TruthTeller wrote:Lenin wrote:TruthTeller wrote:
How come there is at least one study showing that south-koreans in caucasian adopting families on average do significantly better in IQ tests than caucasians? Is the difference explained by their genetics or which environmental factors would you attribute the difference to? What if that even if you take consideration to the socio-economic status, the difference in IQ is still substantial?
I'd need to see the study to have an idea of where it is coming from. You need to understand, that the culture, family, and class effects quite a bit of a person's development. While at the same time a person's willingness to expand their knowledge or ability also comes into question. You'll also want to remember that there are studies for, against, and in the grey, on all topics. I'm not saying that this study is wrong but I can guarantee that there are at least two other that disprove it out there.
Another thing to remember would be that if the child(ren) where at a set age before being adopted then culture settings have already been made. North-East Asia, East Asia, and parts of South-East Asia are well known for having cultures that promote robotic like studding, pushing for obtaining a better education, and a general family/society pushing to be useful to their society. That aspect has some what been running off in Western societies. At the end of the day there are a multitude of elements that dictate more than race or genetics ever could. You'd be surprised by how many people who lacked the ability to memorize simple things pushed themselves past their boundaries and limitations to be put in history books. Adolf Hitler is a great example of that.
Genetics can apply in relation to how a person's brain operates, but at the end of the day it remains the same as we're still learning new things that contradict old things to how we thought it operated. We know as a fact that chemical process do heavily effect it, as well as genetics that hold it back. Can a person be more inclined to remember more genetically? Yes. Do you see it happen through a set family as it would be thought? Surprisingly no. Some people are born with the ability to remember everything they've seen. Yet they pop up randomly throughout the world.
Try not to complain about a book being made when talking about these things. As this is what you get when talking about these things.
EDIT: These questions would be better else where as they are also serving to allow the fallacy of a "legacy" from the thread's creator to go on.