Khross wrote:
Diamondeye:
Literacy is a measure of trained reasoning, particularly inference and deduction. There are sentences I could write that while perfectly intelligible, you would now understand. I'm absolutely certain that the reverse is true as well. Literacy is not the ability to recognize words as they appear in written format. It is goes far beyond that.
Interesting.
I would point out though, that any sentence I could write that you wouldn't understand would involve terms which have highly specialized technical meanings within my areas of expertise, and the reverse would be true for sentences you would write that I couldn't make heads or tails of.
Since not everyone is trained in every area of expertise, however intelligent they may be, I don't think you're trying to say that the inability to understand sentences describing highly specialized matters is a good measure of literacy for the average person.
So it seems you are saying that there is a certain lower limit of reasoning power which is necessary to achieve functional literacy and another, higher, lower limit to achieve full literacy (leaving out literacy in specialized areas). That seems quite reasonable to me. However I would also ask if a person of average intelligence can be expected to meet either standard, and if they cannot, why is the standard so high?