6.-THE SURPRISING DOWNSIDES OF BEING
CLEVER
Can a high IQ be a burden rather
than a boon?
By David Robson
If ignorance is bliss, does a high IQ equal misery? Popular opinion
would have it so. We tend to think of geniuses as being plagued by existential
angst, frustration, and loneliness. Think of Virginia Woolf, Alan Turing, or
Lisa Simpson – lone stars, isolated even as they burn their brightest. As
Ernest Hemingway wrote: “Happiness in intelligent people is the rarest thing I
know.”
The question may seem like a trivial matter concerning a select few –
but the insights it offers could have ramifications for many. Much of our
education system is aimed at improving academic intelligence; although its
limits are well known, IQ is still the primary way of measuring cognitive
abilities, and we spend millions on brain training and cognitive enhancers that
try to improve those scores. But what if the quest for genius is itself a
fool’s errand?
The first steps to answering these questions were taken almost a century
ago, at the height of the American Jazz Age. At the time, the new-fangled IQ
test was gaining traction, after proving itself in World War One recruitment
centres, and in 1926, psychologist Lewis Terman decided to use it to identify
and study a group of gifted children. Combing California’s schools for the
creme de la creme, he selected 1,500 pupils with an IQ of 140 or more – 80 of
whom had IQs above 170. Together, they became known as the “Termites”, and the
highs and lows of their lives are still being studied to this day.
As you might expect, many of the Termites did achieve wealth and fame –
most notably Jess Oppenheimer, the writer of the classic 1950s sitcom I Love Lucy. Indeed, by the time
his series aired on CBS, the Termites’ average salary was twice that of the average
white-collar job. But not all the group met Terman’s
expectations – there were many who pursued more “humble” professions such as
police officers, seafarers, and typists. For this reason, Terman concluded that
“intellect and achievement are far from perfectly correlated”. Nor did their
smarts endow personal happiness. Over the course of their lives, levels
of divorce, alcoholism and suicide were about the same as the national average.
As the Termites enter their dotage, the moral of their story – that
intelligence does not equate to a better life – has been told again and again.
At best, a great intellect makes no differences to your life satisfaction; at
worst, it can actually mean you are less fulfilled.
That’s not to say that everyone with a high IQ is a tortured genius, as
popular culture might suggest – but it is nevertheless puzzling. Why don’t the
benefits of sharper intelligence pay off in the long term?
A weighty burden
One possibility is that knowledge of your talents becomes something of a
ball and chain. Indeed, during the 1990s, the surviving Termites were asked to
look back at the events in their 80-year lifespan. Rather than basking in their
successes, many reported that they had been plagued by the sense that they had
somehow failed to live up to their youthful expectations.
That sense of burden – particularly when combined with others’
expectations – is a recurring motif for many other gifted children. The most
notable, and sad, case concerns the maths prodigy Sufiah Yusof. Enrolled at
Oxford University aged 12, she dropped out of her course before taking her
finals and started waitressing. She later worked as a call girl,entertaining
clients with her ability to recite equations during sexual acts.
Another common complaint, often heard in student bars and internet
forums, is that smarter people somehow have a clearer vision of the world’s
failings. Whereas the rest of us are blinkered from existential angst, smarter
people lay awake agonising over the human condition or other people’s folly.
Constant worrying may, in fact, be a sign of intelligence – but not in
the way these armchair philosophers had imagined. Interviewing students on
campus about various topics of discussion, Alexander Penney at MacEwan University
in Canada found that those with the higher IQ did indeed feel more anxiety
throughout the day. Interestingly, most worries were mundane, day-to-day
concerns, though; the high-IQ students were far more likely to be replaying an
awkward conversation, than asking the “big questions”. “It’s not that their
worries were more profound, but they are just worrying more often about more
things,” says Penney. “If something negative happened, they thought about it
more.”
Probing more deeply, Penney found that this seemed to correlate with
verbal intelligence – the kind tested by word games in IQ tests, compared to
prowess at spatial puzzles (which, in fact, seemed to reduce the risk of
anxiety). He speculates that greater eloquence might also make you more likely
to verbalise anxieties and ruminate over them. It’s not necessarily a
disadvantage, though. “Maybe they were problem-solving a bit more than most
people,” he says – which might help them to learn from their mistakes.
Mental blind spots
The harsh truth, however, is that greater intelligence does not equate
to wiser decisions; in fact, in some cases it might make your choices a little
more foolish. Keith Stanovich at the University of Toronto has spent the last
decade building tests for rationality, and he has found that fair, unbiased
decision-making is largely independent of IQ. Consider the “my-side bias” – our
tendency to be highly selective in the information we collect so that it
reinforces our previous attitudes. The more enlightened approach would be to
leave your assumptions at the door as you build your argument – but Stanovich
found that smarter people are almost no more likely to do so thanpeople with
distinctly average IQs.
That’s not all. People who ace standard cognitive tests are in fact slightly
more likely to have a “bias blind spot”. That is, they are less able to see
their own flaws, even when though they are quite capable of criticising the
foibles of others. And they have a greater tendency to fall for the “gambler’s
fallacy” – the idea that if a tossed coin turns heads 10 times, it will be more
likely to fall tails on the 11th. The fallacy has been the ruination of
roulette players planning for a red after a string of blacks, and it can also
lead stock investors to sell their shares before they reach peak value – in the
belief that their luck has to run out sooner or later.
A tendency to rely on gut instincts rather than rational thought might
also explain why a surprisingly high number of Mensa members believe in the
paranormal; or why someone with an IQ of 140 is about twice as likely to max
out their credit card.
Indeed, Stanovich sees these biases in every strata of society. “There
is plenty of dysrationalia – people doing irrational things despite more than
adequate intelligence – in our world today,” he says. “The people pushing the
anti-vaccination meme on parents and spreading misinformation on websites are
generally of more than average intelligence and education.” Clearly, clever
people can be dangerously, and foolishly, misguided.
So if intelligence doesn’t lead to rational decisions and a better life,
what does? Igor Grossmann, at the University of Waterloo in Canada, thinks we
need to turn our minds to an age-old concept: “wisdom”. His approach is more
scientific that it might at first sound. “The concept of wisdom has an ethereal
quality to it,” he admits. “But if you look at the lay definition of wisdom,
many people would agree it’s the idea of someone who can make good unbiased
judgement.”
In one experiment, Grossmann presented his volunteers with different
social dilemmas – ranging from what to do about the war in Crimea to heartfelt
crises disclosed to Dear Abby, the Washington Post’s agony aunt. As the
volunteers talked, a panel of psychologists judged their reasoning and weakness
to bias: whether it was a rounded argument, whether the candidates were ready
to admit the limits of their knowledge – their “intellectual humility” – and
whether they were ignoring important details that didn’t fit their theory.
High scores turned out to predict greater life satisfaction,
relationship quality, and, crucially, reduced anxiety and rumination – all the
qualities that seem to be absent in classically smart people. Wiser reasoning
even seemed to ensure a longer life – those with the higher scores were less
likely to die over intervening years. Crucially, Grossmann found that IQ was
not related to any of these measures, and certainly didn’t predict greater
wisdom. “People who are very sharp may generate, very quickly, arguments [for] why
their claims are the correct ones – but may do it in a very biased fashion.”
Learnt wisdom
In the future, employers may well begin to start testing these abilities
in place of IQ; Google has already announced that it plans to screen candidates
for qualities like intellectual humility, rather than sheer cognitive prowess.
Fortunately, wisdom is probably not set in stone – whatever your IQ
score. “I’m a strong believer that wisdom can be trained,” says Grossmann. He
points out that we often find it easier to leave our biases behind when we
consider other people, rather than ourselves. Along these lines, he has found
that simply talking through your problems in the third person (“he” or “she”,
rather than “I”) helps create the necessary emotional distance, reducing your
prejudices and leading to wiser arguments. Hopefully, more research will
suggest many similar tricks.
The challenge will be getting people to admit their own foibles. If
you’ve been able to rest on the laurels of your intelligence all your life, it
could be very hard to accept that it has been blinding your judgement. As
Socrates had it: the wisest person really may be the one who can admit he knows
nothing.
© 2015 BBC.