It said the average for those three groups. Therefore, if there were equal numbers of all three then the average for each could be:Mountaineer wrote: ↑Sat Mar 28, 2020 12:08 pmI think some of the data is flawed. An IQ average of 125 for engineers is way, way too low, unless of course, that is the average of the bottom 1%.Libertarian666 wrote: ↑Fri Mar 27, 2020 11:41 pmI agree that engineers are the smartest.yankees60 wrote: ↑Fri Mar 27, 2020 8:15 pm After finally finishing that Mattis book I picked up this one to read:
The Intelligence Trap: Why Smart People Make Dumb Mistakes
https://smile.amazon.com/Intelligence-T ... l_huc_item
Excellent book so far and will going back to it shortly.
Here is one fact from it: The average IQ of accountants, lawyers, engineers is 125. The range is 97 to 157.
By the way, having started out at a math / science / engineering college and then finally finding that my correct path was in the business school (accounting -- though I always wondered if I'd not been in such a purely theoretical program as a math major but, instead, been in a more practical one that I could have also been an actuary, at the top of the list the ratio to highly paid / low stress)… I come out with this general hierarchy of intelligence...
1) Engineers
2) Lawyers
3) Accountants
Anyone I've known who has an undergraduate degree in engineering and then gone on to get an MBA has given the impression that getting the MBA was "baby" work.
Vinny
Of course I might be biased, since I'm a "software engineer".![]()
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120 - accountants
125 - lawyers
130 - engineers
That would fit my preconceptions for each group and would come out to 125 as the average for the three groups combined.
Having gone though part of an intense math / science / engineering regimen and then upper level business / accounting courses I can first person testify that the intellectual prowess is far greater to be able to meet the demands of the former than the latter.
Vinny