Yes, talking about actual indians and not native americans.
But to the above so called issues with the hypothetical, we can turn the dial up of implausibility to hone in on what to test.
Say we keep the same parameters above, but each child from the American indian population and random sample of the indian population in India is placed into the same home in the same time, one by one.
How? A Time machine. A Hundred children from one population, tested over time one by one, and then the other hundred from the other population.
200 trips in a time machine, back to the same family to raise them all.
Is that hypothetical constant enough on the environment?
Regarding that one study with mixed race kids in Germany, if that study is replicated, that is the kind of study and piece of evidence that suggests it’s much less about any genetic differences between groups. After doing some digging it seems that study is a bit of an outlier. I’ve heard about far more studies that show something very different, so this seems like a case of a cherry picked study that goes against what is typically seen.
This entire topic reminds me of the pre copernican explanations of the heavens, before the heliocentric view there were assumptions that the earth was the center of the universe, and so all the motions of planets and their relationship to the earth had to have these incredibly complex explanations as to why they did not behave as if they actually circled the earth.
Then Copernicus comes along and is like, hey guys, if you go with a model where the sun is the center and all the other planets revolve around that, the models and explanations fall out much more naturally. And this model fits the data we see much better than the rest of yours.
Not everyone wanted to adopt that model, to some of them, they thought that not having the earth as the center of the universe would undermine church doctrine.
And this is what I keep seeing as it relates to iq and group differences that are related to genetics. Some have even offered their personal high iq scores up as an argument that their opposition ought to have extra weight compared to my ramblings. Clearly I’m the rube here.
But even there, I remember that article on ars talking about how higher intelligence coupled to ideology made people better equipped to come up with objections to reality. It turns out, being smarter often just makes it easier to come up with plausible reasons to stick to one view rather than another, even if another view would be a more likely fit with the standards of Occams razor applied.
This really is an interesting case study, since I see most of the posters here deeply afflicted with a case of using their higher than average reasoning ability put to use to discredit what I see as accurate data and information about group differences. And then bend themselves and their arguments into pretzels to maintain the view that we can’t yet say it is any more likely that genetics are some of the cause of the group differences we see in iq vs environmental influences. We can’t say. There was this one study decades ago, that has not been replicated, you see? But what about all the other studies that show persistent gaps?
It’s amazing to watch. I feel like I am in a zoo observing the primates reason taken over by their own preferences for reality. They can’t let their own church doctrine of nature itself being completely egalitarian when it comes to group differences fall away, and so any threats to that religious belief that we are all equal in our abilities, or at least all populations have equal average iq, must be terminated and not accepted.
We really are broken things, so easily distorted by our own desires for reality. And I’m not immune, I think it’s partly due to my own affinity for and belief in the capacity to alter nature, and even humanity, that I am more open to the idea of group differences, and it is not seen as some hill that must be fought to the death over where a loss will be some eternal end of… what exactly? To me it’s not an end, it’s just a temporary setback and inequality, one we can hopefully fix soon. But to others, focused on the here and now, this is an absolute terror, and dark visions of what they think would follow must haunt them.