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by civilized
1681 days ago
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I'd like to understand what this comment is saying, but I can't follow. Could someone please explain more clearly what exact intellectual mistake the author allegedly made? The exposition in the OP seems very simple and clear, and I cannot seem to relate the definitional issues raised here to what is said in the article. In the article's first thought experiment, we take a population with IQ 100, pull out the subset with IQ 120, have that IQ 120 subset breed with one another. According to the breeder's equation, we get children with average IQ 110. What is "arbitrary", "ill-defined", "fast and loose", etc. about this? It seems to be a standard application of the equation, no different than how one might breed cows for milk or tomatoes for size. It's quite unclear how the "crucial" clause "from one generation to the next" undermines any of this. And could we perhaps focus on understanding what was said before muddying the waters with unsubstantiated accusations of eugenics? HN rules say that HN is for learning and understanding, not ideological warfare. |
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For example, say a cattle rancher with a large herd may want to increase the average weight. So if he only breeds those animals in the top half of weight, what is the expected change in weight from one generation to the next?
For another example, say a particular species of lizard is hunted by a species of bird. The faster lizards are more likely to escape under a rock than the slower lizards. What is the expected change in average speed from one generation to the next?
Both of these examples have a well-defined _overall_ population and _reproducing_ population. The value of S can be calculated. In the first example, it is the difference between the mean weight of the top half of cattle and the mean weight of the entire herd. In the second example, it is difference in the mean speed of the lizards that are able to reproduce before being eaten and the entire population.
What are the analogous groups in the author's example? He doesn't define what distinguishes the population of 120 IQ parents from the population as a whole. In one reasonable reading, you could even think he means just two people when he says "a set of parents". That is what I mean about being fast and loose with terms: how are we defining the entire population and how are we defining the reproductive population?
Further, he says that 120 IQ parents having children with mean IQ of 110 is an example of regression to the mean. I would say the exact opposite: the 110 IQ children _define the mean_ of the next generation (in the correct usage of the equation). The expectation is that if there continues to be positive pressure on IQ, then future generations will continue to have increasing IQs.
With regards to "ideological warfare", the author himself explicitly introduced eugenics into the conversation with his analogy about the desert island populated by National Merit finalists (he literally described it as eugenics). His Wikipedia page [0] describes him as an anthropologist "who argues that cultural innovation resulted in new and constantly shifting selection pressures for genetic change, thereby accelerating human evolution and divergence between human races". I don't think it's unfair to say there are some unpleasant undertones to his work.
[0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gregory_Cochran