IdeasNotTheProblem
Active Member
http://www.bbc.com/future/story/20121120-what-makes-us-intelligent"What happened, according to Wegner, was that the couples in a relationship had a good understanding of their partners. Because of this they would tacitly divide up the work between them, so that, say, one partner would remember words to do with technology, assuming the other would remember the words to do with sports. In this way, each partner could concentrate on their strengths, and so individually they outperformed people in couples where no mental division of labour was possible. Just as you rely on a search engine for answers, so you can rely on people you deal with regularly to think about certain things, developing a shared system for committing items to memory and bringing them out again, what Wegner called “transactive memory”.
Having minds that work this way is one of the great strengths of the human species. Rather than being forced to rely on our own resources for everything, we can share our knowledge and so pool our understanding." -Tom Stafford
Just thought I would share an article I found interesting. Kind of replaces the "calculator" with the internet. It has ideas on all sorts of topics, but this one on "transactive memory" got me thinking.
Would a tribal society benefit from having a group with diverse cognitive functions enough for it have a greater chance of survival than a less diverse group? And could that have been the origin of the diverse psychological types we all talk about today?
Having minds that work this way is one of the great strengths of the human species. Rather than being forced to rely on our own resources for everything, we can share our knowledge and so pool our understanding." -Tom Stafford
Just thought I would share an article I found interesting. Kind of replaces the "calculator" with the internet. It has ideas on all sorts of topics, but this one on "transactive memory" got me thinking.
Would a tribal society benefit from having a group with diverse cognitive functions enough for it have a greater chance of survival than a less diverse group? And could that have been the origin of the diverse psychological types we all talk about today?