Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Preface
- 1 Intelligence Research and Assessment in the United Kingdom
- 2 Intelligence – Theory, Research, and Testing in the Nordic Countries
- 3 The Psychology of Human Intelligence in Spain
- 4 Psychology of Human Intelligence in France and French-Speaking Switzerland
- 5 Research on Intelligence in German-Speaking Countries
- 6 Is It Possible to Study Intelligence Without Using the Concept of Intelligence? An Example from Soviet/Russian Psychology
- 7 Intelligence Theory, Assessment, and Research: The Israeli Experience
- 8 Intelligence and Intelligence Testing in Turkey
- 9 Intelligence: What Is Indigenous to India and What Is Shared?
- 10 Japanese Conception of and Research on Human Intelligence
- 11 Diligence Makes People Smart: Chinese Perspectives of Intelligence
- 12 Similar Thoughts under Different Stars: Conceptions of Intelligence in Australia
- 13 Being Intelligent with Zimbabweans: A Historical and Contemporary View
- 14 Intelligence Research in Latin America
- 15 North American Approaches to Intelligence
- 16 Human Intelligence: From Local Models to Universal Theory
- Index
- References
6 - Is It Possible to Study Intelligence Without Using the Concept of Intelligence? An Example from Soviet/Russian Psychology
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Preface
- 1 Intelligence Research and Assessment in the United Kingdom
- 2 Intelligence – Theory, Research, and Testing in the Nordic Countries
- 3 The Psychology of Human Intelligence in Spain
- 4 Psychology of Human Intelligence in France and French-Speaking Switzerland
- 5 Research on Intelligence in German-Speaking Countries
- 6 Is It Possible to Study Intelligence Without Using the Concept of Intelligence? An Example from Soviet/Russian Psychology
- 7 Intelligence Theory, Assessment, and Research: The Israeli Experience
- 8 Intelligence and Intelligence Testing in Turkey
- 9 Intelligence: What Is Indigenous to India and What Is Shared?
- 10 Japanese Conception of and Research on Human Intelligence
- 11 Diligence Makes People Smart: Chinese Perspectives of Intelligence
- 12 Similar Thoughts under Different Stars: Conceptions of Intelligence in Australia
- 13 Being Intelligent with Zimbabweans: A Historical and Contemporary View
- 14 Intelligence Research in Latin America
- 15 North American Approaches to Intelligence
- 16 Human Intelligence: From Local Models to Universal Theory
- Index
- References
Summary
In his insightful exploration of the history of the emergence and establishment of the conceptual apparatus of psychology, Danziger (1997) stated a number of dimensions on which the concept of intelligence differs from the concepts of intellect and reason. First, although synonymous (The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, 1992), intellect and intelligence have different time trajectories: The concept of intelligence emerged much later, only at the end of the nineteenth century, while the concept of intellect was introduced at least as long ago as the appearance of Aristotelian writings. Second, the very surfacing of the concept of intelligence in psychological literature was deeply rooted in the discourse of the biological foundation of the human mind and its evolutionary development. The introduction of this concept led to the idea that stages of evolution somehow coincide with the amount of intelligence – the lower the evolutionary position, the less intelligence; the higher the position, the more intelligence. Third, the concept of intelligence has an embedded connotation of a quantitative distribution (one can have more or less intelligence compared to the other), whereas the concepts of intellect and reason appear to be dichotomous (one either has it or does not). Fourth, the concept of intelligence emerged in a time when school as a societal institution had started to become much more accessible to large masses of people; if previously the lack of education was primarily explained by one's social class, in the late nineteenth to the early twentieth century, the variation in educational achievement within social background groups was much larger than across social background groups, calling for a new (compared with social background) explanatory variable for educational failure.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- International Handbook of Intelligence , pp. 170 - 211Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2004
References
- 3
- Cited by