Does arrogance go hand in hand with intelligence?
I've been watching the recent events on these threads, and I've just been wondering 'does arrogance go hand in hand with intelligence'?
It seems to me looking on that the people on the site who are most anxious to prove to others how clever they are are also the ones who show the least regard for other people. It looks like people get so caught up in wanting to win an arguement that they forget that the person they are having that arguement with is a person too.
I know that intelligent people can often feel bruised and battered by the rest of the world, a lot of them maybe got bullied at school or didn't get recognised for their intelligence. Jesus I know that I didn't, and I had a chip on my shoulder for years. But this seems to lead to a callousness, a wish to be heard that over rides any other human feelings that should be present.
It seems that the feeling that you yourself are very intelligent leads you to set yourself in opposition to everyone else, as if you feel they somehow have the ability to wipe you out by not agreeing with you. This leads to what can only describe as a kind of bullying persona, where people are going to listen whether they like it or not.
To change someone's mind about something, I think you have to collaborate with them, enter into a process of thinking with them, not shouting at them. Everyone feels the need to communicate what they think, and this kind of precious arrogance seems to take that right away, because what is important is winning the arguement, not the process of the discussion.
I really do wonder whether people who are intent showing just how clever they are actually have that much interest in other people. If someone can't recognise that other people are complicated beings who also think a lot, also have beliefs, wishes, hopes, that there is so much that lies below the surface of what they say, can we really trust their other conclusions, if they have made such a fundamental mistake?
Doesn't it make you wonder when someone finds the act of talking more valuable than the act of listening?