Like all of the Western world’s public intellectuals who are more interested in their own happiness than in truth (see Jason Richwine’s 2013 dismissal from the Heritage Foundation for an example of what obvious truths one should not say publicly if you want to get ahead), Dennis Prager says he cares little about IQ. By being deliberately obtuse, he gets to have a nice life, make millions of dollars, enjoy vast popularity and go on television regularly. On the other hand, he sacrifices truth for cant.
Jan. 27, 2014, Dennis said: “All of my life I have said that the most important macro value, societal value, is truth. Virtually all evil emanates from lies.”
Feb. 18, 2014, Dennis said: “People think brains are more important than everything. I knew at such a young age that was not true. I saw these kids in high school, some of them had such magnificent brains, but they couldn’t navigate life. There were kids with great brains who cheated on tests…”
“I think those studies [that show a correlation between IQ and delayed gratification], if they exist, are crap. The idea that IQ correlates with character sickens me. You think a person of normal intelligence doesn’t understand delayed gratification but a person with an Einstein IQ understands it better?”
Caller: “I think they’re able to live in the future a little bit more.”
Dennis: “Do you know how many brilliant Nazis and Communists there were? There were more intellectuals who supported Stalin than hardhats. I’m giving you a powerful example of the lack of correlation between brilliance, great brains, and decency. There is no correlation.”
Caller: “Maybe it works better in the other direction and say that most people who become petty criminals and live lives of characterless drift tend to not have high intelligence.”
Dennis: “That’s a good question. I don’t think it’s necessary. I think people of completely average intelligence can be superior human beings. I don’t think the saints of the 20th Century, like those who rescued Jews in the Holocaust, had extraordinary IQs.”
“The brains thing blows my mind. I know I have a good brain, but I have rarely been impressed with brains. So what? It’s a blessing like a good voice is a blessing. It never excited me when I would meet brilliant people. If they weren’t good, they were boring. I felt that as a child and I feel that today. Goodness interests me more than brilliance.”
“This reveling in brains drives me crazy. It’s like revelling in baseball ability. If you have it, great, but it doesn’t make you who you are.”
“The stupid stupid notion that brains determine your life. Common sense is more important than brains. Wisdom is more important than brains… The average person is perfectly intelligent enough to deal with life. I have met very very few people that I walked away thinking, that person has a very low IQ. Everybody I work with at my home radio station is bright. Every single person. Since it runs across the gamut of human background, I have to believe that the vast majority of people are bright… I know one rocket scientist who is an emotional and psychological basketcase. It’s a very narrow greatness, brains. Without wisdom, common sense, and character, it’s nothing.”
According to Dennis: “Use your common sense. Whenever you hear the words, studies show’ — outside of the natural sciences — and you find that these studies show the opposite of what common sense suggests, be very skeptical. I do not recall ever coming across a valid that contravened common sense.”
Say the authors of the book, 50 Great Myths of Popular Psychology, “Contrary to Dennis Prager, psychological studies that overturn our common sense are sometimes right. Indeed, one of our primary goals in this book is to encourage you to mistrust your common sense when evaluating psychological claims. As a general rule, you should consult research evidence, not your intuitions, when deciding whether a scientific claim is correct. Research suggests that snap judgments are often helpful in sizing up people and in forecasting our likes and dislikes, but they can be wildly inaccurate when it comes to gauging the accuracy of psychological theories or assertions.”
According to Steve Sailer: “The greatest trick the intelligent ever pulled was convincing the world intelligence doesn’t exist.”
Sailer wrote: “Jewish intellectuals have a tendency that on any topic related to Jews, they tend to think baroquely many steps down the line. Thus, the full panoply of the subjects that have been assumed to be bad-for-the-Jews and therefore ruled out of discussion in polite society is breathtakingly broad — for example, IQ has been driven out of the media in large part because it is feared that mentioning that Jews have higher average IQs would lead, many steps down the line, to pogroms.”