Continuing iSteve's nonstop coverage of what high-IQ  Steves are thinking about, in Wired, Steven Johnson writes in "Dome  Improvement":
 
The  classic heritability research paradigm is the twin adoption study: Look at IQ  scores for thousands of individuals with various forms of shared genes and  environments, and hunt for correlations. This is the sort of chart you get, with  100 being a perfect match and 0 pure randomness:
 The same person tested twice: 87
 Identical twins raised together: 86
 Identical twins raised apart: 76
 Fraternal twins raised together: 55
 Biological siblings: 47
 Parents and children living together: 40
 Parents and children living apart: 31
 Adopted children living together: 0
 Unrelated people living apart: 0
 After analyzing these shifting ratios of shared genes and the environment for  several decades, the consensus grew, in the '90s, that heritability for IQ was  around 0.6 - or about 60 percent. The two most powerful indications of this are  at the top and bottom of the chart: Identical twins raised in different  environments have IQs almost as similar to each other as the same person tested  twice, while adopted children living together - shared environment, but no  shared genes - show no correlation. When you look at a chart like that, the  evidence for significant heritability looks undeniable.
 Four years ago, Flynn and William Dickens, a Brookings Institution economist,  proposed another explanation, one made apparent to them by the Flynn effect.  Imagine "somebody who starts out with a tiny little physiological  advantage: He's just a bit taller than his friends," Dickens says.  "That person is going to be just a bit better at basketball." Thanks  to this minor height advantage, he tends to enjoy pickup basketball games. He  goes on to play in high school, where he gets excellent coaching and accumulates  more experience and skill. "And that sets up a cycle that could, say, take  him all the way to the NBA," Dickens says.
 Now imagine this person has an identical twin raised separately. He, too, will  share the height advantage, and so be more likely to find his way into the same  cycle. And when some imagined basketball geneticist surveys the data at the end  of that cycle, he'll report that two identical twins raised apart share an  off-the-charts ability at basketball. "If you did a genetic analysis, you'd  say: Well, this guy had a gene that made him a better basketball player,"  Dickens says. "But the fact is, that gene is making him 1 percent better,  and the other 99 percent is that because he's slightly taller, he got all this  environmental support." And what goes for basketball goes for intelligence:  Small genetic differences get picked up and magnified in the environment,  resulting in dramatically enhanced skills. "The heritability studies  weren't wrong," Flynn says. "We just misinterpreted them."    
Flynn is, personally, a  great guy, he does important research, and this explanation is not implausible.  For example, it helps explain why identical twins tend to become more alike in  IQ as they get older -- as they grow apart, they mold their environments to fit  their genetic makeups better. Most notably, their environments are no longer  distorted by having to play an unnatural role distinct from that of their  identical twin (such as leader or follower, which many twin pairs adopt just so  they get things done). For example, two extremely tall identical twins on one  high school basketball team can cause problems because both are natural centers,  but one has to play power forward. If they go to different colleges, they might  both then play center -- i.e., their environments become more appropriate for  their genetic codes.
 Still, Flynn needs to lose this pseudo-example about NBA players. Living in New  Zealand, he seems to have forgotten that NBA basketball players are not  distinguished by just a 1% biological advantage over non-NBA individuals.
 Now and then, I run into movie and TV stars on the street -- Tom Hanks, Robin  Williams, Geena Davis, etc. -- and when dressed to be inconspicuous, they are  fairly inconspicuous. Most screen stars are not obvious genetic marvels,  although they are clearly above average in looks and talent. So, Flynn's 1%  genetic advantage theory might, or might not, be true for Tom Hanks.
 (Although it's definitely not true for Robin Williams, at least not as a  stand-up comedian, where he's about seven standard deviations from the mean.  Dana Carvey tells the story about how, long ago, as a young man trying to get  his courage up to try comedy, he went to an open-mike night, and promised  himself he'd get up on stage if he thought he was better than the other amateurs  on the list before him. Dana was feeling very good about himself, until the guy  before him did his act: "Oh, no, I'll never, ever be even close to  him!" he lamented. That amateur was Robin Williams.)
 But Flynn's assertion doesn't work at all for the NBA stars I've run into: Wilt  Chamberlain, Patrick Ewing, Bill Walton, Dennis Rodman, Horace Grant, Mark  Eaton, etc. These guys are astonishing physical specimens.
 For example, a few years I was walking down Rush Street in Chicago on a Friday  night when out of a restaurant ahead of me comes Bill Walton, the greatest white  center ever. He always insisted on listing himself at 6'-11", but he's one  of the rare basketball players who is considerably taller than his official  height. What was more surprising is how impressive the breadth of his shoulders  and his overall musculature were even at about age 50. He was going my way, so I  trailed about 30 feet behind him for quite a few blocks to watch the amusing  reaction of pedestrians passing him. Many seemed stunned by his size, especially  women, few of whom recognized him.
 More seriously, the Flynn and Dickens model is not very exciting in its  implications. All it says is that people create their own environments to suit  their genetic strong suits. For example, I've molded my life so I spend a lot of  time crunching data and very little time with a wrench in my fumble-fingered  hands. If I spent lots more time trying to repair stuff, I'd be a little bit  better at it, but, so what? I'd never be as relatively good at it as I am at  crunching data, so why spend my life butting my head against my genetic brick  wall?
 Similarly, if Flynn and Dickens are serious about altering the environments of  blacks enough to put a sizable dent in the white-black IQ gap, they would call  for a police state that bans all manifestations of hip-hop, that executes Jay-Z  and Dr. Dre as bad examples, that puts minor rappers and black celebrities in  concentration camps, etc. I doubt if that would work, but it's at least a  semiserious proposal for grappling with a problem of this magnitude. But, Flynn  and Dickens aren't serious at all about closing the IQ gap so they don't call  for serious measures, just token ones that their own analysis shows are  insufficient.       
My published articles are archived at iSteve.com -- Steve Sailer
 
 
 
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