| Literature DB >> 33809469 |
Abstract
The late James Flynn, to whom this Special Issue is dedicated, suggested that what will matter most to the future of the world is not levels of intelligence but rather how intelligence is deployed. In this article, I argue that we can distinguish between transactional and transformational deployments of intelligence. Loosely following Flynn, I suggest that we need to pay much more attention to the latter rather than the former.Entities:
Keywords: IQ; giftedness; intelligence; transactional giftedness; transformational giftedness
Year: 2021 PMID: 33809469 PMCID: PMC8006224 DOI: 10.3390/jintelligence9010015
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Intell ISSN: 2079-3200
STGS: Preliminary Version.
| Part I | 1. Write a paragraph about what your future dream life in 25 years would look like, with the constraint that there is a chance of achieving it. |
| Part II | 1. What would you most like to accomplish in your life? How will you get from where you are to where you want to be to accomplish that thing? |
| Part III | 1. Pick a major world problem. What are things you personally could do to help solve the problem? How could you do them? |
| Part IV | What is the one thing you have done in your life of which you are most proud? Why are you proud of it? |
| Part V | If you were to change one thing in the world, what would it be? |
| Part VI | 1. Martin Luther King and Mahatma Gandhi both defied the laws of their times and went to prison for their beliefs. Did they do the right thing in defying the law? Why or why not? |
| Part VII | 1. If a lot of people believe something, do you generally conclude that it is most likely true? Why or why not? |
Scoring: Scoring is by the consensual assessment technique. Judges are asked to rate the extent to which each response reflects, on a 1–5 scale, a transformational rather than merely transactional mind-set.