Well considering that you quoted Leon J. Kamin, a psychologist well known for criticising flawed ideologies like Heritability of IQ, and rather supporting environmental factors which effect intelligence. I don't think you have any idea what you're talking about either. You haven't even read the journal in question, neither do you know who reviewed the journal. But from the title of the journal alone "South African Journal of Psychology", you can see that their might be a little bias. Bare in mind that South Africa was an apartheid country, untill quite recently.Graney said:I think you don't know what peer reviewed means.
Infact Kamin has criticised (effectively) Lynn, Vanhanen and Jensen. Pretty much all of the psychologists quoted in that extract.Kamin is known in some circles for his position that the heritability of IQ could be zero.
Fail. Reviewers are anonymous.sam04u said:neither do you know who reviewed the journal.
The gap is across the entire social strata.volition said:Just felt like throwing in something I read somewhere, it seems to make sense to me:
All people deserve equal treatment. But that is not the same as saying they are all equal. The error comes in taking a group difference, which may or may not be real, and using it to judge the worth of individuals.
What he said. Even though social-ecconomic has an influence, it doesnt totally account for the difference in IQ between blacks and whites. One study i read said the biological factor was responsible for about 7% of the gap, so obviously money, social status, nutrition, health etc made up the other 93%banco55 said:The gap is across the entire social strata.
Did you mean to quote me or pattii? Because I'm the one accepting that there may be differences... not doubting them.banco55 said:The gap is across the entire social strata.
So what they're saying is... they feel biological factors might make up for 7% of a (let's say 10%) gap (0.7% total here) difference in IQ, which while perhaps a decent measure of intelligence is undoubtably not THAT accurate...Serius said:What he said. Even though social-ecconomic has an influence, it doesnt totally account for the difference in IQ between blacks and whites. One study i read said the biological factor was responsible for about 7% of the gap, so obviously money, social status, nutrition, health etc made up the other 93%
Yep, I totally agree with that.volition said:Anyway, even if it is true it doesn't really change the way we should treat other people.
What do you mean by 'we're still all equal as humans'? You said that we're not equal in the sense that we're born with differing capabilities, but we should nevertheless be treated equally. 1) You can't enforce equal opportunity and treatment without statutory or constitutional mechanisms, without the existence of a government. 2) The result of combining unequal capabilities with legal equality is substantive inequality. What matters in the end seems is the outcome, and in terms of the outcome there has never been and there never will be equality.volition said:Did you mean to quote me or pattii? Because I'm the one accepting that there may be differences... not doubting them.
Anyway, even if it is true it doesn't really change the way we should treat other people. We're still all equal as humans.
Yeah i agree, its not huge. Its not something to stop the presses on, we have known there is an IQ gap of about 30 points of years. Previous studies showed that much of that gap was due to health, social problems etc. They found good evidence to suggest theres genetic reasons behind some of this gap. The number doesnt have to be huge to be valid the fact that it exists at all is reason enough to begin debating if humans are inherently equal in intelligence or not.Enteebee said:So what they're saying is... they feel biological factors might make up for 7% of a (let's say 10%) gap (0.7% total here) difference in IQ, which while perhaps a decent measure of intelligence is undoubtably not THAT accurate...
I don't know why I'd even care about this result... Maybe I'm reading it wrong?
It might not be wrong but it has big social implications. Doctors, lawyers, investment bankers, newspaper editors etc. have a lot more influence on society then say security guards, bricklayers and other jobs that require minimal intelligence.volition said:dhj: When I say it doesn't change our equality I mean to say: even if group differences are real, this tells us nothing about individuals.
The market doesn't need anti-discrimination laws, rational discrimination on the part of employers will ensure that bigoted employers pay for their bigotry. Rational employers value green more than they value white, black or yellow.
IF it so happens that certain races are better at certain things, then whats the problem with them representing a higher % of that occupation? If they're better at the job, then that's not wrong.