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Only if your prior was that intelligent people should be easy to get to question their cherished beliefs.

Not really. Only people who claim to follow logic, reasoning, and scientific thinking who tend to be intelligent, but not all intelligent people do that. These people (the scienticians) should in theory understand that they should conform their beliefs to the data, not the other way around. Science is supposed to be set up to avoid confirmation bias, and that's why the falsification principle that Karl Popper set up was supposed to be so powerful.

But yeah, they disregard all that when their beliefs are sufficiently cherised.

Smart people do not, by and large, change their beliefs, no matter the evidence.

That has been my experience.

http://culturalcognition.squarespace.com/browse-papers/motivated-numeracy-and-enlightened-self-government.html

Very interesting. But not at all surprising to me.

Raw intelligence, g, or IQ is an impediment to wisdom.

Weird, I started the article writing precisely about the difference between intelligence and wisdom, but it diverged so much that I changed the topic. I'll finish the article about wisdom later.

It allows us to bully others with complex arguments, Euler math and factiods, which reinforces our intellectual arrogance. Being smart moves you further from Truth, not closer. It is a handicap to be struggled with, not a superpower.

I think this is the case, but it shouldn't be the case. Smart people have the capacity to move closer to the truth, but only by using the right heuristic, and scientific thinking clearly doesn't seem to be sufficient. Intellectual humility is necessary, and accepting the possibility that perhaps they could be wrong, which many don't.