It seems to us that in intelligence
there is a fundamental faculty, the
alteration or the lack of which, is
of the utmost importance for
practical life. This faculty is
judgment, otherwise called good
sense, practical sense, initiative,
the faculty of adapting one's self
to circumstances. A person may
be a moron or an imbecile if he is
lacking in judgment; but with good
judgment he can never be either.
Indeed the rest of the intellectual
faculties seem of little importance
in comparison with judgment
Alfred Binet
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