Wisdom vs. Intelligence, man. Compare to Gump, Forrest.
Yet, if you actually watched the show, none of that informed brilliance ever quite comes across; most of the solutions to the Problem of the Week are derived from his compassion & intuition. Ever hear him speak one of those languages?
I think I’d give him “show, don’t tell” points for music and medicine.
And even if we ding him on archaeology because he only ever really displayed a knack for reading hieroglyphics and rattling off a few pieces of trivia, I think he deserves a pass on physics; we not only get to see his time machine up and running, but – in The Leap Back – we actually get to see Sam tinkering with it while in full possession of his faculties.
I’m going to nominate Julian Bashir, from DS9. Unlike many of those named above, he pretty much concentrated on a single field (well, two: medicine & math), which to me is a plus rather thana minus. And he caused a lot fewer problems than a lot of Star Trek geniuses I can name.
Hm. Tony Stark? He built an arc reactor and a set of flying armor in a friggin’ cave using scrap metal and a propane welder, and it only took him about a week.
Reid Richards and Charles Xavier come to mind.
I suppose I have always identified with Mr. Fantastic.
I mean, he is ultra-intelligent and is married to a total babe.
[QUOTE=Deep Thought]
The Great Hyperlobic Omnicognate Neutron-Wrangler can talk all four legs off an Arcturan Mega-Donkey but only I can persuade it to go for a walk afterwards.
[/QUOTE]