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IQ tests measure the capability to take tests and to think quickly. That is not the same as intelligence, although it can be clues to the same. As one who always scored well on these, I can say that it took me a long time to learn that being quick and having a good memory are only two aspects of that phenomenom: intelligence. I have not identified instruments that do a better job; I am just saying it only measures some aspects of the subject. (At the moment I appear to be the only "no" vote.)
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#9 |
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Originally posted by Aivo½so
I think IQ is a rather unnecessary concept. It is not a measure of intelligence unless "intelligence" is defined as being what IQ tests measure, and nobody knows what having a high IQ is good for. As VetLegion says, IQ tests measure your ability to complete a certain set of intellectual tasks that share traits with the challenges posed by real life. I'm OK with that, but IMO 'intelligence' per se is a meaningless concept - there are so many domains of expertise, all having their own rules, goals, usefulness, that I find it preferable to talk about one's ability in a certain field rather than some abstract, objective measure of 'intelligence'. |
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Originally posted by TCO
feed me. She has a nice rack. ...and a scary, tired face. She's got that "getting old and sick of it all but trying to prevent it by hysterical denial" look to her, as seen on Paula Abdul. Look at that dead, joyless smile! Those empty, weary eyes! Those crisp, creased folds in her cheeks! Nothing says hott sexx like the dreary, emotionally draining saga of living a lie written all over your face. |
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Originally posted by Elok
...and a scary, tired face. She's got that "getting old and sick of it all but trying to prevent it by hysterical denial" look to her, as seen on Paula Abdul. Look at that dead, joyless smile! Those empty, weary eyes! Those crisp, creased folds in her cheeks! Nothing says hott sexx like the dreary, emotionally draining saga of living a lie written all over your face. I'll drape her over a sofa and plug her from behind. |
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The problem is that the more you do these tests, the better you get at them. They're just like crossword puzzles, number puzzles or even playing chess. You get better with practice. People practice them, get good, get high scores then act like they're superior to everyone else.
For my current job (programming) I sat a logical deduction test, which instead of word & number puzzles described a scenario and then asked questions about what could be logically deduced from the facts, and what could not. The test catches out people who let prejudice get in front of the facts, and people doing well on the test tend to be good at programming, where dumb assumptions are no good, but cold hard analysis is essential. I felt the test was far more appropriate for applying logic to real-world problems than the usual magazine-type puzzles that fraudulently claim to have a full definition and measure of intelligence. |
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Originally posted by Cort Haus
The problem is that the more you do these tests, the better you get at them. They're just like crossword puzzles, number puzzles or even playing chess. You get better with practice. People practice them, get good, get high scores then act like they're superior to everyone else. I passed my mensa test first time with a hangover and yes, I am superior to everyone else... ![]() |
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