After the attack, Padgett felt “off.” He assumed it was an effect of the medication he was prescribed; but it was later found that, because of his traumatic brain injury, Padgett had signs of obsessive–compulsive disorder and post-traumatic stress disorder.[5] He also began viewing the world through a figurative lens of mathematical shapes.
“Padgett is one of only 40 people in the world with “acquired savant syndrome,” a condition in which prodigious talents in math, art or music emerge in previously normal individuals following a brain injury or disease.
this makes it seem more likely to me that bio interventions for increases in IQ in adult humans is possible, though likely algernon’s law holds and there’s a cost.
Sorry to be a party pooper, but I find the story of Jason Padgett (the guy who ‘banged his head and become a math genius’) completely unconvincing. From the video that you cite, here is the ‘evidence’ that he is ‘math genius’:
He tells us, with no context, ‘the inner boundary of pi is f(x)=x sin(pi/x)’. Ok!
He makes ‘math inspired’ drawings (some of which admittedly are pretty cool but they’re not exactly original) and sells them on his website
He claims that a physicist (who is not named or interviewed) saw him drawing in the mall, and, on the basis of this, suggested that he study physics.
He went to ‘school’ and studied math and physics. He says started with basic algebra and calculus and apparently ‘aced all the classes’, but doesn’t tell us what level he reached. Graduate? Post-graduate?
He was ‘doing integrals with triangles instead of integrals with rectangles’
He tells us ‘every shape in the universe is a fractal’
Some fMRI scans were done on his brain which found ‘he had conscious access to parts of the brain we don’t normally have access to’.
I heard (25 years ago) about a friend of a friend who started to see complex images about any word. Even draw them. Turns out it was brain cancer, he died soon after.
Recently learned about Acquired savant syndrome. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jason_Padgett
this makes it seem more likely to me that bio interventions for increases in IQ in adult humans is possible, though likely algernon’s law holds and there’s a cost.
h/t @Jesse Hoogland
Previous discussion, comment by A.H. :
good to know thanks for flagging!
I heard (25 years ago) about a friend of a friend who started to see complex images about any word. Even draw them. Turns out it was brain cancer, he died soon after.
Sounds like synesthesia