Are those of higher intelligence less likely to believe in intelligent

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The discussion centers on the relationship between intelligence and belief in intelligent design (ID), with participants noting that higher intelligence may not directly correlate with disbelief in ID. Many argue that belief in ID often stems from strong religious convictions rather than a lack of intelligence or knowledge. The conversation highlights that intelligent individuals can hold religious beliefs without rejecting scientific understanding, as exemplified by figures like Dr. Francis Collins. Participants also emphasize that ID is poorly defined and often misused as a political tool rather than a legitimate scientific theory. Ultimately, the debate reflects a broader conversation about the compatibility of faith and scientific inquiry.
  • #91


Isaac Newton and Charles Darwin were both theists. They are two of the best scientists that ever lived.
 
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  • #92


JerryClower said:
Isaac Newton and Charles Darwin were both theists. They are two of the best scientists that ever lived.

Ummm... Isaac Newton was indeed a theist (an unorthodox Christian though) while Charles Darwin was a theist who became agnostic after the passing of his favorite daughter, none the less Darwin did not hold people with religious beliefs in contempt (like Dawkins does)
 
  • #93


celebrei said:
Ummm... Isaac Newton was indeed a theist (an unorthodox Christian though) while Charles Darwin was a theist who became agnostic after the passing of his favorite daughter, none the less Darwin did not hold people with religious beliefs in contempt (like Dawkins does)

Dawkins is a fine example of how Atheism is the other side of the Theism coin (he's also about a tenth as bright as he believes himself to be, and twice as annoying and fallacious). They are both a kind of pure faith in something that is not falsifiable. They are both, to be blunt, blind faith which provides a sense of certainty. A colleague in the neurosciences is convinced that faith is mostly hardwired into humans, but that with intelligence comes the ability for that faith to 'glom' onto things it wouldn't otherwise.

We need to run after a Mammoth without constantly questioning the nature of reality, or whether the ground will suddenly give way. Some people achieve this through Theism, assured that the world is purposeful or at least overseen in some sense. Others do so through Atheism, in which case they put a LOT of faith in science that (this forum excepted) most people don't grasp more than articles of faith and religion.

Religion of course, is something which is invented to capitalize on faith... just like lousy books are for Dawkins! :smile:
 
  • #94


DaveC426913 said:
Religion doesn't make people do stupid things. Stupid people do stupid things.

Point well taken. What I hope to convey here is that the usage of religion as an excuse for stupidity doesn't imply that religion is the cause of stupidity. As a counterexample, I would mention that physics can also be used for idiotic purposes, e.g. "What the Bleep do we Know?"

Frame Dragger said:
The IQ test... doesn't exist. There are several standard tests which yield a commonly accepted IQ. The thing is, if you have an ENORMOUS strength in one area, it has a limited ability (think between 1 and 10) to give you credit. Likewise, if for some reason, you struggle with paired-word association, or some element of visual geometry, or have a learning disability (Dyslexia, ADHD, etc...) will skew the score.

I imagine I'd have a pretty low IQ myself. I'm fairly retarded when it comes to most things besides physics.
 
  • #95


arunma said:
Point well taken. What I hope to convey here is that the usage of religion as an excuse for stupidity doesn't imply that religion is the cause of stupidity. As a counterexample, I would mention that physics can also be used for idiotic purposes, e.g. "What the Bleep do we Know?"



I imagine I'd have a pretty low IQ myself. I'm fairly retarded when it comes to most things besides physics.

Well, I wouldn't say 'retarded', which is really a term referring to an ensemble of developmental disorders/delays.

You may have real learning disabilities, or then again, maybe you're just really good at physics. People are different after all, with qualities that are difficult to measure in standardized test. Certainly people who are adept with mathematics and physics already stand as a statistical minority compared to a majority incapable of a similar feat. It shouldn't surprise us perhaps, that some strengths and focuses come with a price.

I can imitate an accent in any language I hear perfectly every time, and I learn them well in immersion settings. All that, yet I cannot learn from paired-word association (i.e. "Hola means yes. Yes is Hola." etc...). *shrug*... Why do some people have artistic sensibilities and some are CLEARLY tone deaf (literally and figuratively)?

The line between "retarded" or Autistism-spectrum, ADHD, etc... etc... shouldn't be a manifestation of similar qualities, but CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE. The medical profession has moved away from that understanding in the search for profits and a genuine desire to classify and cure all perceived abnormalities and ills. If a budding psychologist, psychiatrist, or M.D. should learn one thing that leads them to do no harm, it would be to distinguish between what is clinically significant illness/sequelae, and what is just the crenulations of human nature.
 
  • #96


The term "retarded" is now referred to as "intellectually disabled." A respectful mouthful.
 
  • #97


Loren Booda said:
The term "retarded" is now referred to as "intellectually disabled." A respectful mouthful.

Indeed... and Psychopaths, became Sociopaths, and now with the SAME (or nearly identical) DSM/international diagnostic criteria, they 'suffer from Antisocial Personality Disorder'. These are still the same people of course.

Of course, when someone with no empathy or impulse control is doing something nasty to you and yours, the fine distinction of the semantics probably is a cold comfort. Shying away from the word retarded simply means we're moving further away from the truth. They're not 'disabled' as though they'd been hit by a truck or falling carbonaceous condrite (haven't we all been there. lol. lol. *dead silence*), they were born (or developed) with that contra-stacked deck.

I know you're not advocating 'PC speech' in this context, but I wish we as a society would work to clear common misconceptions about mental illness, retardation, autism (classical, not the full 'spectrum') which do real harm. The annoying and sad point for me is that especially in the community of people with Down's Syndrome, Fragile X, etc... plenty are living long productive lives now and frankly need protection from poor healthcare (a la fight clubs in texas and general neglect everywhere), and not impolite speech. The people I've encountered who resent the term "retarded" are:

1.) Relatives and friends of people who are developmentally retarded (full term) and...
2.) People with learning disabilities, low-average intelligence, who are NOT developmentally retarded, but have been insulted as such.

Of course, it's a better rhetorical position to say, "Roger is offended because he IS intellectually challenged, NOT retarded!" than, "People hurt MY feelings because that word has been used as an insult." Of course, any word can be perverted to become an insult, and amusingly the other way around. For instance, "Who Dat" now so famous for The Saints, was often a gag bit in Minstril Shows. Yeah, not the prettiest past for a cheer. People prefer to focus on the musical history with 'band callng' instead of people in black-face seeing a ghost, saying, "Who dat?! Who dey?!" and then acting like a frightened child. I'm not making that up... sad but true. >:(

Instead of appreciating the venom behind the slur 'Retard' which is what we all know the insult is (not 'that person is retarded', right?), and decoupling it from a harmless medical term... we get Political Correctness.
 
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  • #98


Frame Dragger said:
Indeed... and Psychopaths, became Sociopaths, and now with the SAME (or nearly identical) DSM/international diagnostic criteria, they 'suffer from Antisocial Personality Disorder'. These are still the same people of course.

Of course, "antisocial personality disorder" will soon become a common insult to heap on someone and politicians will have to invent a new term. So stupid.
 
  • #99


ideasrule said:
Of course, "antisocial personality disorder" will soon become a common insult to heap on someone and politicians will have to invent a new term. So stupid.

Of course! After all, most high-level politicians display a remarkable number of traits associated with Sociopathic 'leanings' (lol) or outright Sociopathy itself. People wonder, "how did x politician think he would get away with y scandal?" Answer: Lack of forsight, lack of impulse control even when it's to their own detriment, lack of empathy and meaningful connection GOVERNER SANDORD *cough* *cough* Dick Cheney *cough* The guy who had $100k in his freezer...

Alas.

In fact, there was a study I have since lost the link to (but I keep searching for), which I read years ago out of Norway. They'd calculated a very rough estimate that upwards of 70% of career poloticians could meet (in this case EU standards) for Sociopathy. I don't care what the 'n' of that little statistical process was... if it's 10% that would be 5-10x the human norm (for men, less for women).

I woudn't read too much into a single study, but it's clear that people have a large range of (don't laugh people, you're better than this! lol) 'Arousal Thresholds' (AT) which does not have anything to do with sex (usually). Firefighters who live for the 5 alarm fire, base-jumpers, special operatives with various militaries... etc... ALSO seem to have a lot of those traits such as a very high AT. Makes sense really; what would terrify or paralyze many doesn't FEEL as intense to them, and in fact is the time when they feel most alive.

That last should be distinguished from symtoms of traumatic events that can have similar sequelae.
 
  • #100


Frame Dragger said:
You may have real learning disabilities, or then again, maybe you're just really good at physics. People are different after all, with qualities that are difficult to measure in standardized test. Certainly people who are adept with mathematics and physics already stand as a statistical minority compared to a majority incapable of a similar feat. It shouldn't surprise us perhaps, that some strengths and focuses come with a price.

I've seriously considered the learning disability thing in the past. Is there a learning disability that causes someone to not be very good with arithmetic, but still be good at all other forms of math? On the other hand, it may just be that I'm an otherwise average American who's good at physics. Whatever the case, I figure that if I've made it through four years of college, two years of grad school, and one PhD qualifier without any serious trouble, it's probably nothing to worry about. But I figure that I would probably score fairly low on an IQ test. The existence of people like myself doesn't mean the data presented earlier isn't perfectly valid. But it does mean that we should make ourselves aware of what this funny quantity we call IQ really means.
 
  • #101


arunma said:
I've seriously considered the learning disability thing in the past. Is there a learning disability that causes someone to not be very good with arithmetic, but still be good at all other forms of math? On the other hand, it may just be that I'm an otherwise average American who's good at physics. Whatever the case, I figure that if I've made it through four years of college, two years of grad school, and one PhD qualifier without any serious trouble, it's probably nothing to worry about. But I figure that I would probably score fairly low on an IQ test. The existence of people like myself doesn't mean the data presented earlier isn't perfectly valid. But it does mean that we should make ourselves aware of what this funny quantity we call IQ really means.

To your first question... yes actually. That's a very common deficiet associated with attential disorders (ADD and such). In a neurological panel it would be illuminating, because that would stand as a single PORTION of an overall ensemble, not a single score. It may be that you find it easier to manipulate abstract concepts than you do keeping track of specific quantities. They are very different after all.

As you say however, you have nothing to worry about! You just happen to have some extreme strengths offset by a (harmless) weakness. My handwriting is terrible, but I make lovely calligraphy. I CANNOT improve my handwriting without approaching the spatial issue of writing differently. Does it matter? Not really. I learn foreign languages through immersion freakishly quickly, but a textbook might as well be in Attic Greek if it uses paired-word association.

What is IQ? A historical blip on the rador, like Phrenology, or Phlogiston, or the Aether. lol.
 

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