The argument has gone
on for centuries. Is there a difference between being smart and being
intelligent? I have probably know a number of each throughout my
lifetime and have come to the realization that there are differences
between being intelligent and being smart.
Traditionally, when
someone speaks to intelligence, they usually refer to a 'capability'
with which you were born. It is a measure of your ability to learn.
The greater your intelligent, the assumption is that the more you can
learn. There are many great and familiar names associated with
intelligence; Einstein, Curie, DeVinci, and Darwin to name a few.
Let's not forget Socrates. Who in there right mind answers a question
by asking a question? If it were not for these great intelligent
thinkers, who knows what would not have been discovered or invented.
Maybe the cell phone! I think, therefore I text.
It is more difficult to
come up with a list of 'smart' people. While there are lists, in
general the name are unfamiliar, and to confuse the issue, the word
'smart' often has multiple meanings . The more popular lists of
smart people contain the names of actors and entertainer, comedians
and smart-alics. “Now don't be smart” is not really telling
someone not to be smart. It is describing an obnoxious behavior.
On neither list are
highly regarded politicians or world leaders. That might explain a
great deal about the current state of affairs, especially in Maine!
What parent doesn't
want their child to be intelligent? But, when you listen to a parent
talk about a child, they usually refer to them, not as
'intelligent', but as being smart. “My child is the smartest in the
class.” And this declaration is determined by whom?
Several months ago
there was a published article that rank ordered, from most to least,
the states running out of smart people. Doesn't speak well of today's
educational system now does it? More likely, they might have been
talking about the new generation of babies being born. Actually I
think they were talking about population shifts from state to state.
Smart people move where it is warm in the winter. Good move!
As I look back over my
lifetime, I wish I had been smarter. I think I was fairly
intelligent, but hindsight being what it is, it showed me that just
being intelligent was not enough. Knowing a lot of facts, many of
them unimportant, is not the same as being smart. What I learned
was that being smart means taking advantage of and using the
opportunities you are given to your benefit and to the benefit of
others.
As I think about the
people in my life who I believed were smart, they had several things
in common. They could admit when they were wrong. They could say
they were sorry with ease. Each was comfortable to acknowledge when
they 'didn't know something' and could ask for help.
Being smart is more
than being intelligent. Being smart is being true to who you are and
what you value. A smart person must be big enough to admit to
mistakes, smart enough to learn from those mistakes and smart enough to avoid similar mistakes in the future.
Intelligence is important, but don't overlook the importance of attitude and a desire to work hard.
Intelligence is important, but don't overlook the importance of attitude and a desire to work hard.
So... 'smarten up'!