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by TangoTrotFox
2941 days ago
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I'd expect mostly the latter. In war to the victor go the spoils, and that would have included the women. Consider Genghis Khan - it's been estimated that he has about 16 million living descendents today. But beyond the warfare stuff, another key selector would have been intelligence. Give two groups of people sticks and stones and I'm betting on the smarter. You don't need much strength to kill with even those weapons, and all the strength in the world isn't going to help you when you get hit. Perhaps it's the case that we still some of this today as it relates to Genghis Khan as the mongoloid group of peoples tend to have some of the highest average visual/spatial IQs on the planet. |
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Likewise, lower intelligence might reduce personality differences and increased coordination. Individual troops with less foresight may be more careless of their own safety and thus more fierce on the battle field. In the manner of bees. Also, in a warrior society, obedience maybe favored over independent thinking.
Also, in an pre-agricultural societys everyone is a generalist: everyone must be smart enough to know how to do everything. Less true in agricultural societies.
So it's just as possible agriculture made people dumber but more dense population centers and thus more effective militarily.
My point is that barring actual measurement, we can conceive a great many possibilities and at this point no measurements indicate intelligence change over that period