines. • Appeared on Late Night with David Letterman. She couldn't imagine what would come after...

Marilyn landed a position at Parade Magazine, starting her famous "Ask Marilyn" column. The dream of someone with a passion for writing. Which would soon become a nightmare. All because of one question...

The Monty Hall Problem, September 1990. Named after Monty Hall, the host of "Let's Make a Deal". Here is the question she was asked: 👇

You're on a game show. You got 3 doors. 1 has a car and the other 2 have goats. You pick a door. The host opens another door to reveal a goat. Would you switch doors?

Her answer: "Yes, you should switch." She got over 10,000 letters, with nearly 1,000 from PhDs. 90% stated how wrong she was: • "You are the goat!" • "You blew it, and you blew it big!" • "Maybe women look at math problems differently than men." But was she wrong?

Consider these 2 scenarios: 1. You pick the door with the car (1/3 chance): • You switch, you lose 2. You pick a door with a goat (2/3 chance): • Monty shows the other goat • You switch, you win Switching wins 2/3 of the time. Eventually, she was proven right...

MIT ran computer simulations that confirmed her answer. MythBusters conducted tests to prove it. Some academics recognized their mistake and apologized. But why did so many fail to see it?

The reasons: • People tend to "reset" the scenario when presented with a new choice • The small numbers (3 doors) make it harder to grasp • They assume each door has a 50% chance What is causing people to think like this?

Marilyn feels alone in a crowded room. It's not easy being this smart. Whenever she needs answers, there's no one to turn to. Still, she regards her intellect as a blessing rather than a burden.

I hope you enjoyed this thread. What was your initial response to the Monty Hall problem? Did your answer change after the explanation? What are your thoughts on the schooling system? Don't forget to follow @iamluismalheiro

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Please help address the community note on this thread. I never claimed that she solved the problem. All I said was that she was asked about it on her column, and she gave her answer. Thank you all 🙏

Great point about Shakespeare.

A salient point about making 10th-graders read Shakespeare. A love of reading starts with loving what you read.

Couldn't agree with her more on the "cumpolsory schooling system." It's doing nothing but regurgitating material which many will never use again in their lives. Academia is nothing but a money making machine. Developing skills - what's that?

What a gorgeous lady in every level!

Interesting thread👌🏼 I agree compulsory schooling destroys geniuses...I see some kids here in the islands diving for pearls, by 10 they can navigate the sea, vast knowledge which is hard to attain, only now do start to understand Socrates & plato as a kid it was forced upon me

It was different for me. I almost got expelled for telling the class what a rhetorical question was when my English teacher couldn't tell them what a sentence meant in Shakespeare. This was grade 8. Just handed us a multiple choice questionnaire and had us read 3 pages, then fill it in. Couldn't answer students' questions about anything.
