Many famous prodigies have appeared in the ancient and modern Chinese and foreign worlds, and some of these world-famous genius children have prematurely burned their talents and made people sigh and hurt Zhongyong, while some have been geniuses all the way to the end and made admirable achievements.

William James Sidders
William James Sidders was a tragic genius, an American prodigy with a high talent for mathematics and language. He pointed out that the earth's satellites were the moon in 8 months, read the New York Times in 18 months, taught himself Latin at the age of 2, learned Greek at the age of 3, wrote four books between the ages of 4 and 8, could fluently use Latin, Greek, French, Russian, Hebrew, and Turkish, gave lectures in four-dimensional space at Harvard University at the age of 9, corrected errors in the manuscripts of harvard logic professors at the age of 10, and became proficient in advanced mathematics and celestial motion at Harvard at the age of 11.
Kim Eun-young
Kim Eun-young was a "prodigy" in South Korea at an early age, he could walk and talk for 5 months; he could write and play chess for 7 months; he learned calculus at the age of 3; he could read and write Japanese, Korean, English, and German characters at the age of 4; at the age of 5, he solved a number of complex calculus problems on Japanese television broadcasts and showed a talent for language, using four Chinese words to give speeches and write poems; before the age of 15, he received a doctorate in physics from Colorado State University, scored 210 points in the Stanford Binai IQ test, and was included in the Guinness World Records.
Akrit Jaswar
Akrit Jaswal, an Indian, who began talking and walking at 10 months, began reading English Shakespeare's plays at the age of 5 and pleaded to see a doctor in the local hospital for surgery, at the age of 7 he performed a complex surgical procedure for a little girl in the village of Nupur, who became a "surgeon" at the age of 7, passed all secondary education courses with honors at the age of 11, and entered the University of Punjab, India. Became the youngest university student in India.
Tao Zhexuan
Tao Zhexuan is a Chinese mathematician with an IQ score of 230. At the age of 2, he taught himself almost all of the primary school mathematics courses in a year and a half of kindergarten; at the age of 7, he taught himself calculus; at the age of 8 and a half, he entered secondary school and frequently caused a sensation with excellent mathematical competition test results, and the SAT mathematics part of the test scored a high score of 760 points; at the age of 10-12, he participated in the International Mathematical Olympiad and won bronze, silver and gold medals; he won the gold medal of the International Mathematical Olympiad at the age of 13; and won the honorary science degree of Flinders University at the age of 16. He earned his master's degree just one year later; earned his Ph.D. at the age of 21; and was made the youngest full professor ever at the University of California, Los Angeles at the age of 24.
John von Neumann
A doctor of mathematics at the University of Budapest, he showed a genius in mathematics and memory from an early age, and from an early age von Neumann had an unforgettable talent, at the age of 6 he was able to mentally calculate eight-digit division; at the age of 8 he mastered calculus; at the age of 10 he spent several months reading a forty-eight-volume history of the world, and could compare current events with an event in history, and discuss the military theory and political strategies of the two; at the age of 12 he read and understood the essence of Boller's masterpiece "Function Theory".
Judit Polga
Hungarian chess player, with an IQ of 170, is the first female chess player in history to enter the world's top ten. She began to learn chess at the age of 4, and when she grew up, she did not go to school for a day, but she spoke five foreign languages, she had first-class logical judgment, imagination and psychological qualities, and had all the qualities of a first-class chess player. At the age of 7, Polga Jr. once defeated Yugoslav grandmaster Damzanovic in a friendly match, and was predicted by the chess world to be a real contender for the men's world championship.
Gary Kasparov
Gary Kasparov is a grandmaster chess player who exhibited extraordinary intelligence at an early age. He could read and count at the age of 3; when he was 5 years old, he was able to do mathematical addition with decimal points; what is even more amazing was that he was able to draw magellan routes on the globe with his knowledge of geography and history; at the age of 10, he participated in the All-Soviet Youth Championship, and at the age of 16, he played against several alternate masters, and he was undefeated, causing a sensation in the chess world and the press; at the age of 13, he won the All-Soviet Youth Championship; at the age of 15, he became an international master; and at the age of 16 he won the first place in the World Junior Championship He was promoted to international grandmaster at the age of 17; became the world's youngest chess champion at the age of 22.
Elita Andrew
Elita Andrew, Australia, likes to pick up a pen to scribble and paint at the age of 1, and in an exhibition held in Melbourne, her paintings from the age of two were exhibited along with the works of other well-known adult artists, causing a sensation and being praised as a "master of divine abstraction". Andrew's parents were both painters, and although there is controversy about Andrew Jr.'s paintings and suspicions that "the parents may have interfered", Andrew's work does show the endless imagination of children.
Steve Wonder
Steve Wonder is a well-known blind black singer, composer, music producer, and social activist in the United States. He learned to play the harmonica at the age of 4, began to learn piano at the age of 5, played more than 10 instruments at the age of 11, and was born with a good voice. When Steve Wonder began recording in 1962, he was only 11 years old, and although there was no indication of how deep his talent was at the time, his talent was already obvious, after all, music was the job of this amazingly gifted child, but at the age of 13 he won the single ranking for 3 weeks with a single "Fingertips", which shook the entire music scene, and as a blind black man at that time, he could achieve such an achievement.
Enrique Fermi
Enrique Fermi is a famous Italian physicist, professor of physics at the University of Chicago, known as the "father of atomic energy". At an early age he showed an unforgettable memory and was considered a prodigy in mathematics and physics. At the age of 10, Fermi spent almost all of his spare time thinking about geometric proofs and electric motor construction, and after the accidental death of his brother in 1915, the 14-year-old Fermi indulged in the study of trigonometric functions, physics and theoretical mechanics to get rid of his grief.
Zou Qiqi
Zou Qiqi was born in the United States in 1997, Chinese American, in 2008 by the American media as "the world's smartest child", she began to read a variety of books at the age of 3, began to write with a laptop at the age of 6, published a 120,000-word story collection "Flying Fingers" at the age of 8, became a popular speaker in the United States at the age of 10, published a book satirizing George W. Bush at the age of 13, gave a speech to Harvard teachers and students at the age of 15, and was praised by the American Broadcasting Corporation as "the little giant of the American literary world".
Christopher Hilata
Christopher Hilata, American. He won the gold medal in the International Physics Olympiad at the age of 13, the youngest recipient of the honor at the time, entering the California Institute of Technology at the age of 14, working for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) at the age of 16 to work on Mars migration research, and completing a bachelor's degree in mathematics at the California Institute of Technology at the age of 18.