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top 100 geniuses alive in the world today. Published October 29th 2007
Discovery consists of looking at the same thing as everyone else and thinking something different. Albert Sent-Gyorgi
Synectics is a global consulting business that helps the world's most admired organisations create and implement breakthrough ideas. Whether it is the creation of new products or services, or the re-invention of an entire organisation, Synectics helps create superior results by harnessing the creativity and energy of its clients own people. As pioneers in the field of organisational creativity, Synectics was set up in the 1960s and has helped hundreds of the world's leading companies to succeed in their goals. Unlike many innovation agencies its methods are based on a robust body of knowledge and is the result of 45 years of continuous action research. You can find out more about Synectics at www.synecticsworld.com
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What makes a genius a genius? Everybody, even non-scientists, knows that Steven Hawking is a genius. But what is it about Steven Hawking that makes him a genius? Can his genius be compared to the genius of others? Is he more or less of a genius than Zinedine Zidane? Is Zinedine Zidane a genius at all? Who else is a genius? These are the questions that are examined in this short report. The more that I have pondered on genius, the more I have become convinced that it holds a great secret. It certainly fascinates us. And, for many it is the greatest accolade that can be attributed to a person. There are some who say that genius can be created. I am not so certain. But I am certain that the process of thought that arrives at genius ideas can be re-created. I have seen it happen in some of the work that Synectics has done with its clients. Genius and creativity are bound inextricably together and, therefore, genius and the work of Synectics is also closely related. It is our bread and butter. And so Synectics has attempted the impossible. It has attempted to define and quantify what it is that makes a genius. And through that definition it has arrived at a list of the top 100 living geniuses. Whether or not you agree with the results Nigel Clarke Managing Partner Synectics UK & Europe
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Defining genius This report attempts to define what it is that makes a genius and to use that to create a scoring system that can be used to rank individuals according to their genius factor. The end objective is the compilation of a ranked list of 100 contemporary, living geniuses. What is genius Genius is a very difficult concept to define. Most people would be able to name a couple of people who they think would qualify as a genius. But they may find it more difficult to agree with each other when comparing lists. Genius is not easily quantified. How do we know that Leonardo De Vinci is a genius? Is it because of his phenomenal talent? Is it to do with his lifetime achievement? Is it the recognition that has accumulated over the years? Is it about the impact that he has had on the world. Or is it something about the great advances that he brought to the world. Advances that made the world a different place. Synectics believes that it is a combination of all the above. Paradigm Shifting Many people argue that a genius can be defined by their contribution, where it turns conventional thinking on its head. Einsteins theories of relativity led to a total re-assessment of the Newtonian approach to understanding the physical world. Benjamin Franklins investigations into electricity ushered in a new era in metropolitan living. Abu Ali ibn Sen (Avicenna), a Mu'tazili philosopher and doctor in the early 11th century, is regarded as the father of modern medicine. All three, and many others, are regarded as geniuses because their thinking and their work led to a complete re-appraisal of everything that had gone before.
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Popular Acclaim Others are held up as geniuses as a result of the extent of their influence and their hold upon the public imagination. These men and women need not be the most original thinkers or have the highest IQs. They certainly need not lay claim to having moved the world on its axis. And yet they have had a great impact. Was Elvis Presley a genius? Millions of men and women would argue that he was. How about Ghandi or JRR Tolkein or Charlie Chaplin? If genius is a socially defined concept, then the opinions of millions of human beings cannot and should not be ignored. Intellectual Power Pure intellect is often held up as the true indicator of genius. 20th century psychological techniques have given us the IQ or Intelligent Quotient and many would argue that those with the very highest IQs are geniuses by definition. Kim Ung-Yong, a Korean former child prodigy, has the highest IQ recorded at 210. Does that make him a genius? NASA did not think so. IQ scores of 140 or more are often quoted as genius or near genius levels. Famous people from the world of film with very high recorded IQs include James Woods (180), Sharon Stone (154) and Quentin Tarantino (160). Does that mean that they are geniuses and Francis Crick (117), a Nobel Prize winner who unlocked the mysteries of DNA, is not? Achievement There is no genius without great achievement. It is imposible to recognise genius without achievement. Some would even argue that it is achievement itself that defines genius, although that may be taking it too far. Robert Oppenheimer was responsible for building the first atomic bomb. It was this bomb that took thousands of Japanese lives, brought World War Two to an early conclusion and ushered in the cold fear of armageddon politics.
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The building of this terrible weapon was, without a doubt, a truly great achievement. It had eluded Germany and the Soviet Union. But was Robert Oppenheimer a genius? Alexander the Great was a military prodigy and conquered all the known world from Europe to India and all in between. Great cities were named after him. Historians still pore over his tactics of war. Was he a genius too? Surely achievements as great as his could not be ignored in the search for genius. There are many other examples of men and women who have achieved great things. The difficulty will always be sorting the geniuses from the rest. Any assessment of genius can ill afford to ignore task. Cultural Importance Genius is not always reconised in a persons lifetime. Vincent Van Gogh died unknown and in poverty, but his work has become a testament to his genius for art. It has become an indelible part of the narrative that weaves our understanding of C20th Western culture and individual pieces exchange hands for hundreds of millions of pounds. Culture is humanitys great work and any individual who makes an important contribution to it deserves to be considered as a potential genius. Here is the contribution of philosophy and the arts. Homer, St Paul, Confucius, Bach, Mozart, Shakespeare, Goethe, Hegel, Marx, Kafka, Tolstoy, Wittgenstein The list is impressive and long. It is, of course, the assessment of all these five factors together that helps us to conclude on the existence or lack of genius for any named individual. And it is these five factors that stand at the heart of the Synectics analysis of contemporary living genius.
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How the list was compiled and ranked In August 2007, Synectics emailed 4,000 known people in the UK and asked them to nominate up to ten people who were alive and who they considered to qualify as a genius. The email contained a straight request for nominations without qualification. No other guidance was given. Just over 600 replies were received containing nominations for approximately 1100 discrete individuals. Of these only 60% were still alive. Another 120 proved impossible to identify or were found to be self-nominations. These were discounted. Thus Synectics was in possession of a long list that numbered over 400 people. Nominated individuals came from all walks of life. The world of sport and popular culture accounted for a high number of them. Over 60 percent of them came from the USA and the UK. Synectics assembled a panel of six people with expertise in the fields of creativity and innovation. The panel was charged with the responsibility for ranking the long list in order of genius and to present a resulting shortlist of 100. The panel took five predefined characteristics of genius; Paradigm Shifting , Popular Acclaim, Intellectual Power , Achievement and Cultural Importance. Each of the individuals in the long list were then scored out of ten for each of the five factors. The total score (maximum 50, minimum 0) was then compiled for each individual under the label of genius factor The top 100 scoring individuals were then ranked from the highest ranked (with a genius factor of 27/50) to the 100th ranked (with a genius factor of 2/50)
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1=. Albert Hofmann (born January 11, 1906) is a Swiss scientist best known for synthesizing Lysergic acid diethylamide.
Hofmann has authored more than 100 scientific articles and has written a number of books, including LSD: My Problem Child. On January 11, 2006, Hofmann became a centenarian, and was the focus of an international symposium on LSD. Through the late 1940s and most of the 1950s, LSD caused a revolution in psychiatry. Therapists and doctors used it to treat forms of mental illness, including neurosis, psychosis and depression. More than 40,000 people underwent psychedelic therapy. Respected figures considered it a wonder drug and gave their careers over to LSD research. Some believed it gave a glimpse into the way schizophrenics perceived the world. Others used it as a catalyst to accelerate traditional psychotherapy - and even took the drug themselves along with their patients. Hofmann calls LSD "medicine for the soul" and is frustrated by the worldwide prohibition that has pushed it underground. He believes that the drug was hijacked by the youth movement of the 1960s and then unfairly demonized by the establishment that the movement opposed, although he concedes LSD can be dangerous in the wrong hands. Genius Factor 27 Paradigm Shifter 5, Popular Acclaim, 4, Intellectual Power 6, Achievement 4, Cultural Importance 8
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1=. Sir Timothy John Berners-Lee, OM, KBE, FRS, FREng, FRSA (born 8 June 1955) is a British developer who together with Robert Cailliau invented the World Wide Web.
Sir Timothy Berners-Lee is the director of the World Wide Web Consortium (which oversees its continued development), and a senior researcher and holder of the 3Com Founders Chair at the MIT Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL). While an independent contractor at CERN from June to December 1980, Berners-Lee proposed a project based on the concept of hypertext, to facilitate sharing and updating information among researchers. While there, he built a prototype system named ENQUIRE. After leaving CERN, in 1980, he went to work at John Poole's Image Computer Systems Ltd., he returned in 1984 as a fellow. In 1989, CERN was the largest Internet node in Europe, and Berners-Lee saw an opportunity to join hypertext with the Internet: "I just had to take the hypertext idea and connect it to the TCP and DNS ideas and ta-da! the World Wide Web." He wrote his initial proposal in March of 1989, and in 1990, with the help of Robert Cailliau, produced a revision which was accepted by his manager, Mike Sendall. He used similar ideas to those underlying the Enquire system to create the World Wide Web, for which he designed and built the first web browser and editor (called WorldWideWeb and developed on NEXTSTEP) and the first Web server called httpd (short for HyperText Transfer Protocol Genius Factor 27 Paradigm Shifter 7, Popular Acclaim, 4, Intellectual Power 2, Achievement 6, Cultural Importance 8
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3. George Soros (born August 12, 1930, in Budapest, Hungary, as Gyrgy Schwartz) is an American financial speculator, stock investor, philanthropist, and political activist.
Currently, he is the chairman of Soros Fund Management and the Open Society Institute and is also a former member of the Board of Directors of the Council on Foreign Relations. His support for the Solidarity labor movement in Poland, as well as the Czechoslovakian human rights organization Charter 77, contributed to ending Soviet Union political dominance in those countries. His funding and organization of Georgia's Rose Revolution was considered by Russian and Western observers to have been crucial to its success, although Soros said his role has been "greatly exaggerated." In the United States, he is known for having donated large sums of money in a failed effort to defeat President George W. Bush's bid for re-election in 2004. Soros is famously known for "breaking the Bank of England" on Black Wednesday in 1992. With an estimated current net worth of around $8.5 billion, he is ranked by Forbes as the 80th-richest person in the world. Genius Factor 25 Paradigm Shifter 3, Popular Acclaim, 3, Intellectual Power 6, Achievement 8, Cultural Importance 5
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4. Matthew Abram Groening (born February 15, 1954 in Portland, Oregon; is an Emmy Award-winning American cartoonist and the creator of The Simpsons, Futurama and the weekly comic strip Life in Hell.
Matt Groening has been nominated for 25 Emmy awards and [29] has won ten: nine for The Simpsons and one for Futurama. Groening received the National Cartoonist Society Reuben Award for 2002, and had been nominated for the same award in 2000. He received a British Comedy Award for "outstanding contribution to comedy" in 2004. Genius Factor 24 Paradigm Shifter 4, Popular Acclaim, 6, Intellectual Power 0, Achievement 7, Cultural Importance 7
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9=. Oscar Ribeiro de Almeida Niemeyer Soares Filho (born December 15, 1907) is a Brazilian
architect who is considered one of the most important names in international modern architecture. He was a pioneer in the exploration of the constructive possibilities of reinforced concrete. Although he was a defender of utilitarianism, his creations did not have the blocky coldness frequently criticized by postmodern critics. His buildings have forms so dynamic and curves so sensual that many admirers say that, more than an architect, he is a sculptor of monuments. He was the architect of the majority of buildings in Brazilia, including the residence of the President (Palcio da Alvorada), the House of the deputy, the National Congress, the Cathedral of Braslia (a hyperboloid structure), diverse ministries, not to mention residential buildings. Viewed from above, the city can be seen to have elements that repeat themselves in every building, giving it a formal unity. Behind the construction of Braslia lay a monumental campaign to construct an entire city in the barren center of the country, hundreds of kilometers from any major city. Genius Factor 21 Paradigm Shifter 2, Popular Acclaim, 1, Intellectual Power 4, Achievement 8, Cultural Importance 6
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9=. Philip Glass (born January 31, 1937) is an Academy Award-nominated American composer. His music is frequently described as minimalist, though he prefers the term theatre composer. He is considered one of the most influential composers of the late-20th century and is widely acknowledged as a composer who has brought art music to the public.
Glass is extremely prolific as a composer: he has written ensemble works, operas, symphonies, concertos, film scores, and solo works. Glass counts many visual artists, writers, musicians, and directors among his friends, including Richard Serra, Chuck Close, Doris Lessing, Allen Ginsberg, Robert Wilson, John Moran, actor Bill Treacher, Godfrey Reggio, Ravi Shankar, David Bowie, the conductor Dennis Russell Davies, and electronic musician Aphex Twin, who have all collaborated with him. He is a strong supporter of the Tibetan cause. In 1987 he cofounded the Tibet House with Columbia University professor Robert Thurman and the actor Richard Gere. Glass lives in New York and in Nova Scotia. Genius Factor 21 Paradigm Shifter 6, Popular Acclaim, 4, Intellectual Power 2, Achievement 5, Cultural Importance 5
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9=. Grigori Yakovlevich Perelman, born 13 June 1966 in Leningrad, USSR (now St. Petersburg, Russia), sometimes known as Grisha Perelman, is a Russian mathematician who has made landmark contributions to Riemannian geometry and geometric topology.
In particular, he has proved Thurston's geometrization conjecture. This solves in the affirmative the famous Poincar conjecture, posed in 1904 and regarded as one of the most important and difficult open problems in mathematics. In August 2006, Perelman was awarded the Fields Medal, for "his contributions to geometry and his revolutionary insights into the analytical and geometric structure of the Ricci flow". The Fields Medal is widely considered to be the top honor a mathematician can receive. However, he declined to accept the award or appear at the congress. On December 22, 2006, the journal Science recognized Perelman's proof of the Poincar Conjecture as the scientific "Breakthrough of the Year," the first such recognition in the area of mathematics. Genius Factor 21 Paradigm Shifter 2, Popular Acclaim, 2, Intellectual Power 10, Achievement 7, Cultural Importance 0
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12=. Sir Andrew John Wiles (born April 11, 1953) is a British-American research mathematician at Princeton University, specialising in number theory. He is most famous for solving Fermat's Last Theorem.
Andrew Wiles' most famous mathematical result is that all rational semistable elliptic curves are modular which, in particular, implies Fermat's Last Theorem. Wiles was introduced to Fermat's Last Theorem at the age of ten. He tried to prove the theorem using textbook methods and later studied the work of mathematicians who had tried to prove it. When he began his graduate studies he stopped trying to prove it and began studying elliptic curves under the supervision of John Coates. Later at Princeton University, dedicated his research to the solution to Fermats Last Theorem, though of course he did continue in his teaching duties at; continuing to attend seminars, lecture undergraduates, and give tutorials. Genius Factor 20 Paradigm Shifter 2, Popular Acclaim, 2, Intellectual Power 10, Achievement 6, Cultural Importance 0
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Full table of the top 100 Living geniuses as identified and ranked by Synectics. (Synectics Survey of Contemporary Genius 2007)
Rank 1= 1= 3 4 5= 5= 7= 7= 9= 9= 9= 12= 12= 12= 15= 15= 15= 18 19 20= 20= 20= 20= 20= 25 26= 26=
Name Albert Hoffman Tim Berners-Lee George Soros Matt Groening Nelson Mandela Frederick Sanger Dario Fo Steven Hawking Oscar Niemeyer Philip Glass Grigory Perelman Andrew Wiles Li Hongzhi Ali Javan Brian Eno Damian Hirst Daniel Tammet Nicholson Baker Daniel Barenboim Robert Crumb Richard Dawkins Larry Page & Sergey Brin Rupert Murdoch Geoffrey Hill Garry Kasparov The Dalai Lama Steven Spielberg
Nation (Swiss) (British) (American) (American) (South African) (British) (Italian) (British) (Brazilian) (American) (Russian) (British) (Chinese) (Iranian) (British) (British) (British) (American (N/A) (American) (British) (American) (American) (British) (Russian) (Tibetan) (American)
Field Chemist Computer Scientist Investor & Philanthropist Satirist & Animator Politician & Diplomat Chemist Writer & Dramatist Physicist Architect Composer Mathematician Mathematician Spiritual Leader Engineer Composer Artist Savant & Linguist Writer Musician Artist Biologist and philosopher Publishers Publisher Poet Chess Player Spiritual Leader Film maker
Score (27) (27) (25) (24) (23) (23) (22) (22) (21) (21) (21) (20) (20) (20) (19) (19) (19) (18) (17) (16) (16) (16) (16) (16) (15) (14) (14)
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26= 26= 26= 31 32= 32= 32= 32= 32= 32= 32= 32= 40= 40= 40= 43= 43= 43= 43= 43= 43= 49= 49= 49= 49= 49= 49= 49= 49= 49= 58= 58= 58=
Hiroshi Ishiguro Robert Edwards Seamus Heaney Harold Pinter Flossie WongStaal Bobby Fischer Prince Henrik Gorecki Avram Noam Chomski Sebastian Thrun Nima Arkani Hamed Margaret Turnbull Elaine Pagels Enrique Ostrea Gary Becker Mohammed Ali Osama Bin Laden Bill Gates Philip Roth James West Tuan Vo-Dinh Brian Wilson Stevie Wonder Vint Cerf Henry Kissinger Richard Branson Pardis Sabeti Jon de Mol Meryl Streep Margaret Attwood Placido Domingo John Lasseter Shunpei Yamazaki
(Japanese) (British) (Irish) (British) (Chinese) (American) (American) (Polish) (American) (German) (Canadian) (American) (American) (Philippino) (American) (American) (Saudi) (American) (American) (American) (Vietnamese) (American) (American) (American) (American) (British) (Iranian) (Dutch) (American) (Canadian) (Spanish) (American) (Japanese)
Roboticist Pioneer of IVF treatment Poet Writer & Dramatist Bio-technologist Chess Player Musician Composer Philosopher & linguist Probabilistic roboticist Physicist Astrobiologist Historian Pediatrics & neonatology Economist Boxer Islamicist Businessman Writer Invented the foil electrical microphone Bio-Medical Scientist Musician Singer songwriter Computer scientist Diplomat and politician Publicist Biological anthropologist Television producer Actress Writer Singer Digital Animator Computer scientist & physicist
(14) (14) (14) (13) (12) (12) (12) (12) (12) (12) (12) (12) (11) (11) (11) (10) (10) (10) (10) (10) (10) (9) (9) (9) (9) (9) (9) (9) (9) (9) (8) (8) (8)
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58= 58= 58= 58= 58= 58= 67= 67= 67= 67= 67= 72= 72= 72= 72= 72= 72= 72= 72= 72= 72= 72= 83= 83= 83= 83= 83= 83= 83= 83= 91=.
Jane Goodall Kirti Narayan Chaudhuri John Goto Paul McCartney Stephen King Leonard Cohen Aretha Franklin David Bowie Emily Oster Steve Wozniak Martin Cooper George Lucas Niles Rogers Hans Zimmer John Williams Annette Baier Dorothy Rowe Ivan Marchuk Robin Escovado Mark Dean Rick Rubin Stan Lee David Warren Jon Fosse Gjertrud Schnackenberg Graham Linehan JK Rowling Ken Russell Mikhail Timofeyevich Kalashnikov Erich Jarvis Chad Varah
(British) (Indian) (British) (British) (American) (American) (American) (British) (American) (American) (American) (American) (American) (German) (American) (New Zealander) (British) (Ukrainian) (American) (American) (American) (American) (Australian) (Norwegian) (American) (Irish) (British) (British) (Russian) (American) (British)
Ethologist & Anthropologist Historian Photographer Musician Writer Poet & musician Musician Musician Economist Engineer and co-founder of Apple Computers Inventor of the cell phone Film maker Musician Composer Composer Philosopher Psychologist Artist & sculptor Composer Inventor & computer scientist Musician & producer Publisher Engineer Writer & dramatist Poet Writer & dramatist Writer Film maker Small arms designer Neurobiologist Founder of Samaritans
(8) (8) (8) (8) (8) (8) (7) (7) (7) (7) (7) (6) (6) (6) (6) (6) (6) (6) (6) (6) (6) (6) (5) (5) (5) (5) (5) (5) (5) (4)
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Nicolas Hayek Alastair Hannay Patricia Bath Thomas A. Jackson Dolly Parton Morissey Michael Eavis Ranulph Fiennes Quentin Tarantino
Businessman and founder of Swatch Philosopher Ophthalmologist Aerospace engineer Singer Singer Organiser of Glastonbury Adventurer Filmmaker
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