eternal_neophyte comments on There is no such thing as strength: a parody - Less Wrong Discussion
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Does this definition resolve the problem posed by the OP, that competence in one of various different specific activities requiring strength doesn't imply competence in the others? That is, after all, the basis on which IQ tests are attacked - competence on Raven's progressive matrices doesn't imply competence at the Piano. If we would answer their objection by saying that intelligence is the general capacity to solve problems, have we shed any light on what ties these capacities together?
That's what I interpreted James Miller to mean, at least roughly.
Seems to me to be merely a difference of degree. While not "leaping out", brain-mass and intelligence do seem to correlate non-trivially (at least when cranial volume is measured via MRI):
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2668913/
"imply" is a word that suggests you think about whether it makes sense that there a causal relation between the two task. That's not central for IQ. g is a statistical construct that does things that aren't obvious.