Posted on 09/19/2015 12:08:13 PM PDT by pabianice
...IQ has a substantial direct correlation with measures of success in life, and it is also correlated with a variety of other characteristics that promote success...
...Its not just that the IQ gap in working-class and upper-middle-class communities has gotten wider. The life penalties associated with low IQ have risen since 1960. If you focus on the economic changes since 1960, those with low IQ have faced a labor market in which the market value of a strong back has dropped while the value of brains has soared...
...If you focus on the reforms and social programs of the 1960s, the reductions in immediate penalties for destructive behavior (e.g., doing drugs, dropping out of school, grabbing purses, having a baby without marriage) had the most effect on people who were impulsive, attracted to immediate gratification, and unable to foresee long-term consequencesqualities associated with low IQ. The effects of such changes in incentives among the smart were much smaller....
I have an extra trailer hitch in the cargo area-I don’t remember why it is there...
Thank you! Without jobs, even decent people are forced onto government benefits.
My IQ was tested in school as 146, so I qualify for Mensa, yet never felt a need to join. I manage to meet quite a few really smart people at work, so I have no need to go out of my way to go to a Mensa meeting to have smart people to talk to. Then there's FR and other sites which provide a place to discuss politics and philosophy with smart people.
I've met some Mensa people. They strike me as smart people who are to some degree dysfunctional.
I would expect that during the last decade or so, there is a clustering of IQs in that area from many different ethnic groups.
I am trying to figure out which number is fudged more: IQ or a golf handicap. This thread has me leaning toward IQ, but I haven’t seen a golf score thread yet. By the way, my IQ is 187, and I am a scratch golfer.
LMAO!
That is reason enough for me-the hitch stays where it is...
The point about low IQ being a cause of the gap between those who succeed and those who will be shut out and therefore struggle is easy to see. When you think about it, every occupation has a minimum I Q required to be even minimally competent at that job. The lower the IQ the less number of jobs you can potentially perform and the pay is always lower down there. Checkmate, most of this social engineering is simply useless.
I’ve always thought us engineers would be the ticket to happiness for the babes.
It is ridiculous to reduce all that goes on in the noggin to ONE number, and that formulated by a godless version of science.
I’d be curious to see evaluations pursued in the vein of a Moral Quotient and a Spiritual Quotient.
There is another dimension of thought life called Wisdom which is not even evaluated by the modern psychological tests.
With Wisdom, one might not need to be an Einstein to deal effectively with challenging issues. That is the difference between strategy and brute force.
George Orwell
This pretty much reinforces Murray’s work in his book “The Bell Curve” 1994.
"Do I-phones lower IQ?"
The objective answer is "No."
But the subjective reality, viewed in light of the way in which the device is utilized is emphatically "Yes!"
There's a joke that's been going around for a while now. It goes like this:
"I have in my pocket a small device that can access virtually the entire sum of human knowledge from the founding of civilization through the nuclear and space age.
It includes the writings and speculations of every great philosopher and scientist the world has ever known.
I use it to play video games and argue with strangers."
In short, the iPhone is a part of the pop culture that substitutes activity and information for understanding.
I purposely didn’t mention politicians.
Having a high IQ doesn’t mean a person can’t make bad mistakes and be a total s**t. There are plenty of high IQ people who are disasters as human beings.
That chart and what it means is surely a forbidden discussion.
I read “The Bell Curve” in 1994 and understand what it says, and doesn’t say.
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