My teenage  son has been reading philosopher Daniel Dennett's book Consciousness  Explained (I've never read it -- I'm sure it's beyond me) and we were  discussing Tooby and Cosmides's theory that all sorts of different mental skills  evolved rather than a general factor of intelligence (although domain  specificity and the g Factor are by no means mutually exclusive). I suggested  that it's hard to imagine what particular selection pressure would select for  the specific skill to write Consciousness Explained, and that the  enormous amount of intelligence Dennett musters to attack a problem ("Why  are we conscious?") of no conceivable practical importance during the  supposed Era of Evolutionary Adaptation implies that we possess, in differing  degrees, a fair amount of general problem solving ability (a.k.a., the g  Factor).
Turning to a specific example of hypothesized domain specificity, my son  mentioned the famous evo-psych experiment called the "Wason  four card decision" test. You're supposed to figure out what's on the  other side of a card based on logical rules. When presented as purely a test of  abstract reasoning, only about 10% of test-takers figures it out. But when it's  presented as a concrete way to detect cheaters, 75% figure it out. From this,  Tooby and Cosmides have hypothesized that humans have evolved a "cheater  detection module" that helps make social cooperation feasible by making us  very good at sniffing out and ostracizing free-riders and other cheaters.
This sounds not implausible to me, but an alternative explanation is that we're  just better motivated to detect cheaters than to solve abstract problems with  little human relevance. Perhaps we evolved a tendency to want to figure out  who's trying to slip a fast one past us. Once on a train ride to Machu Picchu, I  sat with three English tourists who were on a round-the-world tour. For two  hours they discussed nothing but who among their tour group owed whom a drink.  This may sound stultifying, but the level of wit that they put into their  complaints of how that parsimonious ponce Percy hadn't bought a round the whole  time they'd been East of Suez made it quite amusing. (An anthropologist tells me  that the conversations of Bushmen bands in the Kalahari Desert sound exactly the  same as the English tourist's: Hey, you borrowed my bow and arrow twice and only  let me use your Coke bottle  once!)
So, the question is whether people figure out the Wason card test more  accurately when it's framed as a cheater detection problem because they bring  into play a more intelligent problem-solving module or simply because they try  harder.. Think of the difference in effort expended between doing your taxes on  TurboTax (a very domain specific software program that lets you do your taxes  much more easily than on Excel, but is no good for anything else) versus doing  them on Excel (a very g Factor software package that lets you do virtually  anything with numbers, but not necessarily easily).
One way to approach this would be to have people solve the Wason problem while  undergoing a PET scan, which measures metabolic activity in the brain. If people  simply burn a lot more calories in their brain when you tell them they need to  do it to nail cheaters, that suggests motivation is the key. But if their heads  stay cool while solving the problem, that suggests they have engaged a  particularly efficient mental module. (Of course, if we do have a highly  effective specific tool for detecting cheaters, why not also apply it to other  problems like the abstract version of the Wason? Indeed, all the amazing stuff  that people have been able to figure out even though it was unimaginable until a  few generations ago -- e.g., quantum mechanics -- suggests that humans are  particularly good at applying mental abilities that evolved under different  conditions to new problems.)
Indeed, you might not need expensive pet scans at all, but perhaps could measure  calories burnt in the brain just by measuring perspiration on the forehead,  which is a proxy for brain effort (brains that are thinking hard burn a lot more  calories than brains that aren't). Keep the laboratory warm and see under which  scenario they sweat more.
Perhaps I'm all wrong about this question of the brain generating more heat the  harder it works, but I'm highly aware of it in myself. When I start thinking  hard, I start sweating from the head down, and it's rather an unpleasant  feeling.
In fact, I made sure to get an Intel Centrino chip in the laptop I bought 18  months ago precisely because it generates less heat than a Pentium chip and thus  is less likely to overheat my office when I'm thinking hard. The Pentium is  working almost all the time, putting out a lot of heat (that's why the fan runs  most of the time on your Pentium PC), but the Centrino chip hibernates when it  doesn't need to do something, even between keystrokes (which is why when the fan  does come on, it's frequently a sign that the PC has gotten hung up in some kind  of infinite loop and a "Not Running" program needs to be shut down  using the Task Manager).
For example, as I blog this, I'm barely breaking a sweat because I'm not working  very hard on this because, well, I'm not getting paid for it, and I expect that  readers will recognize this and put up with some rambling. On the other hand,  when I'm writing a movie review,  I sweat a lot (literally), because I have to make it between exactly 730 and 740  words long, I have to achieve certain tasks I set for myself -- describe the  movie to someone who has never seen it, evaluate its quality, and analyze some  broader social, political, or artistic issue that the movie raises -- and I have  to make all those disparate parts of the essay flow from one to another in a  seemingly natural and effortless manner. When I'm working hardest mentally --  such as when trying to figure out what order to put the paragraphs in an essay  so they flow most easily -- my PC is typically working least hard, so now that I  have a Centrino PC, we complement each other. I much less often need to turn on  the air conditioner just to cool down my office, which saves a lot of money.
Bruce T. Lahn recently announced the discovery of a couple of alleles of genes  related to brain development, which in defective form can cause microcephaly (pathlogically  small brains). These new alleles both appear to have emerged in modern humans  somewhere in Eurasia after the Out-of-Africa event, and neither is as common in  Africa as in Eurasia today. They are evidently favorably mutations because they  spread much more quickly than random chance would allow, at least through some  parts of the world.
The following is some loose speculation, which I'm sure I'll be denounced for by  all the nice people, because nothing is more disreputable these days than  tossing out hypotheses about human differences, especially if the nice people  feel uncomfortable reading them because they remind them of things they've  vaguely noticed too.
One possible cause of Lahn's new alleles would seem to be that they might have  been adaptations suited for cooler climes where the amount of heat generated by  the brain was less of a limitation than in tropical Africa. Perhaps one or both  of these genes simply made the brain larger (there are modest average  differences in brain size among the races with East Asians averaging the  largest, when adjusted for body size, Europeans in the middle, and sub-Saharan  Africans smaller.)
Skull shapes seem to be related in some way to this problem of shedding or  conserving heat. The Eskimos, for instance, have the most spherical skulls,  which minimizes the surface area per unit of volume, thus best conserving  heat.
That's why you should always wear a hat in very cold weather: because your body  prioritizes blood flow to the brain to keep it within its proper temperature  range. If necessary, it will allow frostbite to hit your extremities in order to  keep the brain at the right temperature. In general, though, I think humans have  a harder time cooling their brains than warming them, which is one reason why  the invention of air conditioning has done the American South so much good  economically -- AC allows hard thinking to go on 12 months of the year in a  place like Houston, which was almost physically impossible before it came along.
I've noticed the Kenyan Olympic distance runners, in contrast, seems to have  narrow skulls giving them a lot of surface area per unit of volume, allowing  them to shed heat quickly.
Or possibly Lahn's mutations just encouraged the brain to run hotter because the  chance of overheating was lower in Eurasia than in Africa. By way of analogy,  the most famous marathon in the country is run in Boston in April because the  cool weather allows faster times than if it were run in Atlanta in August. (It's  dominated by men from the cooler highlands of east Africa, by the way, while men  from the warm lowlands of west Africa concentrate on the sprints instead.)
Or maybe, paradoxically, these favorable mutations make the brain run cooler. I  believe, although I could be wrong, that smarter people tend to generate less  heat per unit of problem-solving cognition, just as a well-greased automobile  engine is less likely to overheat per unit of work done. Indeed, Edward  M. Miller proposed a decade ago that well-greased brains (i.e., with higher  myelination) would tend to be smarter:
The brains of the more intelligent actually used less energy than brains of the less intelligent (Haier et al. 1988, also see Haier et al, 1992, and Haier, 1993). The problem is to explain how brains that actually use less energy function better. One possibility is that they are faster and less error prone because of more myelination. Because the myelin is chemically inactive (serving roughly the same function as the insulator on a cable), it uses very little glucose. Most energy is used in the movement of ions in and out of axons. Thus, lower energy use in the more intelligent could be merely the result of more relatively inert myelin.
Knowing zip about  neurology, this struck me as pretty plausible sounding, but I haven't heard much  about the theory, pro or con, ever since.
All of these hypotheses could be tested in the laboratory, using PET scans or,  possibly, lower tech devices.
Brain size is perhaps related to many other important differences. For example,  getting the baby's skull out the birth canal is a life-or-death problem for  humans. The broader the mother's pelvic saddle, the easier this tends to be.  (WWII sailors referred to women as "broads" because attractive women  are wider across the hips relative to waist size than are men.) But, generally  speaking, the wider the hips, the slower she is as a runner.
While west and east Africans are adapted for different running lengths (short  and long distances, respectively), they both tend to have efficient strides  built around having narrower hip bones. (I don't think men in Africa would have  made up the slang term "broad." They might have come up with  "deep" to refer to how the hips of attractive African women tend to be  more pronounced in the third dimension.) 
This pelvic narrowness may have something to do with why African-American appear  to gestate their babies about one week less on average, which is related to the  major problem African-Americans have with low-birthweight babies.
I'm not saying that all this ties together, I'm just tossing out a variety of  ideas, not all of which could be true, for smarter people to think about. I do  think it's likely that once we get our hands on the proper thread and start  pulling, we'll find out it's connected to a wide range of racial differences.
My published articles are archived at iSteve.com -- Steve Sailer
 
 
 
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