From 5cc1b502aa33d53c0a53a2901fe71fdb95ef6be06d143d0ee24b109a9807d02f Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Nicholas Johnson Date: Tue, 6 Sep 2022 00:00:00 +0000 Subject: Remove extra h1 tags The updated theme would've caused extra h1 tags for some pages if the extra tags weren't removed. --- content/entry/the-nonlinearity-of-intelligence.md | 1 - 1 file changed, 1 deletion(-) (limited to 'content/entry/the-nonlinearity-of-intelligence.md') diff --git a/content/entry/the-nonlinearity-of-intelligence.md b/content/entry/the-nonlinearity-of-intelligence.md index a072237..c66cd34 100644 --- a/content/entry/the-nonlinearity-of-intelligence.md +++ b/content/entry/the-nonlinearity-of-intelligence.md @@ -3,7 +3,6 @@ title: "The Nonlinearity of Intelligence" date: 2020-12-12T00:00:00 draft: false --- -# Intelligence is Nonlinear The word "sports" covers a wide variety of activities. It's so broad that its usefulness as a word is limited. What can you say about sports? "I like/dislike sports. I play/don't play sports". If you talk about "popular sports", "contact sports" or "mind sports", there's so much more you can say than if you're just talking about "sports". And if you pick a particular sport like basketball then you open up a world of things you can talk about. You can talk about rules of the game, the history, famous players/teams, statistics, etc. In the same way, you can talk about "intelligence" in a general sense. But when you're just talking about intelligence, it's hard to say much. So instead, to make it more interesting, you can differentiate between mathematical intelligence, social intelligence, historical intelligence, philosophical intelligence, etc. For many people, talking about intelligence in a linear or binary way doesn't accurately describe their situation. Let's look at a few case studies. -- cgit v1.2.3