This is Europe, though, and Communist governments tend to be big on education.
It is one of the poorest parts of Europe, and Communist governments tended to be big on a lot of things they couldn’t deliver.
Within which population? The control group involves one parent “from the outside”, so regression to the mean kicks in and the chance of the recessives finding a pair falls dramatically.
If you’re comparing within an Indian population, then the much higher rates of inbreeding aren’t the confound; all you have is the remaining selection effect, and that’s must be small because anything else would drastically contradict the animal and other breeding experiments, and the estimates from genomic methods.
I am arguing that if you take children of incestuous unions where both parents have reasonable IQ (say, >85), the mean IQ of children would NOT drop by 28 points.
It would probably drop by more like 25 points, looking at the weighted averages. (For the surviving children, that is.)
It is one of the poorest parts of Europe, and Communist governments tended to be big on a lot of things they couldn’t deliver.
Communist governments delivered on that one.
Take a look here, specifically pages 21 and 23. The secondary education in Eastern Europe was more prevalent than in Mediterranean countries and Great Britain + Ireland (but less than in Nordic countries and Central Europe). And Czechoslovakia was one of the better Eastern European countries.
If you’re comparing within an Indian population
I went and looked at the Jammu & Kashmir study and it is more convincing than the Czechoslovak study. Hm. It seems my scepticism about the 20+ IQ points drop was unfounded, changing my mind… :-)
But why did my intuition didn’t like the large magnitude of IQ drop? I think because it implies that intelligence is very fragile and very easy to genetically screw up. But if the IQ drop is valid, then intelligence is very fragile. Hmm...
It is one of the poorest parts of Europe, and Communist governments tended to be big on a lot of things they couldn’t deliver.
If you’re comparing within an Indian population, then the much higher rates of inbreeding aren’t the confound; all you have is the remaining selection effect, and that’s must be small because anything else would drastically contradict the animal and other breeding experiments, and the estimates from genomic methods.
It would probably drop by more like 25 points, looking at the weighted averages. (For the surviving children, that is.)
Communist governments delivered on that one.
Take a look here, specifically pages 21 and 23. The secondary education in Eastern Europe was more prevalent than in Mediterranean countries and Great Britain + Ireland (but less than in Nordic countries and Central Europe). And Czechoslovakia was one of the better Eastern European countries.
I went and looked at the Jammu & Kashmir study and it is more convincing than the Czechoslovak study. Hm. It seems my scepticism about the 20+ IQ points drop was unfounded, changing my mind… :-)
But why did my intuition didn’t like the large magnitude of IQ drop? I think because it implies that intelligence is very fragile and very easy to genetically screw up. But if the IQ drop is valid, then intelligence is very fragile. Hmm...