Christian,
I will disagree here completely. To me intelligence is the combination of current proficiencies and potential ones.
Nevermind the obvious silliness of this statement -- how the ◊◊◊◊ do reconcile this assertion with your assertion that intelligence is a survival skill, whe only
actuality matters in life? You don't get to be a star athlete by being
potentially (but not actually) athletic, you don't get to be a good businessman by having potential (but not actual) understanding of the martket, and you don't get a PhD by bein potentially (but not actually) able to understand, learn, and improve upon massively complex bodies of knowledge.
In life skills, actuality is what matters -- unactualized potential is no different from lack of potential. Therefore, if intelligence is a life skill or a collection thereof, it cannot incorporate potential as a part of its composition.
If nothing else, you position is internally inconsistent, because you are fighting against facts and reality; this is a common problem with people who, like you, place
what they wish to be above
what is.
Someone in my country can be a piano prodigy in potentia, yet because he is unable to attend Julliard, the will (can) never learn the techniques to better his skills. But, he is still a piano prodigy.
Only because the term "prodigy" specifucally connotes potential. However, that prodigy will never become
musical genius without actually being able to do music as one -- his potential does not make his actuality any greater; convesely, a person of average giftedness who achieves a lot through sheer perseverence, isn't any worse in actuality than equally achieving person who had greater potential.
And there isn’t a problem in stating that someone is smarter than someone else, the problem is stating it in absolute terms.
And what would those "absolute terms" be?
Face it, it's trivial to compare two people of drastically different cognitive abilities, and decide who is smarter. Hell, forget Michael Jordan -- I dare you to compare Einstein to your average McDonald's employee on who is smarter at the fast food production process
And idiocy like
this is why I "discriminate" against you -- not because you are a xian.
Din't you ◊◊◊◊◊◊◊ notice that you had to qualify your statement, you had to write "smarter
at the fast food production process"? Doesn't that clue you in on what the word 'smarter' mean?!.
No, probably not. OK, consider this: Person X is the strongest man in the world, physically. Let's say that he holds the world record in all weightlifting forms, undisputedly so. Now, you come up and say: "But, but, person Y is stronger
at burger flipping" You used the word "stronger" there -- but that in no way affects its common meaning, and it in no way implies that Y is stronger than X in any relevant respect!
You simply used the word "smarter", I used "stronger", but they are all nothing but stand-ins for "
better" -- and it's the rest of the sentence (burger-flipping) that describes the actual skill we are talking about. It has nothing to do with
intelligence. Your statement is like saying that a person X, a sound sleeper, is "smarter/stronger/faster/tougher/etc. at sleeping" than person Y.
Yes, it does. All human ventures that are great are collaborative. The combination of the proficiencies of individuals make the one’s accomplishments possible.
Yes, but a group's ability to achieve certain ends does not add to the
individual abilities, it just aggregates them.
As I said, me being able to hire a singer does not increase my "musical intelligence". Duh.
I don’t know what you have been arguing for, but the whole purpose of my argumentation is that the purpose of proficiencies is to be more successful in life.
Yes, of course -- and intelligence is
only one of such. There is intelligence, charisma, strength, health, coordination, etc. -- they are all different proficiencies. You had to effectively lump them together and make "intelligence" an umbrella for
all proficiencies, in order to make a claim that Jordan's gift is in "body-kinesthetic intelligence".
The concepts acquire meaning through differentiation -- we know what they mean based on the regards in which they are differenty from other concepts, as well as the ones in which they are similar. By trying to abolish such meaningful lines of differentiation, you are trying to destroy meaning -- to remove the ability to make certain statements (such as "A is smarter than B"). Completely, utterly Orwellian.
When you say atheists are smarter than Christians, what I understand you to be saying is that atheists are more successful than Christians in life.
Are you ◊◊◊◊◊◊ in the head?.. From which ass did you pull such a moronic conclusion out of?
Intelligence is only
one of many life skills. Just one. It's entirely possible to be brilliant and be a failure in all discernible effects -- if you are lazy for example, or if you lack interpersonal skills, etc. (the aforementiones William Sidis, world's most intelligent man, had a severe case of the latter failing). Saying "X is smarter" absolutely does not translate into "X is more successful in life", unless the translator is an idiot or a cheesy ideological hack.
If you just mean to say, the average IQ of atheist is higher than that of Christians, then fine, I would say big deal. And I would add, that does not make them more successful in life.
Average
intelligence of atheists is higher than that of xians, not just IQ -- and no, that does no ttranslate into them being more successful in life,
even if intelligence automatically entailed success.
If the latter condition held (and I don't believe it does -- I am doing this merely for your edification), you could have drawn your conclusion from certain causal models of intelligence/religiosity correlation; namely, either of of the two
direct causal models -- I causes R, or R causes I (the latter more so than th eformer). However, there is a third model -- X causes both I and R -- and unless we can exclude such a model (which we can't), there is no logical reason to claim that intelligence's life-success effect means that atheists are more successful than xians.
In short, your ignorance (of elementary statistics, in this case) traps you once again.
So what, it doesn't mean the real-world performances were tested correctly or that they are significant in any way.
Sure, and we could all be brains in vats. You are grasping at straws here.
You see how your beliefs translate to discrimination.
I discriminate against you because you are a willfully blind ignoramus, not because you are a xian; see below.
This is racist, and I’m sure you can’t see why.
No, I can't. These are
universal human standards of beauty -- they are held by African plainsmen, South American Indians, Chinese, Europeans, etc. There is nothing racist about saying that all races and ethnicities prefer ~0.85 waist/hip ratio in men, and like healthy skin. In fact, if you are wondering (which I doubt you are), those universal physical beauty traits are based on survival adaptation -- they are all indicators of health and physical reproductive fitness.
And funny you mention quasimodo, some people would say quasimodo is most beautiful.
On the inside, perhaps -- which was why I specifically spoke of
physical beauty. Sure, there may be a few fetishists who regard such physical deformities as appealing, but their existence has no bearing on the validity of my point.
And again the same magic trick. (aren't you getting tired of using the same one. (strawman)
Labelling a point "strawman" does not diminish its validity unless you can prove that it's a strawman -- which you of course haven't. In fact, I think it was a perfectly valid point, since you obviously are in favor of restructuring language in such a way as to remove the possibility of even meaningfully talking about certain differences, on the basis of those differences possibly leading to discrimination.
Well, guess what:
any difference can lead to discrimination. it's possible to discriminate against people based on their eye color, but that dopesn't mean that we should proclaim that there is no differences between "blue" and brown" (we should instead say that eye color is not acceptable basis for discrimination in any situation but the one actually requiring specific eye color).
And do you see why your beliefs lead to discriminate. You rather have all the ignorant people cast aside.
Actually, I'd rather have them educated, but you obviously aren't interested in that.
Anyway, your use of the term "discrimination" here is ridiculous. While that word has come to bear unqualifiedly negative connotations, that's not all it means.
We discriminate all the time. You discriminate each time you chose to eat at a restauirant A instead of B. Each time a more qualified applicant is hired instead of a less qualified one, a discrimination takes place; each time you choose who to be friend with and who to not be friend with, you discriminate. Correct discrimination based on
appropriate traits is not only good, it's necessary -- the alternative is having firefighters who are afraid of flames and can't carry a limp body out of the fire, physicists who can't do calculus, and garneders with black thumbs.
No, discrimination is bad only when it's done inappropriately -- when for example you assume that blacks as a group are more criminally inclined, and thereafter treat each black person you meet as a criminal (as opposed to, say, refusing to hire a black FBI agent for the purpose of being a spy in China, which is appropriate discrimination). This sort of "discrimination", with the negative connotations that are usually perceived to go with it, occurs when you discriminate
incorrectly -- based on traits that are ascribed to a person, rather than
known to be possessed by that person; or when you discriminate based on known trait which have no causal connection to the purpose of discrimination (such as refusing to have gay scout leaders, because they ostensibly lack "upright moral character").
A little anecdote for you. Some time ago, four women in Chicago launched a suit against Chicago Fire Department for refusal hire them; their claim was gender discrimination. What turned out to be the fact is that these four women failed the physical fitness test, while other women who passed it were hired. Firefighters have to be strong enough to be able to break down a door, scale a mountain of rubble, drag out a limp body, etc. -- and discriminating against the physically unfit, by hiring only those capable of performing the said tasks, is not only normal, it's desirable. After all, we don't want an unconscious person in a burning building to be found by a firefighter who can't get you out of there, do you?..
It is not negative to be ignorant, it might be disadvantageous but not negative. And ignorance is not equivalent to less intelligent.
True, and true -- but my problem is not with ignorance per se (everyone is ignorant of something at some time), but rather with the willful, stone-headed, in-your-face flag-bearing arrogant ignorance of the sort you are displaying. Your basic values may be in the right place to some extent (except for your lack of valuation of truth and knowledge), but you are profoundly clueless, you are
happy being clueless, and you fight anyone who challenges your profound ignorance, rather than taking an opportunity to remedy it.
They can understand that I’m not advocating illiteracy
No, you instead advocate irraitonality and refusal to think critically -- you advocate them with your views, by placing ideology ahead of truth.
or that I don't understand that some people are smarter than others.
OK, some some people
are more intelligent that others. I think your long backpedaling process has finally come to its logical conclusion.
First you claimed that it's impossible to say that some people are smarter than others, then you said that they may be smarter in actuality but not in potential, and now you have reversed your original claim altogether, while having avoided actually admitting that you have done so. Your grasp of logic may be abysmal, but your demagogic ability certainly isn't.
Can resist, three more strawmen.
As I said, simply labelling a point "a strawman" doesn't make it so. In fact, I specifically pointed out the instance of each in your previous post -- your claim about potential (Gattaca), your claim about life skills (aristocracy), and your desire to redefine terms so as to avoid th epossibility of discrimination (1984). If you wish to refute the charges, please to do specifically.
Now mind you, I am not saying that you are advocating any of those three. However, it's obvious that in your haste to avoid what you perceive as evil (but which isn't), you have made the necessary conceptual steps which make those three distopias to particularly repugant.
But I cannot agree that person A is more intelligent than person B.
And earlier you wrote:
[I understand that] some people are smarter than others.
These two statements are irreconcilable, unless you start redefining words again, claiming that "smart" and "intelligent" have drastically different meanings.
My view is that the discrimination that arises from that distinction is evil.
The view that some people are smarter than others is only one of many components that go into making a bigoted worldview. Another component is discrimination based on perceived group properties (such as automatically giving atheists better jobs simply because they are atheists, and thus assumed ot be smarter than xians). Still, that fact hasn't prevented you from making all sorts of outlanding claims -- such as that my views are Hitler-like, that they are discriminatory, etc.
Go rent a clue, dude.