Judith Harris’s ‘The Nurture Assumption’: By Parent or Peers

Judith Harris, The Nurture Assumption: Why Children Turn Out the Way They Do. Free Press, 1998.

Almost all psychological traits on which individual humans differ, from personality and intelligence to mental illness, are now known to be substantially heritable. In other words, individual differences in these traits are, at least in part, a consequence of genetic differences between individuals.

This finding is so robust that it has even been termed by Eric Turkenheimer the First Law of Behviour Genetics and, although once anathema to most psychologists save a marginal fringe of behavioural geneticists, it has now, under the sheer weight of evidence produced by the latter, belatedly become the new orthodoxy. 

On reflection, however, this transformation is not entirely a revelation. 

After all, it was only in the mid-twentieth century that the curious notion that individual differences were entirely the product of environmental differences first arose, and, even then, this delusion was largely restricted to psychologists, sociologists, feminists and other such ‘professional damned fools’, along with those among the semi-educated public who seek to cultivate an air of intellectualism by aping the former’s affections. 

Before then, poets, peasants and laypeople alike had long recognized that ability, insanity, temperament and personality all tended to run in families, just as physical traits like stature, complexion, hair and eye colour also do.[1]

However, while the discovery of a heritable component to character and ability merely confirms the conventional wisdom of an earlier age, another behavioural genetic finding, far more surprising and counterintuitive, has passed relatively unreported. 

This is the discovery that the so-called shared family environment (i.e. the environment shared by siblings, or non-siblings, raised in the same family home) actually has next to no effect on adult personality and behaviour. 

This we know from such classic study designs in behavioural genetics as twin studies, adoption studies and family studies.

In short, individuals of a given degree of relatedness, whether identical twins, fraternal twins, siblings, half-siblings or unrelated adoptees, are, by the time they reach adulthood, no more similar to one another in personality or IQ when they are raised in the same household than when they are raised in entirely different households. 

The Myth of Parental Influence 

Yet parental influence has long loomed large in virtually every psychological theory of child development, from the Freudian Oedipus complex and Bowby’s attachment theory to the whole literary genre of books aimed at instructing anxious parents on how best to raise their children so as to ensure that the latter develop into healthy, functional, successful adults. 

Indeed, not only is the conventional wisdom among psychologists overturned, but so is the conventional wisdom among sociologists – for one aspect of the shared family environment is, of course, household income and social class

Thus, if the family that a person is brought up in has next to no impact on their psychological outcomes as an adult, then this means that the socioeconomic status of the family home in which they are raised also has no effect. 

Poverty, or a deprived upbringing, then, has no effect on IQ, personality or the prevalence of mental illness, at least by the time a person has reached adulthood.[2]

Neither is it only leftist sociologists who have proved mistaken. 

Thus, just as leftists use economic deprivation as an indiscriminate, catch-all excuse for all manner of social pathology (e.g. crime, unemployment, educational underperformance) so conservatives are apt to place the blame on divorce, family breakdown, having children out of wedlock and the consequential increase in the prevalence of single-parent households

However, all these factors are, once again, part of the shared family environment – and according to the findings of behavioural genetics, they have next to no influence on adult personality or intelligence. 

Of course, chaotic or abusive family environments do indeed tend to produce offspring with negative life outcomes. 

However, none of this proves that it was the chaotic or abusive family environment that caused the negative outcomes. 

Rather, another explanation is at hand – perhaps the offspring simply biologically inherit the personality traits of their parents, the very personality traits that caused their family environment to be so chaotic and abusive in the first place.[3] 

For example, parents who divorce or bear offspring out-of-wedlock likely differ in personality from those who first get married then stick together, perhaps being more impulsive or less self-disciplined and conscientious (e.g. less able refrain from having children from a relationship that was destined to be fleeting, or less able to persevere and make the relationship last). 

Their offspring may, then, simply biologically inherit these undesirable personality attributes, which then themselves lead to the negative social outcomes associated with being raised in single-parent households or broken homes. The association between family breakdown and negative outcomes for offspring might, then, reflect simply the biological inheritance of personality. 

Similarly, as leftists are fond of reminding us, children from economically-deprived backgrounds do indeed have lower recorded IQs and educational attainment than those from more privileged family backgrounds, as well as other negative outcomes as adults (e.g. lower earnings, higher rates of unemployment). 

However, this does not prove that coming from a deprived family background necessarily itself depresses your IQ, educational attainment or future salary. 

Rather, an equally plausible possibility is simply that offspring simply biologically inherit the low intelligence of their parents – the very low intelligence which was likely a factor causing the low socioeconomic status of their parents, since intelligence is known to correlate strongly with educational and occupational advancement.[4]

In short, the problem with all of this body of research which purports to demonstrate the influence of parents and family background on psychology and behavioural outcomes for offspring is that they fail to control for the heritability of personality and intelligence, an obvious confounding factor

The Non-Shared Environment

However, not everything is explained by heredity. As a crude but broadly accurate generalization, only about half the variation for most psychological traits is attributable to genes. This leaves about half of the variation in intelligence, personality and mental illness to be explained environmental factors.  

What are these environmental factors if they are not to be sought in the shared family environment

The obvious answer is, of course, the non-shared family environment – i.e. the ways in which even children brought up in the same family-home nevertheless experience different micro-environments, both within the home and, perhaps more importantly, outside it. 

Thus, even the fairest and most even-handed parents inevitably treat their different offspring differently in some ways.  

Indeed, among the principal reasons why parents treat their different offspring differently is precisely because the different offspring themselves differ in their own behaviour quite independently of any parental treatment.

This is well illustrated by the question of the relationship between corporal punishment and behaviour in children.

Corporal punishment 

Rather than differences in the behaviour of different children resulting from differences in how their parents treat them, it may be that differences in how parents treat their children may reflect responses to differences in the behaviour of the children themselves. 

In other words, the psychologists have the direction of causation precisely backwards. 

Take, for example, one particularly controversial issue, namely the physical chastisement of children by their parents as a punishment for bad behaviour (e.g. spanking). 

Some psychologists have sometimes argued that physical chastisement actually causes misbehaviour. 

As evidence, they cite the fact that children who are spanked more often by their parents or caregivers on average actually behave worse than those whose caregivers only rarely or never spank the children entrusted to their care.  

This, they claim, is because, in employing spanking as a form of discipline, caregivers are inadvertently imparting the message that violence is a good way of solving your problems. 

Actually, however, I suspect children are more than capable of working out for themselves that violence is often an effective means of getting your way, at least if you have superior physical strength to your adversary. Unfortunately, this is something that, unlike reading, arithmetic and long division, does not require explicit instruction by teachers or parents. 

Instead, a more obvious explanation for the correlation between spanking and misbehaviour in children is not that spanking causes misbehaviour, but rather that misbehaviour causes spanking. 

Indeed, once you think about it, this is in fact rather obvious: If a child never seriously misbehaves, then a parent likely never has any reason to spank that child, even if the parent is, in principle, a strict disciplinarian; whereas, on the other hand, a highly disobedient child is likely to try the patience of even the most patient caregiver, whatever his or her moral opposition to physical chastisement in principle. 

In other words, causation runs in exactly the opposite direction to that assumed by the naïve psychologists.[5] 

Another factor may also be at play – namely, offspring biologically inherit from their parents the personality traits that cause both the misbehaviour and the punishment. 

In other words, parents with aggressive personalities may be more likely to lose their temper and physically chastise their children, while children who inherit these aggressive personalities are themselves more likely to misbehave, not least by behaving in an aggressive or violent manner. 

However, even if parents treat their different offspring differently owing to the different behaviour of the offspring themselves, this is not the sort of environmental factor capable of explaining the residual non-shared environmental effects on offspring outcomes. 

After all, this merely begs the question as to what caused these differences in offspring behaviour in the first place? 

If the differences in offspring behaviour exist prior to differences in parental responses to this behaviour, then these differences cannot be explained by the differences in parental responses.  

Peer Groups 

This brings us back to the question of the environmental causes of offspring outcomes – namely, if about half the differences among children’s IQs and personalities are attributable to environmental factors, but these environmental factors are not to be found in the shared family environment (i.e. the environment shared by children raised in the same household), then where are these environmental factors to be sought? 

The search for environmental factors affecting personality and intelligence has, thus far, been largely unsuccessful. Indeed, some behavioural geneticists have almost gone as far as conceding scholarly defeat in identifying correlates for the environmental portion of the variance. 

Thus, leading contemporary behavioural geneticist Robert Plomin in his recent book, Blueprint: How DNA Makes Us Who We Are, concludes that those environmental factors that affect cognitive ability, personality, and the development of mental illness are, as he puts it, ‘unsystematic’ in nature. 

In other words, he seems to be saying that they are mere random noise. This is tantamount to accepting that the null hypothesis is true. 

Judith Harris, however, has a quite different take. According to Harris, environmental causes must be sought, not within the family home, but rather outside it – in a person’s interactions with their peer-group and the wider community.[6]

Environment ≠ Nurture 

Thus, Harris argues that the so-called nature-nurture debate is misnamed, since the word ‘nurture’ usually refers to deliberate care and moulding of a child (or of a plant or animal). But many environmental effects are not deliberate. 

Thus, Harris repeatedly references behaviourist John B. Watson’s infamous boast: 

Give me a dozen healthy infants, well-formed, and my own specified world to bring them up in and I’ll guarantee to take any one at random and train him to become any type of specialist I might select—doctor, lawyer, artist, merchant-chief and, yes, even beggar-man and thief, regardless of his talents, penchants, tendencies, abilities, vocations, and race of his ancestors.

Yet what strikes me as particularly preposterous about Watson’s boast is not its radical environmental determinism, nor even its rather convenient unfalsifiability.[7] 

Rather, what most strikes me as most preposterous about Watson’s claim is its frankly breath-taking arrogance. 

Thus, Watson not only insisted that it was environment alone that entirely determined adult personality. In this same quotation, he also proclaimed that he already fully understood the nature of these environmental effects to such an extent that, given omnipotent powers to match his evidently already omniscient understanding of human development, he could produce any outcome he wished. 

Yet, in reality, environmental effects are anything but clear-cut. Pushing a child in a certain direction, or into a certain career, may sometimes have the desired effect, but other times may seemingly have the exact opposite effect to that desired, provoking the child to rebel against parental dictates. 

Thus, even to the extent that environment does determine outcomes, the precise nature of the environmental factors implicated, and their interaction with one another, and with the child’s innate genetic endowment, is surely far more complex than the simple mechanisms proposed by behaviourists like Watson (e.g. reinforcement and punishment). 

Language Acquisition 

The most persuasive evidence for Harris’s theory of the importance of peer groups comes from an interesting and widely documented peculiarity of language acquisition

The children of immigrants, whose parents speak a different language inside the family home, and may even themselves be monolingual, nevertheless typically grow up to speak the language of their host culture rather better than they do the language to which they were first exposed in the family home. 

Indeed, while their parents may never achieve fluency in the language of their host culture, having missed out on the Chomskian critical period for language acquisition, their children often actually lose the ability to speak their parent’s language, often much to the consternation of parents and grandparents. 

Yet, from an sociobiological or evolutionary psychological perspective, such an outcome is obviously adaptive. 

After all, if a child is to succeed in wider society, they must master its language, whereas, if their parent’s first language is not spoken anywhere in their host society except in their family, then it is of limited utility, and, once their parents themselves become proficient in the language of the host culture, it becomes entirely redundant.

As sociologist-turned-sociobiologist Pierre van den Berghe observes in his excellent The Ethnic Phenomenon (reviewed here):

Children quickly discover that their home language is a restricted medium that not useable in most situations outside the family home. When they discover that their parents are bilingual they conclude – rightly for their purposes – that the home language is entirely redundant… Mastery of the new language entails success at school, at work and in ‘the world’… [against which] the smiling approval of a grandmother is but slender counterweight” (The Ethnic Phenomenon: p258). 

Code-Switching 

Harris suggests that the same applies to personality. Just as the child of immigrants switches between one language and another at home and school, so they also adopt different personalities. 

Thus, many parents are surprised to be told by their children’s teachers at parents’ evenings that their offspring is quiet and well-behaved at school, since, they report, he or she isn’t at all like that at home. 

Yet, at home, a child has only, at most, a sibling or two with whom to compete for his parents’ attention. In contrast, at school, he or she has a whole class with whom to compete for their teacher’s attention.

It is therefore unsurprising that most children are less outgoing at school than they are at home with their parents. 

For example, an older sibling might be able push his little brother around at home. But, if he is small for his age, he is unlikely to be able to get away with the same behaviour among his peers at school. 

Children therefore adopt two quite different personalities – one for interactions with family and siblings, and another for among their peers.

This then, for Harris, explains why, perhaps surprisingly, birth-order has generally been found to have little if any effect on personality, at least as personality manifests itself outside the family home. 

An Evolutionary Theory of Socialization? 

Interestingly, even evolutionary psychologists have not been immune from the delusion of parental influence. Thus, in one influential paper, anthropologists Patricia Draper and Henry Harpending argued that offspring calibrate their reproductive strategy by reference to the presence or absence of a father in their household (Draper & Harpending 1982). 

On this view, being raised in a father-absent household is indicative of a social environment where low male parental investment is the norm, and hence offspring adjust their own reproductive strategy accordingly, adopting a promiscuous, low-investment mating strategy characterized by precocious sexual development and an inability to maintain lasting long-term relationships (Draper & Harpending 1982; Belsky et al 1991). 

There is indeed, as these authors amply demonstrate, a consistent correlation between father-absence during development and both earlier sexual development and more frequent partner-switching in later life. 

Yet there is also another, arguably more obvious, explanation readily at hand to explain this association. Perhaps offspring simply inherit biologically the personality traits, including sociosexual orientation, of their parents. 

On this view, offspring raised in single-parent households are more likely to adopt a promiscuous, low-investment mating strategy simply because they biologically inherit the promiscuous sociosexual orientation of their parents, the very promiscuous sociosexual orientation that caused the latter to have children out-of-wedlock or from relationships that were destined to break down and hence caused the father-absent childhood of their offspring. 

Moreover, even on purely a priori theoretical grounds, Draper, Harpending and Belsky’s reasoning is dubious. 

After all, whether you personally were raised in a one- or two-parent family is obviously a very unreliable indicator of the sorts of relationships prevalent in the wider community into which you are born, since it represents a sample size of just one. 

Instead, therefore, it would be far more reliable to calibrate your reproductive strategy in response to the prevalence of one-parent households in the wider community at large, rather than the particular household type into which you happen to have been born.  

This, of course, directly supports Harris’s own theory of ‘peer group socialization’. 

In short, to the extent that children do adapt to the environment and circumstances of their upbringing (and they surely do), they must integrate into, adopt the norms of, and a reproductive strategy to maximize their fitness within, the wider community into which they are born, rather than the possibly quite idiosyncratic circumstances and attitudes of their own family. 

Absent Fathers, from Upper-Class to Under-Class 

Besides language-acquisition among the children of immigrants, another example cited by Harris in support of her theory of ‘peer group socialization’ is the culture, behaviours and upbringing of British upper-class males.

Here, she reports, boys were, and, to some extent, still are, reared primarily, not by their parents, but rather by nannies, governoresses and, more recently, in exclusive fee-paying all-male boarding schools

Yet, despite having next to no contact with their fathers throughout most of their childhood, these boys nevertheless managed somehow to acquire manners, attitudes and accents similar, if not identical, to those of their upper-class fathers, and not at all those of the middle-class nannies, governoresses and masters with whom they spent most of their childhood being raised. 

Yet this phenomenon is by no means restricted to the British upper-classes.

On the contrary, rather than citing the example of the British upper-classes in centuries gone by, Harris might just as well have cited that of contemporary underclass in Britain and America, since what was once true of the British upper-classes, is now equally true of the underclass

Just as the British upper-classes were once raised by governoresses, nannies and in private schools with next to no contact with their fathers, so contemporary underclass males are similarly raised in single-parent households, often to unwed mothers, and typically have little if any contact with their biological fathers. 

Here, as Warren Farrell observes in his seminal The Myth of Male Power (which I have reviewed here, here and here), there is a now a “a new nuclear family: woman, government and child”, what Farrell terms “Government as a Substitute Husband”. 

Yet, once again, these underclass males, raised by single parents with the financial assistance of the taxpayer, typically turn out much like their absent fathers with whom they have had little if any contact, often going on to promiscuously father a succession of offspring themselves, with whom they likewise have next to no contact. 

Abuse 

But what of actual abuse? Surely this has a long-term devastating psychological impact on children. This, at any rate, is the conventional wisdom, and questioning this wisdom, at least with respect to sexual abuse, is tantamount to contemporary heresy, with attendant persecution

Thus, for example, it is claimed that criminals who are abusive towards their children were themselves almost invariably abused, mistreated or neglected as children, which is what has led to their own abusive, behaviour.

A particularly eloquent expression of this theory is found in the novel Clockers, by Richard Price, where one of the lead characters, a police officer, explains how, during his first few years on the job, a senior colleague had restrained him from attacking an abusive mother who had left her infant son handcuffed to a radiator, telling him:

Rocco, that lady you were gonna brain? Twenty years ago when she was a little girl. I arrested her father for beating her baby brother to death. The father was a piece of shit. Now that she’s all grown up? She’s a real piece of shit. That kid you saved today. If he lives that long, if he grows up? He’s gonna be a real piece of shit. It’s the cycle of shit and you can’t do nothing about it” (Clockers: p96).

Take, for example, what is perhaps the form of child abuse that provokes the most outrage and disgust – namely, sexual abuse. Here, it is frequently asserted that paedophiles were almost invariably themselves abused as children, which creates a so-called cycle of abuse

However, there are at least three problems with this claim. 

First, it cannot explain how the first person in this cycle came to be abusive. 

Second, we might doubt whether it is really true that paedophiles are disproportionately likely to have themselves been abused as children. After all, abuse is something that almost invariably happens surreptitiously ‘behind closed doors’ and is therefore difficult to verify or disprove. 

Therefore, even if most paedophiles claim to have been victims of abuse, it is possible that they are simply lying in order to elicit sympathy or excuse or shift culpability for their own offending. 

Finally, and most importantly for present purposes, even if paedophiles can be shown to be disproportionately likely to have themselves been victimized as children, this by no means proves that their past victimization caused their current sexual orientation. 

Rather, since most abuse is perpetrated by parents or other close family members, an alternative possibility is that victims simply biologically inherit the sexual orientation of their abuser.

After all, if homosexuality is partially heritable, as is now widely accepted, then why not paedophilia as well? 

In short, the ‘cycle of shit’ referred to by Price’s fictional police officer may well be real, but mediated by genetics rather than childhood experience.

However, this conclusion is not entirely clear. On the contrary, Harris is at pains to emphasize that the finding that the shared family environment accounts for hardly any of the variance in outcomes among adults does not preclude the possibility that severe abuse may indeed have an adverse effect on adult outcomes. 

After all, adoption studies can only tell us what percent of the variance is caused by heredity or by shared or unshared environments within a specific population as a whole.

Perhaps the shared family environment accounts for so little of the variance precisely because the sort of severe abuse that does indeed have a devastating long-term effect on personality and mental health is, thankfully, so very rare in modern societies. 

Indeed, it may be especially rare within the families sampled in adoption studies precisely because adoptive families are carefully screened for suitability before being allowed to adopt. 

Moreover, Harris emphasizes an important caveat: Even if abuse does not have long-term adverse psychological effects, this does not mean that abuse causes no harm, and nor does it in any way excuse such abuse. 

On the contrary, the primary reason we shouldn’t mistreat children (and should severely punish those who do) is not on account of some putative long-term psychological effect on the adults whom the children subsequently become, but rather because of the very real pain and suffering inflicted on a child at the time the abuse takes place. 

Race Differences in IQ 

Finally, Harris even touches upon that most vexed area of the (so-called) nature-nurture debate – race differences in intelligence

Here, the politically-correct claim that differences in intelligence between human races, as recorded in IQ tests, are of purely environmental origin runs into a problem, since the sorts of environmental effects that are usually posited by environmental determinists as accounting for the black-white test score gap in America (e.g. differences in rates of poverty and socioeconomic status) have been shown to be inadequate because, even after controlling for these factors, there remains a still unaccounted for gap in test-scores.[8]

Thus, as Arthur R. Jensen laments: 

This gives rise to the hypothesizing of still other, more subtle environmental factors that either have not been or cannot be measured—a history of slavery, social oppression, and racial discrimination, white racism, the ‘black experience,’ and minority status consciousness [etc]” (Straight Talk About Mental Tests: p223). 

The problem with these explanations, however, is that none of these factors has yet been demonstrated to have any effect on IQ scores. 

Moreover, some of the factors proposed as explanations are formulated in such a vague form (e.g. “white racism, the ‘black experience’”) that it is difficult to conceive of how they could ever be subjected to controlled testing in the first place.[9]

Jensen has termed this mysterious factor the X-factor

In coining this term, Jensen was emphasizing its vague, mysterious and unfalsifiable nature. Jensen did not actually believe that this posited X-factor, whatever it was, really did account for the test-score gap. Rather, he thought heredity explained most, if not all, of the remaining unexplained test-score gap. 

However, Harris takes Jensen at his word and takes the search for the X-factor very seriously. Indeed, she apparently believes she has discovered and identified it. Thus, she announces: 

I believe I know what this X factor is… I can describe it quite clearly. Black kids and white kids identify with different groups that have different norms. The differences are exaggerated by group contrast effects and have consequences that compound themselves over the years. That’s the X factor” (p248-9). 

Unfortunately, Harris does not really develop this fascinating claim. Indeed, she cites no direct evidence in support of this claim, and evidently seems to regard the alternative possibility – namely, that race differences in intelligence are at least partly genetic in origin – as so unpalatable that it can safely ruled out a priori.

In fact, however, although not discussed by Harris, there is at least some evidence in support of her theory. Indeed, her theory potentially reconciles the apparently conflicting findings of two of the most widely-cited studies in this vexed area of research and debate.

First, in the more recent of these two studies, Minnesota Transracial Adoption Study, the same race differences in IQ were observed among black, white and mixed-race children adopted into upper-middle class white families as are found among black, white and mixed-race populations in the community at large (Scarr & Weinberg 1976). 

Moreover, although, when tested during childhood, the children’s adoptive households did seem to have had a positive effect on their IQ scores, in a follow-up study it was found that by the time they reached the cusp of adulthood, the black teenagers who had been adopted into upper-middle-class white homes actually scored no higher in IQ than did blacks in the wider population not raised in upper-middle class white families (Weinberg, Scarr & Waldman 1992). 

Although Scarr, Weinberg and Waldman took pains to present their findings as compatible with a purely environmentalist theory of race differences, this study has, not unreasonably, been widely cited by hereditarians as evidence for the existence of innate racial differences in intelligence (e.g. Levin 1994; Lynn 1994; Whitney 1996).

However, in the light of the findings of the behavioural genetics studies discussed by Harris in ‘The Nurture Assumption’, the fact that white upper-middle-class adoptive homes had no effect on the adult IQs of the black children adopted into them is, in fact, hardly surprising. 

After all, as we have seen, the shared family environment generally has no effect on IQ, at least by the time the person being tested has reached adulthood.[10]

One would therefore not expect adoptive homes, howsoever white and upper-middle-class, to have any effect on adult IQs of the black children adopted into them, or indeed of the white or mixed-race children adopted into them. 

In short, adoptive homes have no effect on adult IQ, whether or not the adoptees, or adoptive families, are black, white, brown, yellow, green or purple! 

But, if race differences in intelligence are indeed entirely environmental in origin, then where are these environmental causes to be found, if not in the family environment? 

Harris has an answer – black culture

According to her, the black adoptees, although raised in white adoptive families, nevertheless still come to identify as ‘black’, and to identify with the wider black culture and social norms. In addition, they may, on account of their racial identification, come to socialize with other blacks in school and elsewhere. 

As a result of this acculturation to African-American norms and culture, they therefore, according to Harris, come to score lower in IQ than their white peers and adoptive siblings. 

But how can we ever test this theory? Is it not untestable, and is this not precisely the problem identified by Jensen with previous positedX-factors.

Actually, however, although not discussed by Harris, there is a way of testing this theory – namely, looking at the IQs of black children raised in white families where there is no wider black culture with which to identify, and few if any black peers with whom to socialize?

This, then, brings us to the second of the two studies which Harris’s theory potentially reconciles, namely the famous Eyferth study.  

Here, it was found that the mixed-race children fathered by black American servicemen who had had sexual relationships with German women during the Allied occupation of Germany after World War Two had almost exactly the same average IQ scores as a control group of offspring fathered by white US servicemen during the same time period (Eyferth 1959). 

The crucial difference from the Minnesota study may be that these children, raised in an almost entirely monoracial, white Germany in the mid-twentieth century, had no wider African-American culture with which to identify or whose norms to adopt, and few if any black or mixed-race peers in their vicinity with whom to socialize. 

This, then, is perhaps the last lifeline for a purely environmentalist theory of race differences in intelligence – namely the theory that African-American culture depresses intelligence. 

Unfortunately, however, this proposition – namely, that African-American culture depresses your IQ – is almost as politically unpalatable and politically-incorrect as is the notion that race differences in intelligence reflect innate genetic differences.[11]

Endnotes

[1] Thus, this ancient wisdom is reflected, for example, in many folk sayings, such as the apple does not fall far from the tree, a chip off the old block and like father, like son, many of which long predate either Darwin’s theory of evolution, and Mendel’s work on heredity, let alone the modern work of behavioural geneticists.

[2] It is important to emphasize here that this applies only to psychological outcomes, and not, for example, economic outcomes. For example, a child raised by wealthy parents is indeed likely to be wealthier than one raised in poverty, if only because s/he is likely to inherit (some of) the wealth of his parents. It is also possible that s/he may, on average, obtain a better job as a consequence of the opportunities opened by his privileged upbringing. However, his IQ will be no higher than had s/he been raised in relative poverty, and neither will s/he be any more or less likely to suffer from a mental illness

[3] Similarly, it is often claimed that children raised in care homes, or in foster care, tend to have negative life-outcomes. However, again, this by no means proves that it is care homes or foster care that causes these negative life-outcomes. On the contrary, since children who end up in foster care are typically either abandoned by their biological parents, or forcibly taken from their parents by social services on account of the inadequate care provided by the latter, or sometimes outright abuse, it is obvious that their parents represent an unrepresentative sample of society as a whole. An obvious alternative explanation, then, is that the children in question simply inherit the dysfunctional personality attributes of their biological parents, namely the very dysfunctional personality attributes that caused the latter to either abandon their children or have them removed by the social services. (In other cases, such children may have been orphaned. However, this is less common today. At any rate, parents who die before their offspring reach maturity are surely also unrepresentative of parents in general. For example, many may live high-risk lifestyles that contribute to their early deaths.)

[4] Likewise, the heritability of such personality traits as conscientiousness and self-discipline, in addition to intelligence, likely also partly account for the association between parental income and academic attainment among their offspring, since both academic attainment, and occupational success, require the self-discipline to work hard to achieve success. These factors, again in addition to intelligence, likely also contribute to the association between parental income and the income and socioeconomic status ultimately attained by their offspring.

[5] This possibility could, at least in theory, be ruled out by longitudinal studies, which could investigate whether the spanking preceded the misbehaviour, or vice versa. However, this is easier said than done, since, unless relying on the reports by caregivers or children themselves, which depends on both the memory and honesty of the caregivers and children themselves, it would have to involve intensive, long-term, and continued observation in order to establish which came first, namely the pattern of misbehaviour, or the adoption of physical chastisement as a method of discipline. This would, presumably, require continuous observation from birth onwards, so as to ensure that the very first instance of spanking or excessive misbehaviour were recorded. Such a study would seem all but impossible and certainly, to my knowledge, has yet to be conducted.

[6] The fact that the relevant environmental variables must be sought outside the family home is one reason why the terms ‘between-family environment’ and ‘within-family environment’, sometimes used as synonyms or alternatives for ‘shared’ and ‘non-shared family environment’ respectively, are potentially misleading. Thus, the ‘within-family environment’ refers to those aspects of the environment that differ for different siblings even within a single family. However, these factors may differ within a single family precisely because they occur outside, not within, the family itself. The terms ‘shared’ and ‘non-shared family environment’ are therefore to be preferred, so as to avoid any potential confusion these alternative terms could cause.

[7] Both practical and ethical considerations, of course, prevent Watson from actually creating his “own specified world” in which to bring up his “dozen healthy infants”. Therefore, no one is able to put his claim to the test. It is therefore unfalsifiable and Watson is therefore free to make such boasts, safe in the knowledge that there is no danger of his actually being called to make good on his claims and thereby proven wrong.

[8] Actually, even if race differences in IQ are found to disappear after controlling for socioeconomic status, it would be a fallacy to conclude that this means that the differences in IQ are entirely a result of differences in social class and that there is no innate difference in intelligence between the races. After all, differences in socioeconomic status are in large part a consequence of differences in cognitive ability, as more intelligent people perform better at school, and at work, and hence rise in socioeconomic status. Therefore, in controlling for socioeconomic status, one is, in effect, also controlling for differences in intelligence, since the two are so strongly correlated. The contrary assumption has been termed by Jensenthe sociologist’s fallacy’.
This fallacy involves the assumption that it is differences in socioeconomic status that cause differences in IQ, rather than differences in intelligence that cause differences in socioeconomic status. As Arthur Jensen explains it:

If SES [i.e. socioeconomic status] were the cause of IQ, the correlation between adults’ IQ and their attained SES would not be markedly higher than the correlation between children’s IQ and their parents’ SES. Further, the IQs of adolescents adopted in infancy are not correlated with the SES of their adoptive parents. Adults’ attained SES (and hence their SES as parents) itself has a large genetic component, so there is a genetic correlation between SES and IQ, and this is so within both the white and the black populations. Consequently, if black and white groups are specially selected so as to be matched or statistically equated on SES, they are thereby also equated to some degree on the genetic component of IQ” (The g Factor: p491).

[9] Actually, at least some of these theories are indeed testable and potentially falsifiable. With regard to the factors quoted by Jensen (namely, “a history of slavery, social oppression, and racial discrimination, white racism… and minority status consciousness”), one way of testing these theories is to look at test scores in those countries where there is no such history. For example, in sub-Saharan Africa, as well as in Haiti and Jamaica, blacks are in the majority, and are moreover in control of the government. Yet the IQ scores of the indigenous populations of sub-Saharan Africa are actually even lower than among blacks in the USA (see Richard Lynn’s Race Differences in Intelligence: reviewed here). True, most such countries still have a history of racial oppression and discrimination, albeit in the form of European colonialism rather than racial slavery or segregation in the American sense. However, in those few sub-Saharan African countries that were not colonized by western powers, or only briefly colonized (e.g. Ethiopia, Liberia), scores are not any higher. Also, other minority groups ostensibly or historically subject to racial oppression and discrimination (e.g. Ashkenazi Jews, Overseas Chinese) actually score higher in IQ than the host populations that ostensibly oppress them. As for “the ‘black experience’”, this meanly begs the question as to why the ‘black experience’ has been so similar, and resulted in the same low IQs in so many different parts of the world, something implausible unless unless the ‘black experience’ itself reflects innate aspects of black African psychology. 

[10] The fact that the heritability of intelligence is higher in adulthood than during childhood, and the influence of the shared family environment correspondingly decreases, has been interpreted as reflecting the fact that, during childhood, our environments are shaped, to a considerable extent, by our parents. For example, some parents may encourage activities that may conceivably enhance intelligence, such as reading books and visiting museums. In contrast, as we enter adulthood, we begin to have freedom to choose and shape our own environments, in accordance with our interests, which may be partly a reflection of our heredity.
Interestingly, this theory suggests that what is biologically inherited is not necessarily intelligence itself, but rather a tendency to seek out intelligence-enhancing environments, i.e. intellectual curiosity rather than intelligence as such. In fact, it is probably a mixture of both factors. Moreover, intellectual curiosity is surely strongly correlated with intelligence, if only because it requires a certain level of intelligence to appreciate intellectual pursuits, since, if one lacks the ability to learn or understand complex concepts, then intellectual pursuits are necessarily unrewarding.

[11] Thus, ironically, the recently deceased James Flynn, though always careful, throughout his career, to remain on the politically-correct radical environmentalist side of the debate with regard to the causes of race differences in intelligence, nevertheless recently found himself taken to task by the leftist, politically-correct British Guardian newspaper for a sentence in his recent book, Does Your Family Make You Smarter, where he described American blacks as coming from a “from a cognitively restricted subculture” (Wilby 2016). Thus, whether one attributes lower black IQs to biology or to culture, either answer is certain offend leftists, and the power of political correctness can, it seems, never be appeased.

References 

Belsky, Steinberg & Draper (1991) Childhood Experience, Interpersonal Development, and Reproductive Strategy: An Evolutionary Theory of Socialization Child Development 62(4): 647-670 

Draper & Harpending (1982) Father Absence and Reproductive Strategy: An Evolutionary Perspective Journal of Anthropological Research 38:3: 255-273 

Eyferth (1959) Eine Untersuchung der Neger-Mischlingskinder in Westdeutschland. Vita Humana, 2, 102–114

Levin (1994) Comment on Minnesota Transracial Adoption Study. Intelligence. 19: 13–20

Lynn, R (1994) Some reinterpretations of the Minnesota Transracial Adoption Study. Intelligence. 19: 21–27

Scarr & Weinberg (1976) IQ test performance of black children adopted by White families. American Psychologist 31(10):726–739 

Weinberg, Scarr & Waldman, (1992) The Minnesota Transracial Adoption Study: A follow-up of IQ test performance at adolescence Intelligence 16:117–135 

Whitney (1996) Shockley’s experiment. Mankind Quarterly 37(1): 41-60

Wilby (2006) Beyond the Flynn effect: New myths about race, family and IQ? Guardian, September 27.

21 thoughts on “Judith Harris’s ‘The Nurture Assumption’: By Parent or Peers

  1. “Almost all psychological traits on which individual humans differ, from personality and intelligence to mental illness, are now known to be substantially heritable” – Well, as for the genetics of intelligence, it’s such obvious thing that I don’t even understand whether there’s even a drop of this intelligence in those who deny its biology. As for “personality traits”, it’s absolute nonsense about nothing – to say that “personality traits” are determined by something is the same as saying that leprechauns are a certain color. In my opinion, even the very concept of “personality” is a category mistake.

    “…from the Freudian Oedipus complex…” – does anyone actually believe this utter bullshit? Sometimes I’m amazed at how liberal arts parasites are inclined to push such nonsense. Sure, on the one hand, purely theoretically, attraction to parents can be viewed in an evolutionary vein, but the cocaine addict’s ravings in the spirit of “attraction to mother as a stage in the development of every (damn, EVERY) boy” – how can anyone take that seriously?

    “…just as leftists use economic deprivation as an indiscriminate, catch-all excuse for all manner of social pathology (e.g. crime, unemployment, educational underperformance)…” – another dogma taken on faith. Of course, perhaps to some extent, if, say, a person is malnourished to the extent of a Buchenwald prisoner – but apply such principles to developed countries, where the basic problems have been solved half a century ago or even more, and where even the homeless live almost under the communism that the theorists promised… well, so-so…

    “so conservatives are apt to place the blame on divorce, family breakdown, having children out of wedlock and the consequential increase in the prevalence of single-parent households” – Yeah, yeah, Christianity. In the West, “conservative” is simply a synonym for Christian. “Every creature in pairs”, we remember, we remember. Let our dear believers explain to us: if their servant of God introduced every creature in pairs into the ark, then what did he do with garden snails, which are hermaphrodites? Or clownfish, wrasses and seabreams that change sex? What about parthenogenetic whiptail lizards? (Well, the latter, apparently, are engaged in… um… lesbianism, but that’s a TERRRIBL SIHN AND ABOMMINUTION!!! according to our Lord Voldem… pardon). (By the way, the biblical “and the two will become one flesh” also made me laugh – there are several species in nature where something similar happens – anglerfish – a tiny male (although sometimes there are several) merges together with a colossal female for life (but also not in all species – in some he is able to separate)). Not to mention the strictest monogamy for life – such species can be counted on the fingers.

    “Of course, chaotic or abusive family environments do indeed tend to produce offspring with negative life outcomes. However, none of this proves that it was the chaotic or abusive family environment that caused the negative outcomes. Rather, another explanation is at hand – perhaps the offspring simply biologically inherit the personality traits of their parents, the very personality traits that caused their family environment to be so chaotic and abusive in the first place” – I have seen something like this in Pinker. In my opinion, this is all extremely simplified. It’s foolish to deny genetics, of course, but it should be noted that if a parent has (presumably innate, although not necessarily in this example) trait X, and trait X inclines one to parenting in the spirit of Y, then raising in Y-style is by no means obliged to produce the same trait X in the offspring! It’s quite possible that, all other things being equal, it would lead to just the opposite. Much in our lives is counterintuitive, we must not forget this. (I don’t like rudeness, but especially intellectual rudeness).

    “The association between family breakdown and negative outcomes for offspring might, then, reflect simply the biological inheritance of personality” – of course. But we should also ask ourselves how much the breakdown of the family all things being equal would affect the children! If, paradoxically, the breakdown somehow had a positive effect, that would be very interesting to study! (What can I do, I love paradoxes – and vice versa, I find it very suspicious when everything goes too smoothly).

    “…the very low intelligence which was likely a factor causing the low socioeconomic status of their parents, since intelligence is known to correlate strongly with educational and occupational advancement” – agreed.

    “In other words, he seems to be saying that they are mere random noise” – Heretic, I certainly understand that it’s a wonderful thing to engage in iconoclasm, but to say that everything around us is “mere random noise“? Seriously?

    “Environment ≠ Nurture” – agreed.

    “environmental effects are anything but clear-cut. Pushing a child in a certain direction, or into a certain career, may sometimes have the desired effect, but other times may seemingly have the exact opposite effect to that desired” – that’s precisely what I’m talking about! The world is counterintuitive.

    (By the way, regarding the question “why do we act this way and not that way” – in my opinion, any possible answer will be incomplete without solving the hard problem of consciousness. I won’t even respond to possible objections that the problem or even consciousness itself doesn’t exist, and therefore there’s nothing to talk about. Everyone (or almost everyone) understands perfectly well what we are talking about. The null hypothesis (at least for me) is that consciousness exists (at least, I have no doubts about my consciousness) and requires an explanation).

    “After all, if homosexuality is partially heritable, as is now widely accepted, then why not paedophilia as well?” – Heretic, as for me, any modern research on the topic of homosexuality is not worth a dime. Any unbiased researcher, whether it be homosexuality or anything else, will simply be lynched on the nearest tree. Incidentally, I will note that it was precisely the “modern leftists” who were hysterical about any genetic differences, who at the same time actively promoted the idea of ​​the heredity of homosexuality – which indicates that genetics isn’t at all alien to them, they would have something to support the dogma with. However, there’s a substantial difference between homosexuality and pedophilia.

    On the one hand, homosexuality can be a consequence of a “genetic switch” – genes that are usually expressed in the opposite sex are “turned on” for some unknown reason, so a certain percentage of homosexuals in the population can constantly appear – after all, both sexes have the same genome. Another thing is bisexuality (I am bi myself, by the way, although more hetero, after all) – assuming a genetic component, it probably, in principle, can exist quite well in the process of evolution. Exclusive homo – unlikely, perhaps only as a result of a “switch”. (Unless kin selection could, but it’s not clear how).

    As for pedophilia, if we assume a genetic basis, then I very much doubt that this could be somewhat widely encountered in the population – and the point isn’t only that in prison there’s a significantly lower chance of passing on genes, but also that the child is by definition not fertile. (Yes, very rarely this happens, but the chances are too small).

    But, in general, there’s a lot that’s unclear about homosexuality from the standpoint of biology and whether and what, if any, genetic reasons for this are, not to mention everything else. Therefore, there’s little sense in this topic at the moment.

    “…it is frequently asserted that paedophiles were almost invariably themselves abused as children, which creates a so-called ‘cycle of abuse’. However, there are at least three problems with this claim. First, it cannot explain how the first person in this cycle came to be abusive” – well, here’s an example – there was a sect in Russia called “skoptsy” (castrates) – they kidnapped people, removed their balls, johnson, clit and tits, thus “initiating” people. After that, realizing that the forcemeat couldn’t be turned back, they became ardent accomplices of the sect. Here’s your cycle. Who was the first? The founders, obviously.

    “…Harris even touches upon that most vexed area of the (so-called) nature-nurture debate – race differences in intelligence… …seems to regard the alternative possibility – namely, that race differences in intelligence are at least partly genetic in origin – as so unpalatable that it can safely ruled out a priori” – I absolutely don’t get it, SO WHAT if there is a racial difference in intelligence?! Maybe it’s such a sore subject for Americans that it’s incomprehensible to me, since I’m not American? SJWs are exported to all corners of the earth, because it’s so fasci… sorry, fashionable. HOW cringeworthy is it when somewhere in Russia or Southeast Asia a talking head starts broadcasting that “oppressing women and blacks is bad, especially the latter” – yeah, fucking topical for countries where there are 3.5 Africans in the whole country!!

    “however, this proposition – namely, that African-American culture depresses your IQ – is almost as politically unpalatable and politically-incorrect as is the notion that race differences in intelligence reflect innate genetic differences” – Heretic, Wokeists are impossible to please. (And then, who of them really likes the African-American community and culture? Rather, they are expressing “belief in belief” (“it’s good to believe that African-American culture is good”). It’s all just virtue signaling).

    By the way, I can explain why African-Americans have rather poor intelligence. The reason is indeed genetic – but not race as such! It’s not that “blacks are dumber than whites”, but rather that the descendants of slaves were selected in such a way as to be submissive and lacking initiative. Indeed, slaves were not kidnapped on the spot, as some blockheads seem to believe – they were bought from the tribes that had originally enslaved them. Now think about who they would sell to the whites? Maybe a chief or a witch doctor? Why – they sold the most talentless cattle first, and already in America those of them who had some remnants of initiative were killed or fled. So there you have selection in action, the results – America’s only half-black president is the descendant not of a slave, but of a Kenyan migrant – the descendants of slaves can hardly bring order even to their own ghetto, if at all – there’s no point even dreaming about the presidency… It’s not without reason that the majority of successful people of African descent are recent migrants, and not descendants of slaves – among them, the individuals who have achieved anything can be counted on the fingers of one hand. (Let me remind those who doubt that, as we now know, evolution can happen very, very quickly – there are plenty of examples).

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    1. ‘…from the Freudian Oedipus complex…’ – does anyone actually believe this utter bullshit?

      Certainly not me. I just included it because it is a theory that has been influential in the history of psychology.

      I believe some literary theorists still consider themselves Freudians. Many continental philosophers also still seem to take Freud seriously as a ‘great thinker‘ of the western canon – and, of course, there’s still a few unreconstructed Freudian psychoanalysts around, both in private practice and the universities.
      _______

      I have seen something like this in Pinker

      Yes, Pinker is was a big promoter of Harris’s peer group socialization theory. That may be where I first read about it.
      _______

      If a parent has (presumably innate, although not necessarily in this example) trait X, and trait X inclines one to parenting in the spirit of Y, then raising in Y-style is by no means obliged to produce the same trait X in the offspring! It’s quite possible that, all other things being equal, it would lead to just the opposite

      Yes.

      For example, an aggressive violent parent may perhaps produce an offspring who copies his/her parental role model – but, on the other hand, an aggressive parent may produce a submissive offspring who cowers before the aggressive parent and carries this submissiveness over into the rest of his/her life.

      This sort of reasoning is therefore unfalsifiable. Parental effects are capable of explaining any outcome in offspring behaviour and hence explains nothing.

      This is another reason why similarity between parent and offspring in personality etc. is better explained by heredity.
      _________

      ‘In other words, he seems to be saying that they are mere random noise’ – Heretic, I certainly understand that it’s a wonderful thing to engage in iconoclasm, but to say that everything around us is “mere random noise”? Seriously?

      This isn’t my position but that of the behavioral geneticist Robert Plomin (at least in my reading), not with respect to “everything around us”, but rather in respect of the environmental component of variation between indiviuals in psychological traits in his book Blueprint: How DNA Makes Us Who We Are. In other words, he claims in this book that that environmental effects on variation between individuals in psychological traits are:

      Mostly random – unsystematic and unstable – which means that we cannot do much about them.

      In my reading, this does indeed amount to saying, in effect, environmental effects on personality are “mere random noise”.
      _______________

      Any modern research on the topic of homosexuality is not worth a dime

      I agree that there’s a lot of taboos surrounding the causes of homosexuality, which is a serious impediment to research, but that doesn’t mean good research can’t be done, or that there aren’t important findings.

      Some of the findings are very interesting, for example the fraternal birth order effect.

      Other findings are very politically incorrect, such as the finding that homosexuality is actually rather less heritable than other behavioural/psychological propensities about which it is much less politically correct to speculate regarding the heritability (e.g. criminality, intelligence), and also that homosexuality is significantly associated with having experienced child sexual abuse.
      ______________

      As for pedophilia, if we assume a genetic basis, then I very much doubt that this could be somewhat widely encountered in the population – and the point isn’t only that in prison there’s a significantly lower chance of passing on genes, but also that the child is by definition not fertile

      Yes, agreed. But the same is true of homosexuality, which is the analogy which I was making.

      Two homosexuals copulating with one another have just as little chance of successfully reproducing as do an adult and a child. Indeed, they have even less chance, depending on how one defines ‘child‘, since, as you acknowledge, there are isolated cases of even disturbingly young girls giving birth, and teenage girls, if they too are to be considered ‘children‘, actually have higher pregnancy rates than do older women, and teenage boys are also highly fertile. (I have written about this here.)

      So there would be strong selection against both homosexuality and paedophilia (in the proper clinical sense, that is), resulting in quite a low frequency of both in the population.

      However, in both cases, these dispositions may not be as strongly selected against as you might expect, because, due to the stigma attached to both homosexuality and paedophilia, both homosexuals and paedophiles often feel pressure to enter into age-appropriate heterosexual relations (e.g. marriage) in order to cover up their sexuality – and history shows that homosexual men are quite capable of reproducucing heterosexually (e.g. Oscar Wilde, though usually considered a homosexual, is nevertheless thought to have fathered two children).

      Similarly, as you note, bisexuality would be much less strongly selected against than exclusive homosexuality – but, curiously, exclusive homosexuality seems to be much more common, at least among males, than is bisexuality.

      For what it’s worth, my own favourite theory (although not necessarily the best supported theory) for the evolution of male homosexuality proposes that genes located on the X chromosome predispose a person to be sexually attracted to males. This attraction is adaptive for females, but maladaptive for males. However, since females have two X chromosomes and males only one, any X chromosome genes will find themselves in females twice as often as they find themselves in males. Therefore, any increase in fitness for females bearing these X chromosome genes only has to be half as great as the reproductive cost to males for the genes in question to be positively selected for.

      This is sometimes called the ‘balancing selection theory of male homosexuality’. However, I prefer Satoshi Kanazawa’s coinage – ‘the horny sister hypothesis’.
      ______________

      I can explain why African-Americans have rather poor intelligence. The reason is indeed genetic – but not race as such… but rather that the descendants of slaves were selected in such a way as to be submissive and lacking initiative… They were bought from the tribes that had originally enslaved them. Now think about who they would sell to the whites?… Why – they sold the most talentless cattle first

      An interesting theory. But I think the sheer numbers of African slaves who were sold during the relatively brief period when the Atlantic slave trade was in full swing would limit the extent of any such selection.

      It is estimated that over ten million slaves were transported from Africa to the Americas, at a time when the population of the entire African continent is estimated as little over a hundred million. This must then have represented a large proportion of the population in the areas of West Africa and West Central Africa whence most American slaves were taken.

      Thus, as I understand it, the Africans didn’t just sell “the most talentless cattle first”, but rather the vast majority of the people whom they enslaved.

      Indeed, African tribes waged war against and thereby enslaved members of other tribes precisely so as to enslave greater numbers and sell them to the slave-traders, and many African tribes became quite wealthy in the process. The impact of the trade on this continent has even been implicated, along with colonialism, as an explanation for the sorry state of much of the African continent today.

      At any rate, you say slaves were “selected in such a way as to be submissive and lacking initiative” – but submissiveness is surely a desirable trait in a slave and initiative at best a mixed blessing, since a slave with lots of independent initiative might use this to try and escape.

      If you wanted to get rid of the most useless slaves, you would surely get rid of the rebellious and disobedient slaves, not, as you put it, the most “submissive and lacking initiative”.

      Moreover, African-Americans show little evidence of ‘submissiveness‘ today (though this was apparently a racial stereotype in the nineteenth century).

      On the contrary, the high rates of violent crime evidenced among African-Americans suggests that African Americans are anything but submissive.
      ______________

      So there you have selection in action, the results – America’s only half-black president is the descendant not of a slave, but of a Kenyan migrant

      Yes, and the likely second part-black American president (Kamala Harris) traces the African part of her ancestry to Jamaica.

      Economically and academically, African Americans are outcompeted by black immigrants (and their descendants) from both the Caribbean and from Africa. But Caribbean blacks are the descendants of the Atlantic slave trade in just the same way as African Americans are – why then do the former still seem to outcompete the latter, at least when they immigrate to America. Selective migration, perhaps?

      On the other hand, Afro-Caribbeans in the UK seem much less upwardly socially mobile, and have a reputation for violent crime similar to that of African-Americans in the US.

      On the other hand, immigrants from Africa do relatively well both educationally and economically in both the UK and the US.

      This indeed represents something of a problem for those who claim the difference in IQ between blacks and whites is genetic, since both African-Americans and Afro-Caribbeans are part-white in ancestry, but most African immigrants are of wholly African ancestry.

      On the other hand, however, measured IQs in sub-Saharan Africa itself are very low, much lower even than those among African-Americans – though environmental deprivation is surely at least part of the explanation for this.

      Hereditarians try to explain this in terms of ‘selective migration‘, since they posit that it is the relatively more intelligent Africans who migrate to the West. However, as African businessman Chanda Chisala points out:

      Realizing that life is better in a very rich country than in your poor country is never exactly the most g-loaded epiphany among Africans”

      I discuss these issues in greater depth here if you’re interested.

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  2. P.S.

    “having missed out on the Chomskian critical period for language acquisition” – personally, I’m not a fan of Chomsky at all, not only because of the support of the donkeyfuckers in the Middle East – in my opinion, most of what he says is complete gibberish. Like the nonsense about how 70,000 years ago a magical mutation occurred and people suddenly developed language… oh my god, what a bullshit… There is NOTHING special about language – neural networks learn it on the fly. If someone wants to prove that language is something special, that’s their business, but it needs to be proved, not disproved. And in general, the stories about “how X made us human” – THERE WAS NO single X that made us human. There was a whole smorgasbord of X, Y, Z, Q, K, S and J that made us human.

    The only thing from Chomsky worth considering is his four grammars, but that’s just a reformulation of automata theory on a different basis, although isomorphism is interesting, he didn’t really invent anything special.

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    1. Personally, I’m not a fan of Chomsky at all, not only because of the support of the donkeyfuckers in the Middle East

      Obviously Chomsky’s political views regarding the Middle East are pretty much irrelevant to his views on language acquisition etc..
      ________

      There is NOTHING special about language – neural networks learn it on the fly

      I’m really not at all expert on this topic – but, while AI may have little trouble with language (indeed, I suppose all computer programs understand one language – namely, the programming language in which they’re programmed, otherwise they wouldn’t work), the general consensus is that attempts to teach anything beyond the most rudimentary of language to non-human animals (e.g. Koko the gorilla, Nim Chimpsky and Alex the parrot) has been considered largely a failure.

      This suggests that there has indeed been some mutations and selection pressure that led to the evolution of language among humans, given that language seems to be universal in our species, but absent in all other species, including our closest relatives.

      Also, since, as I’ve said, I’m not expert in this area, I tend to defer to expert opinion, which seems to generally agree that Chomsky indeed proved that language could not have been acquired by, say, mere operatant conditioning, but rather required a special faculty for language. (You perhaps have more knowledge of this area than me and are therefore entitled to disagree with this general consensus.)
      ________

      The nonsense about how 70,000 years ago a magical mutation occurred and people suddenly developed language”

      Yes, this certainly sounds like nonsense, if it is indeed an accurate summary of Chomsky’s view – but I suspect it’s something of a ‘straw man’. I doubt Chomsky ever used the term “magical” for example.

      Personally, I prefer Steven Pinker‘s take – namely, that there is indeed an innate domain specific module for language ability, but that, rather than appearing “magical[ly]”, or indeed as a random fluke, or by-product of other selection for other abilities, it evolved through natural selection like any other adaptation (Pinker 1990). After all, there are manifold selective advantages that could result from having a system of language that allows for effective communication.

      Pinker & Bloom (1990) Natural language and natural selection Behavioral and Brain Sciences 13(4):707 – 727

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