>>9839757There is no absolute measure of intelligence. What we call IQ is intelligence relative to other people. For example, I could touch one surface and another, hotter, surface and easily tell you that one of them is hotter than the other without giving you any quantitative units. If you gave me multiple different surfaces of varying temperatures, I could tell you which one was the hottest and which one was the coldest (assuming all surfaces are made of the same material, because part of our perception of heat depends on how conducting the material is, and that my fingers are invincible), again, without giving any units. I could tell you which one was colder and which one was hotter than than room temperature, 25 degrees Celsius, just by touch. Consider room temperature to be an IQ of 100, which is the standard/average IQ, the peak of the normal distribution.