BoldItalic
First Post
At last, we agree on something. They are not mathematically equal. But I didn't assert that they were. I argue that the Investigation skill models one aspect of what is commonly called intelligence. You haven't refuted that. You have just denied something else, something that wasn't contentious anyway.That doesn't make investigation = intelligence, though. A skill modified by intelligence does not make that skill = intelligence.
Do you accept the proposition that the Investigation skill models one aspect of what is commonly called intelligence? Or do you wish to propose an argument that refutes it?
They do in my book of logic.Exceptions to a rule do not disprove the rule.
∃X:¬P(X) → ¬∀X

But maybe you've read a different book?