Possibly because the dumb women want to be intelligent like the men
Every species has its own particular adaptation. Intelligence is a specialty of H. sapiens. Note that there are a few other species which have a nearly human level of intelligence, such as the various species of great apes, the elephant, and possibly the dolphin. Even the octopus, an invertebrate, is remarkably intelligent. So, although it is true that our species is the most intelligent species on Earth as far as we know, intelligence is not a uniquely human attribute. We just have slightly more.
Every part of the brain - except possibly the brain stem, where involuntary processes are - contributes to intelligence.
Open mind does not mean intelligent. Open minded means someone will consider positions that are outside and possibly in conflict with their own. Intelligent is synonymous with smart. One could be either, neither or both,
Strongly disagree
No, and no intelligent person would even consider that to even POSSIBLY be true.
No, the size of someone's head does not determine their intellectual abilities. It is important to avoid making assumptions about a person's intelligence based on physical characteristics. Intelligence is a complex trait influenced by multiple factors.
Possibly a camera man. If you specialize in photographing celebrities, you could be called a paparazzo.
A business enterprise could improvise and enhance their business by hiring a market intelligence company. The strategies provided by such firms could possibly help the business to grow.
I think you mean, "What was Bella's phone number?" Or quite possibly, "is." Even still, that was a very intelligent question. (sarcasm)
In their opinion, possibly. In our opinion, not a chance.
Ultimately, research for Artificial Intelligence tries to create intelligent systems, systems which make their own free decisions with the ability to recognize and solve problems, systems which improve by learning from experience and error, in contrast to static systems following a (possibly complex) set of rules.However, as the great Marvin Minsky described it in his 2001 Where's HAL? lecture (paraphrasing from memory) they make a robot walk down the hall trying to find a treasure. In 9 out of 10 cases, it doesn't find the treasure. However, when it does find the treasure, the video camera didn't work to record it, and they can't make the robot do it again.Along similar lines, the great Noam Chomsky pointed out in a November 2012 interview that research for artificial intelligence still isn't able to predict the behavior of the nematode C. elegans with just 300 neurons (see related links for an insightful interview), not to speak of understanding more complex intelligent lifeforms.While the quest for artificial intelligence undoubtedly is a noble one, the current state of the art is that there is very limited practical application and very limited success in terms of truly intelligent (artificial) systems.