JAB <
[email protected]d> writes:
Exploring The Seven Different Intelligences
Word Smart (linguistic intelligence)
Math Smart (numerical/reasoning/logic intelligence)
Physically Smart (kinesthetic intelligence)
Music Smart (musical intelligence)
People Smart (interpersonal intelligence)
Self Smart (intrapersonal intelligence)
That's Six!
First off, I thought the author must be a bloviator until I spotted
that you'd left out one of the seven. From the web page:
4. Spatial
Think in images and pictures. May be fascinated with mazes or
jigsaw puzzles, or spend free time drawing, building things or
daydreaming.
Even that is a weak characterization of "spatial smarts". I'm acutely
aware of the topic after living with someone whose chief cognitive
stumbling block is a shortfall in spatial relations while that mode is
(IMHO) my strong suit.
It's an great exaggeration to say that she cannot too the puzzles,
meant for toddlers, of putting the square block in the square hole,
the round block in the wound hole and so on. But the quotidian tasks
that reflect the adult version of the cognitive skill/talent indicated
by the toddler toy are a chronic problem.
People strong on that aspect can, for example, see instantly that two
things that differ slightly -- two spoons of slightly differing
pattern, 2" bolts of 5/8" and 9/16" diameter -- are different. People
said to be "mechanically inclined" are probably people with a natural
strong talent to see quickly how a mechanical device operates, notice
spatial, dimensional or geometric details and other similar factors.
Here's a related amusing anecdote: After decades of hearing about it,
I recently watched Chaplin's Modern Times for the first time. He
appears to be tightening nuts on threaded studs which the next workers
on the assembly line stake in place. (Well known method of securing a
nut in place.) But AFAICT, he's turning the nuts in the wrong
direction. Yes, there is such a thing as left-hand threads but
spatial intuition says that they'd be more common RHT and he's
loosening them.
http://astro1.panet.utoledo.edu/~ljc/smarts.htm
Writing skills must be practiced....just like verbal...
Verbal and writing skills are not coequal to my awareness.
Regardless, have neuroscientists weighed in on this topic???
There was a piece in SciAm circa 1984, entitled
"Turning something over in the mind". They had found a correlated
physical distribution of neural activity in the brain when a subject
was mentally trying to determine if two images of asymmetric objects represented the same of differing objects.
Turning Something Over in the Mind
Lynn A. Cooper and Roger N. Shepard
Scientific American
Vol. 251, No. 6 (December 1984), pp. 106-115 (10 pages)
https://www.jstor.org/stable/24969504
--
Mike Spencer Nova Scotia, Canada
--- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
* Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)