Is intelligence equal to knowledge?

In summary, the participants in this conversation discuss the relationship between intelligence and knowledge. Some believe that intelligence is an emergent thought pattern stemming from collected memories and information stored in the brain, while others argue that it is a low-level property of knowledge and memories. They also discuss the role of genetics in intelligence and the impact of early experiences and interactions on brain development. There is a mention of a study on the thickness of a child's cortex and its relation to intelligence. Overall, the conversation highlights the complexity of defining and understanding intelligence.
  • #1
octelcogopod
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Intelligence is the mental capacity to reason, plan, solve problems, think abstractly, comprehend ideas and language, and learn.
I had a little thought experiment the other day, and I thought I'd share it here.

If we define knowledge as knowing something, as in, a piece of information, no matter how small or seemingly irrelevant, then, can we say that intelligence is an emergent thought pattern stemming from the collected memories and information the brain has stored?

If the brain works in such a way that it pattern matches things in the way it deems logical(where that logic itself is based on other knowledge again), then it all makes sense because intelligence could just be an advanced pattern matching process.

For instance if a person is very good at learning math from a young age, then the person MUST have had some sort of memories stored that makes him capable of pattern matching logically how math works.
You can't imo get intelligence if there is a lack of knowledge.
Just "being intelligent" without any sort of physical reason for it seems silly to me.

Also, while there may be people that have "faster" brains, as in, there is a physical "fault" in the brain that makes the person think faster, then that is not included in this thesis.

But regardless, it makes sense to me that intelligence for the most part is just a low level property of knowledge / memories.
The pattern matching process could also be based on knowledge, as everything that the brain does could, so that at least we come a little closer to defining what intelligence is.

Thoughts?
 
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  • #2
Very young babies show variance in cognitive taks from one baby to another. Anyone who has been around newborns knows that they are not all equally quick or alert, and these manifestations correlate with later mental quickness when the child becomes older. This is all "anecdotal" on my part but it is plain as day. So where does te differing load of memories that, in your conjecture, enable different intelligence, come from? Reincarnation?
 
  • #3
It's given to them by God.

All jokes aside though,

Different babies have different brains, it seems odd to me that intelligence would be somehow separate from the physical brain?

Sounds redundant I know, but if you think about it, what else does the brain have to work with, when solving logical, abstract or other tasks?
It seems reasonable to me to assume that it comes from earlier memories, no matter how insignificant.

As for your question, I think they must have some sort of prerequisite for being quicker, their brains maybe pick up information faster depending on how much they have already learned..

Maybe a neuroscientist or developmental psychology major could help me out on the issue :)
 
  • #4
In my opinion a child's level of exposure and interaction with the world certainly contributes to his/her intelligence in maturity, and not unsignificantly, but i wouldn't call this "knowledge" exactly.

Drawing a parallel to the computer world: in infancy a child is an algorithm being programmed, in maturity that algorithm is used on data (knowledge or stimulus). The algorithm is the person's "first nature", which defines what you can do without thinking about how it needs to be accomplished.

I think conditioning is responsible for defining this algorithm and that it takes place at infancy more so than at other stages. The effectiveness of the algorithm being correlated with intelligence.

Knowledge and experience, together with stimulus, are the data that the algorithm handles. I wouldn't say that knowledge and experience are equivalent to intelligence, because in my opinion intelligence is more of a reflex rather than something learned. But knowledge can be an extension of the algorithm rather than just plain data. Learned knowledge might specify another algorithm which a person's "main algorithm" will execute, but this is no longer "first-nature" so it might not be as efficient although for most purposes it can well be good enough.
 
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  • #5
I'm trying damn hard to find you some articles on mediational and predicational learning theories to give you somewhat of a primer on this topic, as I'm no expert myself, but I'm having a great deal of difficulty doing so. I'm going to go ahead and move this to the mind and brain sciences section of the forum, with the hope that perhaps the posters there will have more knowledge of childhood learning models.

The Journal of Mind and Behavioral Sciences keeps coming up, but I can't seem to gain access to it through any of the major databases available to university libraries and it doesn't seem to be online through its own website. They only give abstracts and the option to order reprints of each article by writing to the professor responsible for it.
 
  • #6
There's been a study recently that looked at the thickness of a child's cortex as they aged in relation to their level of intelligence.

They found that kids scoring higher in IQ tests actually started out with a thinner cortex, which would suggest they'd be less intelligence. But they found what I suspected they might, that these kids had much more plastic tissue than the others, allowing them to form interconnections more rapidly - and that's a major thing when it comes to learning.

There are two things that affect how intelligent a person appears for me... firstly, how much information they already have their brain and secondly, what their genetic disposition is towards exploiting that information.

I think of my memories as puddles or pools of data in my brain. I personally acquire these puddles by empirically investigating my world, and my parents helped provide them while I was too young to fully do so on my own.

I have an idea when one of those two puddles joins together. And my parents' DNA provides a rough template for how good or bad my brain is at doing that via things like how rapidly neurotrophins and coincidence detectors respond in my brain tissue.

I think the DNA does play an important role, but I think at least an equal percentage, if not more, comes from just filling your mind up with as many different puddles as you can - since you can't change your DNA, yet. I'm sure that some of the factors that could be mistaken for being based purely on a DNA disposition are also linked to more environmental factors. For instance, if you contantly use your brain to think up new ideas you can train it into performing a bit better - as an athlete might have to 'warm up' for a few days or weeks before getting back into a sport after a long break. By constantly feeding your brain with problems, I would guess that you encourage it to get things like an, at least temporarily, increased blood supply, that'll help with fuelling the cells on the next problem - thoughts cost glucose (could you think yourself thin? :-p)

In terms of intelligence and ability to handle new problems, I think it's a lot like the ability to jog or swim well. Some of it's DNA, some of it's practice. Some people are born good at it, and then beaten by those who aren't but who've practiced hard.

Classical music is supposed to be good for your brain. Probably because it teaches you to listen to more than one line of music at once. Mozart was particularly good at merging a huge number of voices into one section of music. Once you get your ears trained to listen to it, music with multiple voicings becomes a kind of 'choose your own adventure' story where you can pick different instruments and voices to follow through different sections of the music, listening to how they interact with the others. You can listen to such music tens of times over and still find yourself thinking 'I didn't notice that last time'.

One thing I like to try is to sing or think about a tune while I'm listening to something different, and then maybe try tapping the beat to something else again. It's very tricky. But since I started playing an instrument years and years ago, and listening to hours worth of music a day sometimes, it's gotten easier.

There are other things you can do like memory tests. Perhaps you could try to remember the last paragraph I wrote word for word for instance, or something else.

If it's hard for your to do something with your brain, it's probably because it's an underworked area. My ability to speak different languages isn't great and I've actually wondered if I'm slightly dyslexic (I used google, yes) - I'll see words and not be able to work out how to say it for longer than normal. But I managed to get an A* for English. I'd put this down to the fact that I now spend a lot of my time on scientific as opposed to literal problems.

I know I'm also not the most artistic person alive, so I have fantasies about having a bit of a doodling and colouring session to keep those particular parts of my brain happy.
 
  • #7
selfAdjoint said:
Very young babies show variance in cognitive taks from one baby to another. Anyone who has been around newborns knows that they are not all equally quick or alert, and these manifestations correlate with later mental quickness when the child becomes older. This is all "anecdotal" on my part but it is plain as day. So where does te differing load of memories that, in your conjecture, enable different intelligence, come from? Reincarnation?

Call me nuts but I think that if the environment is what determines what genes we have... ie:speciation etc... then the environment of experiences that influence the neurons in a brain also influence the genetics of each of these neurons in the brain.

Judging by this premise... we will see predominant abilities and preferences that have been "programmed" by the long line of anscestors who have contributed genetics to the offspring being studied. If this is the case then we will observe the offspring showing diligence or delinquence in one or more subject... according to the inherited genetics held by the neurons of that offspring's brain.

So, its not reincarnation... per sey, its more like passed along genetically modified neuronal grouping, plasticity and those traits that are expressed by these predetermined conditions. :-p
 
  • #8
quantumcarl said:
Call me nuts but I think that if the environment is what determines what genes we have... ie:speciation etc... then the environment of experiences that influence the neurons in a brain also influence the genetics of each of these neurons in the brain.
In that sense, I think behaviors acquired via different means of learning might be better fitted as an explanation since genetics mentioned is a little too generalized. Behaviors are learned from generation to generation, and get changed to fit themselves to the environmental changes along the way.
Because behaviors are fully controlled by the brain and enviromental factors, long duration of interaction would certainly give rise to genetic adaptations...
 
  • #9
MemoryOfUs said:
In that sense, I think behaviors acquired via different means of learning might be better fitted as an explanation since genetics mentioned is a little too generalized. Behaviors are learned from generation to generation, and get changed to fit themselves to the environmental changes along the way.
Because behaviors are fully controlled by the brain and enviromental factors, long duration of interaction would certainly give rise to genetic adaptations...

Yes, that's my point. Not only are there genes being "mutated" by the repeated behaviours of an individual but, when that individual has offspring their behaviour acts as a catylis toward the expression of the behaviourally modified genes they have passed on to their offspring. So that, in effect, the behaviour that moulded the gene that is now a part of the offspring also reinforces the expression of that gene.

However, there's always the "rebel without a cause" to explain. Probably just EmotionalIntelligence (also known as "drama")
 
  • #10
Mutations aren't driven by habit or practice. The Giraffe's neck didn't get longer for it's constant practice of reaching for the taller vegetation. This theory has a name, i forget what it is exactly, but was discarded a while ago. Mutations are mostly driven by damage incurred by environmental agents or by errors during replication. Even when a mutation does occur it doesn't mean it will be passed on. In order for it to be passed on it must be present in a germ cell (involved in reproduction). If a cell in your skin (or your brain) is mutated then the changes won't be passed on to your offspring. At most this mutated cell can replicate enough times to fill your body with the mutated version having potentially negative effects (like cancer).
So the proposal that:
quantumcarl said:
Not only are there genes being "mutated" by the repeated behaviours of an individual but, when that individual has offspring their behaviour acts as a catylis toward the expression of the behaviourally modified genes they have passed on to their offspring.
... is not correct.
 
  • #11
Thank you Job, I'll have to respond at a later date... for now... here's a link and part of an article from the Neuroscience of Intelligence:

The hypothesis about the hereditary nature of any trait, including intelligence, can be tested thanks to certain events that occur naturally, such as the birth of monozygotic/identical twins, that is, twins born from the same cell (ovule). It was mentioned earlier that Francis Galton primarily used twin studies to collect evidence when hypothesizing his hereditarian explanation of the phenomenon of intelligence. First used by Galton, twin studies have always been the major source of collecting evidence by the investigators of the ‘nature’ camp. These studies are rendered on sets of twins; these include both identical twins and fraternal twins. As noted earlier, they are conducted to determine the comparative influence of heritability and environment. In fact, there are largely three types of studies (including twin studies) that you will regularly see in the research area of hereditarians:

From:http://www.macalester.edu/psychology/whathap/ubnrp/intelligence05/Rnature.html

You'll have to note that every chromosome in your body is subjected to the habits, practices and repetitions you put your body through. The amino acids and resulting proteins produced by these chromosomes is probably affected and probably reconfigured because of the repetitions. The DNA in the haploid sperm or ovum carries the altered record of those chromosomes.

The traits of an individual... and the individual's anscestory are carried on to the individtual's offspring. The individual's environmental (including the cellular/nucleic/molecular) influences and their anscestrial genetics both play a role in contributing to the haploid (reproductive cell). And so, the offspring not only enjoys genetic developments from its immediate contributor but also those of its anscestor's.
 
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  • #12
The results seen in the offspring of parents exposed to various levels of radiation (extra arms, missing limbs etc...) show that what the offspring's primary contributor (of DNA) experiences... ie: the environment of the parent (including the parent's DNA) during their life is transfered, genetically, to the offspring.

How is it any different for the subtler forms of exposure a parent goes through such as repeated use of intellect or the repeated use of dexterity? These forms of exposure to frequency of events will always translate into modifications of genetic material and be passed on to the offspring.
 
  • #13
quantumcarl said:
How is it any different for the subtler forms of exposure a parent goes through such as repeated use of intellect or the repeated use of dexterity? These forms of exposure to frequency of events will always translate into modifications of genetic material and be passed on to the offspring.

These modification may happen in the genome of the body cells, but only the genome of the sex cells is passed on. If a retrovirus like HIV modifies the genes in the bone marrow and blood cells, that doesn't affect the sex cells, and AIDS is not inherited.

Your theory is called Lamarckism, after its pre-Darwin originator, and it is not just falsified on theoretical grounds but on thousands and thousands of genetic experiments with fruit flies and mice, and careful observation of human populations. It is false and that's all! Sorry.
 
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  • #14
quantumcarl said:
How is it any different for the subtler forms of exposure a parent goes through such as repeated use of intellect or the repeated use of dexterity? These forms of exposure to frequency of events will always translate into modifications of genetic material and be passed on to the offspring.

The extra arms and things the kids end up with are a result of the radiation causing mutations, very specifically, to the DNA in their parent's sex cells rather than just any part of their body.

If all of that mutation was limited to only their parent's own DNA (just in their arm say) the chance of that mutation making it into their sex cells, and so on to their kids, would be minimal at best. Further, and somewhat obviously, their parent's wouldn't necessarily develop another arm given the same dose of radiation just elsewhere in their body.

Since we're talking about intelligence, that's based very tightly around what's going on with the neurons in your brain.

If, through very hard use, I somehow manage to modify the DNA of one of my neurons (which, as far as I'm aware, no human cell can do on purpose to carry over empirical information), why would that change end up in my sex cells? There isn't really an A-Z of where each neuron goes in DNA either - it'd have to contribute to a more general effect.

I think -Job- is closer. If you're intelligent you're more likely to have and look after children. The brain is just a piece of tissue like the rest of us, and it's shape and layout is quite tightly controlled by genes (all babies grow up with a brain roughly the same shape and with the same bits in the same places). I expect that the actual differences between us, in terms of predetermined abilities and our base personality, is much smaller than a lot of us would like to think.

I also think that a lot of our life is basically chance, there are lots of thoughts and feelings I wouldn't have if it wasn't for chance putting them infront of me to experience. I can try to call them my own choices but I can't predict the future 100% accurately, therefore I can only raise the chances of having a particular experience.
 
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  • #15
Maybe quantumcarl is referring to epigenetics:

In other words, you are what your grandmother ate. But, wait, wouldn't that imply what every good biologist knows is practically scientific heresy: the Lamarckian inheritance of acquired characteristics?

If agouti mice are any indication, the answer could be yes. The multicolored rodents make for a fascinating epigenetics story, which Randy Jirtle and Robert Waterland of Duke University told last summer in a Molecular and Cell Biology paper; many of the scientists interviewed for this article still laud and refer to that paper as one of the most exciting recent findings in the field

https://notes.utk.edu/Bio/greenberg.nsf/0/b360905554fdb7d985256ec5006a7755?OpenDocument

And:

In a written commentary, evolutionary biologist Massimo Pigliucci said that Ruden's experiment was "one of the most convincing pieces of evidence that epigenetic variation is far from being a curious nuisance to evolutionary biologists."10 Pigluicci doesn't go so far as to say that the heritable changes caused by Hsp90 alterations are Lamarckian, but Ruden does. "Epigenetics has always been Lamarckian. I really don't think there's any controversy," he says.

Not that Mendelian genetics is wrong; far from it.

Last week i posted a topic that showed that it now does look like mendelian genetics is wrong:

https://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=121972
 
  • #16
selfAdjoint said:
These modification may happen in the genome of the body cells, but only the genome of the sex cells is passed on. If a retrovirus like HIV modifies the genes in the bone marrow and blood cells, that doesn't affect the sex cells, and AIDS is not inherited.

Your theory is called Lamarckism, after its pre-Darwin originator, and it is not just falsified on theoretical grounds but on thousands and thousands of genetic experiments with fruit flies and mice, and careful observation of human populations. It is false and that's all! Sorry.

Agh! Hey, at least I'm givin' it here!:redface:

And there's still no doubt in my mind that it is soley the environment that shapes a gene. One cannot assume that a gene has spontaneous origins. I'll go as far as to say that the first form of RNA such as Viral RNA was formed in response to an environment that demanded its formation as a response. That is not Lamarciakism... its Carlisticism!:rolleyes:

These modification may happen in the genome of the body cells, but only the genome of the sex cells is passed on.

I've already explained that the sex cells and their genetcs are part of the body. Their not some separate, aphysical entity floating around waiting to be married or whatever.

Germ cells and the haploid DNA they carry are as influenced by the activities of a person as the rest of the body. They are also rapidly and repeatedly produced... using genetic material and the proteins produced in the rest of the body in their method of production and reproduction.

Therefore, I, the purveyor of Carlisticism, maintain that

1. Environment is the sole form of influence that "programs" a gene's genome sequence (thereby determining specific traits in an individual/species)

2. Each surviving and successive generation of a family and/or species contributes a certain amount of programming to the future genetics of a family/gene pool and/or species.

The influence of each generation's genetic contribution can be shown to be exponentially greater in relation to how long the genes have been associated with the species.

For instance... the gene for the production of the Cerebellum is an ancient sequence andcommonly occurs in many species. This is because the gene(s) for its production was formed in response to the need to be mobile. It is basically the evolved cerebral ganglia of a planaria.
 
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  • #17
quantumcarl said:
Agh! Hey, at least I'm givin' it here!:redface:

And there's still no doubt in my mind that it is soley the environment that shapes a gene. One cannot assume that a gene has spontaneous origins. I'll go as far as to say that the first form of RNA such as Viral RNA was formed in response to an environment that demanded its formation as a response. That is not Lamarciakism... its Carlisticism!:rolleyes:

The ORIGINS of genes (of the RNA and DNA molecules) has nothing to do with modern inheritance. Genes mutate randomly, the resulting physical organisms compete in the environment, and those whose genes built the most successful organism are the ones who leave more descendents, and hence pass there genes down. This is confirmed as I said by thousands of experiments. You do not find "acquired characteristics" passed down, period. What there may be no doubt of in your mind is no evidence that will convince anybody.



I've already explained that the sex cells and their genetcs are part of the body. Their not some separate, aphysical entity floating around waiting to be married or whatever.

Au contraire, mon frere, the sex cells are kept apart from the rest of the body in special organs.

Germ cells and the haploid DNA they carry are as influenced by the activities of a person as the rest of the body. They are also rapidly and repeatedly produced... using genetic material and the proteins produced in the rest of the body in their method of production and reproduction.

Therefore, I, the purveyor of Carlisticism, maintain that

1. Environment is the sole form of influence that "programs" a gene's genome sequence (thereby determining specific traits in an individual/species)

2. Each surviving and successive generation of a family and/or species contributes a certain amount of programming to the future genetics of a family/gene pool and/or species.

The influence of each generation's genetic contribution can be shown to be exponentially greater in relation to how long the genes have been associated with the species.

For instance... the gene for the production of the Cerebellum is an ancient sequence andcommonly occurs in many species. This is because the gene(s) for its production was formed in response to the need to be mobile. It is basically the evolved cerebral ganglia of a planaria.

No, the planaria evolved a gene for cerebellum because the ones who had it were more mobile. It took a long time because the original gene had to mutate randomly and the more successful variants to leave descendents. You can argue and boast all you want, but those experiments contradict you.
 
  • #18
selfAdjoint said:
... Genes mutate randomly, the resulting physical organisms compete in the environment, and those whose genes built the most successful organism are the ones who leave more descendents, and hence pass there genes down...

I recently read that gene mutation is or can be biased.
Does that mean the mutations arent random?
 
  • #19
selfAdjoint said:
The ORIGINS of genes (of the RNA and DNA molecules) has nothing to do with modern inheritance. Genes mutate randomly, the resulting physical organisms compete in the environment, and those whose genes built the most successful organism are the ones who leave more descendents, and hence pass there genes down. This is confirmed as I said by thousands of experiments. You do not find "acquired characteristics" passed down, period. What there may be no doubt of in your mind is no evidence that will convince anybody.Au contraire, mon frere, the sex cells are kept apart from the rest of the body in special organs.
No, the planaria evolved a gene for cerebellum because the ones who had it were more mobile. It took a long time because the original gene had to mutate randomly and the more successful variants to leave descendents. You can argue and boast all you want, but those experiments contradict you.

Ach! Let me try to save face by siting Genetic Engineering and mutations caused by radiation as generational influences that are immediately expressed in offspring. (I had to be "boasting" about something here!)
 
  • #20
I have to enter this exhibit where Lamarckian geneological studies have been reconsidered as being partially true:

Science 7 April 2000:

Vol. 288. no. 5463, p. 38

DOI: 10.1126/science.288.5463.38
News Focus
GENETICS:

Was Lamarck Just a Little Bit Right?
Michael Balter

Although Jean-Baptiste Lamarck is remembered mostly for the discredited theory that acquired traits can be passed down to offspring, new findings in the field of epigenetics, the study of changes in genetic expression that are not linked to alterations in DNA sequences, are returning his name to the scientific literature. Although these new findings do not support Lamarck's overall concept, they raise the possibility that "epimutations," as they are called, could play a role in evolution.

"Epimutations" are a result of a genetic mutation caused by the various conditions found by the epidemiological research done on the environment. The environment changes the behaviour and structure of the gene. This is what I'm talking about.

I think we already agreed that nutrition or lack of it will "turn on" and "turn off" genes respectively. This is seen in subjects when iron is lacking in their diet. This also points to more extreme geneological changes being caused by the same epidemilogical sources.

http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/short/288/5463/38
 
  • #21
As for the topic question:

In another topic where the definition of intelligence was discussed, i(with the help of google) reached this definition:

Intelligence: to understand something and act upon this knowledge.

So i would say that intelligence requires knowledge (and knowledge requires consciousness), but is not equal to it. Perhaps intelligence is knowledge being used in a creative form.
 
  • #22
PIT2 said:
As for the topic question:

In another topic where the definition of intelligence was discussed, i(with the help of google) reached this definition:

Intelligence: to understand something and act upon this knowledge.

So i would say that intelligence requires knowledge (and knowledge requires consciousness), but is not equal to it. Perhaps intelligence is knowledge being used in a creative form.

Hi Pit.

Yeah, sorry to get off topic in this thread. Intelligence does seem to be a synergy of awareness + cognition + the integration of these elements toward building a comprehension of a subject...

What is knowledge?

PS. The whole speil about genetics in this thread happened because (don't know if it was me) someone credited learned traits like computation, capacity for the comprehension of knowledge etc... with contributing to the "intelligence" of offspring... or with being acquired from previous generations.

I would go as far as to say that the environment created by a progenitor when they use intelligence creates "mini-epimutations" in the genetics of the progentior and this is passed on as a slightly modified trait to the off-spring. (see above article)
 
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  • #23
quantumcarl said:
Hi Pit.

Yeah, sorry to get off topic in this thread. Intelligence does seem to be a synergy of awareness + cognition + the integration of these elements toward building a comprehension of a subject...

What is knowledge?

I think in all cases of experience, the experience is equal to knowledge.
But 'knowledge' as used in everyday language ("I know ur name") is perhaps the illusion (or realisation) of some absolute, objective truth (brought forth by intelligence).
 
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  • #24
PIT2 said:
I think in all cases of experience, the experience is equal to knowledge.
But 'knowledge' as used in everyday language ("I know ur name") is perhaps the illusion (or realisation) of some absolute, objective truth (brought forth by intelligence).


Experience would be a good candidate as a support mechanism for knowledge. But, what is the actual, physical make-up of knowledge? Is knowledge just some more electromagnetic patterns generated by several billion sodium/potassium pumps? Or is it genetically encoded? Or both?:confused:
 
  • #25
octelcogopod said:
Intelligence is the mental capacity to reason, plan, solve problems, think abstractly, comprehend ideas and language, and learn.
I had a little thought experiment the other day, and I thought I'd share it here.

If we define knowledge as knowing something, as in, a piece of information, no matter how small or seemingly irrelevant, then, can we say that intelligence is an emergent thought pattern stemming from the collected memories and information the brain has stored?

If the brain works in such a way that it pattern matches things in the way it deems logical(where that logic itself is based on other knowledge again), then it all makes sense because intelligence could just be an advanced pattern matching process.

For instance if a person is very good at learning math from a young age, then the person MUST have had some sort of memories stored that makes him capable of pattern matching logically how math works.
You can't imo get intelligence if there is a lack of knowledge.
Just "being intelligent" without any sort of physical reason for it seems silly to me.

Also, while there may be people that have "faster" brains, as in, there is a physical "fault" in the brain that makes the person think faster, then that is not included in this thesis.

But regardless, it makes sense to me that intelligence for the most part is just a low level property of knowledge / memories.
The pattern matching process could also be based on knowledge, as everything that the brain does could, so that at least we come a little closer to defining what intelligence is.

Thoughts?

one way to prove your point might be to examine the biography of famous scienctist to see if their are some recognizable pattern to their childhood development. i once read any article by scientific america(?) about a psychologist father that tries intentionally to make his daughter to be a genius chess player. He succeed, but how did he do it? he did it by constantly stimulating his daughers mind with chess problems, and mental tast when they were growing up.
 
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  • #26
quantumcarl said:
Experience would be a good candidate as a support mechanism for knowledge. But, what is the actual, physical make-up of knowledge? Is knowledge just some more electromagnetic patterns generated by several billion sodium/potassium pumps? Or is it genetically encoded? Or both?:confused:

U mean the knowledge that is not equal to direct experience, like "i know what i will do tomorrow"?

It could be a physical construct organised in such a way that it represents a model of some situation, which can then be interpreted by the observer. Though he doesn't observe the real situation directly (and thus does not know from direct experience), he does observe the construct which may be similar to direct experience to some degree.

Im just speculating btw.
 
  • #27
PIT2 said:
Last week i posted a topic that showed that it now does look like mendelian genetics is wrong:https://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=121972
Yes, very interesting post about role of RNA, but this type of research does not suggest mendelian genetics (e.g., the genetics from DNA) is "wrong", only incomplete.
 
  • #28
PIT2 said:
U mean the knowledge that is not equal to direct experience, like "i know what i will do tomorrow"?

It could be a physical construct organised in such a way that it represents a model of some situation, which can then be interpreted by the observer. Though he doesn't observe the real situation directly (and thus does not know from direct experience), he does observe the construct which may be similar to direct experience to some degree.

Im just speculating btw.

Imagine how a deer has "knowledge, comprehension and understanding" of standing and walking in about 5 minutes or less after being born.

We call this "innate" and we call it "instinct". But it knows how to balance, it uses visual cues and utilizes all the other instrinsic cybernetics of walking.

What is instinctual knowledge? How is it encoded? How is it interpreted without prior experience?

I could go on for another mile of text... but I'll spare you and myself the torture. Please consider my question... however!
 
  • #29
quantumcarl said:
Imagine how a deer has "knowledge, comprehension and understanding" of standing and walking in about 5 minutes or less after being born.

We call this "innate" and we call it "instinct". But it knows how to balance, it uses visual cues and utilizes all the other instrinsic cybernetics of walking.

What is instinctual knowledge? How is it encoded? How is it interpreted without prior experience?

Consider the body as a blueprint/template that can be interpreted by direct experience and acted upon. How this interpreting works without prior experience(if this is the case), it beats me, but i would think that it starts in a very abstract way.

If u look at ur own body movements, u can see that u do not need to understand the workings of all muscle cells in order to move an arm. U do not even have to think in any language to do this. Perhaps its like a person using a computer. Though the person is in control of the thing and can produce the results he wants, he doesn't understand its parts or their workings. These parts however are automated according to a design blueprint, which work without any experience or understanding of them being required. The only understanding the person needs is of the graphical user interface - GUI.

In another topic there was the idea that 'consciousness exists to make itself unneccesary', which talked of consciousness making learned skills automatic:

In a very real sense, then, the purpose of consciousness -- why it evolved -- may be for the assemblage of complex nonconscious skills. In harmony with the general plasticity of human brain development, people have the capability of building ever more complex automatic “demons” that fit their own idiosyncratic environment, needs, and purposes. As William James (1890) argued, consciousness drops out of those processes where it is no longer needed, freeing itself for where it is...Intriguingly, then, one of the primary objectives of conscious processing may be to eliminate the need for itself in the future by making learned skills as automatic as possible. It would be ironic indeed if, given the current juxtaposition of automatic and conscious mental processes in the field of psychology, the evolved purpose of consciousness turns out to be the creation of ever more complex nonconscious processes.

http://pantheon.yale.edu/~jab257/Bypassing_the_Will.pdf

In organisms, these 'learned' skills could be stored inside genes (whether they are produced by random mutations + natural selection makes no difference, it simply means that the skills were acquired (= 'learned') through RM+NS). The result would be that an organism could use the body as a whole, without understanding its parts. This way direct experience (which represents the GUI mentioned above) could have direct control over the parts. The direct experience can, through intelligence, create very simple concepts very easily, such as:

"I smell A, I like smell A, I want to smell it again".

Upon thinking this, the automated parts can be activated to achieve the goal. A newborn deer may sense gravity then start walking this way, driven by a simple concept formed by direct experience.

Perhaps if we kill everyone who doesn't speak english and do this for another 10 million years, the english language would be encoded in our genes and we would know it from birth :biggrin:
 
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  • #30
PIT2 said:
Consider the body as a blueprint/template that can be interpreted by direct experience and acted upon. How this interpreting works without prior experience(if this is the case), it beats me, but i would think that it starts in a very abstract way.

If u look at ur own body movements, u can see that u do not need to understand the workings of all muscle cells in order to move an arm. U do not even have to think in any language to do this. Perhaps its like a person using a computer. Though the person is in control of the thing and can produce the results he wants, he doesn't understand its parts or their workings. These parts however are automated according to a design blueprint, which work without any experience or understanding of them being required. The only understanding the person needs is of the graphical user interface - GUI.

In another topic there was the idea that 'consciousness exists to make itself unneccesary', which talked of consciousness making learned skills automatic:



In organisms, these 'learned' skills could be stored inside genes (whether they are produced by random mutations + natural selection makes no difference, it simply means that the skills were acquired (= 'learned') through RM+NS). The result would be that an organism could use the body as a whole, without understanding its parts. This way direct experience (which represents the GUI mentioned above) could have direct control over the parts. The direct experience can, through intelligence, create very simple concepts very easily, such as:

"I smell A, I like smell A, I want to smell it again".

Upon thinking this, the automated parts can be activated to achieve the goal. A newborn deer may sense gravity then start walking this way, driven by a simple concept formed by direct experience.

Perhaps if we kill everyone who doesn't speak english and do this for another 10 million years, the english language would be encoded in our genes and we would know it from birth :biggrin:

Kill everyone who doesn't speak english? Its been done and continues.:mad:

I think that genes and the DNA molecule require quite a bit less time than 10,000,000 years and less extrinsically imposed modification for them to be encoded with configurations that can be considered reflexes or instincts... or "habits" as Mr. Charles Darwin calls them...

Charles Darwin said:
I will not attempt any definition of instinct. It would be easy to show that several distinct mental actions are commonly embraced by this term; but every one understands what is meant, when it is said that instinct impels the cuckoo to migrate and to lay her eggs in other birds' nests. An action, which we ourselves require experience to enable us to perform, when performed by an animal, more especially by a very young one, without experience, and when performed by many individuals in the same way, without their knowing for what purpose it is performed, is usually said to be instinctive. But I could show that none of these characters are universal. A little dose of judgment or reason, as Pierre Huber expresses it, often comes into play, even with animals low in the scale of nature.

Frederic Cuvier and several of the older metaphysicians have compared instinct with habit. This comparison gives, I think, an accurate notion of the frame of mind under which an instinctive action is performed, but not necessarily of its origin. How unconsciously many habitual actions are performed, indeed not rarely in direct opposition to our conscious will! Yet they may be modified by the will or reason. Habits easily become associated with other habits, with certain periods of time, and states of the body. When once acquired, they often remain constant throughout life. Several other points of resemblance between instincts and habits could be pointed out. As in repeating a well-known song, so in instincts, one action follows another by a sort of rhythm; if a person be interrupted in a song, or in repeating anything by rote, he is generally forced to go back to recover the habitual train of thought; so P. Huber found it was with a caterpillar, which makes a very complicated hammock; for if he took a caterpillar which had completed its hammock up to, say, the sixth stage of construction, and put it into a hammock completed up only to the third stage, the caterpillar simply reperformed the fourth, fifth, and sixth stages of construction. if, however, a caterpillar were taken out of a hammock made up, for instance, to the third stage, and were put into one finished up to the sixth stage, so that much of its work was already done for it, far from deriving any benefit from this, it was much embarrassed, and in order to complete its hammock, seemed forced to start from the third stage, where it had left off, and thus tried to complete the already finished work.

If we suppose any habitual action to become inherited - and it can be shown that this does sometimes happen - then the resemblance between what originally was a habit and an instinct becomes so close as not to be distinguished. If Mozart, instead of playing the pianoforte at three years old with wonderfully little practice, had played a tune with no practice at all, he might truly be said to have done so instinctively. But it would be a serious error to suppose that the greater number of instincts have been acquired by habit in one generation, and then transmitted by inheritance to succeeding generations. It can be clearly shown that the most wonderful instincts with which we are acquainted, namely, those of the hive-bee and of many ants, could not possibly have been acquired by habit.

From: http://www.bbc.co.uk/education/darwin/origin/oos8_1.htm
 
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FAQ: Is intelligence equal to knowledge?

1. Is intelligence the same as knowledge?

No, intelligence and knowledge are not the same. Intelligence refers to a person's ability to think, reason, and solve problems. Knowledge, on the other hand, is the information and understanding that a person has acquired through learning and experience.

2. Can someone be intelligent without having much knowledge?

Yes, it is possible for someone to be intelligent without having a lot of knowledge. Intelligence is more about a person's potential to learn and understand, while knowledge is the actual information that a person has acquired.

3. Is knowledge more important than intelligence?

It is difficult to say whether one is more important than the other. Both intelligence and knowledge are valuable and can complement each other. A person with high intelligence can use their abilities to acquire knowledge, while a person with a lot of knowledge can use it to enhance their intelligence.

4. Can intelligence and knowledge be measured?

Yes, both intelligence and knowledge can be measured, but in different ways. Intelligence is typically measured through IQ tests, while knowledge can be assessed through exams or other forms of evaluation.

5. Can intelligence and knowledge be improved?

Yes, both intelligence and knowledge can be improved through learning and practice. While a person's level of intelligence may be largely determined by genetics, they can still work on developing their knowledge and skills through education and experience.

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