That can be attributed to practice. If I do math more than you, I'll most likely be better at it.Queen Michael said:Obviously, yes. If you're better at math than me then in that respect you're just plain more intelligent than I am.
Eh, I wouldn't say "stupid" so much as "over-simplified". Which is understandable, the concept is very complicated, confusing and poorly understood. Most of the time, we don't need a really thorough grasp of the concept, as long as we are aware of the limitations of how we are used the term there wouldn't be a problem.Silent Protagonist said:IMO the way we conceptualize intelligence is very stupid.
I agree that it is over-simplified rather than stupid, and I think that is apparent from the rest of my post. Calling it stupid was an attempt at humor ruined by the fact that I immediately tried to explain it with the with the whole irony tangent.Thaluikhain said:Eh, I wouldn't say "stupid" so much as "over-simplified". Which is understandable, the concept is very complicated, confusing and poorly understood. Most of the time, we don't need a really thorough grasp of the concept, as long as we are aware of the limitations of how we are used the term there wouldn't be a problem.Silent Protagonist said:IMO the way we conceptualize intelligence is very stupid.
Ah, ok, fair enough.Silent Protagonist said:I agree that it is over-simplified rather than stupid, and I think that is apparent from the rest of my post. Calling it stupid was an attempt at humor ruined by the fact that I immediately tried to explain it with the with the whole irony tangent.
I agree, "as long as we are aware" is rather wishful thinking on my part. I tend to think it causes large problems, dismissing someone as stupid because they aren't good at one particular thing, for example. An extreme example, but someone who is not a native speaker of a language will often be assumed to be stupid by someone who is. Or the other way around, where someone is (perhaps rightfully) see as an expert on something they are judged to be worth listening to on unrelated fields.Silent Protagonist said:Where I disagree is that I don't think we(collectively) are aware enough of the limitations of the term and the flaws in how we conceptualize intelligence. I think the way we generally conceptualize intelligence actually causes quite a few problems across a multitude of different areas of our society and culture. Probably small problems in the grand scheme of things, but problems none the less.
Another one that frustrates me is when a person believes they aren't very intelligent(relatively or otherwise) and therefore doesn't even try to understand things that aren't immediately obvious to them, because they think if they were smart then they would "get it" but since they don't "get it" they assume they aren't smart enough and "it" will remain forever beyond their ability to comprehend.Thaluikhain said:I agree, "as long as we are aware" is rather wishful thinking on my part. I tend to think it causes large problems, dismissing someone as stupid because they aren't good at one particular thing, for example. An extreme example, but someone who is not a native speaker of a language will often be assumed to be stupid by someone who is. Or the other way around, where someone is (perhaps rightfully) see as an expert on something they are judged to be worth listening to on unrelated fields.Silent Protagonist said:Where I disagree is that I don't think we(collectively) are aware enough of the limitations of the term and the flaws in how we conceptualize intelligence. I think the way we generally conceptualize intelligence actually causes quite a few problems across a multitude of different areas of our society and culture. Probably small problems in the grand scheme of things, but problems none the less.
What if I'm better at math than you but can't name an organic compound to save my life, while you can?Queen Michael said:Obviously, yes. If you're better at math than me then in that respect you're just plain more intelligent than I am.