Man man! Bitten by a radioactive man, he now fights crime (and precocious foxes) using all the powers of a man! Traveling town in the Man-mobile before returning to his secret lair, the Man-cave.
Ah, here we have an example of the erroneous conflation of ‘smart’ with ‘knowledge’. An autistic person can memorize detailed baseball stats back to the game’s invention, but be completely unable to figure out social cues.
On the other hand, Albert Einstein was considered smart, but supposedly didn’t clutter up his mind with his own telephone number, which he could just look up. Smart is how knowledge interacts to solve problems.
Man man! Bitten by a radioactive man, he now fights crime (and precocious foxes) using all the powers of a man! Traveling town in the Man-mobile before returning to his secret lair, the Man-cave.
Bravo! One of the few times that the comments are funnier than the comic!
Ah, a fellow Great Liar To Small Kids!
If the chip will make money, they will invent it.
Amen.
Ah, here we have an example of the erroneous conflation of ‘smart’ with ‘knowledge’. An autistic person can memorize detailed baseball stats back to the game’s invention, but be completely unable to figure out social cues.
On the other hand, Albert Einstein was considered smart, but supposedly didn’t clutter up his mind with his own telephone number, which he could just look up. Smart is how knowledge interacts to solve problems.
‘Profession’ by Isaac Asimov is an excellent story on this theme.