Fascinating review by J.P. Rushton of Richard Lynn's IQ and the Wealth of Nations in VDARE. Lynn's book lists average IQs for scores of nations, from Equatorial Guinea on the bottom to Hong Kong on the top.
I take a somewhat more optimistic view of         the data than Rushton. The correlation Lynn found between IQ and per         capita income is extraordinary, around 0.75 - maybe the highest         correlation ever seen in the social sciences for a world-historic         issue like this. As a former marketing researcher, I have some doubts         about how demographically representative the samples from each country         were (I haven't seen the book yet), because t's extremely expensive to         get a perfectly nationally representative sample. But keep this crucial         point in mind: better data would almost certainly raise Lynn's         correlation!
But which way does the arrow of causation run? It probably runs both ways. Higher IQs lead to higher average incomes (for obvious reasons), but higher incomes probably also lead to higher IQs. If the latter wasn't true, it would be very hard to understand why African-Americans outscore Africans by 15 points (an entire standard deviation).
The good news is that it should be         possible to set off a virtuous cycle of higher IQs leading to a         wealthier, more civilized society that in turn leads to even higher IQs,         and so forth. In fact, this has probably been happening in a lot of the         world. But how could we fully ignite this process in the low IQ portions         of the 3rd World? There's probably no way short of 22nd Century genetic         engineering to make Equatorial Guinea into Hong Kong, but it ought to be         possible to do something to raise the next generations' IQs.
But we don't really know yet. Education         probably helps. But there may be other, cheaper ways that focus on         alleviating biological problems that prevent people from reaching their         genetic potential in intelligence. Perhaps some IQ-cognizant         philanthropic computer zillionaire should fund intense research into how         to raise IQ's in 3rd World countries. (Hey, Larry Ellison - this         is how you could trump Bill Gates at saving the world!) A rise of         just a few points could mean a big improvement in the workings of these         countries. Lynn and the New Zealand scholar James Flynn, working         separately, have shown that raw IQs scores have been rising in         many countries - the Lynn-Flynn effect - but we know very little about         what causes this or how significant it is. Lynn himself has demonstrated         that malnutrition hurts IQ, but we need to know more the precise         mechanisms. Perhaps getting enough of certain nutrients early in life         can make a modest but significant difference. Arthur Jensen thinks that         is likely.
Further, I strongly suspect, based on twins raised apart data, that infections sap IQ. Tropical countries are more germ-ridden than temperate countries. Unfortunately, we really don't know much about which germs knock a few points off IQ. This is something that ought to be studied in depth. But practically nobody is doing it because IQ researchers are considered the devil's spawn these days.
 
 
 
 Posts
Posts
 
 
 
 
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment