![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#151
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Mxsmanic wrote in
: Doug Semler writes: How the **** would you demonstrate that you have the "valuable predictor" of intelligence without a group, such as Mensa, that filters applicants based on intelligence, dip****? An IQ test would suffice. However, intelligence is usually fairly obvious. And yet, even people of moderate intelligence can understand bernoulli Bertie |
#152
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Mxsmanic wrote in
: Doug Semler writes: Explain, to me, why I am 6'3, 190 lbs? Perhaps you don't eat much. Wow, maybe you are a genius after all. Bertie |
#153
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Martin wrote in
: On Fri, 17 Aug 2007 10:58:02 +0000 (UTC), Bertie the Bunyip wrote: Mxsmanic wrote in m: Doug Semler writes: How the **** would you demonstrate that you have the "valuable predictor" of intelligence without a group, such as Mensa, that filters applicants based on intelligence, dip****? An IQ test would suffice. However, intelligence is usually fairly obvious. And yet, even people of moderate intelligence can understand bernoulli The average IQ of US enlisted men tested during WW1 was that of a12 year old. IQ isn't really age related. though it is true that capacity increases with age, the measurement is usually like/like otherwise it's kind of pointless. So it would be fairer to say that they had a sub-normal IQ of say ,less than 85 than to say they had the IQ of a 12 year old. It'd be a bit like comparing the horsepower of a modern airplane to the horsepower of a airplane from 75 years ago. In general, airplanes of 75 years ago had smaller engines, but you could b talking about a mustang. IOW, you're not neccesarily comparing like with like. |
#154
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Martin wrote in
: On Fri, 17 Aug 2007 12:26:41 +0000 (UTC), Bertie the Bunyip wrote: Martin wrote in m: On Fri, 17 Aug 2007 10:58:02 +0000 (UTC), Bertie the Bunyip wrote: Mxsmanic wrote in m: Doug Semler writes: How the **** would you demonstrate that you have the "valuable predictor" of intelligence without a group, such as Mensa, that filters applicants based on intelligence, dip****? An IQ test would suffice. However, intelligence is usually fairly obvious. And yet, even people of moderate intelligence can understand bernoulli The average IQ of US enlisted men tested during WW1 was that of a12 year old. IQ isn't really age related. though it is true that capacity increases with age, the measurement is usually like/like otherwise it's kind of pointless. So it would be fairer to say that they had a sub-normal IQ of say ,less than 85 than to say they had the IQ of a 12 year old. It'd be a bit like comparing the horsepower of a modern airplane to the horsepower of a airplane from 75 years ago. In general, airplanes of 75 years ago had smaller engines, but you could b talking about a mustang. IOW, you're not neccesarily comparing like with like. I quoted a recent book by an expert ( MX/Mixi incognito?) on IQ tests. It didn't make much sense to me either. It went on to say that ever since WW1 US advertising has been aimed at 12 year olds. That I an believe. But it would be pitched towards a 12 year old education/maturity level, not IQ, I would imagine. |
#155
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Martin wrote in
: On Fri, 17 Aug 2007 12:26:41 +0000 (UTC), Bertie the Bunyip wrote: Martin wrote in m: On Fri, 17 Aug 2007 10:58:02 +0000 (UTC), Bertie the Bunyip wrote: Mxsmanic wrote in m: Doug Semler writes: How the **** would you demonstrate that you have the "valuable predictor" of intelligence without a group, such as Mensa, that filters applicants based on intelligence, dip****? An IQ test would suffice. However, intelligence is usually fairly obvious. And yet, even people of moderate intelligence can understand bernoulli The average IQ of US enlisted men tested during WW1 was that of a12 year old. IQ isn't really age related. though it is true that capacity increases with age, the measurement is usually like/like otherwise it's kind of pointless. So it would be fairer to say that they had a sub-normal IQ of say ,less than 85 than to say they had the IQ of a 12 year old. It'd be a bit like comparing the horsepower of a modern airplane to the horsepower of a airplane from 75 years ago. In general, airplanes of 75 years ago had smaller engines, but you could b talking about a mustang. IOW, you're not neccesarily comparing like with like. OK I dug around and Alfred Binet’s intelligence, or IQ, test used on enlisted men also included an assessment of mental age. I guess it should have been "The average mental age of US enlisted men tested during WW1 was that of a 12 year old". That doesn't make a lot of sense either but ... Well, it makes sense to me. Pretty much what I was trying to say earlier. |
#156
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Martin writes:
The average IQ of US enlisted men tested during WW1 was that of a12 year old. IQ does not vary with age, so "the IQ of a twelve-year-old" has no meaning. |
#157
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Bertie the Bunyip writes:
IQ isn't really age related. though it is true that capacity increases with age, the measurement is usually like/like otherwise it's kind of pointless. Capacity does not increase or decrease significantly with age. Someone who is smart in childhood will be smart in old age as well. Someone who is stupid as an adult was also stupid as a child (excluding pathology). Extremely poor living conditions very early in life can prevent a person from coming close to his genetically-determined IQ limit. Likewise, some types of illness (especially CVAs) can diminish IQ scores temporarily or permanently. But healthy people in normal environments tend to reach IQs close to their genetic programming and these tend to remain fairly constant over their lifetimes. |
#158
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Martin writes:
I quoted a recent book by an expert ( MX/Mixi incognito?) on IQ tests. It didn't make much sense to me either. It went on to say that ever since WW1 US advertising has been aimed at 12 year olds. IQ tests are widely misunderstood, and many "experts" misrepresent them in order to further their own personal agendas. |
#159
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Bertie the Bunyip writes:
That I an believe. But it would be pitched towards a 12 year old education/maturity level, not IQ, I would imagine. Actually, there are good reasons for developing materials for lower IQs. The average IQ is 100. Half the population is above that ... and half of it is below. If you develop material that requires an average IQ to understand, half of the population will not understand it. For this reason, it makes more sense to develop material for a lower target IQ, so that a much larger percentage of the population can handle it. If you target an IQ of 70, for example, about 98% of the population will be able to understand it. This is the reason for "dumbing down" materials to the lowest common denominator (within reason). In commercial endeavors, you dumb down your advertising and other materials until everyone with the money to buy your product or service can understand it. In politics, you dumb down your rhetoric and policy until everyone with the ability to vote can understand it. |
#160
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Martin writes:
OK I dug around and Alfred Binet’s intelligence, or IQ, test used on enlisted men also included an assessment of mental age. I guess it should have been "The average mental age of US enlisted men tested during WW1 was that of a 12 year old". That doesn't make a lot of sense either but ... It doesn't, and modern tests are usually normed differently, although the concept of "mental age" is still used sometimes for scoring. In reality, a 25-year-old is no more intelligent than a 12-year-old. The only differences are in experience and acquired knowledge, although both obviously have quite an influence on overall competency in life. |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Those *dangerous* Korean War relics | Kingfish | Piloting | 192 | June 19th 06 07:06 PM |
reporting dangerous aircraft | [email protected] | General Aviation | 4 | October 20th 05 09:15 AM |
Okay, so maybe flying *is* dangerous... | Jay Honeck | Piloting | 51 | August 31st 05 03:02 AM |
Dangerous Stuff | [email protected] | Rotorcraft | 21 | July 16th 05 05:55 PM |
Flying - third most dangerous occupation | David CL Francis | Piloting | 16 | October 22nd 03 02:38 AM |