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A Mundane Comedy is Dominic Kelleher's new book, which will be published in mid 2024. The introduction is available here and further extracts will appear on this site and on social media in the coming months.

The 52:52:52 project, launching on this site and on social media in mid 2024, will help you address 52 issues with 52 responses over 52 weeks.

This site addresses what's changing, at the personal, organisational and societal levels. You'll learn about key changes across more than 150 elements of life, from ageing and time, through nature and animals, to kindness and love...and much more besides, which will help you better prepare for related change in your own life.

What's Changing? - Intelligence

Intelligence

 

Please see below selected recent intelligence-related change. 

 

See also:

 

March 2024

 

December 2022

 

June 2022

 

May 2022

  • Mensa “geniuses” gather annually to test new board games. Members of the world’s oldest high IQ club have previously endorsed Scattergories, Trivial Pursuit, Magic the Gathering, and Taboo.

 

March 2022

 

September 2021

 

August 2021

  • The Economist analysed the power of open-source intelligence. New sensors, from dashboard cameras to satellites, are examining the planet and its people as never before. Hobbyists and experts use information from these resources to solve riddles and unearth misdeeds at speed. Satellite imagery is being used to document ethnic cleansing. Photographs are yielding geographical clues that help stop the trafficking of children. Nanosatellites are tracking boats that fish illegally. The decentralised and egalitarian nature of open-source intelligence erodes the power of traditional arbiters of truth and falsehood, in particular of governments and their spies and soldiers. 

 

June 2021

  • An article in the Financial Times argued that ‘anthropological intelligence’ is a vital and often overlooked tool for solving many of the problems that humans face, from protecting internet users from misinformation to helping software engineers make group decisions. Taking the time to listen deeply and widely to other people, with the diligence and curiosity of an anthropologist studying a remote far-flung community, can help us see beyond the narrow lens of polls and surveys.

 

March 2021

  • Emotional intelligence is now widely accepted as a crucial aspect of successful leadership, with emotionally intelligent leaders seen as being better able to provide the kind of psychologically safe environments that encourage the best from their team. Research from Cambridge Judge Business School revealed that emotionally intelligent leaders are also ideal for innovation to flourish. The research, which involved around 15,000 workers, found that supervisors with high levels of emotional intelligence created opportunities for growth among employees, which in turn supported their creativity.

 

October 2020

  • Fungi force us to reconsider what intelligence means. It’s an emotive, slippery and in many ways unhelpful word - for many people it is synonymous with sentience or consciousness, while at the same time being notoriously hard to measure even within a given species, let alone to compare across the species divide. Many animal behaviourists prefer instead to speak of cognition: the neural processes that govern behaviour. But that generally assumes a brain, or at least a nervous system. Plants and fungi have neither. What they do share in common with us and other “higher” animals is a system of branching filaments that act as conduits for signals of some kind - signals that put cells and tissues here in touch with those there

 

June 2020

  • Economic growth will also depend heavily on the speed at which we can find a vaccine, manufacture it at scale and make it globally accessible. The World Health Organisation initiative to ensure worldwide sharing of all Covid-19-related knowledge, data and technologies by making a pool of Covid-19 patent licences freely available to all countries is a great move in this direction. The virus can only be defeated with truly collective intelligence, economist Mariana Mazzucato told the Financial Times. 

 

May 2019

  • Society prizes intelligence. Geniuses are often viewed with awe and assumed to be guaranteed prosperity and success. Yet there is a dark side to intelligence. Many gifted children's childhood can often be unhappy. For example, Mensa is an international organisation founded in Britain in 1946 to nurture the country’s most intelligent people. However when an Economist reporter put out a request via Mensa to hear from gifted children and their parents, her inbox filled with emails, many of them anguished

 

August 2018

 

July 2018

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