Jim Stout

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To any reader familiar with his views it will seem strange to attribute to Thorndike a one-dimensional view of intelligence, since he was consistently arguing intelligence was multidimensional (abstract, social, and mechanical) and was one of Spearman’s biggest critics. However, he did believe there was an innate component that applied to your ability to learn and that it had to do with your neural ability to form connections.
Jim Stout
confusion and hypocracuy
The End of Average: How We Succeed in a World That Values Sameness
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