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Presidential Intelligence Scores

 
 
Reply Mon 22 Jan, 2007 11:24 pm
Subject: Presidential Intelligence

A report published Monday, by the Lovenstein Institute of Scranton, Pennsylvania, detailed its findings of a four month study of the
intelligence quotient of President George W. Bush. Since 1973, the
Lovenstein Institute has published its research to the educational
community on each new president, which includes the famous "IQ" report
among others.

There have been twelve presidents over the past 50 years, from F.D.
Roosevelt to G.W. Bush, who were rated based on scholarly
achievements:
1. Writings that they produced without aid of staff.
2. Their ability to speak with clarity, and several other psychological
factors, which were then scored using the Swanson/Crain System of
intelligence ranking.

The study determined the following IQs of each president as accurate to
within five percentage points. In order by presidential term:

Franklin Delano Roosevelt [D] 142,
Harry S Truman [D] 132,
Dwight David Eisenhower [R] 122
John Fitzgerald Kennedy [D] 174,
Lyndon Baines Johnson [D] 126,
Richard Milhous Nixon [R] 155,
Gerald R. Ford [R] 121,
James Earle Carter [D] 175,
Ronald Wilson Reagan [R] 105
George Herbert Walker Bush [R] 98,
William Jefferson Clinton [D] 182,
George Walker Bush [R] 91

In order of IQ rating:

182 . . William Jefferson Clinton [D]
175 . . James Earle Carter [D]
174 . . John Fitzgerald Kennedy [D]
155 . . Richard Milhous Nixon [R]
147 . . Franklin Delano Roosevelt [D]
132 . Harry S T r uman [D]
126 . . Lyndon Baines Johnson [D]
122 . Dwight David Eisenhower [R]
121 . . Gerald R. Ford [R]
105 . Ronald Wilson Reagan [R]
098 . . George Herbert Walker Bush [R]
091 . . George Walker Bush [R]

The six Republican presidents of the past 50 years had an average IQ of
115.5, with President Nixon having the highest at 155.

President George W. Bush rated the lowest of all the Republicans with
an
IQ of 91.

The six Democratic presidents of the past 50 years had an average IQ
of
156, with President Clinton having the highest IQ, at 182.

President Lyndon B. Johnson was rated the lowest of all the Democrats
with an IQ of 126. No president other than Carter [D] has released his
actual IQ (176). Note the institute measured him at 175.

Among comments made concerning the specific testing of President G.W.
Bush, his low ratings are due to his apparently difficult command of
the English language in public statements, his limited use of
vocabulary
[6,500 words for Bush versus an average of 11,000 words for other
presidents], his lack of scholarly achievements other than a basic MBA,
and an absence of any body of work which could be studied on an
intellectual basis The complete report documents the methods and
procedures used to arrive at these ratings, including depth of sentence
structure and voice stress confidence analysis.

"All the Presidents prior to George W. Bush had a least one book under
their belt, and most had written several white papers during their
education or early careers. Not so with President Bush," Dr.
Lovenstein said.

"He has no published works or writings, which made it more difficult
to
arrive at an assessment. We relied more heavily on transcripts of his
unscripted public speaking."

The Lovenstein Institute of Scranton, Pennsylvania think tank includes
high caliber historians, psychiatrists, sociologists, scientists in
human behavior, and psychologists. Among their ranks are Dr. Werner R.
Lovenstein, world-renowned sociologist, and Professor Patricia
F.Dilliams, a world-respected psychiatrist For more information on the
Lovenstein Institute, go to http://lovenstein.org// .

Hmmm - The smartest president didn't know enough to keep his pants zipped
and the dumbest one thinks he can run a war.
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Ticomaya
 
  1  
Reply Mon 22 Jan, 2007 11:32 pm
http://www.snopes.com/inboxer/hoaxes/presiq.htm

http://www.museumofhoaxes.com/lovenstein.html

http://newsbusters.org/node/6575
0 Replies
 
Ticomaya
 
  1  
Reply Mon 22 Jan, 2007 11:34 pm
Gullible much?
0 Replies
 
pachelbel
 
  1  
Reply Mon 22 Jan, 2007 11:57 pm
Ticomaya wrote:
Gullible much?


Duh, don't know. Ask George.

"The most important thing is for us to find Osama bin Laden."
"It is our number one priority and we will not rest until we find him."
-- George W. Bush 9-13-2001

"I don't know where he (bin Laden) is. I have no idea and I really don't care.
It's not that important. It's not our priority."
-- George W. Bush 3-13-2002


THINK MUCH????
0 Replies
 
dlowan
 
  1  
Reply Tue 23 Jan, 2007 01:41 am
It's interesting (but absolutely appropriate, I think) that genuine presidential IQ scores aren't published along with so much else about their health and private details...many of them both embarrassing and invasive!

I assume that most of them would have done IQ tests at least at university entrance.


Kennedy, for instance, was part of the famous Harvard longitudinal study written about so fascinatingly and brilliantly by George Vaillant in "Adaptation to Life" and "Aging Well: Surprising Guideposts to a Happier Life from the Landmark Harvard Study of Adult Development". (This was rather revolutionary at the time in choosing a cohort of "the brightest and best" to study throughout their life span from universtity on, and attempt to learn from, rather than examining cohorts known to be in trouble.) However, his personal IQ etc could never be extracted from the study and generally published for reasons of confidentiality.


I would assume Clinton's IQ would be very high, given his academic record, as far as I recall it? (I may well be imagining it as better than it is.)


However, as Ticomaya points out, these estimated IQ furphies that fly around are laughable.
0 Replies
 
Ticomaya
 
  1  
Reply Tue 23 Jan, 2007 12:05 pm
dlowan wrote:
I assume that most of them would have done IQ tests at least at university entrance.


I'm not sure why you would assume that. An IQ test is not a factor in college/university admissions. You take a test (SAT/ACT) but that's not an IQ test.
0 Replies
 
kelticwizard
 
  1  
Reply Tue 23 Jan, 2007 12:22 pm
I would have known if I had taken an IQ test my last year of high school, and I can say with surety I did not. Nor, as Tico pointed out, do colleges consider them in the admissions process, assuming they ever receive the results.

I am not sure that I have ever taken an IQ test. We got a lot of multiple choice tests in our elementary and junior high levels with answer sheets consisting of little boxes which had to be filled in with No. 2 pencil-not number three or higher-but I am not sure if the IQ tests were among them.

However, I do remember a reading a novel by a former teacher from the same school system I went to, and in the novel she spoke of a problem character in her class who had a high IQ-in the 122 range. So maybe one of those multiple choice tests was an IQ test, I don't know.

I'm not worried though. As those years were pre-computer, and it was the New York City school system I went to, I can safely assume that the IQ results, if they ever existed, were lost a long time ago.
0 Replies
 
 

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