The thread in R&T about IQ scores and atheism has attracted a few IQ claims, and sceptical replies from those who know what an IQ of 220 would actually mean - Gentle Giant helpfully posted a link to
this table, which shows that (with the IQ distribution being a normal distribution around 100, with 15 as 1 standard deviation) 170 is roughly 1 in a million, and 220 1 in 1.6 quadrillion (for comparison, one estimate of all Homo sapiens that have ever lived is 100 billion, which I reckon would mean the most intelligent person ever had an IQ of about 200; the most intelligent person alive might be expected to have about 195. There is, of course, a possible aspect of "well, it's just chance that the most intelligent human ever, in the past or the future, is posting on DU at the moment").
It was also posted that IQ tests can't really measure an IQ above about 150-155 - this sounds believable to me, because that would be about 3.5 standard deviations, or 1 in 5000, and I doubt you could devise tests that could pick out the 1 in 5000 at all accurately. But that's just me and my innate scepticism, rather than any knowledge or references. Can anyone say if that is a generally held limit, among those who do think IQ tests show something measurable?
And that last part shows the question I was begging - is the concept of IQ meaningful anyway?
Finally, wouldn't it be a lot more useful, both to weed out claims that effectively say "I'm one of the 300 most intelligent people in the USA", and in the more everyday world, for easier public understanding, to say "X is in the top 2% of intelligence" or "Y is in the top 70%" (or "bottom 30%" - discuss), because that relates to numbers and proportions that we can all think about, rather than "IQ of 95"? What's the use of a
manufactured normal distribution?