I hope this doesn’t come off as “um actually” but, at least how I learned it is knowledge isn’t data/information. Information is what it is, information. Knowledge is how you utilize and interpret that data through researching and understanding based on experience and so on. And so intelligence is the ability and process how fast and strongly you can turn information into knowledge and also how you apply that knowledge. So I understand it as what you said intelligence is how you apply knowledge but, Information and data turns into knowledge and knowledge is a much deeper understanding of that information. And that’s why intelligence as a blanket is weird because people can be intelligent across all scopes but people can also be smart in one specified area that they have a huge knowledge base in that allows the intelligence and understanding of someone to apply it better than someone who may be overall more intelligent like an athlete who sucks at academics but is a brilliant tactician on the field and learning plays, reading opponents, watching film and noticing other formations is easier for them to understand and grasp even in a pressurized environment (in football we called it being football smart) I don’t even know if this is correct this is just how I came to understand it in youth and I just wanted to toss it out there I guess cause I look at it as three steps (info, knowledge, intelligence) rather than two.
@@MistaAwesome26 Interesting that you bring this up, i was learned something differently, Knowledge, is how much you know(it's in the name) While intelligence, is how you process and apply what you know. So yes, It does start at information/data, that then gets out into knowledge because of what you have percieved/learned from the piece of data. And now, since you have that data and LEARNED it, it is because what you know of that data. Intelligence then, is, how fast(and correct)/effecient you percieve/ learn data and turn into knowledge, and apply said knowledge in a way that is fitting for that moment/problem( so it is also correlated with adaptability)
It's a chimera. Intelligence is so big people can't see how enormous and how all encompassing it is, we could be here with 100 comments and still not represent it as it works normally, getting stuck on names like crystallized, fluid, adaptation, resourcefulness, insight, high return from inductive/deductive reasoning. I've seriously spent years reading all sorts of dudes from the last 100 years detailing how it manifests, plus the ancient thinkers and I'm still not done.
@@BygoneT intelligence derives from our awareness of the various functions of our mind to make decisions. It’s our inner light. That’s why if you’re intelligent people will call you bright.
For sure. I've had experiences with doctors far more educated than me, yet they still act like idiots. All that knowledge going to waste what a tragedy
Ran across Dr K for the first time about two weeks ago and don’t know how I haven’t run into his content before! The way he breaks down clinical concepts is so approachable
the Player’s Handbook lays it out, there’s a big distinction. Wisdom is your senses and your intuition. Intelligence is book smarts, logic and analytical problem solving.
I think this heavily relates to the Dunning Kruger effect, because while most of us know it as inexperienced people are stupid because they think they know everything, the inverse is also true, smart people realize just how much they don't know, and they also forget how much they actually do know, so they don't think they are that intelligent.
Every time I reply to these kinds of comments it feels like a "Haha I'm so smart" but it really is just my lived experience that my family and friends always tried to encourage me by commenting on how smart I was/am yet I did horribly in school. Now that I know I have several learning disabilities it makes a bit more sense, but I still feel like I'm too dumb to learn anything I might be interested in
But after reaching a certain level of wisdom and knowledge, the person knows what they don't know and have an idea of what they don't know they don't know in an area. That's the expertise and consolidation/plateau phase.
Love that you let loose!! THIS is what makes you so relatable and your content is able to be digested and process so easily because of. Thank you for your service!! You’ve truly helped me to access areas and resources I would have had no clue about. 🙇♂️
He responds well to roasting. Gives a reaction without being hurt or genuinely upset. And the way he talks gives that sort of vibe too, so even before you've attempted a roast, he presents as someone who will take it well.
A smart person who is unintelligent won’t be able to work things out if they haven’t seen similar examples of that in the past. An intelligent person is able to work out how to do something whether they have the knowledge required or not
I think another way is to view it as a difference between smart and learned person If you go to a TV show like "Who wants to be a millionaire" and we ignore the partial rigging thst happens in shows like these, you want to have learnt as much as possible, to be able to remeber what you have heard and be able to remember that Intelligence is the ability to recall information that makes one appear as intelligent Whereas a smart person would have to rely on some prior knowledge but then use reasoning to setermine what the answer is, or see its relevance to the topic in order to view it from a different angle
This is incorrect, smart and intelligent are synonyms. There's a difference between fluid, crystal, and general intelligence, though, which is more the distinction you're referring to (your first example being high crystal, low fluid, your second being high fluid, indeterminate crystal).
The opposite, Lud thinks the two are the same, he thinks wisdom is just intelligence. But it's not the same. Wisdom is questioning your morals, saying to yourself, "Is this the right thing to do for my friends, family, society, the world and myself?" You don't have to be smart to know or do those things. You can be intelligent, aka. smart, and ignore the morals because it just benifits you positively. That is being smart without the wisdom.
Intelligence can be thought of as keenness of the mind. Knowledge is accrued information over time. Wisdom is the ability to apply knowledge in a way that works within the world.
I’ve always thought of it as knowledge is a collection of facts and ideas and intelligence is the speed and efficiency with which you collect the facts and ideas
Storage vs CPU. For students cRAM = Ram while studying = installing. You can cram and access data for a few days but it gets overwritten, while you can study and learn the data and open it whenever you want later on.
I had similar discussions in D&D about intelligence and wisdom. I always explain it like that: Intelligence is knowing that tomatos are fruits not a vegetables. Wisdom is knowing that a tomatos don't belong in a fruit salad.
Knowledge is stored information. Intelligence is the speed at which your brain processes that information. That's why a wise person is not necessarily intelligent, but rather experience compensates for the lack of procedural speed.
'speed' can be aspect of inteligence but i would say flexibility,ability to conect,abstract observe, analise, synthesise,and other are more important ... you could even say that even dumbest person alive thinks at speed of light...
@@piotrlatuszek171 Yeah, those things are what I would consider as part of processing information. If someone lacks the means to process the info, it doesn't matter how fast they are, as you say.
Intelligence is a persons ability to solve problems/puzzles. Knowledge is the library you keep in your head filled with facts and views. Knowledge you can acquire, intelligence is what you’re born with.
Knowledge and intelligence are interrelated but distinct concepts that relate to how we understand and interact with the world around us. Knowledge: Knowledge is the collection of facts, information, and skills acquired through experience or education. It's the understanding or awareness one possesses regarding specific subjects or the world as a whole. Knowledge is typically cumulative, expanding as a person learns more from various sources such as school, work, personal experiences, and other forms of study. Knowledge can be transmitted from one person to another and can be stored for use at a later time. Intelligence: Intelligence, on the other hand, refers to the capacity to learn, reason, and problem-solve. It involves the ability to comprehend complex ideas, adapt effectively to the environment, learn from experience, engage in various forms of reasoning, and overcome obstacles through thought. While knowledge is the accumulation of facts and data, intelligence is more closely related to the ability to use that data to solve problems, make decisions, or create new ideas. Intelligence is generally considered to be a personal trait, varying among individuals. In simple terms, knowledge is what is known, while intelligence is the ability to use and apply that knowledge. While the two are interconnected, one can exist without the other to some extent. For instance, a person can have a great deal of knowledge (be very well-read or educated) but lack the ability to apply this knowledge effectively (lower intelligence). Conversely, a person can be highly intelligent (able to quickly learn and apply new concepts) but may not have a vast amount of knowledge if they haven't had a lot of experience or education. Straight from GPT-4
There’s a quote attributed to Socrates. “I am the wisest man alive, for I know one thing, that is I know nothing.” Approaching your intelligence with humility and introspection is super important, and I think that’s what some of the smartest people alive do. They will always be on the lookout for something new to learn.
See the dude actually does know the difference between the two things he just thinks that he doesn't because I guess its easier to say ah im just stupid and the brain settles with that or something
I like to think that knowledge is like an xp bar. Intelligence is like an xp booster. Avg person has a x1.0 xp booster (aka no xp booster) while someone twice as intelligent as an avg person has a x2.0 xp booster. The avg person would get 10 xp from reading a book while someone twice as smart would get 20 xp, or maybe just read two 10 xp books in the time it would take the avg person to read one. Because of this difference, a smart person can gain xp much much faster and unlock skills that compound their xp growth. That is also to say that even if you're born with a x10 xp booster, if you only farm xp 1 hour a day every day, someone with no xp booster will still out level you if they farm xp for 12 hrs a day every day.
It's like worker class vs scholar. One is intelligent the other one has knowledge. Even in D&D you'd have intelligence and wisdom as two separate stats.
The curse of much knowledge is often indecision. Paralysis by analysis. An intelligent person is someone who can make good decisions based on the knowledge they possess, no matter how little or great that knowledge may be.
I thought intelligence was how well an individual retained and drew from information. You can have great critical thinking and ability to navigate many situations and still fail many intelligence tests or fail to excel through higher education. So I think we need a third category. Intelligence, Wisdom and something else…
Knowledge and intelligence are actually synonymous, because there are so many definitions of “intelligence”. When we say “intel” or “intelligence agency”, we are talking about the possession and acquisition of knowledge. Of course there are also other definitions of intelligence, under which “knowledge” is not a synonym.