That would be fairly easy to check. If you look at studies on identical twins, raised separately, you should get a marked similarity in attitudes. Not that I've ever read up on that, but I bet that someone has done a study on it.Tyrannical wrote:Behavior does have a genetic link, so you shouldn't be surprised that children on average closer to their parents beliefs than a random stranger. I'm not discounting a nurture component, just that there is a genetic component.
Most of us think what our parents told us to think
- mistermack
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Re: Most of us think what our parents told us to think
While there is a market for shit, there will be assholes to supply it.
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Re: Most of us think what our parents told us to think
Confucius he say "The apple does not fall far from the tree ..." 

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It's not up to us to choose which laws we want to obey. If it were, I'd kill everyone who looked at me cock-eyed! - Rex Banner
The Bluebird of Happiness long absent from his life, Ned is visited by the Chicken of Depression. - Gary Larson



Re: Most of us think what our parents told us to think
http://www.theguardian.com/science/blog ... n-not-madeSocialists and conservatives may be born not made
What hope is there of rational debate if our political affiliations are biologically determined?
Right-wingers are less intelligent than left wingers, says study
Children with low intelligence grow up to be prejudiced
Right-wing views make the less intelligent feel 'safe'
Analysis of more than 15,000 people
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/ ... z2fRV9YFQ2
Only Six Percent Of Scientists Are Republicans: Pew Poll
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/.../only- ... 9382.html
Jul 10, 2009 - A new study by the Pew Research Center finds that the GOP is alienating scientists to a startling degree. Only six percent of America's scientists
I think we can see a trend hereINTELLIGENCE SCORES AND BEHAVIOR: EVEN A FEW POINTS MATTER
Low IQ is a known risk factor for crime and delinquency (See related article, Crime Times, Vol. 1, No. 3, Page 6). But a new study by Robert Goodman suggests that even when IQs are in the normal range, lower IQ scores are linked to stealing, lying, and other symptoms of conduct disorder.
Goodman studied 339 children between the ages of 5 and 16. All of the children were seen at a psychiatric clinic. Children with diagnoses of hyperactivity, psychosis, pervasive developmental disorders, or retardation were excluded.
Tests revealed, Goodman says, that lower IQ in his sample of "normal-IQ" subjects was linked to conduct disorder, a link which was stronger in teens than in younger children. "Other dimensional measures of psychopathology--covering emotional symptoms, developmental immaturity and relationship difficulties--were not significantly correlated with IQ," he says.
In Goodman's sample, the mean IQ of children with conduct disorders was nearly 10 points lower than that of children with emotional disorders--and children with mixed disorders of conduct and emotion fell in between. The low-IQ subjects did not appear to be more immature or hyperactive, but Goodman says this is probably because children with overt hyperactivity were excluded from the study.
"When taken together with the results of previous clinical and epidemiological studies," he says, "the findings of this study suggest that IQ variation within the normal range does influence the risk of common childhood psychopathology." The IQ effect remained true when Goodman controlled for socioeconomic status and for reading ability, which he says indicates that "the link between low IQ and conduct problems was not wholly attributable to social class or entirely mediated by scholastic attainments.
"Given the overlap between teenage conduct disorder and juvenile delinquency," Goodman says, "it is worth emphasizing that the link in the current study between low IQ and more conduct problems was greater in teenagers than younger children. In younger children, IQ may be more closely linked to hyperactivity than to conduct problems."


Resident in Cairns Australia • Current ride> 2014 Honda CB500F • Travel photos https://500px.com/p/macdoc?view=galleries
- mistermack
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Re: Most of us think what our parents told us to think
I think we can. Is this trend of you quoting the Guardian and the Daily Mail going to continue?macdoc wrote: I think we can see a trend here![]()
I might have to stop taking you seriously.

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Re: Most of us think what our parents told us to think
Yeah, twin studies are big, and there have been many on what you have suggested. What I am unaware of if they have conducted these studies over time, since the old wive's tail tells us we become our parents. A twin study has shown that the effect of nurture decreases with age so that by the age of 28 about 90% of IQ is genetic.mistermack wrote:That would be fairly easy to check. If you look at studies on identical twins, raised separately, you should get a marked similarity in attitudes. Not that I've ever read up on that, but I bet that someone has done a study on it.Tyrannical wrote:Behavior does have a genetic link, so you shouldn't be surprised that children on average closer to their parents beliefs than a random stranger. I'm not discounting a nurture component, just that there is a genetic component.
A rational skeptic should be able to discuss and debate anything, no matter how much they may personally disagree with that point of view. Discussing a subject is not agreeing with it, but understanding it.
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Re: Most of us think what our parents told us to think
Confucius also say "man who is kicked in testicles is left holding bag."klr wrote:Confucius he say "The apple does not fall far from the tree ..."
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Re: Most of us think what our parents told us to think
From the study --macdoc wrote:http://www.theguardian.com/science/blog ... n-not-madeSocialists and conservatives may be born not made
What hope is there of rational debate if our political affiliations are biologically determined?
If it's not a representative sample, then the study is faulty. It may be interesting, but not persuasive.In the summer of 2007, 200 participants were brought to a computer laboratory in Lincoln, Nebraska, USA, to complete a survey soliciting their political, personality and demographic information subsequent to their having been contacted by phone at random by a professional survey organization. Though in no way a representative sample,
Then, says the study --
A sample size of 48, who were picked based on "availability," and who are solidly right or left, with no room for middle ground folks.The particular group employed in the analysis here consisted of 48 individuals who were called back later that summer. They were selected because of availability and because they were the individuals most clearly falling on either the political left or the political right according to the survey responses provided during their first visit.
And, having read through to the end, the study does not show or conclude that political views are "born not made." The reporting is bogus. The Guardian either didn't read it, or didn't understand it. Probably the latter, since reporters are notoriously shitty at understanding and recounting anything scientific, among other things.
Do we believe the Daily Fail today?macdoc wrote:Right-wingers are less intelligent than left wingers, says study
Children with low intelligence grow up to be prejudiced
Right-wing views make the less intelligent feel 'safe'
Analysis of more than 15,000 people
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/ ... z2fRV9YFQ2
I have an issue with the "children with low intelligence grow up to be prejudiced" conclusion. That doesn't make sense. The incidence of prejudice went from nearly universal among westerners in the 19th century, to somewhat diminished present day. Were people generally stupider decades ago?
The article says - "Conservative politics work almost as a 'gateway' into prejudice against others, say the Canadian academics." LOL. Right. Liberal academics say conservatives are a "gateway" to prejudice. Surprising conclusion....
- rasetsu
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Re: Most of us think what our parents told us to think
Yeah, I can see why you would complain about my comment regarding you pulling shit from your ass.mistermack wrote:That would be fairly easy to check. If you look at studies on identical twins, raised separately, you should get a marked similarity in attitudes. Not that I've ever read up on that, but I bet that someone has done a study on it.Tyrannical wrote:Behavior does have a genetic link, so you shouldn't be surprised that children on average closer to their parents beliefs than a random stranger. I'm not discounting a nurture component, just that there is a genetic component.

My parents were Swedish Presbyterians, but I rebelled early and became Japanese, unlike my brother who grew up to be an Inuit eskimo.
- mistermack
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Re: Most of us think what our parents told us to think
Is there any trace of sanity in the family?rasetsu wrote: Yeah, I can see why you would complain about my comment regarding you pulling shit from your ass.![]()
My parents were Swedish Presbyterians, but I rebelled early and became Japanese, unlike my brother who grew up to be an Inuit eskimo.
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Re: Most of us think what our parents told us to think
Mostly because said reporters tend to be leftist.Coito ergo sum wrote:And, having read through to the end, the study does not show or conclude that political views are "born not made." The reporting is bogus. The Guardian either didn't read it, or didn't understand it. Probably the latter, since reporters are notoriously shitty at understanding and recounting anything scientific, among other things.
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Re: Most of us think what our parents told us to think
Well may we laugh about past scientific theories, such as flames rising because they possess a property or element called "jubilance". This study is no different. To wit: Each of us possesses "appetitive" and "avoidance" systems, and we are socialists or conservatives depending on which one predominates our emotional sphere. Behavioural genetics sucks when it overreaches its scope.macdoc wrote:http://www.theguardian.com/science/blog ... n-not-madeSocialists and conservatives may be born not made
What hope is there of rational debate if our political affiliations are biologically determined?
I am, somehow, less interested in the weight and convolutions of Einstein’s brain than in the near certainty that people of equal talent have lived and died in cotton fields and sweatshops. - Stephen J. Gould
- cronus
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Re: Most of us think what our parents told us to think
One mans radical is another mans square. Parents say nothing about the future except what they've known in their past. We've lived through unusually stable times in the West over recent decades that may well be coming to a abrupt end. Emergent new ideas and old ones revisited are all part of the coping systems humans have developed to survive change. Expect change. Expect boundary stones to be uprooted and moved. Don't take your thoughts for granted - you may need to change them to survive.
What will the world be like after its ruler is removed?
- Ayaan
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Re: Most of us think what our parents told us to think
But things like this don't account for those who do a 180 later in life to become more liberal and less religious, completely unlike their parents. Do these people suddenly acquire more IQ points through mail order?macdoc wrote:http://www.theguardian.com/science/blog ... n-not-madeSocialists and conservatives may be born not made
What hope is there of rational debate if our political affiliations are biologically determined?
Right-wingers are less intelligent than left wingers, says study
Children with low intelligence grow up to be prejudiced
Right-wing views make the less intelligent feel 'safe'
Analysis of more than 15,000 people
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/ ... z2fRV9YFQ2Only Six Percent Of Scientists Are Republicans: Pew Poll
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/.../only- ... 9382.html
Jul 10, 2009 - A new study by the Pew Research Center finds that the GOP is alienating scientists to a startling degree. Only six percent of America's scientistsI think we can see a trend hereINTELLIGENCE SCORES AND BEHAVIOR: EVEN A FEW POINTS MATTER
Low IQ is a known risk factor for crime and delinquency (See related article, Crime Times, Vol. 1, No. 3, Page 6). But a new study by Robert Goodman suggests that even when IQs are in the normal range, lower IQ scores are linked to stealing, lying, and other symptoms of conduct disorder.
Goodman studied 339 children between the ages of 5 and 16. All of the children were seen at a psychiatric clinic. Children with diagnoses of hyperactivity, psychosis, pervasive developmental disorders, or retardation were excluded.
Tests revealed, Goodman says, that lower IQ in his sample of "normal-IQ" subjects was linked to conduct disorder, a link which was stronger in teens than in younger children. "Other dimensional measures of psychopathology--covering emotional symptoms, developmental immaturity and relationship difficulties--were not significantly correlated with IQ," he says.
In Goodman's sample, the mean IQ of children with conduct disorders was nearly 10 points lower than that of children with emotional disorders--and children with mixed disorders of conduct and emotion fell in between. The low-IQ subjects did not appear to be more immature or hyperactive, but Goodman says this is probably because children with overt hyperactivity were excluded from the study.
"When taken together with the results of previous clinical and epidemiological studies," he says, "the findings of this study suggest that IQ variation within the normal range does influence the risk of common childhood psychopathology." The IQ effect remained true when Goodman controlled for socioeconomic status and for reading ability, which he says indicates that "the link between low IQ and conduct problems was not wholly attributable to social class or entirely mediated by scholastic attainments.
"Given the overlap between teenage conduct disorder and juvenile delinquency," Goodman says, "it is worth emphasizing that the link in the current study between low IQ and more conduct problems was greater in teenagers than younger children. In younger children, IQ may be more closely linked to hyperactivity than to conduct problems."![]()
"Women and cats will do as they please, and men and dogs should relax and get used to the idea." ♥ Robert A. Heinlein

“Do I contradict myself? Very well then I contradict myself; (I am large, I contain multitudes.)”-Walt Whitman from Song of Myself, Leaves of Grass
I say we take off and nuke the entire site from orbit. It's the only way to be sure.~Ripley
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- Tyrannical
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Re: Most of us think what our parents told us to think
Since we seem to take IQ as a valid measure of intelligence in this thread, anyone care to explain why the group with the lowest average IQ in the US votes 95% Democrat? 

A rational skeptic should be able to discuss and debate anything, no matter how much they may personally disagree with that point of view. Discussing a subject is not agreeing with it, but understanding it.
- cronus
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Re: Most of us think what our parents told us to think
They can't be that dumb I guess?Tyrannical wrote:Since we seem to take IQ as a valid measure of intelligence in this thread, anyone care to explain why the group with the lowest average IQ in the US votes 95% Democrat?

What will the world be like after its ruler is removed?
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