When everyone was in school, everyone know who the "smart kids" were. Why, based on these anecdotal and unsystematic observations that we were confident enough to make an assessment of someone, do people believe that after years of academic study by an entire profession, no better way to refine our categorization of such people has been achieved beyond our naive assessments from school?
Well, as one of the smart kids, I noticed that the group was made up of:
- Dan, who studied very little but could fake erudition in essays quite well
- Chris, who took good notes
- Alex who studied far more than anyone else
- Louis, who had after school private tutors, due to grade-conscious parents
- Me, who was good at spotting the bits teachers were interested in, and slipping it into my work
- the other Chris, who was actually a year older but had been held back to due to childhood illness
- Max, who got 100% in modern languages because he was from Belgium and had grown up speaking English, French and German, and had strictly average grades in everything else
- Jason, who was long-sighted, and could copy other people's work from across the room, and was skilled at reading upside down
- Matthew, who was going to get shipped back to his home country by his relatives unless he maintained a certain average grade
- Neil, who's parents were both teachers
It didn't include
- Abe, who was taking care of his parents after their severe car accident left them with mental problems
- James, who made $23,000 dollars trading his own portfolio account before he hit 14, but often didn't complete his homework
- Adrian, who had average grades but kept on winning national music prizes
- James, who could fix rubix-magics, the schools computers, the school's alarm systems, bikes, some cars, and a betting pool, but couldn't spell.
That left me with the idea that 'being smart' was very little to do with a single unitary capacity in the brain, and much more to do with whether you could successfully apply what disparate talents you do have to the task at hand.