Vault101 said:
your here people here say it all the time....so how do you know?
is tests and acedemic scores? or are there other ways of knowing? how would you define "average" intelligence
not to insult people on this site specifically, though I have read that we do often overestimate ourselfs.....and intelligence is a VERY hard thing to measure eather way
I mean some people might be usless acedemically...but VERY good with peope ect ect
Depends on what you're talking about, relly. If you're talking IQ, which really doesn't measure intelligence, but more the ability to apply the knowledge that we do have, or adaptability, then a simple test will do.
There are several different types of intelligence, as you yourself pointed out. I consider myself above average intelligence not because my IQ is higher than average (indeed, it may not be, I've never taken an IQ test) but because most people I've spoken to on an intellectual level don't seem to be able to keep up. Whether this is simply because I have reasonably good logic and reasoning skills or because they're dumb as a post, I'm not entirely sure.
I know a little bit about a lot of things, and a lot about several subjects. I remember once a person in my class was trying to prove that he was smater than me because he knew about physics, whereas I've never studied physics, and only have a basic understanding of it. He started asking me all these complex physics problems, and I simply told him that those questions didn't show my intelligence, but my lack of study on the subject because people don't inherently know such things.
I saw a documentary about IQ, and they had several people from highly specialized areas do the same tests. They were mostly reasoning tests, not a whole lot to do with "intelligence" in the sense that we often think about it. They had a chess grand master, a genius (IQ of 150 or so I think), a fighter pilot (he ended up doing the best, but I'll get to that), a fairly well known artist, and a few others.
As it turns out, the fighter pilot did the best because he was able to adapt to the test as hand, whereas the people from the more specialized professions (like the artist and chess master) did the worst.
Intelligence isn't really how much you know. It's about how well you can apply what you do know to the situation at hand. This means anything you've learned, both in and out of school. A "smart" person is always going to do better than someone who's "average" simply because they're better able to use what they know.