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- Path: sparky!uunet!utcsri!torn!newsserver.cs.uwindsor.ca!bouche2
- From: bouche2@server.uwindsor.ca (BOUCHER DAVID )
- Newsgroups: sci.skeptic
- Subject: Re: tv & science education
- Message-ID: <2518@newsserver.cs.uwindsor.ca>
- Date: 26 Jan 1993 22:37:11 GMT
- References: <1993Jan23.4286.31992@dosgate>
- Sender: news@server.uwindsor.ca
- Distribution: sci
- Organization: University of Windsor, Ontario, Canada
- Lines: 27
-
- SOMEBODY wrote:
-
- >>How can you possibly complain about "unprovoked attacks" when you tell some
- >>that you are a member of Mensa? Would you still find it odd if you replaced
- >>that declaration with the equivalent statement "I'm smarter than you [...]
-
- > [....] why is it that such a
- >statement is felt to be more arrogant than:
- >I'm taller [heavier, stronger, paler, blacker, fatter, thinner, mory hairy,
- >richer, a better painter, quicker, from an older family etc. ] than you [...]
-
- I think it is because everyone likes to feel that they personally have
- some unique kind of awareness. The idea that someone else could be more
- intelligent is a kind of threat; it implies that one's most cherished beliefs
- and insights might be considered trite by the greater mind. To say "I'm
- smarter than you" even when it is obviously true is considered bad form
- because it is tantamount to saying "I'm BETTER than you" or "your beliefs are
- not worthy of respect by one such as I".
-
- People who are extremely intelligent either learn at an early age to
- disguise their intelligence to some extent in ordinary social situations
- or else they become friendless outcasts. Most of the Mensans I have met
- seem to have gravitated more towards the latter option.
-
- - d boucher, mensa dropout
-
-
-