Genes, Brains, and Human Potential The Science and Ideology of Intelligence
268 HUMAN INTELLIGENCE outstrips that of any other species. Let us now see how that complexity with diversity may have come abou ...
HUMAN INTELLIGENCE 269 Th ese forms of structure may be refl ections of our more general capacity for structure abstraction. In ...
270 HUMAN INTELLIGENCE Th is is what Hennig found in each of his volunteer musicians, tapping out their beats on keyboards. But, ...
HUMAN INTELLIGENCE 271 highly complex acoustic streams of speakers. As we know, they do this with great fa cil i ty so long as a ...
272 HUMAN INTELLIGENCE Individual inputs to the group are limited in range, although the social dynamics add much to adaptabilit ...
HUMAN INTELLIGENCE 273 humans went further than the isolated group in their collaboration. Hunting and gathering bands collabora ...
274 HUMAN INTELLIGENCE HUMANS ONLY INDIVIDUATE THROUGH CULTURE Since ancient Greece, philosopher- psychologists have known that ...
HUMAN INTELLIGENCE 275 As Patricia Zukow- Goldring noted, ordinary experience involves a multitude of signals from a multitude ...
276 HUMAN INTELLIGENCE routes to it (strategies and “maps”), agreements about divisions of labor, signals for monitoring and mod ...
HUMAN INTELLIGENCE 277 As Vygotsky put it, “By being included in the pro cess of be hav ior, the psychological tool alters the e ...
278 HUMAN INTELLIGENCE diff erences in wider culture, such as tending to be individualistic or col- lectivist in outlook, are re ...
HUMAN INTELLIGENCE 279 Another major feature of these sociocognitive dynamics is that, as for hunting in wild dogs or wolves, th ...
280 HUMAN INTELLIGENCE IQ IN CULTURAL CONTEXT Thinking or Reasoning Th inking, reasoning, and prob lem solving are considered to ...
HUMAN INTELLIGENCE 281 As described in chapter 6, cognitive systems evolved to deal with deeper structures in experience. Learn ...
282 HUMAN INTELLIGENCE knowledge. Everyday reasoning is based on culturally specifi c knowl- edge. For example, the logical abil ...
HUMAN INTELLIGENCE 283 Take basic knowledge of objects, for example. In prehuman cognitive systems, co- variations picked up fro ...
284 HUMAN INTELLIGENCE Memory Memory fi gures prominently in IQ tests as the content of many simple items, such as digit span or ...
HUMAN INTELLIGENCE 285 Since the time of ancient Greece, it has been the task of scientifi c research to systematize that confi ...
286 HUMAN INTELLIGENCE precisely as a language for expressing the deeper structures and patterns in phenomena— patterns that can ...
HUMAN INTELLIGENCE 287 individual humans can develop within a specifi c domain when commit- ted to it. Noteworthy is the remarka ...
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