Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Ben's avatar

I read the New Yorker article you mention when it came out and thought that Harden’s ideas seemed very reasonable and I would have thought uncontroversial (and speaking as a behaviour geneticist, pretty much in line with my views). Yet every time the New Yorker tweets out that article (and they do like to tweet out the same articles a lot), all the replies are from (I assume) left wing people accusing Harden of being a racist/eugenicist. I really don’t understand how If we accept genes influence height, eye colour, health, etc, how could they possibly not also influence intelligence and behaviour? Anything to do with the brain requires neuronal communication, which requires proteins, which are encoded by genes. Therefore differences in how these genes may affect behaviour in some way. How can that possibly be controversial or debatable?

Expand full comment
Shane Horan's avatar

That was a fine skewering! The only thing that gives me pause is trying to reconcile how two very smart Stanford professors got it so obviously wrong. Feldman is a population geneticist - he can't be unaware of the glaring problems with his argument.

In these kind of culture wars, it's often explicitly left-wing figures (e.g. Steven Rose, Dick Lewontin, Stephen Jay Gould) lobbing accusations of ideologically driven research at apolitical or centre-left scientists. Harden makes her liberal, pro-equality stance very clear. But her book gets painted as a mere front for a far-right eugenicist agenda. I can only guess that Feldman and Riskin's ideology has led them into a scientifically untenable position.

Expand full comment
26 more comments...

No posts