Tainted by its authorship


Many people have been sending me this article about how high IQ turns academics into atheists. I’m afraid I don’t trust it at all: the author is the infamous racist, Richard Lynn, and carries all the baggage of his peculiar notions of genetic determinism and narrow views on the significance of IQ.

I don’t think the religious are necessarily stupid, and I most definitely do not believe they are born stupid. I do believe they are saddled with a set of foolish misconceptions that can throttle their intellectual development and send them careering off into genuinely weird sets of beliefs, but this doesn’t make them stupid. I also think that IQ tests are written by people who promote an implicitly scientific perspective (which is a good thing!), and it’s therefore not surprising that a group in which a significant fraction of its membership actively reject science will do poorly on such tests.

While I can see where accepting the handicap of faith might lead to poor performance on non-faith-based tests and scientific thinking, I reject Lynn’s usual premise of a biological basis for such ability.

Comments

  1. Schmeer says

    Instead of implying some genetic component to atheism wouldn’t the correlation between atheism and high IQ more likely indicate the ability to see through illogical belief systems? We’ve obviously seen people who believe in gods reason their way out of religion.

  2. says

    Hmm, has this been true throughout history, say 500 years ago?

    As usual there are too many confounding factors for Lynn’s simplistic notion of IQ being “the cause.” Maybe IQ is the effect of atheism (seriously, IQ might go up slightly if one is more free to think).

    Academics are more secular because they’re smart enough (combination of nature and nurture, most likely), and because they have learned how to evaluate evidence. The social nature of academia is far more accommodating as well, and intelligent educated people are hardly without a strong socially-influenced dimension to their beliefs.

    If somehow Lynn had taken care of all of the confounding factors (as if he could), then its conclusions might be more sound than simply being a rehash of what we’ve always known, that intelligent educated people are more secular than society.

    Glen Davidson
    http://tinyurl.com/2kxyc7

  3. tony (not a vegan) says

    Or as RAH said: Geniuses and supergeniuses always make their own rules

    they’re just generally smart about not making it obvious to those less smart.

    For the rest of us – we just get crucified for being different!

  4. says

    Ah, it’s good to hear this from an atheist — I’m sick of people saying that somehow, by declaring my atheism, I’m claiming to be smarter than religious folk. I get it all the time: “Only atheists would be that arrogant,” “No wonder you can’t accept God, you atheists are too obsessed with yourselves,” etc etc. Which is silly, because dumb atheists are just as prevalent (if the internet is any judge) as dumb theists. There are smart and dumb people, not more and less secular ones.

    The study is, for the record, not near rigorous enough to even suggest anything, regardless of who had authored it. IQ tests, for one, aren’t really indicators of intelligence. I hate obnoxious atheists; they make the rest of us look bad. Thanks, PZ, for not being one. ::sigh of relief::

  5. omar ali says

    There ARE less intelligent people who really believe in fairies and demons and then there are highly intelligent people who know which way their short-term bread is buttered. The idea that being intelligent is all it takes to give up religion is silly, even nonsensical. I know many highly intelligent people who are determinedly religious and they think it helps them here and now. What is dumb about that?

  6. Holbach says

    I was saddled with a set of foolish misconceptions that throttled my intellectual development when I was young as have many of us, but have managed to slough it off with the innate intelligence I was born with and can never admit to possessing more than a standard IQ. That adequate intelligence made it possible to question and evaluate that stunted religious upbringing by my own volition with the same materials that are available to those who remain stunted by religious nonsense. Does this make my intelligence suspect if I were to claim that little more I do posess has made it possible to enhance that intelligence without a smug appearance at being smarter than those who do not utilize an equal intelligence?

  7. Tex says

    I, too, was skeptical of the link between religious belief and IQ until I read the comments at the bottom of the linked article. Check them out. They strongly confirm the hypothesis.

  8. Coriolis says

    Actually no, I don’t know any highly intelligent people who actually believe their religion helps them now, either in a “prayer works” or in a “I’m more moral then you” way.

    I do know highly intelligent religious people – but they recognize that their religion is mostly a personal choice and that insofar as we have common human morality it is a universal human thing rather then a consequence of any religion, or lack thereof.

    As for what’s dumb about believing in magic (or prayer if you want to put it that way) well, is there really much of a need to address that?

  9. Paul W. says

    I have no idea what to make of this study, but anybody whose interested in it might also be interested in studies that show that academic and especially scientific achievement are inversely correlated with religiosity.

    Whichever way the causality goes, nontheists are way more likely to be scientists than theists, especially at the higher levels of science. In the National Academy of Sciences, atheists are wildly overrepresented and non-atheists are wildly underrepresented, so that atheists are overrepresented relative to theists by a factor of around 100. That’s just enormous.

    Press around the RAAS (Religion Among Academic Scientists) study makes it sound like that’s just because scientists come disproportionately from irreligious or liberally religious or not-very-religious households.

    Even if that were true, it would still be very interesting—why are irreligious households producing 100 times the top scientists (per capita) that religious ones are?

    But it’s not true. If you actually look at Ecklund & Scheitle’s RAAS paper, as I have, you see that their own data in table 4 show a strong tendency for scientists to become irreligious at some point. They may be relatively unlikely to come from strongly religious backgrounds, but the large majority start out Christian, and about three fifths of those stop being Christian.

    That’s not enough to explain the huge correlation between advanced science and non-theism, so the causality appears to go both ways. Science does seem to substantially erode religious belief, and less religious people are far more likely to make it in science. (And much more likely to be high achievers.)

    This isn’t just a matter of fundamentalists being at a disadvantage. Atheists are overrepresented relative to agnostics, agnostics are overrepresented relative to liberal theists, and liberal theists are overrepresented relative to orthodox theists.

    Factors like race, sex, income level, and even having a graduate degree don’t come anywhere close to explaining the unreasonable effectiveness of atheists in science. For example, if we just look at (American) white men with graduate degrees, the large majority are religious. But the large majority of elite scientists are not, and the vast majority of top scientists aren’t. Clearly it’s not just a matter of atheism and science being correlated with the “usual suspects” like being white and male, or well-off and educated.

    See the comments on this thread over at gene expression for more detail and links to papers, etc.

  10. Carlie says

    I would say that education and training in critical thinking leads to atheism. There is a correlation between more education and higher intelligence, but intelligence and atheism aren’t the linked parts.

  11. Alcari says

    Well, I do recall, on several ocasions, reading that atheism and IQ are correlated. Not that one causes the other, but there was a correlation. The same was said for atheism and education level.

    But, I can offer some speculation as to why atheists are generally more educated. It’s not that difficult, someone who wants to learn, who wants to know, will find out. If you take everything that’s tossed at you from authority, be it in church or in school, you’re unlikely to learn as much as someone who is willing to go out and look for answers themselves.

    Of course, I’m far to lazy to retrieve said research, so feel free to show me horribly wrong.

  12. Alex says

    Why use the lable “racist” to describe Richard Lynn? Just because his research on IQ and race are uncomfortable and politically incorrect does not invalidate his scientific findings.
    Living in snow white Minnesota allows a certain distance from the everyday intuitivness regarding race that those of us in more diverse areas experience.

  13. Sven DiMilo says

    the everyday intuitivness regarding race

    Please, Alex…DON”T share further.

  14. says

    Why use the lable “racist” to describe Richard Lynn? Just because his research on IQ and race are uncomfortable and politically incorrect does not invalidate his scientific findings.

    Exactly. Why, I was just telling my friend that anyone with half a brain can see that bigots are generally stupider than non-bigots. Of course, conservatives’ll jump all over you for saying it because it’s not politically incorrect to point that out….

  15. Divalent says

    I don’t see how this can be considered controversial. It seems pretty self-evident: the smarter you are the less likely you will fall for non-sensical and illogical arguments. (I.e., your reasoning ability will be sharper).

    Clearly high intelligence is neither sufficient nor necessary to be an atheist, but its not surprising that there is a strong correlation. And the proposed causal mechanism is reasonable, given what many believers claim are the reasons they believe.

  16. Paul W. says

    While I can see where accepting the handicap of faith might lead to poor performance on non-faith-based tests and scientific thinking, I reject Lynn’s usual premise of a biological basis for such ability.

    P.Z., I’m not clear on what premise you’re rejecting here.

    If it’s a strongly biologically determinist thing with a substantial correlation with race, then I too would be very skeptical.

    I don’t find it at all implausible that there’s a moderate correlation between atheism and intelligence (or some better measure of native “smartness”). Do you?

    When you look at the strong predictiveness of atheism for scientific achievement, what would you conclude? It isn’t mostly about race, sex, family income, or even getting a graduate degree. It’s mostly something else.

    Maybe it’s about being in the “evolutionist class.” :-)

    I wouldn’t be surprised if it’s substantially about being smart, with the smartness being socially amplified by being around other smart people. So partly native smarts, and partly the effect of an environment in which smart people question and criticize ideas.

    I don’t know how to establish the direct causal links, but that doesn’t seem like a hypothesis that should be rejected out of hand.

  17. says

    Belief in God is much lower among academics than among the general population because scholars have higher IQs

    If that is truly the premise, there are so many things wrong with it, I wouldn’t know where to start.

    However, Occam’s Razor applies IMHO.

    Abrahamic Religions teach comic book stories to children about Ark’s, and Babels, and Adams and Eves. Once you become educated enough in geology anthropology, biology, and so forth, you realize that you have BEEN LIED TO!!! And if all that was lies, it follows that all the Jesus, Mohammed, Moses stories, which have exactly the same ‘ring’, are lies, too.

    It’s the fault of religion that learning leads to Atheism, they should make up better stories.

  18. says

    ANY FAVORITE DAWKINS SPEECH??
    I’m starting a radio series on ‘The New Atheism’, as it has become known. Starting with Dawkins tonight, any particular audio to recommend?

  19. Margaret says

    “Religion is regarded by the common people as true, by the wise as false, and by rulers as useful.” – Seneca the Younger (4? B.C. – 65 A.D.)

    It’s hardly new to see a correlation between atheism and intelligence.

  20. windy says

    While I can see where accepting the handicap of faith might lead to poor performance on non-faith-based tests and scientific thinking, I reject Lynn’s usual premise of a biological basis for such ability.

    P.Z., I’m not clear on what premise you’re rejecting here.

    I think he’s rejecting a biological basis for performance differences in “non-faith-based tests and scientific thinking”, not a biological basis for differences in religiosity (although I think he has previously said he is skeptical of the latter, too).

    While skepticism is probably warranted for most claims of biological differences leading to different mental abilities, I don’t see how this possibility can be summarily “rejected”.

  21. David Marjanović, OM says

    anyone with half a brain can see that bigots are generally stupider than non-bigots. Of course, conservatives’ll jump all over you for saying it because it’s not politically incorrect to point that out….

    And that’s not a new observation either. PZ has a quote in his currently inaccessible collection that says that, while not all conservatives are stupid, stupid people are generally conservative, and calls this latter such a well-known fact that “no gentleman” could deny it.

  22. Marius Andersen says

    High IQ turns American acedemics into atheists. In secular Europe, it may well turn them into theologians, philosophers of religion, etc.

    It’s all about going against the flow and the above-average intelligence that requires. Even neo-Nazis have a higher average IQ than the general population.

  23. Walton says

    David Marjanovic at #26: That was J.S. Mill. “Although it is not true that all conservatives are stupid people, it is true that most stupid people are conservative.”

    Of course, he meant the conservatives of his day – reactionaries who wanted to maintain aristocratic rule and the “old order” across Europe. Modern conservatism, ironically, perhaps owes more to the libertarian ideas of Mill than to any other thinker. But I digress, and I’m going to try not to take this thread off-topic (as I’ve inadvertently done with several others).

  24. Infidel Michael says

    Correlation between A and B can be interpreted in 3 different ways:
    1. A causes B
    2. B causes A
    3. There is an unknown C, which causes both A and B

    So if intelligence and disbelief are correlated, we have following options:
    1. intelligence makes you an unbeliever
    2. disbelief enables you to be smarter (no handicap of faith)
    3. Something unknown (C) causes intelligence and disbelief

    What could be the C? Individualism? Effort to control instead of being controlled? Curiosity? (not being satisfied with the unknown/mystery)

    Any ideas?

  25. windy says

    High IQ turns American acedemics into atheists. In secular Europe, it may well turn them into theologians, philosophers of religion, etc.

    May, schmay. Do you have any evidence suggesting that this might be the case?

  26. says

    What could be the C? Individualism? Effort to control instead of being controlled? Curiosity? (not being satisfied with the unknown/mystery)

    Any ideas?

    Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons?

  27. pnu says

    if i may quote Gould:

    “…the abstraction of intelligence as a single entity, its location within the brain, its quantification as one number for each individual, and the use of these numbers to rank people in a single series of worthiness, invariably to find that oppressed and disadvantaged groups–races, classes, or sexes–are innately inferior and deserve their status”

    i’m surprised no one has brought up the fact that IQ, while not meaningless, is not actually a measure of ‘brainpower’ or ‘raw intellect’

  28. says

    After going on for a while about IQ & religious belief, the article claims:

    He added that most Western countries had seen a decline of religious belief in the 20th century at the same time as their populations had become more intelligent.

    ??? How does one use the normalized IQ distribution to determine whether an entire population has “become more intelligent”? What does this even mean? We’ve definitely become more knowledgeable, but more intelligent?

    The whole study looks rather sketchy, and using IQ as an unqualified measure of intelligence seems questionable. Much more interesting, IMO, would be a study looking at people’s logical thinking skills, scientific knowledge, and religious belief.

  29. Otto says

    It seems to me that being religious is not a question of intelligence but of ones emotional makeup.
    And I do applaud PZ for rejecting association with an unsavory character like Richard Lynn.

  30. says

    i’m surprised no one has brought up the fact that IQ, while not meaningless, is not actually a measure of ‘brainpower’ or ‘raw intellect’

    You barely beat me to it! Kamin’s Science and Politics of IQ makes interesting reading. As does stuff about Gardner’s multiple intelligences (must get that book). I’ve always thought IQ was mostly a bullshit measure. I’ve taken a couple of IQ tests and there were many questions that were matters of (what I’d call) knowledge rather than (what I’d call) intelligence.

  31. says

    Well, I didn’t recognize the name, but it didn’t make sense to me; it looked to get the causality all wrong, and there are some other issues.

  32. Gotchaye says

    He’s probably referring to the Flynn effect with that ‘become more intelligent’ bit, though I very much doubt that the much-increased incidence of atheism can really be explained by the relatively minor gains in IQ.

    Caveats about what IQ really represents aside, I had thought that IQ, whatever it is, has been pretty clearly shown to be strongly heritable and to correlate with ability to perform various mental tasks.

    If we suppose that a big part of what tends to drive conversion to atheism is a tendency to think scientifically, it seems obvious that aptitude for scientific thinking is itself an important factor. And I had thought it was relatively uncontroversial to claim that IQ at least significantly correlated with that sort of ability.

  33. Alex says

    “Please, Alex…DON”T share further.
    Posted by: Sven DiMilo”

    Please feel free to skip over my posts if they conflict with your politically correct conditioning. However, as atheists we shouldnt let our emotions dictate our acceptance of scientific truths. If we can accept that certain populations are prone to specific diseases (Type 1 diabetes in Northern Europeans and sickle cell anemia in West Africans) then why can’t we also accept that science seems to point to differences in average abilities between populations?

  34. Brad says

    I once heard someone ask, “Don’t you care if what you believe is true?” It might have been Rebecca on Skeptics Guide to the Universe podcast.
    When I see any True Believers in the media or on the internet, I silently ask this question and answer for them based on what they say. No, no they really don’t, in many cases. This appears to be the case in religion, politics, economics, all sorts of woo (homeopathy, UFOs, etc.) And yet, these people seem to get along just fine. Maybe rationality is not necessary to lead a normal life.

  35. Lynnai says

    How is it possible to test for IQ without accidentally (or do I mean incidentally?) also testing education?

    We clearly veiw them as sperate things but how do you test one without being biased by the other?

  36. says

    Western countries had seen a decline of religious belief in the 20th century at the same time as their populations had become more intelligent.

    both A and B (for bullshit) are a result of the reduction of the population of pirates over this same time period.

    and also climate change.

    and

    the Internets

    which make you stupid

  37. Gotchaye says

    Lynnai, while it’s probably impossible to completely separate IQ and education, it’s worth noting that IQ scores tend to be pretty independent of education when you start testing people above a very young age. My understanding of the evidence is that you really can’t do much to significantly budge IQ scores after kids become teenagers, though it remains an open question as to how strongly early childhood environment and education can influence IQ. If I recall, you can even try to specifically prepare adults to take an IQ test and you’ll only see a small gain in scores, which gain usually disappears if you test them again after some time has passed.

    You’re right though that we currently have no way of testing ‘inborn’ intelligence, nor are we sure if it even makes sense to speak of such a thing. It seems clear that, at the least, there are very complicated gene/environment interactions going on, especially, of course, at environmental extremes.

  38. CrypticLife says

    I wouldn’t be surprised if there were a correlation between IQ and atheism, but I suspect this has more to do with stupid people believing anything more easily and taking the path of least resistance. Ask a classroom of first graders to give you their thoughts on the pledge of allegiance, for example, and it’s only the smarter ones who will give any opinion at all on “under God” — positive or negative — because they’re the ones who’ve thought about it. The stupid ones take it at face value, pulling down the average of any smart ones who approve.

    Note that Lynn, in saying intelligence “predicts” atheism, may not mean that it causes atheism per se. He may be simply noting it as a correlation, as in, “Give me a person with a high IQ, and I’ll predict they’re more likely to be an atheist than one with a low IQ”.

  39. Dan says

    Alex,
    your’e sliding off-topic and taking the thread where no-one wants to go. Give it a rest, mate.
    I’m as racist as the next guy, but I would never venture to say that A WHOLE POULATION GROUP varies from another in a measurement as variable as IQ.
    Now, I agree, black guys do tend to have bigger diques than white guys – or all that porn involves some kind of unnatural selction that I am not aware of, but I think that there is a trend there.

    “Is it twu, what they say about how you people are… gifted?”

  40. Sadie Morrison says

    In general, I’m instantly wary of someone who tosses around the label “politically correct” as an insult in serious debates, and so far Alex has given me no reason to revise this mindset.

  41. RamblinDude says

    CrypticLife

    Ask a classroom of first graders to give you their thoughts on the pledge of allegiance, for example, and it’s only the smarter ones who will give any opinion at all on “under God” — positive or negative — because they’re the ones who’ve thought about it.

    I’ve known many smart people who weren’t raised in an environment that nurtured inquisitiveness and thoughtfulness. They never thought about “under God” at an early age, but this doesn’t make them dumb (at least not inherently).

    Did it, however, lower their testable IQ?

    I suspect that it did (or often does), which is why, it seems to me, there is as much “nurture” as “nature” in the equation of “smartness.”

    There are people who look at religion and say, “Wait a minute, this is bullshit.” I’m not convinced that they were simply born “smarter.”

  42. cyan says

    Lynnai,

    Differentiating between IQ and education:

    IMHO, a valid IQ test should be able to be be assess any group of people in any country on earth regardless of their language or education, i.e., visual spatial or numerical sets designed to test if and/or how quickly one can recognize a pattern and then infer the most parsimonious placement of another element in those pattern.

    Using a language and its vocabulary to describe the elements of the sets would make the test one of a mix of IQ and education.

    I.e., my view of IQ is the ability to, and how quickly one can, perceive patterns; logic is how parsimoniously one can infer the placement of new information into the perceived pattern.

    Will be very interested to hear what others here think about these things.

  43. Lynnai says

    Lynnai, while it’s probably impossible to completely separate IQ and education, it’s worth noting that IQ scores tend to be pretty independent of education when you start testing people above a very young age.

    I question that. Independant of schooling certainly, but believe it or not there are more places to pick up an education then at school. If the child in question has educated parents and spends any time at all in ear shot of them they will pick things up. I know I did.

    And there are the different kinds of intellegences, I’ve done many IQ tests and score so wildly all over the map you’d swear I was cheating for some or drunk for others. Some where little better then English comprehention tests and others the bias swung heavily over to arthmatic. Has this been even remotely standardized?

    What your post says to me isn’t so much that IQ tests can be moore or less unbiased by education levels but that early education is increadibly important. Of course the problem with bias is that I already believed that anyway. :)

    You’re right though that we currently have no way of testing ‘inborn’ intelligence, nor are we sure if it even makes sense to speak of such a thing.

    Probably not but we do seem to keep trying don’t we?

  44. Lynnai says

    Using a language and its vocabulary to describe the elements of the sets would make the test one of a mix of IQ and education.

    I.e., my view of IQ is the ability to, and how quickly one can, perceive patterns; logic is how parsimoniously one can infer the placement of new information into the perceived pattern.

    Except that isn’t what it is when it is being talked about; although you’re right that is what we can test fairly for. But I suspect it will give absolutely no indication about the individuals ability to learn and use language, and despite the bais-engendering are the tests valid without that?

    Surely there are also many advanced logical constructs which require use of language.

    I am assuming that your preffered tests would have both two and three dimentional spatial acuity? (again personal bias coming in as I’m pretty good at 3d and strangely bad at 2d)

  45. dogmeatib says

    Please feel free to skip over my posts if they conflict with your politically correct conditioning. However, as atheists we shouldnt let our emotions dictate our acceptance of scientific truths. If we can accept that certain populations are prone to specific diseases (Type 1 diabetes in Northern Europeans and sickle cell anemia in West Africans) then why can’t we also accept that science seems to point to differences in average abilities between populations?

    Alex, as has been pointed out numerous times the genetic argument has been made to attempt to explain lower achievement in minority populations, this explanation fails to account for very real socio-economic factors which have been shown to have a much higher correlation. To further damage the genetic argument is the fact that tests showed as early as the 40s (during WWII) that northern educated blacks (IE middle class) consistently outperformed southern whites.

    Sorry, but there is far too much evidence for nurture to support a nature argument regarding gaps in achievement levels.

  46. Wowbagger says

    You’ve also got to consider how religion is presented. If religion is just something a person is aware of, rather than immersed in, that person is going to react differently.

    I’m unable to say with surety that I’m an atheist simply because I’m intelligent, or because I do well on IQ tests. I don’t know what I’d have done if i’d been more seriously indoctrinated – and, when you look at the more sophisticated apologetics there’s a complexity there that could engage a suitably intelligent person enough that the challenge would be at least somewhat compelling.

    Plus, how do you separate the truly religious from those who are just giving what they feel is the appropriate, culturally-defined response? I know many people who I’m sure don’t ‘believe’ any more than I do, but who still identify as religious for any number of reasons.

    Take any of the so-called ‘religious’ scientists through history – the ones that are always named to counter arguments of church-supported anti-intellectualism. I’m sure that in a culture where atheism was acceptable many more of them would have identified as such.

  47. says

    #29:

    3. Something unknown (C) causes intelligence and disbelief

    I’m surprised nobody else has mentioned the research connecting high rates of atheism with high rates of social well-being — education, health, life expectancy, low poverty, low crime rates, etc. It would seem to be very pertinent to this question.

    And no, the author (citation below) doesn’t think atheism causes social health and prosperity — or that religion causes their opposites. He thinks it’s the other way around.

    Which is very much relevant to this discussion.

    We know, pretty certainly, that poverty, poor health (especially poor health in childhood), and poor education can contribute to lower intelligence. So it seems very probable that this is Infidel Michael’s “C”. Prosperity and social health make people more likely to be both intelligent and atheist; poverty and other social ills make people less likely to be both.

    (BTW: Like other commenters here, I, too, am a wee bit skeptical of IQ as an accurate test of intelligence. But let’s set that aside for now.)

    P.S. “Atheism: Contemporary Rates and Patterns” was written by Phil Zuckerman, Ph.D. and published in the Cambridge Companion to Atheism.

  48. says

    Surely it’s the nature of academia that suits critical thinkers and those who want to discover the world that least to a higher number of atheists than anything to do with intelligence.

  49. plum grenville says

    “A Federal judge has dismissed a lawsuit by a man who was barred from the New London police force because he scored too high on an intelligence test.”

    And the police department’s justification for rejecting applicants who are too smart is?????

  50. Dahan says

    I just don’t buy the I.Q. thing. I’ve taken three tests. All of them claimed that I’m just short of having a genius rating. I’m 100% sure that that’s bullshit. I’m aware I’m not exactly as dumb as a box of rocks, but genius? No way. I know people who I’d easily put that label on, worked with some of them. Not all of them even match my scores. I know others that supposedly aren’t supposed to be that bright, who have phenomenal gifts I can only wish I had. Again, I just don’t buy it.

  51. SEF says

    I have yet to meet an unintelligent atheist.

    Try the BBC website – specifically the religion message board sub-site of it. There were definitely some thick ones around there as well as the smart ones. I suspect the greater availability would be because it’s a lot easier to be an atheist in the UK than in the US, even when too stupid to achieve that atheism alone. Plus the education system is now bad enough, along with a rising trend of anti-intellectualism, that many of them don’t know they’re thick (let alone have the sense not to display it in public).

    The demand to be special without merit is no longer limited to the religious. The cult of celebrity (including the BBC’s own low standards), the effective giving away of freebie exam passes (when previously exams would have provided valuable feedback on merit) and the existence of the internet at all(!) has allowed more people to be more vocal in their shallowness than ever before. These days one can be an atheist without merit in much the same way as one can be a media presenter or have a singing career without merit.

  52. Nick Gotts says

    He’s probably referring to the Flynn effect with that ‘become more intelligent’ bit, though I very much doubt that the much-increased incidence of atheism can really be explained by the relatively minor gains in IQ.

    Caveats about what IQ really represents aside, I had thought that IQ, whatever it is, has been pretty clearly shown to be strongly heritable and to correlate with ability to perform various mental tasks. – Gotchaye

    The Flynn effect is indeed of great significance in relation to IQ, since it is very strong evidence that population means are strongly affected by environment. From Wikipedia:
    “The average rate of rise seems to be around three IQ points per decade. Because children attend school longer now and have become much more familiar with the testing of school-related material, one might expect the greatest gains to occur on such school content-related tests as vocabulary, arithmetic or general information. Just the opposite is the case: abilities such as these have experienced relatively small gains and even occasional declines over the years. The largest Flynn effects appear instead on culture reduced highly general intelligence factor loaded (g-loaded) tests such as Raven’s Progressive Matrices. For example, Dutch conscripts gained 21 points in only 30 years, or 7 points per decade, between 1952 and 1982.”

    More from Wikipedia (Alex, look away NOW if you don’t want your prejudices challenged):
    “The Flynn effect may have ended in some developed nations starting in the mid 1990s although other studies, such as Black Americans reduce the racial IQ gap: Evidence from standardization samples (Dickens, Flynn; 2006), still show gain between 1972 and 2002.”

    Of course, none of this means there are no inter-population differences in intelligence, but the confounding factors make it practically impossible to discover, and will do so unless and until racial prejudice and indeed racially-correlated cultural differences disappear.

    By the way, Gotchaye, “strongly heritable” is meaningless unless you specify the population you’re talking about, since heritability is just the proportion of variance accounted for by innate differences. Gould (The Mismeasure of Man) uses the example of height: within a a sample of (say) rich Dutch or poor Bangladeshis, it may be over 90%; if you take a global sample, pretty low, since height (and probably IQ) are strongly dependent on childhood nutrition.

  53. Nick Gotts says

    @58: Of course, none of this means there are no inter-population differences in intelligence ->
    Of course, none of this means there are no innate inter-population differences in intelligence

  54. SEF says

    Yes, IQ is known to be dependent on (early) childhood nutrition (NB the research will be long pre-internet). The brain is regarded by the body as a second-class organ – one to be disfavoured when resources are scarce. This applies during both development and later activity (eg eating takes significant supply away from the brain while the gut does the more important digestion thing).

  55. Gustaf says

    I think Richard Lynn is on to something, but I wouldn’t say it’s just IQ (as in the ability to score well on IQ tests). It’s more about personality. Especially in otherwise enlightened countries, you need to have a certain personality to be religious. In particular, you need to have use what C.G Jung called your Feeling function, rather than your Thinking function, to make decisions on what you believe to be right and true. Religiousness is a personality trait.

  56. Logicel says

    An atheist I know who was raised in a secular family and raised her own kids in a similar setting, and who possesses at least average intelligence (whatever that means) is an unthinking atheist, atheist by default.

    Though intelligent, she seems to have a deference to traditional and authoritative “knowledge” which she regards as true, absolute, and non-changing.

    For example, she believes that all cats thrive on milk (and refuses to even listen to recent research contesting that old wives tale), and she opens up small wounds after they have successfully knitted though I have explained why such an activity is countering the enormous effort and energy expended by her body to heal. She insists that her intuition tells her that such wound knitting is bad for health as it will trap dirt and bacteria (and this is after the wound is cleaned!).

    Her inability to process new information which conflicts to that which she was instructed decades ago is astounding to me. First. Time. Ever. That I have met someone like this–she can’t be the only one! She is literate and lives in a western democracy, and all her kids are university educated and none of them can get through to her.

    She reminds me of the Jonathan Haidt profile, of people who base their ‘morality'(knowledge) on tradition, authority, and purity. Wonder if Haidt’s profile can be used to supplement IQs test, in other words, use it as means of identifying people’s inability to process and adapt to conflicting and new information.

  57. Gavel Down says

    And for another nail in Alex’s pseudoscientific “Bell Curve” nonsense, studies have shown conclusively that lower status populations (such as lower castes in india, and suchlike who are the same race as the dominant class) do worse as a population than higher status groups on intelligence tests. The difference disappears when the social pressures are no longer applied, such as when the low status people move to other countries. In addition, research on “stereotype threat” shows that peoples scores on intelligence and other tests can be made to decrease or increase relative to what stereotypes are in force for the group they belong to merely be reminding them (via having to fill in a bubble with their race or gender) prior to taking the test.

    So in other words, Alex’s belief that black people are stupid is why they do worse on intelligence tests as a group. It’s your fault, you racist swine.

  58. Freehand says

    The folks in the Southern Baptist churches I grew up in weren’t stupid in ways that would have shown on an IQ test. But they were appallingly disinterested in whether their beliefs matched reality, and seemed oblivious to the logical consequences of some of their assertions. They were, however, quite skilled at changing the subject, equivocation, strawmen, and other logical fallacies.

    I’ve never been entirely domesticated; my need for peer approval may be weaker than average. Perhaps that’s why their conditioning never really took in me.

    Etha, average IQ *has been rising in the last two generations. Remember that IQ is just the score on the IQ test, and it makes sense if you’re comparing it to previous generations. It’s analogous to the height of the average Japanese increasing some 10 cm from 1900 to 2000. Presumably we are not evolving smarter – not this fast, anyway! This factoid puts the lie to Alex’s nonsense. Whatever environmental differences there have been leading to this absolutely swamps the differences that may be lurking inherently between any two large genepools of humans. So far, no evidence for the latter than can be teased out of the larger effects of self-esteem, teacher expectations, income, toxin exposure, education level of parents, nutrition, cultural value placed on academic achievement, etc.

  59. Andreas Johansson says

    In my experience, so far, I have yet to meet an unintelligent atheist. Mere anecdote, I know, just an observation.

    I envy you.

  60. Danarra says

    If we’re using anecdotal evidence, I have to say I have 5 siblings, all of whom tested higher on IQ tests than I did, all of whom I will happily admit are far more intelligent than I’ll ever be. Still, I’m the only atheist in the family and two of the brothers are fundamentalist christians.

    I have to agree with Freehand that their religious beliefs have no correlation to their intelligence or education – they are just completely uninterested in whether their beliefs match reality. I flat out asked my oldest brother how he reconciles the book of genesis with the fossil record and his reply was, “I don’t really think that’s important.”

  61. Naked Bunny with a Whip says

    I’m not so sure that being more intelligent necessarily leads to increased atheism. It may just allow you to spin more and more elaborate rationalizations for your religious beliefs. Look at theologians…they are often plainly smart and are able to discern subtleties and nuances well beyond me, but they will argue how many angels can dance on the head of a pin without noticing that there are no angels, just pins.

  62. truth machine says

    Somewhat relevant:

    “A Federal judge has dismissed a lawsuit by a man who was barred from the New London police force because he scored too high on an intelligence test.

    Just because the religious are often fools doesn’t mean that any given atheist isn’t as well. A non-fool would have pointed out the judge’s stunning illogic:

    Judge Dorsey ruled that Mr. Jordan was not denied equal protection because the city of New London applied the same standard to everyone: anyone who scored too high was rejected.

    That’s right, folks: it’s not discrimination if you won’t hire anyone who is {smart, black, female, gay …}

    The fact is that most people are so stunningly stupid that such failures in logic don’t pop out at them.

  63. says

    PZ – You said:

    “While I can see where accepting the handicap of faith might lead to poor performance on non-faith-based tests and scientific thinking…”

    Wow, with folks spreading this kind of gospel, you should be rid of all those undesirable ‘faith’ folks in the near future.

    Wouldn’t want to let someone into the science tent who was a C. Everett Koop (medical pioneer who saved lots of kids), Wernher von Braun (who singlehandedly got us to the moon), Raymond Damadian (inventor of the MRI), or Nobel Laureate Ernest Chain (antibiotics guru).

    (all creationists or ID advocates, by the way…)

    Just think – THOSE folks added so LITTLE to our science base. Their religion made them utterly incapable of contributing to science, and of course, their IQ must have been horrible. Wonder how they managed to make any name for themselves at all…

    I wonder how many more folks like this you could persuade your followers to kick out of science.

    Get a clue, you dolt.

  64. truth machine says

    In my experience, so far, I have yet to meet an unintelligent atheist.

    Look in the mirror; only a fool could make such a claim. Here at this site we have seen plenty of moronic atheists who are racists, global warming deniers, Republicans (your ID is ironic) … and if you argue that instances of unintelligent arguments or behavior doesn’t make one unintelligent, you have to apply the same standard to the religious.

    Are atheists less likely to be unintelligent? Probably so, but someone who states it as an absolute isn’t at the high end of the bell curve of atheist intelligence.

  65. Sven DiMilo says

    Alex’s first post:

    Why use the lable “racist” to describe Richard Lynn? Just because his research on IQ and race are uncomfortable and politically incorrect does not invalidate his scientific findings.
    Living in snow white Minnesota allows a certain distance from the everyday intuitivness regarding race that those of us in more diverse areas experience.

    My response:

    the everyday intuitivness regarding race
    Please, Alex…DON”T share further.

    Alex’s response to my response:

    Please feel free to skip over my posts if they conflict with your politically correct conditioning. However, as atheists we shouldnt let our emotions dictate our acceptance of scientific truths. If we can accept that certain populations are prone to specific diseases (Type 1 diabetes in Northern Europeans and sickle cell anemia in West Africans) then why can’t we also accept that science seems to point to differences in average abilities between populations?

    My (brand-new!) response to Alex’s response to my response to his original post:
    You’re an ignorant asshole.
    Let me explain: Note carefully that the part of your original post I didn’t want to hear more about was NOT the part about scientific data and their interpretation, but rather the part about your your “everyday intuitivness regarding race” and how people who live in predominantly European-American areas are not privy to this common-sense wisdom. Gotta tell you that that smells like old-fashioned Archie-Bunker-style bigotry to me. (Not really relevant is the fact that I live in what has to be one of the most racially diverse areas of the US, and yet I do not share your “intuitions,” whatever they may be. Hey, are you James Watson sockpuppeting here?)
    Your examples of geographic variation in disease susceptibility are single-gene traits, you dipshit. IQ or intelligence or whatever other “abilities” you allude to are far, far more complicated in both genetic and environmental underpinnings.
    Believe it or not, and, I guess despite my “politically correct conditioning,” I am open to the concept of geographic/population/racial differences in genetically-determined average intelligence. I do not reject that possibility out of hand. However, a) it is nearly impossible to measure the genetic contribution to intelligence because of the many interacting environmental factors that confound it; b) nobody can agree on what the hell “intelligence” means anyway, and (most importantly, in my opinion) c) even if there are small differences in average intelligence among genetic groups, the overlap in distributions is so nearly complete that small differences in the average are unlikely to be finctionally significant in any way whatsoever.
    As for skipping your posts, thanks! Don’t mind if I do! Not because they “conflict with my politically correct conditioning,” though, but rather because you appear to be a stupid, lying bigot and reading anything else you post is very likely to be a waste of my time.

  66. Owlmirror says

    Wernher von Braun the Nazi SS officer (who singlehandedly as one of many, many physicists, engineers, and other scientists and technicians helped to design the rocket that got us to the moon)

    Fixed.

  67. Owlmirror says

    Oh, and as for this:

    Get a clue, you dolt.

    Right back at you, you arguer-from-authority-against-a-strawman moron.

  68. negentropyeater says

    Kevin Wirth,

    reread the sentence you are commenting on. You see there is a “might” and not an “always”.
    I know, it’s a bit difficult for you, “might”, “always”, it all means the same, why do we need all these words ?

  69. truth machine says

    Speaking of stupid atheists, we have Alex:

    Why use the lable (sic) “racist” to describe Richard Lynn?

    It’s been explained at length, dumbfuck. See, e.g., his Wikipedia article.

    Just because his research on IQ and race are uncomfortable and politically incorrect

    Uh, no, those aren’t the reasons, cretin.

    does not invalidate his scientific findings.

    Moronic strawman.

    Living in snow white Minnesota allows a certain distance from the everyday intuitivness regarding race that those of us in more diverse areas experience.

    There are at least three different fallacies packed into that immensely idiotic sentence.

  70. truth machine says

    However, as atheists we shouldnt let our emotions dictate our acceptance of scientific truths.

    It’s only emotion that leads people to mischaracterize their precious beliefs (and the “intuitivness” (sic)(k) of same) as “scientific truths”.

    If we can accept that certain populations are prone to specific diseases (Type 1 diabetes in Northern Europeans and sickle cell anemia in West Africans) then why can’t we also accept that science seems to point to differences in average abilities between populations?

    Here we have the classic fallacy of the “scientific” racist morons. There is no dispute that different populations have differences in average abilities. Rather, it is the facile inferences drawn from such tautologies that intelligent people have doubts about.

  71. truth machine says

    @Paul W.
    I’m not clear on what premise you’re rejecting here.

    Then perhaps you should clean your monitor, since he spelled it out: “a biological basis for such ability”.

    I don’t find it at all implausible that there’s a moderate correlation between atheism and intelligence

    No premise of a biological basis there, until we get to

    (or some better measure of native “smartness”)

    “native” implies the rejected premise. Duh and sheesh.

    @Windy
    I don’t see how this possibility can be summarily “rejected”.

    Oh Windy. You’re one of the smartest here — smart enough to understand the difference between “premise” and “possibility”.

  72. Paul W. says

    truth machine:

    @Paul W.

    I’m not clear on what premise you’re rejecting here.

    Then perhaps you should clean your monitor, since he spelled it out: “a biological basis for such ability”.

    I was just asking P.Z. to clarify what he means.

    Presumably he does not actually reject the premise that there are any “biological” bases for such abilities. For example, early nutrition during myelination of neurons might affect all sorts of mental abilities in various ways.

    I think it’s worth clarify just what is or isn’t being rejected, and why.

    Note also that P.Z. doesn’t clearly say that he rejects “a biological basis for such ability.” He first talks about Lynn’s peculiar notions of biological determinism, and then says

    While I can see where accepting the handicap of faith might lead to poor performance on non-faith-based tests and scientific thinking, I reject Lynn’s usual premise of a biological basis for such ability.

    (Emphasis mine.)

    It’s not quite clear whether, in what sense, or to what degree he’s rejecting biological bases, and to what degree he’s rejecting the particular kind, sense, and degree of biological basis that Lynn usually posits.

    I don’t find it at all implausible that there’s a moderate correlation between atheism and intelligence

    No premise of a biological basis there, until we get to

    (or some better measure of native “smartness”)

    “native” implies the rejected premise. Duh and sheesh.

    Well, duh and sheesh to you, too.

    Obviously, I do not reject out of hand the possibility that there are mental traits that are affected by biology, including genetically influenced variation between individuals.

    (Why should I? There’s a lot of evidence from twin studies that many individual differences in mental traits are partly heritable. The mind is clearly not a completely blank slate.)

    I wasn’t saying P.Z. agreed with me. I agree that he appears not to, and I find that interesting.

    @Windy
    I don’t see how this possibility can be summarily “rejected”.

    Oh Windy. You’re one of the smartest here — smart enough to understand the difference between “premise” and “possibility”.

    Stop with the condescending, browbeating shit, OK, truth machine?

    I think it’s reasonable to ask such questions. If P.Z. is really rejecting a premise as opposed to a conclusion, it would be worth clarifying that.

    Does the paper in question simply assert that as a premise, or does it conclude it by a chain of inferences that P.Z. doesn’t buy?

    It’s also worth clarifying the sense in which P.Z. is rejecting it—is he saying that the case hasn’t been made, so its use as a “premise” is question-begging, or that it has been soundly refuted, so that asserting it as a premise or drawing it as a conclusion is clearly wrong? Or what?

    I gotta say, this is not one of P.Z.’s better posts. It does seem mostly ad hominem. The work may suck, and the guy may suck, and the work may suck because the guy sucks, but P.Z. is not making a particularly clear argument.

    Please, anybody who feels like jumping on me, realize that I’m not defending IQ as a particularly good measure of mental ability, especially cross-culturally. That’s one reason I brought up the issue of atheism among elite & top scientists. (It’s not just about artificial measures, and is a very striking effect even if we just look at the U.S. and factor out things like race, sex, and income.)

    Please also don’t jump to the conclusion that I’m a racist just because I don’t reject individual differences in a genetic factors that may affect mental abilities. (If that makes me a racist, please don’t tell my wife; it’d be a big shock to her.)

    Maybe I’m just dumb as a bag of hammers, truth machine, but that’s why I’m asking for clarifications. Lighten up.

  73. Explicit Atheist says

    Etha Williams, OM | June 12, 2008 6:24 PM wrote:

    ‘??? How does one use the normalized IQ distribution to determine whether an entire population has “become more intelligent”? What does this even mean? We’ve definitely become more knowledgeable, but more intelligent?’

    Probably by comparing the results of the same tests over time. For example, if a higher score on a given test is needed this year to qualify for a 100 than in previous years then the overall population has become “more intelligent” by that measure.

  74. Paul W. says

    High IQ turns American acedemics into atheists. In secular Europe, it may well turn them into theologians, philosophers of religion, etc.

    May, schmay. Do you have any evidence suggesting that this might be the case?

    I’d be interested in any evidence on this point, too.

    FWIW, about the irreligiosity of top scientists, I recently saw a stat that says that fellows of the (British) Royal Society are even more atheistic than members of the (U.S.) National academy of sciences. Only three or four percent believe in a personal god. (As opposed to the whopping 7 percent of NAS members.) Most Britons do believe in God, though less overwhelmingly in the US, and their top scientists are even more overwhelmingly atheistic.

    Unfortunately, I forgot where I saw that; it may have been on RDnet.

  75. windy says

    Oh Windy. You’re one of the smartest here — smart enough to understand the difference between “premise” and “possibility”.

    Apparently not :) I agree that it wasn’t fair of me to substitute “possibility” for “premise”. But I also agree with Paul W that it isn’t clear what we mean by “rejecting the premise”.

    But anyways, Lynn is a simplistic bore. There are more interesting things going on in human behavioral genetics. Gustaf’s suggestion in #61 that this might be a matter of personality is interesting, since many personality traits have high heritability (sometimes suspiciously high.) Another new study claims to have found a strong association between alleles at a single locus and political identification, with a strong environmental interaction.

  76. Paul W. says

    pnu,

    You can quote Gould on the subject, but a lot of us won’t take it particularly seriously. Gould was (IMHO) pretty philosophically naive, and blinded by his radical politics about this particular subject.

    You might want to read the relevant parts of The Blank Slate by Pinker (especially chapter 7) and/or Darwin’s Dangerous Machine by Dennett for critiques of Gould’s (and Lewontin’s) views.

    Gould was fond of straw men and lofty and extreme statements like this:

    Thus, my criticism of Wilson does not invoke a non-biological “environmentalism”; it merely pits the concept of biological potentiality, with a brain capable of a full range of human behaviors and predisposed toward none, against the idea of biological determinism, with specific genes for specific behavioral traits.

    The idea that the brain has no behavioral predispositions is just ridiculous.

    The idea that behavioral predispositions are uniform across all human brains is not tenable.

    It’s a convenient assumption for a Marxist, but it’s just not true.

    Gould was not a very good cognitive scientist or philosopher of mind.

  77. says

    To negentropyeater
    Response to post #75

    “reread the sentence you are commenting on. You see there is a “might” and not an “always”. I know, it’s a bit difficult for you, “might”, “always”, it all means the same, why do we need all these words ?”

    Sure, I read that. But oh, excuse me, NOW I see where I erred! I thought you could understand P.Z.’s plain and clear meaning! Wow, that really WAS pretty darn “stupid” of me!

    Your comment is so typical of the bigoted brain… so focused on the minutae of their claims that they can’t even see their own bigotry in context.

    Just like those religious folks who “might” not “neccesarily” be stupid, or “might” not be “born” stupid.

    The word “might” didn’t qualify the rest of what P.Z. sais.

    “it’s therefore not surprising that a group in which a significant fraction of its membership actively reject science will do poorly on such tests”.

    Which group “might” that be? Why those crazy religious folks, that’s who!

    “…While I can see where accepting the handicap of faith might lead to poor performance on non-faith-based tests and scientific thinking…”

    Gee. You must’ve missed these “other” words. So tell me, WHO didn’t read this right?

  78. says

    Response to Owlmirror, Post # 73

    Wernher von Braun the scientists who preferred to go to jail rather than support Hitler’s use of rockets he designed for use on English civilians and who singlehandedly pioneered the development of rocket design and who was ASKED to head up the mission to the moon (and of course there were other technicians…duh)

    Fixed.

    Again, as usual, you take issue with nuance rather than the point I was making.

    The point, owlbrain, is that von Braun was a creationist and a darn good scientist. And folks like P.Z. like to say that people of faith have no business being in science.

    Why don’t you come back on my point instead of getting your feathers ruffled over trivia?

  79. says

    Von Braun was an engineer who never, ever used biology in his chosen field. His invalid beliefs about science and biology and evolution were irrelevant in every thing he did…but I guarantee you, they would have seriously impeded progress in biology.

    And no, I have never said people of faith have no business being in science. That is a claim entirely of your own invention.

    And with that, I suggest you bugger off, you dishonest cretin.

  80. Owlmirror says

    Wernher von Braun the Nazi SS officer engineer who was arrested because of Himmler’s paranoia, not because he ever expressed any moral objection to how Hitler’s rockets were built by slave labor, or used on English civilians, and who was released after a couple of weeks anyway, and who built upon pre-existing work on the development of rocket design, and who was ASKED to head up the Marshall Space Flight Center which produced the Saturn V which lead to the mission to the moon (and of course there were other technicians…duh)

    Fixed, dammit.

    Why don’t you come back on my point instead of getting your feathers ruffled over trivia?

    Since your entire point was in fact on the one hand false, and on the other, by your own admission, wirthless trivia, it has indeed been addressed…

    Say, weren’t you working on a book? Didn’t you say that you knew about poor widdle creationist scientists who were fired for being creationists? Weren’t you going to post their tragic stories here? Did you ever find out anything that was not addressed at the website:

    http://expelledexposed.com

    ?

  81. Nick Gotts says

    Paul W.,

    Your quotation from Gould’s criticism of Wilson (at least if the quote is from the essay “Potentiality vs Determinism”, as reprinted in “Ever Since Darwin”), omits a crucial word: “predisposed” should be “rigidly predisposed”. Is that your source, did Gould perhaps insert this word after the original publication in Natural History, or have you taken it from some intermediate source such as Pinker?

    Gould did not maintain that there are no genetically-based differences between human brains. In “Racist Arguments and IQ” (reprinted in “Ever Since Darwin”), he says:
    “I do not claim that intelligence, however defined, has no genetic basis – I regard it as trivially true, uninteresting, and unimportant that it does. The expression of any trait represents a complex interaction of heredity and environment. Our job is simply to provide the best environmental situation for the realization of valued potential in all individuals.”

    Nor did he have a “blank slate” view of human nature. In “The Mismeasure of Man”, in the concluding chapter, he says:
    “Are we after all, at birth, the tabula rasa, or blank slate, imagined by some eighteenth-century empiricist philosophers. As an evolutionary biologist, I cannot adopt such a nihilistic position without denying the fundametal insight of my profession.”

    I think it may be someone other than Gould whose politics are leading them to “convenient” views.

  82. Paul W. says

    Nick—

    You nailed me on the “disposed” vs. “rigidly disposed” quote thing.

    How embarrassing. Pinker either got the quote wrong, or got the attribution of the version wrong, and I did indeed take it from him. I do not know whether the original version in Natural History had the word “rigidly.”

    Still, I have to more or less agree with Pinker that Gould, despite his explicit protestations to the contrary, was pretty much a blank-slater.

    I don’t get that conclusion from Pinker or Dennett, by the way. I got that impression from reading Gould himself in the 1980’s, before I ever read Pinker and Dennett. Along the way, I was studying a bit of psychology and sociology and anthro, and I agreed with him. The stuff he was saying reinforced stuff I was learning (at first) that was basically the Standard Social Science Model.

    This posting on Oran Kelley’s blog is interesting, for a much more extensive quote from Gould, and a couple of the comments. (Especially one that has a quote from Wilson that clarifies what Wilson was actually talking about.)

    My overall impression is that Gould did often pay lip service to mental stuff having some genetic basis—of course it does—but then turned around and made it sound like everything was culturally determined, and that anybody actually looking for genetic influences and individual differences was (a) stupidly looking for very particular “genes for” particular beliefs or actions, or something close to that, and (b) a naive “biological determinist” on the royal road to racism, classism, etc.

    What Gould tended to leave out was that our minds largely function using a variety of heuristics that are necessarily biased, and that genetic variation may affect the importance of different biases. There’s a huge middle ground between an almost-tabula rasa mind (with a few easily-overridden drives and basically no instincts) and a very “rigidly determined” mind with tons of very specific genes for very specific thoughts and actions.

    Sometimes, Gould’s criticism of naive sociobiology was a much needed corrective. People might pay lip service to the flexibility of human cognition, and then proceed to make a greedily reductionist argument that some particular things was “genetic” in a simplistic way.

    But likewise, Gould tended to go overboard the other way, paying lip service to genetic bases, but quickly rejecting biological explanations in favor of purely cultural ones. (And sometimes caricaturing his opponents’ views as “rigidly” deterministic when they made it clear they were talking about differences in low-level tendencies with interesting high-level consequences.)

    I think it may be someone other than Gould whose politics are leading them to “convenient” views.

    Maybe, but I’m not sure what you’re implying.

    I, by the way, am a left liberal myself. I just disagree with Gould about what that has to do with nativism.

  83. Nick Gotts says

    Paul w.
    Well, on Gould we’ll have to differ. I’ve read almost all the popular science he wrote, and I think his opinions are in line with his explicit statements; but he clearly felt (I tend to agree), that the tendency over the last 30 years or so has been toward unjustified nativist assumptions, often used in support of popular stereotypes and reactionary politics; and at least over that time, Pinker’s “SSSM” is rather a straw man. My comment about political views was provoked by your “convenient for a Marxist” jibe; but I am happy to withdraw the implication.

  84. Paul W. says

    Nick,

    Have you read Moral Minds by Hauser, or Religion Explained by Boyer, or Unto Others by Sober and Wilson?

    That sort of “evolutionary psychology” seems pretty good to me.

    Paul

  85. windy says

    Unto Others by Sober and Wilson

    I haven’t read that yet, but given the way Wilson resorts to misrepresenting kin selection theory in his popular science articles like this one, I would take their conclusions about group selection with a grain of salt.

    Buller’s Adapting minds is a good, if a bit uneven, positive criticism of the excesses of modern evolutionary psychology.

  86. Paul W. says

    Windy,

    If you get around to reading Unto Others, I’d be interested in your opinion.

    I agree that the New Scientist article is not persuasive, and take the book much more seriously. (That may be more due to Sober than Wilson.)

    BTW, I’m not necessarily convinced that group selection is as common as Wilson would make it out to be.

    I do (as an admitted non-expert) find the book persuasive where it shows that group selection has too often been dismissed as extremely unlikely or even incoherent. (Group selection does not simply reduce to gene selection as some folks like Dawkins have sometimes made it sound.)

    Sober and Wilson do acknowledge that usually lower units of selection typically undermine higher ones, and that the conditions have to be “just right” (small enough groups, low enough outbreeding, enough inter-group competition, etc.)

    Even if significant group selection is much rarer than they make it out to be, it could still be quite important in the bigger picture, by providing a rarely-used but crucial crane to enable significant evolutionary transitions you otherwise wouldn’t get.

  87. windy says

    I do (as an admitted non-expert) find the book persuasive where it shows that group selection has too often been dismissed as extremely unlikely or even incoherent. (Group selection does not simply reduce to gene selection as some folks like Dawkins have sometimes made it sound.)

    So far no one has come up with a plausible group selection model that doesn’t reduce to kin selection aka inclusive fitness. And inclusive fitness is easiest to understand (at least to me) in terms of the propagation of genes. So on one level it’s just a matter of taste in how we choose to name the processes, but kin selection models have been much more fruitful in actual research, and the distinctions Wilson likes to draw between kin and group selection (in favor of the latter) don’t appear to exist.