Comment by plantain
12 hours ago
>exactly what "stupid" people do when their are somewhat aware of the limits of their competence
Being aware of one's limitations is the strongest hallmark of intelligence I've come across...
12 hours ago
>exactly what "stupid" people do when their are somewhat aware of the limits of their competence
Being aware of one's limitations is the strongest hallmark of intelligence I've come across...
I'm not so sure it's about knowing his own limitations, rather it's about building a reliable process and trusting that process more than either technology or people.
Any process that relies on 100% accuracy from either people or technology will eventually fail. It's just a basic matter of statistics. However, there are processes that CAN, at least in theory, be 100% effective.
So following that strange logic if a dumb person knows he's dumb, he's suddenly become intelligent? Or is that impossible by your peculiar definition of intelligence?
Yeah that sounds like wisdom, not intelligence.
Wisdom would be knowing not to try and exceed those limits
Intelligence would be knowing they exist (I know that I cannot fly by flapping my arms, it took intelligence to deduce that, wisdom tells me not to try and jump from a height and flap my arms to fly. Further intelligence can be applied, deducing that there are artificial means by which I can attain flight)
Knowing your limits has to be a sign of intelligence.
"Dumb" people (FTR the description actually refers to something rather than that which you think it does...) run around on the internet getting mad because they haven't thought things through...
It's an interesting question though. I know quite some "smart" people who lack self awareness to an almost fatal degree yet can outdo the vast majority of the population at solving logic puzzles. It tends to be a rather frustrating condition to deal with.