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The Economic Times
The Economic Times
Aastha Raj

Psychology says people who can’t tie their shoelaces but solve impossible math problems may have an advantage: The surprising reason our brains work this way

Have you ever met someone who can solve a difficult differential equation in minutes but struggles to make a necktie or tie their shoelaces properly? At first, it sounds strange. Many people assume intelligence works like a video game level. If someone is extremely smart, they should automatically be good at everything. But psychology says the human brain does not work that way. In reality, some of the world's brightest thinkers struggle with everyday physical tasks. This isn't because they are lazy, careless or less intelligent. It happens because the brain stores different kinds of intelligence in different systems.

Modern psychology has a name for this idea: being brilliant in one area does not guarantee mastery in another.

Psychology says intelligence is not a single superpower

For many years, schools trained us to believe intelligence is one giant bucket. The smarter a person is, the better they should be at life. But researchers have repeatedly found that intelligence is more like a toolbox. A person may possess exceptional abstract reasoning skills while simultaneously finding physical coordination difficult.

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