Much of the excitement among investigators in the field of
intelligence derives from their trying to determine exactly what intelligence
is. Different investigators have emphasized different aspects of intelligence in
their definitions. For example, in a 1921 symposium on the definition of
intelligence, the American psychologist Lewis M. Ter-man emphasized the ability
to think abstractly, while another American psychologist, Edward L. Thorndike,
emphasized learning and the ability to give good responses to questions. In a
similar 1986 symposium, however, psychologists generally agreed on the
importance of adaptation to the environment as the key to understanding both
what intelligence is and what it does. Such adaptation may occur in a variety of
environmental situations. For example, a student in school learns the material
that is required to pass or do well in a course; a physician treating a patient
with an unfamiliar disease adapts by learning about the diseases; an artist
reworks a painting in order to make it convey a more harmonious impression. For
the most part, adapting involves making a change in oneself in order to cope
more effectively, but sometimes effective adaptation involves either changing
the environment or finding a new environment altogether.
Effective adaptation draws upon a number of cognitive processes, such as
perception, learning, memory, reasoning, and problem solving. The main trend in
defining intelligence, then, is that it is not itself a cognitive or mental
process, but rather a selective combination of these processes purposively
directed toward effective adaptation to the environment. For examples, the
physician noted above learning about a new disease adapts by perceiving material
on the disease in medical literature, learning what the material contains,
remembering crucial aspects of it that are needed to treat the patient, and then
reasoning to solve the problem of how to apply the information to the needs of
the patient. Intelligence, in sum, has come to be regarded as not a single
ability, but an effective drawing together of many abilities. This has not
always been obvious to investigators of the subject, however, and, indeed, much
of the history of the field revolves around arguments, regarding the nature and
abilities that constitute intelligence.
According to the passage, how do you understand
"effective adaptation"
【参考答案】
It lies chiefly in changing oneself to cope with the environ......