Brewing Knowledge Friday hosted by The English Book Depot
Discuss moral behaviour and the complexities of intelligence.
Key Takeaways
Moral Action Gap: A gap exists between knowing what is right and doing it. People often choose conventional transgressions (e.g., stealing an eraser) over moral ones (e.g., wearing pyjamas to school) to avoid social disapproval.
IQ vs. Success: The group debated the role of IQ in success, contrasting the book's view that IQ is a strong predictor with the argument that EQ (emotional intelligence) is equally vital for understanding people and the world's needs.
Systemic Hypocrisy: School systems often undermine stated values. For example, sharing stationery is punished as a failure to be prepared, while competitive success is praised, creating a conflict between taught principles and enforced rules.
IQ Test Limitations: IQ tests are not a fixed measure of intelligence. Scores reflect motivation, anxiety, and compliance, not just ability, and can be culturally biased, making them an unreliable sole metric for success.
Topics
Moral Behaviour & Systemic Hypocrisy
The book defines responsible behaviour as the ability to make and act on decisions concerning others' welfare.
Factors influencing moral action:
Awareness: Interpreting social cues and feeling empathy.
Reasoning: Knowing the right action to take.
Decision: Weighing personal costs/benefits against moral reasoning.
The "High-Cost" Conflict: High-cost helping (e.g., anonymous donation) creates a conflict between personal desires and moral duty, which is resolved through reasoning.
The "Should vs. Would" Gap: A study found children know what they should do but often choose a conventional transgression (e.g., wearing pyjamas) over a moral one (e.g., hitting a classmate) to avoid social disapproval.
Systemic Hypocrisy in Schools: School environments often discourage the moral behaviour they claim to value.
Example (Maira): Sharing stationery is punished as a failure to be prepared, not praised as an act of generosity.
Example (Book): Helping a peer with homework is labelled "cheating," and competitive success is praised at the expense of others.
Proposed Solution: Open dialogue between students and teachers in a trusting environment to discuss these complexities and allow students to develop their own moral sense.
The Intelligence Debate
Measuring Intelligence: Creating a fair intelligence test is difficult because it must be culture-neutral, class-neutral, and literacy-independent. Most tests measure knowledge, not pure ability.
The Bell Curve Controversy: A 1994 book claimed IQ is a stronger predictor of poverty than environmental factors.
Criticism: Correlation does not imply causation. Poverty can cause low IQ scores by creating deprived environments.
Moral Concern: Such claims fuel discriminatory movements like eugenics, which seeks to control reproduction to "improve" a population's average IQ.
IQ vs. Success Debate:
Minakshi: Success requires both IQ and EQ (emotional intelligence) for understanding people and the world's needs.
Maira: An obsession with IQ limits creative fields (art, dance) and pressures students to conform to narrow academic standards.
Akansha (via chat): Some teachers equate IQ with being a top-ranker, leading them to neglect average students.
IQ Test Limitations: An IQ score is not a fixed property. It reflects:
Ability to solve specific problem types.
Motivation and anxiety during the test.
Compliance and obedience.
Inherent measurement error.
Defining Intelligence:
"G" Factor: The theory that intelligence is a single, general factor influencing all abilities.
Multidimensional View: Intelligence has multiple, distinct aspects (e.g., Howard Gardner's Multiple Intelligences).
Next Steps
All: Reflect on personal experiences with the "should vs. would" gap in moral decisions.
All: Consider how school systems can better align their practices with stated moral values.
All: Continue the discussion on the definition and measurement of intelligence next Friday.