Everything I'm reading in this thread sounds pretty familiar. When I was in the 1st grade, my parents were called into a meeting by my teacher, where she told them that I had the highest IQ in the school(which was 1st-6th grade), at 150.
All of a sudden, I was enrolled in a bunch of special programs and it seemed as though nothing I did was ever good enough. I was constantly told that I wasn't "living up to my potential." I really couldn't stand it, so one day I just stopped paying attention and retreated into the nice, warm cocoon of my own head-space, at which point my parents were called in and told that I needed to stop daydreaming.
countzarroff wrote:
What I do know is that intellegence is a subjective term. My view of what is intellegent in a person may be something you define as being stupid and immature.
I'd say that the generally accepted explanation of intelligence, at least as far as your intelligence quotient goes (which is, of course, what is being discussed in this thread),is that it is the ability to recognize patterns and then use that understanding to predict future outcomes.
Of course, there are the terms social intelligence and emotional intelligence, which are used to describe intelligence in a much more general sense while applying it to a more specific area. In my opinion, they describe instinct and reflex more than they describe an actual conscious, cognitive process. These terms use the word "intelligence" as more of a synonym for the word "ability."