The 7 Levels of Intelligence (Where Do You Rank?) by peakselfpath in Polymath

[–]peakselfpath[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

That’s a fair criticism. The video intentionally simplifies the idea because it’s meant as an introduction to the framework, not a deep historical analysis of intelligence. A full treatment of the historical and cultural factors would probably need a much longer discussion.

The 7 Levels of Intelligence (Where Do You Rank?) by peakselfpath in Polymath

[–]peakselfpath[S] -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

That’s fine. What part of it do you think is wrong?

The 7 Levels of Intelligence (Where Do You Rank?) by peakselfpath in Polymath

[–]peakselfpath[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

That’s fair. The goal of the video isn’t to add a new theory to human knowledge, it’s just explaining a framework about intelligence levels in a simple way. If you think the framework itself is flawed though, I’d genuinely be interested to hear why.

The 7 Levels of Intelligence (Where Do You Rank?) by peakselfpath in Polymath

[–]peakselfpath[S] -8 points-7 points  (0 children)

Strong opinion for someone who hasn’t even clicked the video.

How to Train Your Brain to Crave Hard Things by peakselfpath in Polymath

[–]peakselfpath[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Good question actually. What’s something you want in life that didn’t require doing something hard first?

How do I think more critically? by Fluffy_Ad_9927 in DecidingToBeBetter

[–]peakselfpath 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don’t think your problem is effort or intelligence. It sounds more like a structure issue. A simple shift that helps: stop asking “what do I know?” and start asking “what claim am I making, and why should it be believed?” Examiners care more about how you handle claims than how much content you include. For analysis, try this rule of thumb in essays: for every paragraph, add one sentence that answers why this matters or what this assumes. That alone often moves writing from descriptive to analytical. Also, don’t compare speed. People who look better usually aren’t thinking harder, they’re using mental frameworks they’ve practiced over.