It is widely employed in the US by parents using (for whatever reason) modern reproductive technology
I would say it depends what you mean by “widely employed.” Among the left half of the American bell curve, what percentage of children would you guess are the result of modern reproductive technology and a voluntary search for a high IQ egg or sperm donor? I would guess it’s well under 5%. i.e. not enough to have a big impact on the intelligence of future generations.
He is right. Reproductive technology is mostly currently employed by people with above average IQ, not just because this is the general pattern with all almost all technology and medical services in general, but because high IQ people are more likley to be infertile at the period in their life when they want to have children.
high IQ people are more likley to be infertile at the period in their life
And, incidentally, are more likely to be fertile overall. (And taller and with an ass that conforms to sex appropriate indicators of ‘damn fine’.) Of course, not very much more likely.
I would say it depends what you mean by “widely employed.” Among the left half of the American bell curve, what percentage of children would you guess are the result of modern reproductive technology and a voluntary search for a high IQ egg or sperm donor? I would guess it’s well under 5%. i.e. not enough to have a big impact on the intelligence of future generations.
Why is this down-voted?
He is right. Reproductive technology is mostly currently employed by people with above average IQ, not just because this is the general pattern with all almost all technology and medical services in general, but because high IQ people are more likley to be infertile at the period in their life when they want to have children.
And, incidentally, are more likely to be fertile overall. (And taller and with an ass that conforms to sex appropriate indicators of ‘damn fine’.) Of course, not very much more likely.
By fertile you mean “able to have children, whether they actually have them or not”? Otherwise, that’s wrong.
Clearly.
Um, citation needed?
Really? I thought it was a reference to common knowledge.