Eddie Dane
Philosopher
- Joined
- Aug 18, 2007
- Messages
- 6,681
Do you think an IQ of 150 is superior to an IQ of 90?
That depends on the situation.
Are we trying to fill a position for CEO or suicide bomber?
Do you think an IQ of 150 is superior to an IQ of 90?
That depends on the situation.
Are we trying to fill a position for CEO or suicide bomber?
Intelligence, height, athleticism, and health are all important attributes in the game of life (some more than others) but Murray only writes books about the increasing value and centrality of one of them. If we take out the controversial chapters about racial subgroups from The Bell Curve and Coming Apart, what we have left are books about how IQ is by far the most important determinant of life outcomes in modern society.
Nope.It's racist to research IQ without simultaneously researching height, athleticism, and health?
Nope.
You made it about something it wasn't about; don't see any point in rephrasing when you could just reread.Then could you rephrase your point?
That's a separate issue. It may well be that g is not a very rigorous metric. It's one of those examples I gave where I said the claim is a "target rich environment". If we can cast enough doubt on the findings we don't have to think about it anymore and that would be satisfying enough.
However, what if it is a robust metric after all?
Then we presumably have to find another hiding place, right?
Listened to it over lunch today (at 2x speed) and I'm going to say Sam Harris pretty much **** the bed on this one. He made everything personal, whined endlessly about meta-topical minutiae, and generally failed to focus on the scientific or sociological claims which Murray makes.As an aside, the discussion between Harris and Klein has been released. (Or if you'd prefer listening to Klein's show.)
It is 2 hours long, so clear some time.
Listened to it over lunch today (at 2x speed) and I'm going to say Sam Harris pretty much **** the bed on this one. He made everything personal, whined endlessly about meta-topical minutiae, and generally failed to focus on the scientific or sociological claims which Murray makes.
Bias check: I'm on the relatively short list of people who were already subscribed to both Ezra and Sam's podcasts, but I usually enjoy Sam's show a bit more.
Listened to it over lunch today (at 2x speed) and I'm going to say Sam Harris pretty much **** the bed on this one. He made everything personal, whined endlessly about meta-topical minutiae, and generally failed to focus on the scientific or sociological claims which Murray makes.
Bias check: I'm on the relatively short list of people who were already subscribed to both Ezra and Sam's podcasts, but I usually enjoy Sam's show a bit more.
hypotheticals like his Neanderthal thought experiment.
Basically Europeans and some other groups have traces of Neanderthal ancestry, whereas people with exclusively African ancestry do not. Harris claims (based on a thorough investigation into the counterfactual social simulation module in his own mind) that we are only allowed to discuss this phenomenon in polite company because it turned out that way, rather than the other way around.Can I get the cliff notes on that?
Can I get the cliff notes on that?
Basically Europeans and some other groups have traces of Neanderthal ancestry, whereas people with exclusively African ancestry do not. Harris claims (based on a thorough investigation into the counterfactual society simulation module in his own mind) that we are only allowed to discuss this phenomenon in polite company because it turned out that way, rather than the other way around.
The discovery channel and PBS have had specials on it. It's hardly some huge secret only the white intellectual elite talk about.
Well he says that if Africans had the Neanderthal dna and the rest of humanity did not, discussing that fact would get you vilified the way he and Murray did discussing I.q. because of the historical association of Neanderthals with being backwards and brutish.
Sam was saying it would be kept secret (or at least rather taboo) if we all lived in the possible world where Neanderthals arose and persisted in Africa instead of Europe.
Not to mention an real world example of the counterfactual fallacy.That's basically an extraordinary claim, in my opinion.
Indeed.Not to mention an real world example of the counterfactual fallacy.
My understanding is that if neanderthals and humans hooked up and had fertile babies, it means (by nature of current taxonomy) neanderthals were human.
Am I wrong?