Padraic P. McGuinness, “Mensa — a front for a mutual admiration society,” The Sydney Morning Herald, August 24, 2000, p. 12.

Mensa has found out the hard way that high intelligence correlates in no way with good character, emotional stability, personal charisma or understanding of other people, argues Padraic P. McGuinness.

Recently we learnt of the death of the founder of a strange little international conspiracy, Mensa. Lancelot Ware died in London aged 85. The great idea of the Mensa organisation was that if only it were possible to get together all the most intelligent people in the community, they could have an overwhelming influence for good and social welfare.

It was an outgrowth of the cult of the IQ — the intelligence quotient. There has been a huge amount of controversy over the notion of IQ, especially as to whether it was a genuine aspect of human personality, whether it could change over a person’s lifetime, whether it was genetically determined (that is, was mainly hereditary), and whether it was a class-biased concept.

The basic idea is that there is some measurable feature of the behaviour of the human brain which is an indicator of general intelligence, and which is a good predictor of performance in later life, especially in intellectually demanding pursuits. The first is virtually undeniable on the evidence; the latter is rather more questionable.

Thus someone with a high performance in pure mathematics will not necessarily even prove to be an innovator in that field, let alone competent in academic, managerial or applied scientific pursuits. But to start with a great deal of basic mathematical ability does make it possible to progress in such fields in a way which innumeracy does not.

There has been a vicious onslaught on the idea of hereditary intelligence over the last 30 years, mainly for reasons of political and social ideology. A great deal of the argument has been beside the point, since in any case we do not know much about the sources and nature of mental ability — the work of Professor Allan Snyder, at the Australian National University’s Centre for the Mind, suggests that most people might have as yet unplumbed mental capacities. The real problem is why some people manifest them and others cannot.

Unfortunately, this centre sometimes sounds like a new version of Mensa. For years much research into intelligence was aborted by political attacks — culminating even in violence directed at preventing the then leading expert in the field, the late Professor Hans Eysenck, from speaking on Australian university campuses.

What does Mensa contribute to all this? Hardly anything, really.

I must declare an interest, in that my elder brother was one of the founders of Australian Mensa. As a result I have known quite a few members of Mensa, both here and overseas, during my life. It has always seemed to me to suffer from snobbery and the insufferable smugness of those who are able to display their high scores in a number of paper tests as some kind of apology for not having succeeded in exercising the kind of influence which Ware, and his successors, including the late Victor Serebriakoff, thought they should.

Mensa meetings are usually held in private houses where people play games, verbal and logical (ie, puzzles), socialise and indulge in mutual admiration of each other’s IQ scores.

That this has sometimes absurd results was brought home to me years ago when a perfectly nice and entertaining acquaintance among the local science fiction fans (there was always an overlap, since science fiction in those days idolised the intellectual superman while popular fiction idolised the sporting superman) had his life ruined when he tested out with an IQ of 100 — perfectly average. It was no solace to him that he was more intelligent than a lot of other people. He wanted to be more intelligent than most other people, and, of course, many of his friends laughed up their sleeves at his inferiority.

The best that really can be said about Mensa is that it is a perfectly harmless failed conspiracy. It has discovered the hard way that high intelligence correlates in no way with good character, emotional stability, personal charisma or understanding of other people. There are just as many nasty as nice intelligent people. About all one can say with some certainty is that high intelligence increases the amount of harm that a person can do to the human race. It, of course, also increases the amount of good. For example, our present high living standard and remarkable, even if dangerous, grasp of the building blocks of the universe and of life are the creations of high intelligence.

Intelligence does not seem to be the same as genius in any case. Nor is it the same as talent in various fields held in high esteem by humanity, such as music or the visual arts (although mathematical and musical ability to seem to go hand in hand). Still less does it correspond with such talents as linguistic ability.

The worst product of the cult of the IQ has been the emergence of the anti-IQ cult, seen most clearly among those schoolteachers, usually of mediocre intelligence or achievement themselves, who like to think that education should somehow level out differences, and who deny that there is any element in intelligence which is the product of other than crudely interpreted environmental or cultural difference. Often the product of the basest kind of envy, this has frequently meant that clearly gifted children have been penalised and stunted rather than encouraged to develop their talents to the fullest.

But Mensa has not helped.