|
|
|
|
|
by bayesian_horse
2518 days ago
|
|
In animals or plants, for simple traits, yes. Complicated, polygenetic traits with virtually unlimited interactions between genes and environmental factors? Much more difficult. Add in the serious consequences of mistakes. The limited supply of subjects. The difficulty of grading the success of any modification. For intelligence, we don't even know what kinds of changes we would want to make, even if we could make them reliably. |
|
No, complex traits too. Come on. Dog intelligence and personalities? The domesticated foxes? Any of the many mouse/rat selective breeding experiments like Tryon? Personality, intelligence, these sorts of traits are all highly heritable and about the only thing everyone can agree on that heritability means is that you can select on it. 'virtually unlimited interactions between genes and environmental factors'? Give me a break!
> Add in the serious consequences of mistakes. The limited supply of subjects. The difficulty of grading the success of any modification.
??? None of that is a real problem. You are wildly gesturing at hypotheticals and making stuff up. Being 'polygenetic' is not a problem, it's a blessing.
> For intelligence, we don't even know what kinds of changes we would want to make, even if we could make them reliably.
Yes, we do. The PGSes have identified hundreds of variants at genome-wide significance, and there are thousands at high posterior probability, with nontrivial cumulative predictive power in the general population.