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Intelligence

There's an interesting article in the New York Times (HT Instapundit) on intelligence. In essence, it says that intelligence is not an adaptive trait, all the time. Only some environments encourage the adaption of intelligence. That makes sense. Bertrand Russels said, "So far as I can remember, there is not one word in the Gospels in praise of intelligence. ", which is, of course, true because the Bible prefers to praise wisdom. And, in looking this up, I came across this from Arthur C. Clarke, "It has yet to be proven that intelligence has any survival value." So, this isn't really news.
 
What I found odd was this quote from the article:

The benefits of learning must have been enormous for evolution to have overcome those costs, Dr. Kawecki argues. For many animals, learning mainly offers a benefit in finding food or a mate. But humans also live in complex societies where learning has benefits, as well.

“If you’re using your intelligence to outsmart your group, then there’s an arms race,” Dr. Kawecki said. “So there’s no absolute optimal level. You just have to be smarter than the others.”
First of all, my IQ is fairly high and I can speak to the fact that intelligence is basically no benefit to natural selection within the species. It's alienating and actually slows down social development except in cities, where the company of compatible people is still a constant, active pursuit. But, the point is that Dr. Kawecki makes the mistake of viewing other species from an external vantage point and his own from an internal vantage point.
 
Humans consume in what computer science calls a "greedy algorithm". By consuming all resources available to us as individuals, but doing so in the company of other humans, we are actually forced to prioritize our consumption in accordance with others. That's what the monetary system is: a way to communicate individual priorities across the wider society. That's why capitalism works in human societies; by competing internally, we make highly efficient choices for the global allocation of resources. As I mention in a previous post, most animals, like wolves, don't do that.
 
This is why I believe that humans are actually a hive species, albeit a complex hive, but not with the negative connotations that normally come with the word "hive" (there's more to this hypothesis; this is only part). On the one hand, the Right often accuses the Left that Socialism turns everyone into faceless drones with no individuality, like a hive. On the other, the Left often accuses the same thing of the Right, for the same reason. The problem is that hives are highly individualistic. In ant colonies, one is the queen (and she isn't in command), some are drones, and some are workers. Some workers will explore the surrounding territory and find new food, laying trails for other workers to follow, and others simply following the trail to collect the food and return it to the colony. The larger point is that there is no central authority, not even the queen. It is the result of what is called manifest behavior, or emergent behaviorThe Once and Future King to the contrary, the queen does not telepathically control anyone. This means that the appearance that the ants are force-fit into their roles is incorrect; the ants find their personal role based on what they are; they are not shaped physically by their place in society. This gives the appearance that they were custom made for the role because the role that they made for themselves fits them perfectly.
 
This is the same illusion that plagues the Left when looking at corporations. They assume that it is a sterile place because everyone has their role in the company. But, the role is defined by the people that have filled it, not the other way around. Some are accountants, some engineers, etc. And one of the reasons that Socialism doesn't work is that it does the opposite; it force-fits a person into a predefined role. So, the Right is wrong that Socialism is like a hive; it's like the negative and false vision of a hive. And the Left is wrong that Capitalism is bad; it's like the true vision of a hive, which is pretty good.
 
So, human societies, as a whole, benefit, not from everyone competing to be the most intelligent against other humans without an "absolute optimal level", but rather from the existence of abnormally intelligent humans benefiting the "hive" as a whole (the analog, I should mention, isn't a city or even a state; it's a trading block).
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Iron Man

There is no question - zero - in my mind that Stan Lee is the greatest cultural influence on America other than the Beatles, even if he is less recognized as such. The stylized movies of the last few decades, from Edward Scissorhands to Underworld to 300 (and God bless every one of them) have all come out of the visual traditions of comic books, not old movies, and Stan Lee's Spiderman was the first genuinely empathetic and deep character in comic books, opening the door to graphic novels and a retooling of Batman from DC comics in order to compete. They never did. Stan Lee started with X-Men which a few years ago claimed the top 3 best-selling titles, simultaneously, by recreating them, not just as superpowered good guys, but as characters whose powers reflected their very human dilemmas in larger-than-life fashion. After Spiderman, Stan Lee created Daredevil, a character that epitomized the saying, "when life gives you lemons, make lemonade" and, in the same larger-than-life style, gave hope that from tragedy can come goodness.
The project in between, Spiderman, was his first lead effort and the most important to me. The motif of this project, "With great power comes great responsibility" has been my motto for years. The lesson, for me, has not been about responsibility, it's been about power. Peter Parker's conflict with this saying is that, to accept responsibility, one has to acknowledge one's power, embrace and come to terms with having it. C. S. Lewis said that modesty isn't lying about what you've done, but being as proud of it as if it were done by someone else. I can't stick to walls or lift a semi over my head, but let's just say I made Mensa by pretty comfortable margins. And it's caused me no end of trouble. I grew up with no one to talk to, I was far enough out in the country that there were no gifted programs. There weren't any opportunities out there for my talents to be recognized, but there was no way I could hide what I am enough to be socially accepted in a town of less than 1000 people. Oh, it's a tale of woe, I assure you. But getting into Mensa, shortly after graduating college on a disappointingly normal schedule, was a formative moment for me. I'd never really been on the left, but I realized that, if Progressivism had never made sense to me, it probably didn't make sense at all. In recent years, I've been reading more, and recently I've begun to write more, and getting published.
 
Kyle Smith didn't like Iron Man as much as I did. Like him, I loved the first half of the movie. Blow-the-crap-out-of-Al-Queda is a good first act. Yes, Mr. Stark was then motivated by pulling back from arms dealing. But, he never apologized for selling arms to the United States. The problem wasn't the arms, it was always that his company had been selling to the "bad guys" (and I loved that they used that phrase). When I lived in Chicago, I was in favor of the moratorium on the death penalty, not because the death penalty was a problem, but because the courts were too corrupt to handle the responsibility. And I liked that Iron Man asked for help from Pepper Potts, the adorable female lead; he was being clever!
 
It's always been DC that's been more UN-Internationalist-wrath-of-the-self-righteous type; Marvel's heroes have been more about individualism and metaphor. I'd never really known much about Iron Man. Actually, as I was determined to make my own suit like that by the time I grew up, I resented him a little once I discovered that he wasn't a robot. But, as a 27-year-old engineer/businessman comicbook fan, I think you can imagine the appeal of an older engineer/businessman turning superhero. I'm inclined to give anything Stan Lee does the benefit of the doubt and there was plenty of room for it. Conservatives have so much to gripe about when it comes to the movies, but we need to reward the movies that come closer, that are good enough and Iron Man is comfortably where we can see it. My only regret is that I rode my motorcycle to the theatre; I was a little juiced up from the movie; putting on my helmet never felt so good; I can't really swear to the legality or safety of everything I did on the way home; this was a really great movie.
 
There was one early one-night-stand scene that may warrant more than PG-13, but not quite R. Some almost nudity that I, personally, rather liked but parents may want to know about (although the idea that Vanity Fair does investigative war journalism was a bit of news to me; did I miss something?).
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Bush right

I didn't get the story, but one of the headlines on my iGoogle widget this morning was "Economy shows low growth last quarter" or something like that. A recession is defined as "two quarters of negative growth". This means we are not in a "recession", but a "slow-down". Which is exactly what Bush said. Even Greenspan and Bernanke were wrong about this. Now, maybe we'll start shrinking this quarter, which might be the start of a recession, but we weren't in one last month.
 
Sarcasm aside, we're close and it's getting bad, but there's no cause for mass hysteria. I actually read some fool on a lefty site saying that he went through the Great Depression and we're in one just as bad right now. That's so obviously false, he must be in some company town that shut down the factory or something, because that's just absurd. Who knows. But there's more hope out there than we're being shown.
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