Ah, I was already aware of those, I was more thinking of the “political, religious, and moral ideology” values; those are the ones I hadn’t seen a genomic study of.
I also have some concerns with the notion that the studies you listed here are good examples, but that might be getting a bit too tangential? Idk, up to you if you feel like you want to discuss them.
tailcalled—I agree that we don’t yet have very good GWAS studies of political, religious, and moral ideology values; I was just illustrating that we already have ways of studying those (in principal), we have big genotyped samples in several international samples, and it’s just a matter of time before researchers start asking people in those samples about their more abstract kinds of values, and then publishing GWAS studies on those values.
So, I think we’re probably in agreement about that issue.
Ah, I was already aware of those, I was more thinking of the “political, religious, and moral ideology” values; those are the ones I hadn’t seen a genomic study of.
I also have some concerns with the notion that the studies you listed here are good examples, but that might be getting a bit too tangential? Idk, up to you if you feel like you want to discuss them.
tailcalled—I agree that we don’t yet have very good GWAS studies of political, religious, and moral ideology values; I was just illustrating that we already have ways of studying those (in principal), we have big genotyped samples in several international samples, and it’s just a matter of time before researchers start asking people in those samples about their more abstract kinds of values, and then publishing GWAS studies on those values.
So, I think we’re probably in agreement about that issue.