Vincent Vega said:
They just came out with a study the other day about how some children with superior intelligence start off slower than average kids.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/03/29/AR2006032902182.html
Yea, I heard about this but I can't remember where. That smarter kids start off with a thinner layer of cortex at some points or something like that. But I remember, where ever it was I heard it from, they said it wasn't a very significant difference. It could have possibly even been within the natural tolerances of the experiment, but I can't remember.
What's interesting about those scans is if you think about them in terms of data, it's almost like you're watching the data being processed, just on a geological / ice age type scale.
I think there's definately a limit to the rate a human brain can naturally learn at and the amount of data it can hold without loosing fidelity. For example, Captain Janeway on Trek Voyager seems to know everything that her crew does, and usually more. I don't think that is going to happen soon. We'd have seen examples of these people by now. The closest we have are theoreticians, who are usually big on the ideas and the rough working of things, which allows them to bridge ideas together better, but not so sure about the details. Once you try to pack too much in, bits start getting lost no matter how hard you work at it. I read technical stuff all day everyday and have started actually thinking in terms of things I can afford to forget.
Trek works on the idea that their technology is so advanced that this is all easy stuff for them, they know quantum mechanics aged 10 because it's all old news. But it just doesn't seem to work like that with humans, because the ideas still take time to learn and can be quite abstract, requiring a big knowledge base to understand. Electronics is an example. How long have we known about electricity? It's so common place in society people have come to rely on it. But how many people actually know the difference between a volt and an amp? And that's the
absolute beginning of the entire topic.
Saying that, the education system is no where near it's peak. As it's already been said, one to one, or just better tailored, education would see a be improvement in our level of intelligence. My mum is a teacher and so I'm in quite direct contact with what's going on in teaching. By far the biggest problem is parents having children and not being particularly interested in them, just wanting to get back out to work and come home to the kids quiet... so they put TVs with sky in their bed rooms and the kids are up at 1am watching things even I would consider not suitable for just before going to bed. I'm a very open minded person, but the kids watching these things don't have them in context, they don't understand what sex is about, let alone some of the things adults will do to seek fulfillment - like paying someone to physical beat them up.
With regards to accelerated learning via drug therapy, see...
https://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?p=972279#post972279