intelligence Hear it!

intelligence Definition

in·tel·li·gence (in telə jəns)

noun

    1. the ability to learn or understand from experience; ability to acquire and retain knowledge; mental ability
    2. the ability to respond quickly and successfully to a new situation; use of the faculty of reason in solving problems, directing conduct, etc. effectively
    3. Psychol. measured success in using these abilities to perform certain tasks
    4. generally, any degree of keenness of mind, cleverness, shrewdness, etc.
  1. news or information
    1. the gathering of secret information, as for military or police purposes
    2. the persons or agency employed at this
  2. an intelligent spirit or being

Etymology: OFr < L intelligentia, perception, discernment < intelligens, prp. of intelligere: see intellect

Related Forms:

  • intelligential in·tel′·li·gen′·tial (-jens̸həl) adjective
intelligence Synonyms

intelligence

n.

  1. Understanding

    perspicacity, discernment, comprehension; see acumen, judgment 1.

  2. Ability

    capacity, skill, aptitude; see ability 1, 2.

  3. Secret information

    report, news, statistics, facts, inside information, account, knowledge, info*, the dope*, the lowdown*; see also data, knowledge 1, news 1, secret.

  4. The mind

    intellect, brain, mentality; see mind 1.

Intelligence Hacker Definition
According to Jeffery T. Richelson in his tome The U.S. Intelligence Community, “intelligence” is the product of an information search and analysis about some foreign nation or about that nation’s operation areas of particular interest. In the United States, the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) collects overseas intelligence, whereas the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) collects domestic intelligence. Today, the collection of intelligence includes employing hacking skills to access information stored in computer systems around the world. Legally, the CIA cannot collect intelligence against a U.S. citizen unless the investigation began overseas. For these kinds of cases, the CIA communicates with and shares intelligence with the FBI.

See Also: U.S. Intelligence Community.

Milnet.com. MILNET: Intelligence Defined. [Online, November 4, 1997.] Milnet.com Website. http://www.milnet.com/definei.htm.
intelligence Usage Examples

Preposition: of

  • electorate: The Natural Law Party will base its campaign on knowledge, and place its confidence in the intelligence of the British electorate.

Converse of object

  • gather: However, they had been useful in gathering intelligence for the Allies.
  • underestimate: Perhaps Lord Melchett underestimates the intelligence of the consumers.
  • embed: What are we really aiming for when we try to embed intelligence in all the objects around us?
  • possess: Daring, utterly original and possessing a keen intelligence, Jim Sclavunos ' The Vanity Set demands your immediate attention.
  • distribute: David Leiper explains how the concept and ' art ' of distributed intelligence can help end users solve this particularly thorny problem.

Adjective modifier

  • artificial: SCULLY: Mulder, that level of artificial intelligence is decades away from being realized.
  • emotional: The emerging literature of emotional intelligence may be relevant.
  • ambient: A social and technological view of ambient intelligence in everyday life: what bends the trend?
  • actionable: Eleven per cent of these resulted in actionable intelligence.
  • multiple: Howard Gardner's theory of multiple intelligences contradicts the old views of the nature of intelligence.
  • military: It was a classic example of predetermined policy driving military intelligence.

Modifies a noun

  • gathering: They also visited 28 offenders in prison for intelligence gathering purposes.
  • agency: Second, increase the Director's authorities with regard to all national intelligence agencies.
  • analyst: The report does note a minority of intelligence analysts believes the tubes are for conventional weapons, not a nuclear program.
  • quotient: A child is born with a certain intelligence quotient.
  • officer: The first phrase was written by an intelligence officer.
  • operative: Plainclothes intelligence operatives from the Interior Ministry filtered back into the province as the Kosovo Liberation Army renewed its attacks.

Noun used with modifier

  • swarm: I also have a growing interest in swarm intelligence and homeostatic systems.
  • market: With regular e-mails you can build relationships and gather market intelligence.
intelligence Quotes

Die Probleme werden gel o« st, nicht durch Beibringen neuer Erfahrung, sondern durch Zusammenstellung des l a« ngst Bekannten. Die Philosophie ist ein Kampf gegen dieVerhexung unseresVerstandes durch die Mittel unserer Sprache. The problems are solved, not by giving new information, but by arranging what we have always known. Philosophy is a battle against the bewitchment of our intelligence by means of language.

—Wittgenstein, LudwigJosef Johann

Book learning, or intelligence of one sort, doesn't guarantee you intelligence of another sort.You can behave just as stupidly with a good college education.

—Byrne, David

Ihappentofeel thatthe degree of a person's intelligence is directly reflected by the number of conflicting attitudes she can bring to bear on the same topic.

—Alther, Lisa ne¤  e Reed

As elaborate a waste of human intelligence as you can find outside an advertising agency.

—Chandler, Raymond

How do you explain school to a higher intelligence?

—Mathison, Melissa

   The Fight for our National Intelligence.

—Cattell, Raymond B(ernard)

Armed with a notebook, ingratiating grin and fine intelligence, he grew to be a most discerning witness of America's most distinctive rite, not just the election but the making of our presidents.

—NewYorkTimes

O bom era ter uma intelige"  ncia e na‹  o entender. Era uma be"  n c° a‹  o estranha como a de ter loucura sem ser doida. Era um desinteresse manso em rela c° a‹  o a'  s coisas ditas do intelecto, uma do c° ura de estupidez. What was good was to have intelligence and yet not understand. It was a strange blessing like experiencing madness without being mad. It was a gentle lack of interest with respect to the so-called things of the intellect, a sweet stupidity.

—Lispector, Clarice

The quality of strength lined with tenderness is an unbeatable combination, as are intelligence and necessity when unblunted by formal education.

—Angelou, Maya originally MayaJohnson

On the summit of the precipice and in the deep green woods emotions as palpable and as true have agitated me as if I were surveying them with the blessing of sight. There was an intelligence in the winds of the hills and in the solemn stillness of the buried foliage that could not be misleading. It entered into my heart and I could have wept, notthat Ididnot see, butthat Icould not portrayall I felt.

—Holman,James

A third-rate political wheel-horse, with the face of a moving-picture actor, the intelligence of a respectable agricultural implement dealer, and the imagination of a lodge joiner†a benign blanköa decent, harmless, laborious, hollow-headed mediocrity.

—Mencken, H(enry) L(ouis)

Let man's soul be a sphere, and then, in this, The intelligence that moves, devotion is.

—Donne,John

   The death of Nelson was felt in England as something more than a public calamity; men started at the intelligence, and turned pale, as if they had heard of the loss of a dear friend.

—Southey, Robert

To us, who are regaled every morning and evening with intelligence, and are supplied from day to day with materials for conversation, it is difficult to conceive how man can subsist without a newspaper.

—Johnson, Samuel known as Dr Johnson

The first duty of the press is to obtain the earliest and most correct intelligence of the events of the time, and bydisclosing them, to makethemthe common property of the nation.

—TheTimes

‚Oh inteligencia, soledad en llamas, que todo lo concibe sin crearlo! Oh intelligence, flaming solitude, envisioning all without creating!

—Gorostiza,Jose¤

Poetry must resist the intelligence almost successfully.

—Stevens,Wallace

The cardinal tenets of feminism divided my generation, effectively disempowering and disenfranchising its members. It does make me bitterlyangry that my generation, which prided itself so complacently on its soul, on its powers of intelligence and analysis, should have fallen so cloddishly for totalitarian simplicities which declared a war of eternal opposition between men and women.

—Lynd, Robert

We can applaud the state lottery as a public subsidy of intelligence, for it yields public income that is calculated to lighten the tax burden of us prudent abstainers at the expense of the benighted masses of wishful thinkers.

—Quine,Willard Van Orman

Advertising may be described as the science of arresting human intelligence long enough to get money from it.

—Leacock, Stephen Butler

   The test of a first-rate intelligence is the ability to hold two opposed ideas inthemind atthesametime, and still retain the ability to function.

—Fitzgerald, F(rancis) Scott Key

Les ve¤  rite¤  s de¤  couvertes par l'intelligence demeurent ste¤  riles. Truths discovered by intelligence are sterile.

—Thibault

I am imbued with two deep impressions; the first, that science knows no country; the second, which seems to contradict the first, although it is really a direct consequence of it†that science is the highest personification of the nation. Science knows no country because knowledge belongs to humanity, and is the torch which illuminates the world. Science is the highest personification of the nation because that nation will remain the first which carries the furthest the works of thought and intelligence.

—Pasteur, Louis