DeLoreanDude wrote:
IQ tests are not a accurate measure of intelligence anyways, the guy who made the first IQ test acknowledged that himself.
Intelligence has many different aspects to consider, it cannot be measured by a number.
IQ is an accurate measurement of a number of cognitive abilities that constitute part of the 'intelligence' spectrum. Intelligence on its own has no defined meaning, it has to be broken down into a number of different intelligences, including verbal intelligence, mathematical intelligence, emotional intelligence, etc. While the more abstract aspects such as emotional intelligence cannot be so easily quantified, 'traditional' intelligence, which was defined primarily around academic achievement, can indeed be measured by a number, although even within those aspects there's room for variation, for example two people with identical IQs may differ, with one excelling more in the verbal component while another does better in the mathematical component. In the end, while it says little about someone's individual abilities and talents, IQ is indeed an accurate approximation of one's general level of 'academic' intelligence (as compared to the average level, which is what the level of 100 IQ is anchored to and defined as); it's what IQ testing and, in fact, the concept of IQ itself, was
designed to measure and quantify. The fact that it doesn't grasp the whole picture doesn't invalidate the part of the picture that it
does grasp.
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