• squaresinger@lemmy.world
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    9 hours ago

    Also going around parading your IQ falls straight into the rule “the more a person brags about some great personal quality, the less strong it is”

    Or it’s your only quality. The main reason to join Mensa is that you haven’t accomplished anything better since the IQ test you took as a youth.

    • Aceticon@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      2 hours ago

      As I see it, that’s both a problem of low self-confidence and passiveness (or maybe underdeveloped values).

      For the first, we all have several qualities, but people often don’t recognize or value certain qualities, especially people driven mainly by what they think others value and hence who end up valuing pretty much just the qualities modern Society focuses on - namely Wealth, Beauty and Brains - which is a typical low self-confidence thing.

      For the rest, as I see it, having some inherent quality that one was born with isn’t exactly something deserving of much pride because it’s not something one did anything to achieve. If that much one’s parents deserve the recognition for the “achievement”, though they didn’t actually do it on purpose, so maybe not even them. Having pride in being born with a high IQ makes about as much sense as having pride in being born in a rich family: it’s masturbatory ego stroking about one’s luck rather than a celebration of one’s successes.

      • squaresinger@lemmy.world
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        43 minutes ago

        That’s pretty much what I mean. If the thing one the most proud of is a high IQ, then that person probably doesn’t have a lot going for them.