Three years ago I listened to a lecture on
cognition that changed the way I think about intelligence. This is the crux.
There are two types of cognition. The first is normal cognition. This is the
ability to retrieve knowledge from memory. When you are asked a question on a
test and produce an answer, that’s a display of cognitive ability. The second
type of cognition is metacognition; the ability to know whether or not you
know.Have you ever been asked a question that you knew the answer to, but you
couldn’t find the right word? This is called the “tip of the tongue” phenomenon
and I’m sure we’ve all experienced it. You know that you know the answer, but
you fail to produce it. If someone said an answer, you would know instantly if
it was correct or not. In these cases metacognition exists without cognition.In
short, cognition is knowing, metacognition is knowing if you know or not. Both
can exist together, but many times they don’t.
How Does this Affect
Intelligence?
So what importance does this have and how is it relevant to
self improvement? The fact that there are two different kinds of cognitive
ability means that there are different types of intelligence.In traditional
education, intelligence is measured by cognitive ability. For some people this
is works well. They can easily produce everything they know on a test. But for
others it doesn’t work out so well. The people that know something cold but
can’t find the right words on a test are awarded with poor grades and considered
inferior.But does this inability make them any less intelligent? They know the
answer. If the question came up on a task, they could refer to a book or a quick
Google search. In reality they’re just as effective as the people that aced the
test. They just can’t prove it as easily.
The Importance of Knowing what
you know
Unless you’re taking a test or playing Jeopardy, metacognition
is more important to success than cognition. In real life, when you’re faced
with a question the first decision is whether you know the answer or not. With
strong metacognitive ability this is easy. If you know the answer, but can’t
come up with it, you can always do a bit of research. If you know for sure that
you don’t know, then you can start educating yourself. Because you’re aware of
your ignorance, you don’t act with foolish confidence. The person who thinks
they know something that they really don’t makes the worst decisions.A person
with poor cognitive ability, but great metacognitive ability is actually in
great shape. They might do poorly in school, but when faced with a challenge
they understand their abilities and take the best course of action. These people
might not seem intelligent at first glance, but because they know what they
know, they make better decisions and learn the most important
things.
Clever but mediocre people
At the opposite end of the
spectrum are people with great cognitive ability but poor metacognitive ability.
These people are proclaimed geniuses at a young age for acing every test and
getting great SAT scores. Unfortunately, they’ve been ruined by poor
metacognition; they think they know everything but they really don’t. They are
arrogant, fail to learn from mistakes, and don’t understand the nuances of
personal relationships; showing disdain for persons with lower cognitive
ability.So who is superior? In a battle of wits the higher cognitive ability
prevails, but life is not a single encounter. It is a series of experiments in
succession, each building upon the last. Learning requires knowing what you
don’t know, and taking steps to learn what you need to. People with poor
metacognitive ability never realize that they don’t ‘get it’. They also don’t
realize what’s important.This doesn’t preclude them from material success. But,
perhaps that’s a poor measurement of intelligence as well. There are many people
who become rich and successful by their cleverness and cognitive ability, but as
human beings are quite mediocre. Is the man that makes a million dollars, but is
cruel and abusive to his employees and family, really more intelligent than the
poor man who lives a modest and loving life? I don’t intend to demonize wealth,
only to state that it should not be the measure of virtue.
Use your
metacognitive ability
So what do we know and what do we not? And how can
we tell the difference? There is so much to know in the world that the most
brilliant human minds can grasp only the tiniest fraction. For this reason we
should always be in doubt of what we know. The closed mind is oblivious to its
surroundings, while the open mind absorbs them. Like a sponge, it soaks up
observations, becoming fuller and more robust.But we can’t live in total doubt.
If we did we would never act, paralyzed by our inadequate knowledge. We must
trust our intuition. If something makes you feel a certain way, that feeling is
real and must be respected. Act based on your own convictions, not those of
others, and keep an open ear for new ideas.The most important mental power is
the ability to know what you don’t know. The recognition of a fault is the first
step to improvement. Don’t try to hide a lack of knowledge. People will see
through it and you’ll appear foolish and arrogant. If you admit your ignorance,
people will help you learn and respect your humility. For intelligent people
this is the toughest lesson to learn. We are used to being right, and consider
being wrong shameful. We’re afraid to lose status by looking stupid. This vain
arrogance is a great weakness and the source of many problems. To crush it and
embrace humility is the mark of true wisdom.
by Editor in Chief, Pick The Brain
No comments:
Post a Comment