IQ Award

Summary

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The IQ Award is a prize donated by the high-IQ association Mensa to honor people and organisations who have made remarkable contributions to public welfare by an intelligent idea, scientific research about human intelligence or the positive image of intelligence in the public.[1] Candidates can be nominated by Mensa members and former award winners. After being checked by an internal commission, all Mensa members can vote for which nominee to win the award.

History edit

The German IQ Award is held annually since 2004. The winners are:

Since 2011 the award is issued in the two categories "Wissenschaft/Innovation" (Science/Innovation) and "Kultur/Medien" (Culture/Media):

  • 2011: Heatball and Richard David Precht
  • 2012: Eckart von Hirschhausen and due to the same number of votes Franz Porzsolt and Florian Freistetter [de] for ScienceBlogs
  • 2013: Auticon
  • 2014: Jonny Lee Miller. Initially Edward Snowden had been nominated by Mensa members, and the IQ commission had approved his nomination, the managing board of Mensa revoked Snowden's nomination because "Mensa is not allowed to comment on political issues." Jonny Lee Miller then garnered the most votes and won the award.[2]
  • 2015: Category 1 (Intelligent contributions to the Greater Good): foodsharing.de, Category 2 (Intelligent Dissemination of Knowledge): Daniele Ganser, Category 3 (Intellectual Giftedness in the Public): Initiative ArbeiterKind.
  • 2017: Category 1 (Intelligent contributions to the Greater Good): One Dollar Glasses Category 2 (Intelligent Dissemination of Knowledge): ScienceLab

References edit

  1. ^ "Was ist der Deutsche IQ-Preis? (What is the German IQ Award?)". Mensa in Deutschland e.V. Archived from the original on 21 December 2014. Retrieved 22 January 2015.
  2. ^ Werdermann, Felix (21 January 2015). "Kein IQ-Preis für Edward Snowden (No IQ Award for Edward Snowden)". der Freitag. Retrieved 22 January 2015.