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IQ rates are dropping in many developed countries


Moreno

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On 5/6/2020 at 4:44 PM, CharonY said:

Also the ideas make no sense to me. Easing the access to higher education is fine, but paying the equivalent of a salary does not amke sense to me (outside of graduate studies where folks actually work full-time). What is the benefit of studying in Uni for as long as possible? How does it benefit the student, the Uni and the society at large?

Intelligent people will start to produce children earlier in their life and perhaps larger amount of them without fear of unemployment and student debts. Society will benefit from both increased number of educated people and their children. Bursary suppose to constitute 80-90% of average beginner specialist salary in the field, so people would not loose interest to search job rather than continue their study for PhD or go in another university. Who is going to pay for it? Taxpayers, of course. But hopefully, not the poorest of them.

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10 minutes ago, Moreno said:

Intelligent people will start to produce children earlier in their life and perhaps larger amount of them without fear of unemployment and student debts.

People with a higher level of education and with financial stability tend to have fewer children, not more. 

Also with this bizarre focus on “intelligent people” having children sounds a bit like we are moving from racism straight into eugenics. Wow. 

You do realise that there is not a strong genetic component to intelligence?

Here is an example:

Quote

Born ... to poor, working-class parents. His mother was illiterate and never recorded the date of his birth, remembering only that he had been born on a Wednesday

Oh no, we don’t want people like that having children. Only nice, rich, well educated people.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carl_Friedrich_Gauss

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As I already noted IQ tests are a century out of date

Intelligence testing the 2020 way was examined on BBC Horizon on 4th May.

Sorry this broadcast has been and gone but some may be able to access it on catchup and there is a web based activity to go with it.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/articles/2xhbqsm0NyPLfRzYqNl966M/how-intelligent-are-you

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43 minutes ago, Strange said:

People with a higher level of education and with financial stability tend to have fewer children, not more. 

Also with this bizarre focus on “intelligent people” having children sounds a bit like we are moving from racism straight into eugenics. Wow. 

You do realise that there is not a strong genetic component to intelligence?

Here is an example:

Oh no, we don’t want people like that having children. Only nice, rich, well educated people.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carl_Friedrich_Gauss

Also take a look at this paper here:

https://www.pabst-publishers.com/fileadmin/Redaktion/Beitrag_des_Monats/popsy_2-2018_267-283.pdf

Quote

Generational IQ test score gains in the general population (the Flynn effect) have been observed to diminish in strength in recent years, and there is evidence for a stagnation and even a reversal of the Flynn effect in a number of countries. Here, we show that there is only little evidence for effects of migration, fertility, and mortality as substantive correlates of IQ decreases. We argue that the stagnation of the Flynn effect may be explained by ceiling effects and diminishing returns of IQ-boosting factors, whilst its reversal can be attributed to negative associations with psychometric g.

 

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1 hour ago, Strange said:

You do realise that there is not a strong genetic component to intelligence?

Here is an example:

Oh no, we don’t want people like that having children. Only nice, rich, well educated people.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carl_Friedrich_Gauss

With all due respect to the point you are trying to make, we have no idea how intelligent Gauss' mother was.

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9 hours ago, J.C.MacSwell said:

With all due respect to the point you are trying to make, we have no idea how intelligent Gauss' mother was.

True. But by the naive approach taken by the OP I guess she would be considered unsuitable for breeding because she could not evidence her IQ (unlike those who have spent decades in state-funded education, learning sports, nail decoration, catering, juggling, etc /sarcasm)

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5 hours ago, Strange said:

True. But by the naive approach taken by the OP I guess she would be considered unsuitable for breeding because she could not evidence her IQ (unlike those who have spent decades in state-funded education, learning sports, nail decoration, catering, juggling, etc /sarcasm)

It's easy to underestimate people. Moreno seems to have been convinced himself (herself?) that people of Papua New Guinea are quite talented, and apparently isn't from there...so maybe there's hope for him.

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19 minutes ago, Strange said:

themself?

That works. I use "they", and "them" alot for singular. What should I have used here?

23 minutes ago, J.C.MacSwell said:

It's easy to underestimate people. Moreno seems to have been convinced himself (herself?) that people of Papua New Guinea are quite talented, and apparently isn't from there...so maybe there's hope for him.

 

"them" still doesn't seem right in that sentence.

Edited by J.C.MacSwell
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3 minutes ago, J.C.MacSwell said:

That works. I use "they", and "them" alot for singular. What should I have used here?

 

"them" still doesn't seem right in that sentence.

If we don't include everyone's intelligence, how do we know who them are?

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11 minutes ago, J.C.MacSwell said:

That works. I use "they", and "them" alot for singular. What should I have used here?

I would actually use "themselves"; for example: "The chosen student must make themselves available on Friday morning when they will receive the materials to distribute to the other students." 

But "themself" does get used occasionally when the antecedent is obviously singular.

Quote

"them" still doesn't seem right in that sentence.

I think it would if you wrote the whole sentence using they/them/themselves

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38 minutes ago, J.C.MacSwell said:

It's easy to underestimate people. Moreno seems to have been convinced himself (herself?) that people of Papua New Guinea are quite talented, and apparently isn't from there...so maybe there's hope for him.

 

2 minutes ago, Strange said:

I would actually use "themselves"; for example: "The chosen student must make themselves available on Friday morning when they will receive the materials to distribute to the other students." 

But "themself" does get used occasionally when the antecedent is obviously singular.

I think it would if you wrote the whole sentence using they/them/themselves

It's easy to underestimate people. Moreno seems to have been convinced themself that people of Papua New Guinea are quite talented, and apparently they isn't from there...so maybe there's hope for them.

Seem OK? Or should "isn't" be "aren't"?

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1 hour ago, J.C.MacSwell said:

 

It's easy to underestimate people. Moreno seems to have been convinced themself that people of Papua New Guinea are quite talented, and apparently they isn't from there...so maybe there's hope for them.

Seem OK? Or should "isn't" be "aren't"?

It would be "aren't" because we require grammatical agreement. In the same that we say "you are" and not "you is" even when talking to a single person because "you" is a plural pronoun (we lost the singular form, "ye", a long time ago although it is still used in some dialects).

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5 hours ago, Strange said:

Well I hope Moreno watches that. It answers pretty much all his points in this thread and the other one. 

!

Moderator Note

Hopefully it will do so in a way discussing it fell short of. Thread closed.

 
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