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Abel Dean's avatar

I have long been a member of the racial "hereditarian" school of thought, and I listen to the American Renaissance podcast. They have plenty of problems, and I have plenty of differences with them. Nevertheless they seem to get it right much more often than they are commonly credited. I am more in line with the more free spirited thinkers on such matters, such as Richard Hanania, Bo Winegard, and Sam Harris.

If we were to seriously resolve the Flynn effect, it is likely with biology. That may seem absurd, but both sides of the debate are out of touch with the biology as it really is. A "reaction norm" is a range of trait values that follow from a single genotype and depend on a range of environmental values. Further, states along a reaction norm can be heritable, i.e. locusts tend to reproduce locusts and grasshoppers grasshoppers, though you may see a shift from one to another over many generations depending on population density. Neither side of our debate has really confronted that possibility, preferring only to ignore it. (But, I am working on it as a personal scientific project, as I think I have proved that many human traits have shifted due to decreasing juvenile mortality, our genes shifting from offspring quantity to quality.) In the end, then, though they have closed their minds to such solutions to such problems as the Flynn effect, the hereditarians would still end up being mostly correct. The anti-hereditarians will have nothing to do with biology to explain intelligence differences either across generations or across races.

I think we need to confront the implicit doctrine that equality is the default hypothesis. That would be plainly wrong if we were to apply that doctrine to racial height differences. Some races are taller than others, and it seems to follow largely from biology. Why should it be so different for intelligence? Why should we assume from the get-go that all races are equally smart? You can point out a lot of puzzles and potential escape hatches, but that isn't the same as building a probable model of the human species in which all races have equal intelligence. I don't think any serious thinker would do so, either, as they prefer to either defend the racial hereditarian model or (more commonly) attack it, not build any convincing alternative.

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Michael Magoon's avatar

I am not sure that I understand your logic. As far as I know, no hereditarians believe that there is no environmental impact on intelligence. It is their opponents who claim that there is no genetic impact. If your claim is that it is both, then how are you not largely supporting the hereditarian argument?

Unless you claim that there is evidence for no biological differences, then you are a weak hereditarian rather than a strong hereditarian, no?

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