The problem with asking race related questions is that there’s a much stronger social pressure to shut up if you believe something that comes off as racist.
I’m at a loss as to what to do about that, because I do get where that pressure is coming from. In presenting such data, you can hedge and qualify all you want, but what many people are going to hear is just a lot of wonderful reasons why their prejudices were right all along, and how science proved it. What can anybody do? A remedial course in ethics (“moral equality does not require literal sameness”)?
Sometimes I do think discussions of race and gender-related fact questions are best not done “in front of the goyim.” It’s a vexing question.
There’s an additional problem—there’s a social circle where the consensus is that believing in race and gender differences in ability is proof of rationality, so if you’re trying to do a counter-tribe rationality check, you’d need to know which tribe has a stronger influence on a person.
If Africa has the most genetic variation for humans, does that imply it’s likely that the smartest human subgroup is likely to be African?
All else being equal, yes. However, many regions of Africa have ongoing problems with public health, availability of education, etc. that would wash out any advantages in genetic predisposition for intelligence.
I’m at a loss as to what to do about that, because I do get where that pressure is coming from. In presenting such data, you can hedge and qualify all you want, but what many people are going to hear is just a lot of wonderful reasons why their prejudices were right all along, and how science proved it. What can anybody do? A remedial course in ethics (“moral equality does not require literal sameness”)?
Sometimes I do think discussions of race and gender-related fact questions are best not done “in front of the goyim.” It’s a vexing question.
There’s an additional problem—there’s a social circle where the consensus is that believing in race and gender differences in ability is proof of rationality, so if you’re trying to do a counter-tribe rationality check, you’d need to know which tribe has a stronger influence on a person.
If Africa has the most genetic variation for humans, does that imply it’s likely that the smartest human subgroup is likely to be African?
All else being equal, yes. However, many regions of Africa have ongoing problems with public health, availability of education, etc. that would wash out any advantages in genetic predisposition for intelligence.