I believe the question should be: Who else here has solved a Rubix cube? That's "solved", the past tense of solve instead of the present. Anyone who still solves Rubix cubes is either a child or not a real Mensan if they must still waste valuable grown up brainspace on such a trivial pursuit. Regardless, to pose the Rubix cube as something to be "solved" is to imply that it was a problem in the first place. For me- and I imagine most superior Mensans- the Rubix cube screams its solution the very moment it is unveiled. Let's try a more stimulating mental quickie instead: Who else here has solved Fermat's last theorum?
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...now, I probably couldn't do it to save my life. :)
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(read: tried and failed miserably, questioned my 'mensahood')
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That's "solved", the past tense of solve instead of the present. Anyone who still solves Rubix cubes is either a child or not a real Mensan if they must still waste valuable grown up brainspace on such a trivial pursuit.
Regardless, to pose the Rubix cube as something to be "solved" is to imply that it was a problem in the first place. For me- and I imagine most superior Mensans- the Rubix cube screams its solution the very moment it is unveiled.
Let's try a more stimulating mental quickie instead:
Who else here has solved Fermat's last theorum?
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