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  • Number 5. Kim Ung-Yong. Kim Ung-Yong is a South Korean civil engineer and former child

  • prodigy whose IQ was recorded by the Guinness Book of World Records at 210. He started speaking

  • at 6 months and was able to read Japanese, Korean, German, English and many other languages

  • by his third birthday. By the age of 4, he had scored more than 200 on an IQ test normally

  • given to 7 year olds. As of 2007 Kim Ung-Yong currently works as an adjunct professor at

  • Chungbuk National University. Number 4. Johann Wolfgang von Goethe. Goethe was a German writer

  • and Statesman who is believed to have had an IQ of 220. His body of work consists of

  • epic and lyric poetry written in a variety of styles and his most notable works include,

  • Faust’, ‘The Sorrows of Young WerhterandElective Affinities’. Although his

  • literary work attracted great interest, Goethe was also actively involved in the studies

  • of natural science writing several works on morphology and colour theory. Number 3. Christopher

  • Hirata. Hirata is a child prodigy turned astrophysicist with an IQ of 225 by the age of 16. He is

  • best known for his human chemical thermodynamics and human physics based, ‘The Physics of

  • Relationships’. At the age of 3, Hirata entertained himself at the supermarket by

  • calculating the total bill of his parent’s shopping cart, item-by-item, by weight, quantity,

  • discounts and sale taxes. That is pretty impressive for a 3 year old. By 12, he was taking college-level

  • courses in Physics and multivariable calculus. However, perhaps most famously Hirata became

  • the youngest competitor ever to win a gold medal at the International Physics Olympiad

  • at 13 years old. If you are still not impressed, by 16 he was working with NASA on projects

  • dealing with colonizing Mars and he earned his PhD in astrophysics from Princeton University at 22.

  • Number 2. Terence Tao. Tao is an Australian-American mathematician working on harmonic analysis,

  • partial differential equations, additive combinatorics, ergodic Ramsey theory, random matrix theory,

  • and analytic number theory. No wonder he has an IQ of 230, I was wondering whether the

  • list was ever going to end. From an early age, Tao exhibited extraordinary mathematical

  • capabilities by attending calculus courses at the age of 7 and the following year he

  • even began to teach high school calculus at Garfield High School just at the age of 8.

  • His mathematical abilities do not end there! Tao and Lenhard Ng are the only two children

  • in the history of the Johns Hopkins' Study of Exceptional Talent program to have achieved

  • a score of 700 or greater on the SAT math section while just nine years old. Tao scored

  • 760. Tao also remains the youngest winner of each of the three medals in the International

  • Mathematical Olympiad, winning a bronze in 1986 at 10, a silver in 1987 at 11 and finally

  • a gold in 1988 at the age of 12. Number 1. William James Sidis. Just when you thought

  • that someone couldn’t have a higher IQ, well someone just did! William James Sidis

  • was an American child prodigy with exceptional mathematical abilities and a claimed mastery

  • of many languages. Although not confirmed, he is believed to have had an IQ of 275, the

  • highest IQ ever in the history of our planet. He attended Harvard University at age 11,

  • as anadult’, and was claimed to be conversant in over 40 languages and dialects. Sidis could

  • read the New York Times at 18 months and had reportedly taught himself 8 languages (Latin,

  • Greek, French, Russian, Hebrew, German, Turkish and Armenian) only at 8 years old. Also by

  • the age of 8 he invented his own language called, ‘Vendergood’.

Number 5. Kim Ung-Yong. Kim Ung-Yong is a South Korean civil engineer and former child

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