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05-10-2005
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#1 (permalink)
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Coincidence of Molecules
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My intelligence can beat up your intelligence!
This aspect was brought up in a different thread and I thought it would be an intersting discussion. This may be a bit fuzzy because many of the deffinitions are circular, vague or just plain undefined (as well as anthropocentric). So I guess a bit of ground work is required before we get rolling..
1) What is intelligence?
2) Is it quatifiable and comparable?
3) Is it a universal standard? (ie the deffinitions used for humans apply to ape, cephalapods, or cetaceans?)
4) Are there diverse qualities that constitute intelligence? (ex. Tool use vs. navigation)
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Don't walk behind me; I may not lead. Don't walk in front of me; I may not follow. Just walk beside me and be my friend.
Albert Camus
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05-10-2005
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#2 (permalink)
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Coincidence of Molecules
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Re: My intelligence can beat up your intelligence!
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Originally Posted by Fishteacher73
1) What is intelligence?
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IMO intelligence is the ability to learn and alter ones actions for future events. Essentially the ability to interpret the current situation and predict the most likely outcome.
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2) Is it quatifiable and comparable?
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I think it is difficult to generate a number that represents intelligence. It manifestations are quite diverse.
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3) Is it a universal standard? (ie the deffinitions used for humans apply to ape, cephalapods, or cetaceans?)
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I think it is a standard in the form that I defined.
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4) Are there diverse qualities that constitute intelligence? (ex. Tool use vs. navigation)
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As one can see intelligence expressed differently in just a singe species one has to grant that it can exist in different forms that perhaps excede human ability in the specific realm.
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Don't walk behind me; I may not lead. Don't walk in front of me; I may not follow. Just walk beside me and be my friend.
Albert Camus
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05-10-2005
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#3 (permalink)
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Local Brewmaster
Location: intellegencia [sic]
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Re: My intelligence can beat up your intelligence!
While only a partial answer to your interesting question, I would say one of the biggest components of intellegence is imagination. Basically, problem solving is an intellegence you see in animals, tool use you also see, but imagination is largely absent.
We can imagine a bridge before we build it- that's how we make long term plans. We imagine land projected onto paper- that's how we make maps. We don't have to rely on instinct, because we can use imagination to project into the future and see possible results from different choices. That's one of the biggest differences between us and the great apes, for example. We have a strong ability to imagine, whereas they mostly rely on instinct. I can see a house before I build it, that's how I know to build it- I can take a many step process that does not resemble houses, and turn that into a realized vision.
So, any measure of intellgence should include a measure of imagination or visualization ability.
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Every dollar you spend is a vote you cast
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05-10-2005
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#4 (permalink)
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Explaining
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Re: My intelligence can beat up your intelligence!
This is one thing I used to think of because I played D&D when I was a teenager, and there was a difference between Intelligence and Wisdom. The way that I always thought of it was that intelligence is having knowledge of different subjects and wisdom is knowing what to do with that knowledge. It seems to me that each can exist without the other. If you look at some people with autism, they sometimes have a lot of knowledge but they really can't use it in a practical situation. Also, there are plenty of people who are successful because they are wise and know how to use things to their advantage, but if you played them in trivial persuit they would look like children.
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2) Is it quatifiable and comparable?
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I don't know how you would compare intelligence, I think that you can compare someone's knowledge in a certain area, but not generally.
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3) Is it a universal standard? (ie the deffinitions used for humans apply to ape, cephalapods, or cetaceans?)
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Yes, I think it's standard.
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4) Are there diverse qualities that constitute intelligence? (ex. Tool use vs. navigation)
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When it comes to animals using tools and things like that, I think that if it is not their instinct to do this, then it shows as intelligence.
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05-10-2005
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#5 (permalink)
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Percipient

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Re: My intelligence can beat up your intelligence!
___I think every intelligence bout will have a unique outcome. If I were to challenge your biology intelligence Fish, with my biology intelligence, yours would stomp on my aorta.
___I won't presume which, if any, intelligence I posess would likewise set you aback. Perhaps this bears on why quiz shows continue in popularity, & for that matter contests of all kinds. If intelligence is relative as I assert, some manner of comparison is requisite for knowing where ones own intelligence lies. 
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 semantics is not always just pedantic quibbling. ~ douglas r. hofstadter
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05-10-2005
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#6 (permalink)
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Coincidence of Molecules
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Re: My intelligence can beat up your intelligence!
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Originally Posted by bumab
So, any measure of intellgence should include a measure of imagination or visualization ability.
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I think there is a diference between a mental projection and imagination. Imagination would imply creativity while the ability to mentally picture the result would just indicate a level of planning. Either case they are impossiple to quantify are measure in anything that cannot verbalize this internal perception to the observer. Koko has shown this by combining signs to create new signs for unknown objects or ideas.
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Don't walk behind me; I may not lead. Don't walk in front of me; I may not follow. Just walk beside me and be my friend.
Albert Camus
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05-10-2005
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#7 (permalink)
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Creating
Location: Southern California, USA
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Re: My intelligence can beat up your intelligence!
Intelligence is the ability to successfully solve novel problems. Everything else is training or innate behavior. A naked man in the wild is food for anything that cares to eat. If he grabs a stick he'll rule the world.
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2) Is it quantifiable and comparable?
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Absolutely! IQ tests, the old SAT, GRE... and education in general are empirically functional quantitative evaluations. The high school dropout rate has not changed in 150 years - a steady 30%. About 1/3 the population is good for other things - or nothing.
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3) Is it a universal standard? (ie the definitions used for humans apply to ape, cephalapods, or cetaceans?)
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It depends on the society. Yesterday's Nobel Prize is tomorrow's homework in the First World. Dolphins have other priorities. However, remember who kills whom at will.
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4) Are there diverse qualities that constitute intelligence? (ex. Tool use vs. navigation)
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Prodigies need not be intelligent (idiot-savants). The intelligent need not be useful. However, if you want metal (mettle) you mine ore.
We have had the Fine Arts and religions for 5000+ years. Everything around you that truly matters was done by mathematicians, scientists, and engineers. A 100 IQ will never do it. Things get interesting around 120-130 IQ. That excludes about 90% of the population right at the starting line. The future (any desirable future) is borne in other wombs.
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Uncle Al
http://www.mazepath.com/uncleal/
(Toxic URL! Unsafe for children and most mammals)
http://www.mazepath.com/uncleal/qz4.htm
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05-10-2005
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#8 (permalink)
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Percipient

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Re: My intelligence can beat up your intelligence!
___UncleAl, you never cease to amaze me! As I am an idiot/savant with IQ 125 or so, I have always had the hardest time fitting my intelligence to a world otherwise oriented. Most of my life, I simply pretended; gets you by pretty well in most cases. Of course when the bluff is called, that's it.
___Nonetheless, it is quite challenging indeed to try & impart to most people (your 90%) even a smidgeon of what patterns I see. In many senses, my intelligence is no contest one way or the other. 
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 semantics is not always just pedantic quibbling. ~ douglas r. hofstadter
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05-10-2005
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#9 (permalink)
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Eccentric Heretic
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Re: My intelligence can beat up your intelligence!
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Originally Posted by UncleAl
...Everything around you that truly matters was done by mathematicians, scientists, and engineers. ...
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Interesting perspective. So, the following folks do not matter:
1) Julius Caeser
2) George Washington
3) Mother Theresa
4) Picasso
5) Voltaire
6) Michaelangelo
7) Vladamir Horowitz
8) Ernest Hemingway
9) Oscar Hammerstein
10) Lou Gehrig
Really?
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Few problems are so complex that they cannot be substantially clarified by one more cup of coffee  (or a nice cabernet if it is after 5:00)
Moderator in absentia. Return anticipated. Timing somewhat vague.
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05-10-2005
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#10 (permalink)
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Understanding
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Re: My intelligence can beat up your intelligence!
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Originally Posted by Fishteacher73
1) What is intelligence?
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I think that intelligence is a relative term. Some monkeys seem to have learning capabilities (I guess many animals do in a way...) but they can't put two and two together if you give them a tool to use. They might use the tool for awhile, but they can't figure out how to improve on it. I suppose I would call intelligence the individual quest for knowledge - a desire to learn and understand things. Even if this particular "person" didn't have books or an environment that allowed them to learn well, she might "wonder" about things in head... without outside interference to do so. I'm sure there are levels of intelligence less than this, but when I think of what that word means to me, this is wh at I think of. The capability to learn and comprehend; and retain and manipulate that information. My dog can remember some commands; he does not know how to open the dog food container and get his own food out (although he does remember where I keep it!)
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Originally Posted by Fishteacher73
2) Is it quatifiable and comparable?
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Yes, I believe that it is. ALthough I do think IQ tests and SAT/ACT scores are a measure of this (as said by someone else), I think that there are types of intelligence that are not fully captured by these types of tests. BUt, I do think that these "other" types of intelligence are in the minority, at least.
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Originally Posted by Fishteacher73
3) Is it a universal standard? (ie the definitions used for humans apply to ape, cephalapods, or cetaceans?)
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I do not think it is universal. I do not think we could measure an ape or other being with the same type of test.... it would be like trying to map a cube on a 2 dimensional graph. I think that while some animals have higher relative levels of intelligence than others (I have seen some programs showing elephants and dolphins - to name a few- to be pretty intelligent...) that their types of intelligence differ from human intelligence. I also think that since they have to spend so much of their time in life being wary of their surroundings due to predators, that they don't have the free time as we do to let their minds wander into the abyss of intelligent thinking. So to speak.
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Originally Posted by Fishteacher73
4) Are there diverse qualities that constitute intelligence? (ex. Tool use vs. navigation)
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I think there are. Some people seem to just "know" things - the ability to understand things more easily - to take things apart and study and figure out on their own. Some people have an "inherent sense of direction" - I've heard rumors of course that men are better at this than women because they "have more iron in their bodies and due to magnetism, etc etc.", but I think that's balogna because my levels of iron are very low and I seem to always know which direction is which... anyway, some people seem to handle people and social situations naturally; others seem to be able to take engines apart with ease; some people seem to be born leaders; others can listen to music and sort it out both tonally and mathematically in their minds; I think these are variances in types of intelligence. Just like I feel that if you put a handful of people out in the middle of the wilderness, some would be more likely to survive. I guess this could be seen as instinct, but I think in humans instinct is influenced by intelligence. Ah, it's getting late... I don't know what I'm talking about anymore....
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