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Dean Burnett

  • Despandrihas quoted2 years ago
    There’s a famous quote that says, ‘If the human brain were so simple that we could understand it, we would be so simple that we couldn’t.’
  • Despandrihas quoted2 years ago
    French scientists Binet and Simon, inventors of one of the first rigorous IQ tests, defined intelligence as: ‘To judge well, to comprehend well, to reason well; these are the essential activities of intelligence.’
  • Despandrihas quoted2 years ago
    indicating that a person’s working-memory capacity is a major factor in overall intelligence
  • Despandrihas quoted2 years ago
    These two traits, impostor syndrome in intelligent people and illogical self-confidence in less intelligent people, regularly overlap in unhelpful ways.
  • Despandrihas quoted2 years ago
    Louis Leon Thurstone in 1938, who proposed that human intelligence was made up of seven Primary Mental Abilities:
  • Despandrihas quoted2 years ago
    If you get really good at something then your brain becomes so efficient at it, it essentially stops realising it’s happening. And if it doesn’t know it’s happening, it won’t adapt or respond to it, so you get a self-limiting effect.
  • Despandrihas quoted2 years ago
    Genetics, parenting styles, quality of education, cultural norms, stereotyping, general health, personal interests, disorders; all of these and more can lead to the brain being more or less able or likely to perform intelligent actions. You can no more separate human intelligence from human culture than you could separate a fish’s development from the water it lives in. Even if you were to separate a fish from the water, its development would only ever be ‘brief’.
  • Despandrihas quoted2 years ago
    But being treated as if they were smarter and brighter meant they essentially started performing to meet expectations.
  • Despandrihas quoted2 years ago
    but you could argue that it’s an inevitability when you make endless amounts of food available to a species that has evolved to take whatever food it can get whenever it can get it.
  • Despandrihas quoted2 years ago
    Broca’s and Wernicke’s areas were identified because damage to them caused aphasias, which are profound disruptions to speech and understanding. Broca’s aphasia, aka expressive aphasia, means someone cannot ‘produce’ language. There’s nothing wrong with their mouth or tongue, they can still understand speech, they just can’t produce any fluid, coherent communication of their own. They may be able to utter a few relevant words, but long complex sentences are practically impossible.
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