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  1. #21
    When I was 14, I was doing undergraduate research and playing video games. You don't really have to pick.

    ---------- Post added 2012-11-27 at 05:41 PM ----------

    Quote Originally Posted by RICH1471 View Post
    College at 15? Sure she will get along great with everyone else in their 20's.....
    I started college part time when I was 12, full time at 13, and it was basically fine. There wasn't really much for bumps in the road, and everyone just treated me as a peer (although I got a lot of the obvious questions). It's really just not that big of a deal.

  2. #22
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    Quote Originally Posted by JayJay09 View Post
    How many diseases are kept alive out of profit reasons, I wonder? The pharmaceutical industry values selling over healing, for those who haven't noticed yet.
    Depending on who you ask the list is:

    1) Cancer
    2) AIDS
    3) The Common Cold
    4) Every disease in existence.

    The reality is what Laize said. Pharma companies are too competitive with each other and a disease cure would make them tons of money.

    Or you can look at it this way -- Where are the millions of new cases of Polio and Smallpox?
    Forum badass alert:
    Quote Originally Posted by Rochana Violence View Post
    It's called resistance / rebellion.
    Quote Originally Posted by Rochana Violence View Post
    Also, one day the tables might turn.

  3. #23
    Deleted
    Newsflash! Different people have different interests!

  4. #24
    Quote Originally Posted by RICH1471 View Post
    I feel sorry for her, fancy not having any friends at all at her age. All the kids her age are dumb fucks to her, she cannot relate at all. Everyone with the same level of qualifications are 10+ years older than her and dont want to hang around with a kid. She will have problems later in life I am sure, she has my sympathies.
    Well, you're just plain wrong. I'm not really sure what else to tell you. Being academically advanced doesn't really have anything to do with making friends; my best friend was a kid I met when I was about 8 or 9 years old, and we remained best friends all through undergrad and graduate school, nothing's really changed.

  5. #25
    Titan Lenonis's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Spectral View Post
    I started college part time when I was 12, full time at 13, and it was basically fine. There wasn't really much for bumps in the road, and everyone just treated me as a peer (although I got a lot of the obvious questions). It's really just not that big of a deal.
    My mom was early to college (although not as early as you) and was miserable.

    I think in general being outside of your peer group in what is considered one of the most social parts of your life is more detrimental than not. Glad to hear you had a good time of it though.
    Forum badass alert:
    Quote Originally Posted by Rochana Violence View Post
    It's called resistance / rebellion.
    Quote Originally Posted by Rochana Violence View Post
    Also, one day the tables might turn.

  6. #26
    Quote Originally Posted by JayJay09 View Post
    It seems pointless to discuss with you. And now you talk about drugs o_O... If you don't think that "profiteering" has become the core of making business then I am sorry. And sadly, the human health is nothing but a business for most people (pharmaceutical industry). Therefore I am happy that this little girl puts her intelligence into something that actually aims to solve problems and doesn't try to maintain a status quo out of "cheap labourer" reasons or whatever.
    It's like you're not aware that the NIH and non-profit research exist.

  7. #27
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    Quote Originally Posted by Spectral View Post
    When I was 14, I was doing undergraduate research and playing video games. You don't really have to pick.

    ---------- Post added 2012-11-27 at 05:41 PM ----------



    I started college part time when I was 12, full time at 13, and it was basically fine. There wasn't really much for bumps in the road, and everyone just treated me as a peer (although I got a lot of the obvious questions). It's really just not that big of a deal.
    Treated you with respect? Sure, Treated you as a peer? Not a chance, a kid is still a kid, regardless of intelligence.

  8. #28
    Quote Originally Posted by Lenonis View Post
    My mom was early to college (although not as early as you) and was miserable.

    I think in general being outside of your peer group in what is considered one of the most social parts of your life is more detrimental than not. Glad to hear you had a good time of it though.
    I'll never fully understand what makes everyone different, but there's definitely people that do well with it and people that don't (just like high school, really). I had a mixed social life between the people at my university and the kids I played football and basketball with. When I started grad school (took my time through undergrad, stopped rushing at that point), I had my grad school life and then lived more like most people think of college kids living like when I wasn't at work/school. It was a bit of back and forth, but really not so hard.

  9. #29
    Quote Originally Posted by Laize View Post
    Oh get off your fuckin high horse.

    All of business revolves around solving a problem and getting paid to do it. Her future is set. There's nothing to feel sorry for her about. She'll make friends in college like anybody else.
    Or she'll wind up like a real world equivalent of Sherlock Holmes. Few friends...because they're so terribly dull.

  10. #30
    Quote Originally Posted by RICH1471 View Post
    Treated you with respect? Sure, Treated you as a peer? Not a chance, a kid is still a kid, regardless of intelligence.
    Well, I'm fucking glad you're here to inform me of how I was treated by people, since there's no way that I'd have any idea based on the part where I was actually there and living it.

  11. #31
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    Quote Originally Posted by Spectral View Post
    Well, I'm fucking glad you're here to inform me of how I was treated by people, since there's no way that I'd have any idea based on the part where I was actually there and living it.
    How many social events were you invited to at the age of 14? Go to many nightclubs or bars with your "peers"?

  12. #32
    Quote Originally Posted by RICH1471 View Post
    How many social events were you invited to at the age of 14? Go to many nightclubs or bars with your "peers"?
    I spent most of my out of school social time with kids closer to my age, since I didn't live on campus. I didn't state that everything was exactly the same for me as every other student, I stated that I was always treated as a peer. I could run down a list of specific examples, but what's the point? You've decided that you know how my life actually went, and anything at all will seem to confirm to you that you're correct.

  13. #33
    Quote Originally Posted by Laize View Post
    Yeah... name one disease that makes more money for a drug company to treat rather than cure.
    I am not saying that current medicine does not aim to cure what it's meant for. Not everything works, some stuff is utter bullcrap or has severe side-effects, but a lot of medicine actually helps.

    But I am certain that way more is possible but kept away from publicity because it would lower the rather stable margin of pharmaceutical products. If a 14 years old girl can find a solution to dirty water, what about all those people who have spent way way more years exploring and studying chemistry? They all got outwitted by a young girl? Or maybe, in case she is "only" very very smart but no genious, there just hasn't been enough "interest" to do research on this subject before.

    Take your pick.

  14. #34
    Quote Originally Posted by Faroth View Post
    Or she'll wind up like a real world equivalent of Sherlock Holmes. Few friends...because they're so terribly dull.
    I'm like that right now! Except without the mystery solving. But decidedly better off financially.

  15. #35
    Quote Originally Posted by JayJay09 View Post
    But I am certain that way more is possible but kept away from publicity because it would lower the rather stable margin of pharmaceutical products.
    Are you accusing researchers at the NIH, all academic institutions, and all non-profit institutions as being complicit in this fraud? That's surely what would be necessary for your conspiracy to hold.

  16. #36
    Quote Originally Posted by JayJay09 View Post
    I am not saying that current medicine does not aim to cure what it's meant for. Not everything works, some stuff is utter bullcrap or has severe side-effects, but a lot of medicine actually helps.

    But I am certain that way more is possible but kept away from publicity because it would lower the rather stable margin of pharmaceutical products. If a 14 years old girl can find a solution to dirty water, what about all those people who have spent way way more years exploring and studying chemistry? They all got outwitted by a young girl? Or maybe, in case she is "only" very very smart but no genious, there just hasn't been enough "interest" to do research on this subject before.

    Take your pick.
    Wow talk about not having a single clue about how medicine and chemistry works.

    This isn't the World of Warcraft's crafting system. You don't walk into a lab and science so fucking hard the cure for cancer pops out.

    In reality, chemists draw up plans for a chemical designed to do a certain thing in the body. Look at OTHER chemicals that do similar things. Figure out how to synthesize those. Modify the synthesis process to get a chemical similar to what you want. MAKE A FUCKING BILLION DIFFERENT CHEMICALS SIMILAR TO THE ONE YOU WANT. Test every last one of them in mice to see which ones don't kill them. Then find which ones actually do close to what you want them to do. Take that chemical and start all over until you get one that's good enough to market as a drug.

    Congratulations, you now know why Pfizer spends more on R&D than Apple despite making less money.

  17. #37
    Quote Originally Posted by Spectral View Post
    It's like you're not aware that the NIH and non-profit research exist.
    And that is sufficient for you? You simply believe that? Well, sir, I honor your optimism, but I fear you have not understood how rotten the ways are a human being chooses to get his cut. Look, I am not trying to pose something like the harbinger of the apocalypse or something like that. I am just trying to redirect the attention away from the potential pecuniary success to a rather "result-oriented" approach that calls money secondary. If she really found a way to help those, mostly third-world-people, then this is something utterly brilliant and beautiful. And talking about her becoming amazingly rich due to her "urge to help" is simply a debasement of her whole work.

  18. #38
    hey when i was 14 we would play with bars of roentgen radiation and at night we would sneak outside the dome and cause all kinds of mischief O-O
    "I was a normal baby for 30 seconds, then ninjas stole my mamma" - Deadpool
    "so what do we do?" "well jack, you stand there and say 'gee rocket raccoon I'm so glad you brought that Unfeasibly large cannon with you..' and i go like this BRAKKA BRAKKA BRAKKA" - Rocket Raccoon

    FC: 3437-3046-3552

  19. #39
    Quote Originally Posted by JayJay09 View Post
    And that is sufficient for you? You simply believe that? Well, sir, I honor your optimism, but I fear you have not understood how rotten the ways are a human being chooses to get his cut. Look, I am not trying to pose something like the harbinger of the apocalypse or something like that. I am just trying to redirect the attention away from the potential pecuniary success to a rather "result-oriented" approach that calls money secondary. If she really found a way to help those, mostly third-world-people, then this is something utterly brilliant and beautiful. And talking about her becoming amazingly rich due to her "urge to help" is simply a debasement of her whole work.
    I have no idea at all what you're trying to say. Researchers work hard to solve problems, are not paid impressive salaries by any reasonable standard, and tend to be quite smart. Most aren't in line to ever profit from their work in any substantial way, they do it because they like science.

    The problem of inventing a better water purifier (of which there are many designs) is just something that's much more amenable to simple, clever solutions than biomedical research.

    ---------- Post added 2012-11-27 at 06:06 PM ----------

    Quote Originally Posted by Laize View Post
    You don't walk into a lab and science so fucking hard the cure for cancer pops out.
    Well, at least now I know what I've been doing wrong!

  20. #40
    Quote Originally Posted by Spectral View Post

    Well, at least now I know what I've been doing wrong!
    I dunno. I'm not an organic chemist. Do you walk into a lab at work and just fiddle with stuff all day while a bar fills up and when that bar fills a cure for a disease appears in your backpack?

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