Are you suggesting that all must agree upon certain definitions of terms before the discussion can even begin? — Arne
Perhaps we can agree that your desire for definitions has its roots in a certain theory of meaning, one more or less in line with the ideas that Harry espouses and that I have discussed elsewhere. That theory of meaning was closely critiqued during the middle of last century, by philosophers from diverse backgrounds. — Banno
If you think that IQ tests are bad designed, so they are not scientifically valid, you should show some kind of evidence. If your argument is that empirical science is inherently "invalid" in some grade, it is a selection fallacy or a kind of general skepticism equally fallacious. — Belter
Both mathematics and music are complex in their own ways yet there are those good at one but not the other. Surely if they were possessed of some abstract ability they would be innately good at both? — Pseudonym
Not necessarily. This would require a presumption that the intention of the language user is to accurately communicate some fact. Given what we know of human psychology, I think that's probably unlikely. — Pseudonym
Your theory about IQ (predictable by people's belief about IQ tests) is not plausible. — Belter
Under any run-of-the-mill notion of "measurement" seeing and "s" on a page and measuring an "s" on a page are entirely different kinds of activities — MetaphysicsNow
Basically, we don't look inside anyone's head for intelligence. If we judge it at all we judge it by the things people successfully do. Put a series of those sorts of things in a test and, by default, you do indeed have a device for measuring the thing we're calling 'intelligence'. Either that, or admit that we really don't know what sort of thing an intelligent person should be able to successfully do, and so abandon the idea that we have any means of measuring it, neither intuitive nor quantitative — Pseudonym
If you are right, then the word "intelligent" would never have exited, much less used by anyone. It is because we have some (vague) concept of intelligence that we can use the word. — FLUX23
And the only thing that IQ tests have ever been able to tell about anyone is how good or bad they are at taking IQ tests. — MetaphysicsNow
This the wrong point. Why IQ tests are different to other psychological ones? The questioning of IQ validity is an evidence of low IQ. — Belter
The questioning of IQ validity is an evidence of low IQ. — Belter
And when you recognise that you have made a mistake (if you ever do) do you thereby measure that fact? — MetaphysicsNow
No, that won't work either. — SophistiCat
Now I understand that you do not understand statistics. If you don't understand statistics, then you won't even know what IQ tests are about. Why are you arguing if you don't know IQ tests? — FLUX23
I didn't measure anything and I did not even compare your "wether" with a correctly typed "whether". — MetaphysicsNow
what do I measure when I recognise a spelling mistake — MetaphysicsNow
The point of that would be to sound fashionable and win arguments by being the loudest and rudest. — Michael Ossipoff
Recognising something and measuring that thing are, in general, two entirely distinct activities. — MetaphysicsNow
If IQ tests measure intelligence and intelligence is nothing other than what IQ tests measure, then I cannot see how an IQ test can be inaccurate — SophistiCat
Take your pick. I presume you have made a mistake at some point during your life, and have recognised that you had made that mistake. In that case, the fact that you recognised, yet did not measure, was the fact that you made that mistake. — MetaphysicsNow
is that it is a complex concept that does not have any one-one relation to some property of human beings. — jkg20
Meaning is something that is transferred? — Banno
And when you recognise that you have made a mistake (if you ever do) do you thereby measure that fact? — MetaphysicsNow
I speculate that IQ test is "accurate" but have "notable deviation". — FLUX23
When you recognise someone in a crowd, do you measure them? — MetaphysicsNow
But all this makes sense only if the liquid volume can be given independently of what the measuring cylinder is gauging. — SophistiCat
Not having a definition in that sense, however, does not prevent me from recognising instances of intelligent behaviour — MetaphysicsNow
If IQ tests measure intelligence and intelligence is nothing other than what IQ tests measure, then I cannot see how an IQ test can be inaccurate, even in principle — SophistiCat
How do you expect me to answer the question when you have not even clarified what scientific definition of intelligence you suppose everyone to be familiar with. — MetaphysicsNow
Hence you are saying that the definition does not give the meaning. — Banno
So should philosophers concern themselves with mere definitions, or should they look to meaning? — Banno
your underlying argument remains the same:
Premise: IQ tests measure something
Premise: That something is intelligence
Conclusion: Therefore IQ tests measure intelligence. — MetaphysicsNow
if by "dismissing the validity of IQ tests" you mean something like "raising skeptical challenges about what IQ tests are supposed to be measuring" — MetaphysicsNow
Do you think there are differences in intelligence among people? — Tomseltje
But that's to assume that intelligence is something that can be measured, and simply to say that it is because we measure it with IQ tests is a petitio principii. — MetaphysicsNow
What scientific definition? As far as I'm aware there is no settled scientific definition and if you just mean "intelligence is what IQ tests measure" then the charge of circularity remains meet. As for my definition of intelligence, my whole point is that intelligence is not a concept that can be defined in the way you want it defined. — MetaphysicsNow
So, going back to the OP, there is a point in discussing more than the definition when doing philosophy. — Banno
But that's to assume that intelligence is something that can be measured, and simply to say that it is because we measure it with IQ tests is a petitio principii. — MetaphysicsNow
The groups are quite different. Their standard deviations are different. — tom
So, the argument is we can be certain that it is possible for us to be mistaken, therefore... — creativesoul
Looks like a tree to me. My conception is made out of language and stuff. The tree is not. Conceptions can be wrong. Trees cannot. — creativesoul
If this is the case, what sort of thing is the "meaning"? Is it the definition? Is it a thing-in-the-head of the speaker? What is the meaning, apart from the use? — Banno