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THE WORLD IS GETTING SMARTER

  • anthropology
  • IQ
  • Psychology

AT LEAST, BY JAMES FLYNN'S CALCULATIONS | November 27th 2007

meneldur/Flickr

Average IQs are rising sharply from generation to generation, a phenomenon known as the "Flynn effect". Helen Joyce talks to James Flynn, the man who spotted the trend and has been working to explain it ...

From INTELLIGENT LIFE magazine, December 2007

James Flynn is not the sort of man to go quietly into retirement. A professor emeritus at the University of Otago in New Zealand, he still teaches and researches energetically at 73. He speaks on finance and tax for the left-of-centre Alliance Party. He has a book in preparation that will be his own last word on the relation between race and IQ. In autumn he was touring the world talking about "What is Intelligence", a book published in October, in which he sets out his explanation for a mysterious phenomenon that bears his name: the rise in IQ from generation to generation. Your IQ is likely to be higher than those of your parents, and your children's IQs is likely to be higher than yours.

"Our advantage over our ancestors is relatively uniform at all ages from the cradle to the grave," says Flynn. Nobody knows if the gains will persist, but "there is no doubt that they dominated the 20th century and that their existence and size were quite unexpected."

He is not afraid to offend. In July, when a journalist asked him about New Zealand census figures showing that less-educated women were bearing more children, he said the trend would exert downward pressure on average intelligence--just as average heights would fall if short people had more children than taller ones.

Flynn went on to speculate that if future scientific advances meant contraceptives could be put in the water, so that an antidote had to be taken before becoming pregnant, then every child would be a wanted child. Another academic described his ideas as "totally repugnant". New Zealand's children's commissioner said he was wandering into "dangerous territory". And Flynn? He said he was just too old to be worrying about offending anyone.

Which makes Flynn's ideas on intelligence, race and politics all the more striking for their liberalism. They had their genesis in his time at the University of Chicago half a century ago. In 1951, aged 17, he had travelled to the Midwest from his home town of Washington, DC, to study politics. Liberal ideas were in the air. Nine years earlier, some of the university's students had helped found the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE). Precociously clever, Flynn was awarded a BA after just one year, and went on to do a master's degree and then a doctorate.

In his first academic job, at the University of Eastern Kentucky, he became chairman of a chapter of CORE--and, as a result, found his job untenable. He moved north, to Lake Forest, a liberal-arts college back in Chicago, only to find that his socialist politics meant he didn't fit in there either.

So in 1963 he moved to New Zealand, taking his interest in liberal ideas with him. And in 1980 he wrote a book, "Race, IQ and Jensen", arguing that the reason American blacks' IQs lagged behind whites' was not a genetic inferiority, as claimed by some intelligence researchers including Jensen.

The gap was caused, Flynn thought, by the huge differences between the two groups' environments. Hence it could be closed. He discussed how, between the two world wars, blacks had narrowed the gap with whites on tests of mental ability that the American military used to screen recruits. His opponents had retorted that such tests merely registered school-taught knowledge, and that the gap would remain unchanged on any purer test of cognitive ability. To prove them wrong, Flynn needed to show that the military tests truly measured intelligence, and not just learning.

He started wading through the manuals for the two most widely used IQ tests to see how well they correlated with the ones the military used. Both the Stanford-Binet and the Wechsler tests were seen as good measures of native intelligence--so, if the same people tended to do well on both the IQ tests and the military ones, it would strengthen his case that there had been cognitive gains among black Americans.

Flynn found nothing relevant to his search, but he did spot something else, something very strange. IQ tests are updated periodically, to replace out-of-date questions ("typewriters" have given way to "computers"; da ted words like "delectable" have been jettisoned for modern jargon like "operational"). Whenever a test was updated, a single group of people would take both versions--the obsolete and the replacement--to check that each ranked people in a similar order.

As a matter of completeness, the groups' average scores on both versions would be published in the test manuals. And, pretty much always, the group would score higher on the old test. An IQ score shows how a candidate does in comparison with a large "standardisation sample" of people who took the test when it was first introduced. Flynn's discovery indicated that the people who were used to calibrate the earlier tests were consistently easier for test-takers to beat.

Now Flynn found himself with a much bolder hypothesis. Rather than just one disadvantaged group--black Americans--having made cognitive gains, could the average person be getting smarter? He looked up every study in which a single group had been given two tests, one calibrated before the other. By 1984 he had compiled results from more than 7,000 subjects, and about a dozen combinations of tests. And they pointed to a startling conclusion: that white Americans had been steadily gaining around three-tenths of an IQ point a year for almost half a century.

In 1984 he published a paper saying so. It didn't convince his critics. As far as they were concerned, all he had proved was that IQ tests were far more influenced by general improvements in schooling, and far less good at picking up native ability, than had previously been thought. IQ scores tend to remain fairly stable throughout a person's adult life, and studies of twins who had been separated at birth suggested that genetic inheritance had a greater influence than any environmental factor. That Americans--white Americans, no less--could genuinely be getting smarter, and astonishingly quickly, seemed inconceivable.

Flynn looked farther afield. "I had got some notoriety because of my '84 article," he explains. "So I felt I could write the military authorities in every country that gave mental tests, and all the testing agencies around the world that I knew of." Not all of them answered, but some did. And it was the reply he got on a dull November Saturday in 1984, from P.A. Vroon, a Dutch psychologist, that convinced Flynn he was on to something of profound significance.

It contained the results of a test called Raven's Progressive Matrices, administered to 18-year-old Dutch conscripts from 1952 to 1982. This is one of the purest tests of innate intelligence. The task is to spot logical patterns in groups of shapes and fill in the missing ones. There are no words, no school-taught skills and no general knowledge. In those three decades the average score had gone up by 20 points.

This was a huge gain. It meant that an 18-year-old with a middling score in 1982 did better than all but a tenth of the young men of the same age who had been tested three decades earlier. Just as tellingly, a random sample of the most recent group had been matched with their own fathers, and the sons had scored 18 points higher. Over the following year Flynn received data from another 13 countries, all of them showing IQ gains.

Today, no doubt remains: IQs have gone up throughout the 20th century. Almost 30 countries, some developed, some developing, have recorded gains. The whole world got smarter, and fast. But no one knew how, or why, or what this meant.

Paradoxes abounded. "Why are we not struck by the extraordinary subtlety of our children's conversation?" asks Flynn. "Why do we not have to make allowances for the limitations of our parents?" If you project IQ gains back to 1900, the average score would be less than 70 on current norms. "That's the cut-off for a diagnosis of mental retardation," says Flynn. If people in 1900 were as thick-skulled as that, how on earth did they manage to run a modern society?

Then there was the puzzle of how such massive gains could have occurred at all. Everything that was known about IQ suggested that by far the strongest influence on it was genetic: parents and their children tend to have similar IQs; the IQs of identical twins are closer than those of fraternal twins; and the effects on IQ of environmental factors such as better schooling tend to fade. "And yet, IQ gains are so great as to signal the existence of environmental factors of enormous potency." How could environment be so feeble and so potent at the same time?

For two decades, Flynn thought about these questions, in between teaching and carrying out research in politics and moral philosophy. Many others thought about them too. Some rejected the very notion of IQ. It had always been controversial anyway, from its early links with eugenics to its later use to justify the place of white men at the top of pretty much every hierarchy. If IQ was meaningless, then its increase would be meaningless too.

But Flynn was sure that rising IQs did matter. IQ is a pretty good predictor of academic success. Scores on IQ tests tend to match teachers' opinions of their students. People with low IQs are rarely found in jobs that require creativity or autonomy. Although plenty of other ingredients are needed for success in life, an above-average IQ seems to help.

Among those who took rising IQs seriously, some thought the cause might be better diet, or smaller families, or more liberal child-rearing. But none of these theories accounted for the size or extent of the phenomenon. And none could explain the odd pattern of the gains.

Most IQ tests contain a collection of subtests, each of which picks up on a different mental skill. And only some of the subtests showed an increase in scores. The average person had become much better at completing geometric patterns, at spotting abstract similarities and at re-ordering scrambled picture cards to tell a story. But people were no better at memorising lists of numbers, and their vocabulary and general knowledge had not expanded at all.

Why would better-fed children, or those with fewer siblings, or those who were more gently reared, grow into adults who had improved so much on some intellectual tasks, but not on others? The rise in IQs was a mass phenomenon, but by no means all children were better-fed.

Although the components of an IQ test measure different skills, someone who is good at one tends to be good at the others too. The same people who are good at spotting the missing piece of a pattern tend also to be good at arithmetic and to amass large vocabularies and stores of general knowledge. This common element, known as "g" for "general intelligence factor", is what IQ tests are meant to measure.

Some subtests are better single measures of the overall score than others. This is not surprising: you could imagine testing people on their ability to cook different dishes. Those who cooked one dish beautifully would be most likely to cook other ones well too, so there would be a "general cooking factor", but the truly excellent cooks would open up a bigger lead when making soufflé than when frying an egg.

Likewise, the most cognitively complex tasks are better predictors of g than more straightforward ones--but some of the most complex tasks showed very large gains, and others, none at all. If each of a pair of tests was supposed to be equally closely related to innate intelligence, how could people have got so much better at one of them but not the other?

It was this puzzling patchiness that started Flynn thinking along the right lines. He likes to use sporting analogies to illustrate his ideas. Suppose we had long been in the habit of subjecting children to a battery of tests for athleticism: long jump, high jump, sprint, and so on. As with mental abilities, so physical abilities would tend to be linked. Someone who can run fast can usually also run a long way, and jump high and far. So we could calculate a "physical g".

But over time priorities change. Satellite television becomes widespread; broadcasters bid up the rights to athletic events; advertisers find that some events attract viewers so they pay more for those events and sponsor the athletes who excel at them. The 100-metre sprint, say, becomes the most popular event in schools and sports clubs; training improves. Even though human bodies and human genes have not changed, and even though excellence in sprinting is still just as closely related as it ever was to excellence in other events, sprinting improves massively, whereas performance in other events barely changes.

By reverse-engineering the pattern of improvement in IQ tests, you can tell how mental priorities have changed over the century. It turns out that we, far more than our recent ancestors, take seriously the ability to find abstract similarities between objects (Question: how are dogs and rabbits alike? Answer: they are both mammals). And we are better at applying logic to finding abstract patterns, as in Raven's Progressive Matrices.

"At that point I began to get excited", says Flynn, "because I began to feel that I was bridging the gulf between our minds and the minds of our ancestors. We weren't more intelligent than they, but we had learnt to apply our intelligence to a new set of problems. We had detached logic from the concrete, we were willing to deal with the hypothetical, and we thought the world was a place to be classified and understood scientifically rather than to be manipulated."

Flynn cites his own father, who was 50 when he was born in 1934. "He was a highly intelligent man. But he had only an intermediate school education; he and all his brothers had gone into factory work between the ages of 12 and 14. I don't think he would have taken a 'matrices' problem seriously. He wouldn't have had any practice in his everyday life at finding logical patterns in abstract shapes; he could do logic all right, but it was mainly applied to concrete situations."

Saying that the rise in IQ scores has been caused by shifting social priorities may seem like dismissing it as mildly interesting, but ultimately trivial. This would be to miss the point. Changes in what we take seriously, and what we use our minds for, are just as real and meaningful as changes in the speed with which we process thoughts, or how much we can remember.

"I reject the idea that either these are intelligence gains or else they're insignificant," says Flynn. "They're not in any simple sense intelligence gains, but they are still highly significant." His father was also rather unwilling to waste his time on profitless speculation. "I remember frustrating occasions when it was natural for me to take hypothetical situations seriously and he thought of this as silly. We might argue about race, and I would say: 'What would you think if your skin turned black?' And his response would be: 'Who has ever heard of such a thing?' Most moral argument cannot get off the ground unless you take the hypothetical seriously."

And when he looks at his two-year-old grandson, he sees social priorities shifting still further. "His parents have enlisted in the great crusade of intellectual stimulation. If he identifies something they immediately pounce on it. A parent 30 years ago who was looking at a book with their child, if the child said, 'that's a cow'; they would say, 'you're right, it's a cow.' Today's parent will add, 'And what noise does a cow make? How many legs does a cow have?' And away they go."

I tell him that this story makes me think of my own 18-month-old son, who, when I took him to his room the night before our conversation, had turned the light switch on and off, again and again, until finally, to his disgust, I had pulled him away to put him in his cot. "Exactly! Merely being surrounded by mechanical contrivances prepares you to have a different mindset. They are artificial causal networks. That in itself helps to free the mind."

There is still the puzzle of how environmental differences can be so weak when we compare individuals born at the same time, but so strong over time. The key, which Flynn attributes to fruitful discussions with his collaborator, William Dickens, an economist at the Brookings Institution in Flynn's home town of Washington, DC, lies in the observation that superior genes cause superior performance by co-opting superior environments.

To illustrate, he recounts another sporting analogy; this time-as is practically mandatory in all discussion of the roles of genes and environment--a fable about identical twins, separated at birth.

These particular twins were born in Indiana, and adopted by unconnected families in the vicinity. They share genes that make them grow a bit taller and stronger than average. In that basketball-mad state, both, like all neighbouring children, shoot hoops in the yard and in school, and, being tall and strong, they are both rather good. This is pleasurable, so they play more and get better still. Each makes his high-school team, enjoys good coaching, puts in a great deal of practice, and goes on to play for his college team too. Both men started with a slight shared genetic advantage. But even tall, strong players are bad before they are trained and it was their genes' ability to recruit an ideal environment that explains how this translated into an enormous superiority.

Everything falls into place with the observation that, for the first time in human history, some people's superior mental abilities are making superior mental environments available to everyone. Humans are social animals. The most important part of the environment that created your mind is other people's minds. Before the 20th century, only the privileged had easy access to ideas. Now, when one person thinks something worthwhile, we can all think it and that thought changes all of us.

This process does not have to be "intellectual" to have an effect. In his book "Everything Bad is Good for You", Steven Johnson analyses the way popular entertainment has changed as people have got better at using their brains quickly and logically. Computer games such as "Civilisation" and "The Sims" reward players who obey the coherent internal logic of virtual realities. Popular television shows weave together multiple characters and storylines, in narrative arcs that extend over many episodes. Think of "24", or "Heroes", which require the audience to hold unanswered questions in their minds through entire series.

These days, film and television viewers are expected to work more out for themselves. Baddies no longer wear black hats; plucky kids lost in the wood no longer turn to one another and say "let's split up"; the presence of an intruder is no longer signalled by repeated shots of a door left ajar.

The Flynn effect is not a story of pure gains. There are signs that children are missing concrete experiences that help develop some mental abilities. Michael Shayer, a psychologist at King's College, London, has spent most of his working life studying the foundations of mathematical ability. In 1976 he tested children on their understanding of volume and shape, an understanding thought by many to underlie all future mathematical ability. When he repeated the tests in 2003, 11-year-olds performed only as well as eight-year-olds had done 30 years earlier.

Flynn's thesis does, though, provide a dignified escape from fruitless arguments about nature and nurture. And it points towards a satisfying answer to his original question: why do black Americans still perform worse on IQ tests than whites do, even when matched for poverty and other disadvantages? It is perfectly possible that in a still-biased society their genes can only co-opt inferior environments.

Most importantly, it shows that whole societies can get better at thinking. The next step will be to build on IQ gains to become wiser too. Flynn reels off abstractions that are now part of our intellectual capital: concepts such as "market", "placebo" and "control group". "If only we trained students to use these properly, that would...give them more critical intelligence and allow them to test truth in the world around them." The mind is supple and the Flynn effect shows that what we value gets stronger.

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One thing I've wondered

Submitted by Visitor (not verified) on November 30, 2007 - 01:25.
One thing I've wondered about, along with this increase in abstract spatial skills, is if there has been a decline in verbal ability or what people typically think of as linear, left-brain critical thinking. Just look at anything written today, such as popular newspaper articles, with ones written in say 1950. The sentences seem to be simpler and shorter, complicated words are not used as often, and everything is (allegedly) written at about a 6th grade level. News programs today are little more than entertainment rather than reliable sources of information. And it seems that much more high-quality literature was produced before recently. I'm not a psychologist, but it seems instead of an IQ increase, it's more of a shift from verbal, analytical thinking to visual, emotional thinking instead. While this isn't a scientific observation can anyone honestly turn on the TV and tell me we're that much smarter than 50 years ago?
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Simplicity

Submitted by Visitor (not verified) on November 30, 2007 - 12:24.
That's the thing. There's no need for all the complicated words. It's just unnecessary . You have heard of the KISS Rule , correct ? Keep It Simple Stupid? Well, we do. As a matter of fact, we have simplifies our language so much so, that we can communicate using emoticons. ;p ;/ :) :( :| See? And I'm certain you know what each of those are.
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I agree with you that it

Submitted by Sarah (not verified) on November 30, 2007 - 21:45.
I agree with you that it seems as if verbal skills are becoming depleted. I tried to read some of the children's classics from around 1900 with my kids--Peter Pan, Robin Hood, etc. These were books that children in the past devoured with enthusiasm and knew by heart. I could barely wade through them, much less could my kids! I was really disappointed in myself. Instant excitement and simplifying the language impoverishes all of us. There is nuance and subtlety and force of argument that does not happen in material aimed at 6th graders! And all of that should matter in terms of quality of thought. One other point--I remember reading something a dozen years ago or so when I was pregnant. Supposedly a study done with rats showed that pregnant rats who lived in a stimulating environment had babies whose brains were actually heavier that those born to rats in a boring environment. And more importantly, that difference in brain size CONTINUED into the next generation when the mothers had equal environments. I have wondered why I have not read more about this study or of follow-ups to it. It seems to me that the 20th century has offered one of the most increasingly stimulating environments human beings have ever experienced. Anyone doing studies on brain sizes over the decades?
  • reply

KISS

Submitted by http://goldenapples.wordpress.com/ (not verified) on December 1, 2007 - 16:14.
Wow, the post starting "I agree with you that..." was not only unintelligible but pointless. "There's no need for all the complicated words. It's just unnecessary," implores a necessary demand. Only use complex words when the intent is for a specific meaning as the medical field. Do we measure intelligence by the # of terms you have in a post? On what basis? Are these horrific writing because journals pay based on # of words? signed, http://goldenapples.wordpress.com/
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Complex words aren't useless!

Submitted by labareda (not verified) on December 3, 2007 - 17:46.
I think it is necessary to separate the using of the words. If you want to transmit a specific clear message or a strong opinion, you obviousily do not need complicated words because simpler words are easier to remember and to understand. But if you want a text (spoken or written)to express complicated ideas or feelings a set of extra words would be extremely great. Also,the so called "more complex" words do not exist by random chance, nor they are useless synonyms of other simpler words. They all carry in themselves a rich particular meaning, and they may be a better way of expressing yourself. I agree that "complicated" words are more used in the scientific context, but i think they are mostly useful in the philosophic and literary context. So, complex words are everithing but useless. At least they allow you to understand what others are speaking about. I'm sorry my english isn't very correct, it's not my native language.
  • reply

a

Submitted by Visitor (not verified) on December 3, 2007 - 17:49.
a
  • reply

verbal decline

Submitted by Visitor (not verified) on December 28, 2007 - 06:27.
Don't forget that the SAT was "recentered" lower a few years ago and scores continue to decline. How now to measure intelligence?
  • reply

Lead Exposure

Submitted by Mark (not verified) on November 30, 2007 - 14:44.
Since they controlled for "poverty and other disadvantages" I would assume they controlled for lead exposure? I know there is a large body of work demonstrating the adverse effects of lead exposure at an early age on IQ. Hopefully, each subsequent generation of children is less exposed to toxic paint chips, especially in older homes and apartment buildings. Also, many inner cities have such high lead concentrations in the soil that playgrounds and/or yards are dangerous. This would probably affect minority children at higher levels. Whether this affects one race disproportionately over another, could reducing lead exposure play some small part in increasing the average over-all IQ?
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I'm a strong believer that

Submitted by New Yorker (not verified) on December 1, 2007 - 13:40.
I'm a strong believer that every human characteristic is a combination of genetic and environmental attributes. But it's interesting, in the world at large, to see how different groups tilt this. If a group has an attribute that it doesn't want to change but is a negative in view of general society (e.g., homosexuality in America), then the attribute is proclaimed to be mostly genetic in nature. If a group has an attribute that it wants to change and is also a negative in general society (e.g. low intelligence test scores among certain ethnic groups, poor mathematical abilities in women), then the attribute is proclaimed to be mostly environmental. Or in the instance of IQ tests, the claim is disputed outright. I think that human society has a basic problem recognizing that people are different and some of those differences make people better than others in certain dimensions. We seem to have no trouble accepting this in the world of athletics -- I'm never going to run a sub-4 minute mile, and that's due to my genes and the fact I didn't start training when I was a teen.
  • reply

intelligence

Submitted by Visitor (not verified) on December 28, 2007 - 06:18.
Studies show that environment causes intelligence to vary 15 points. If a child is starting from average or 100, he/she can go to 115 or 85 with the right or wrong environment. That casts a lot of doubt on whether historically disadvantaged groups are disadvantaged because of lower intelligence. Environment is a powerful influence usually figured at about 50% in many measures of causality. Brain-power is a lot more important to survival than athletic ability in the modern world so why do we want to make stupid judgements about groups native ability? On the other hand, group habits can foster mental strengths or weaknesses. This again is envonment. Just look at the effect America has had on many minority groups-or even the majority group of "women". Given a chance, many disadvantaged groups thrive. . .
  • reply

Words and Intelligence mesasuring

Submitted by Labareda (not verified) on December 3, 2007 - 18:06.
Yes, you could measure intelligence by the words you use because -1- the meaning of one word is correlated with the meaning of another, and you need to be smart to notice those relations (e.g. if you know that Hydro meas water, you understand that hydrogen means "which generates water" and hydrophobia means fear of water). -2-you need to be smart to understand the uses of words in new situations (e.g. metaphors) though this applies to any word. I just wanted to point out that knowledge is never useless, be it of Math, History, Languages, Politics.... However, I think that a more accurate way of measuring IQ would be the use of syntax, which deals with abstract patterns.
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It would be helpful to see

Submitted by Visitor (not verified) on December 9, 2007 - 07:06.
It would be helpful to see more detail as to which sections of the test have seen improvements in scores, charted over time. It seems obvious that as society evolves to favor different ways of comprehending and using information, people will tend to improve their abilities in those areas. In this light the decline in verbal fluency is obviously a function of a society that reads less and reads briefly when it does read. It's also, in the western nations anyway, a function of a more secular society that doesn't read and hear readings from a particular text that, 100 years ago, nearly the entire society used to do every week or even daily: the bible. The range and depth of vocabulary in that text are unmatched by any popular work of fiction or nonfiction on the market today. Likewise, it's obvious today that to succeed in any kind of social undertaking the average young person must rapidly process an enormous amount of *visual* information, whether it be transmitted over a device or in person, embedding all sorts of cues that change constantly. Watch a child's TV show or advertisement and see if you can make sense of any of the rapid-fire succession of images hurled at you. When life begins to imitate a video game, your visual reflexes need to up their game a notch or two. Finally, of course math skills are moving backwards. Most people now spend most of their lives in front of the most powerful calculators the world's ever seen. I suspect the advent of portable timepieces likewise caused a diminution in general skills at deducing the time of day from the position of the sun.
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Stimulating environment

Submitted by Tim Wills (not verified) on December 10, 2007 - 19:11.
Seeing the sections of the tests that show most improvement would indeed help understand some of the factors assisting higher IQ scores. It remains evident that a more stimulating environment must be a major factor. Perhaps the definition of generalist and specialist plays a role, the specialist knows more and more about less and less until they know everything about nothing, whereas the generalist knows less and less about more and more until they know nothing about everything. Kids are highly adaptable. They want to survive and thrive and will normally do whatever is needed in their own social situation to accomplish that. If noone at school reads it is less likely they will. If their peers at school have seen films of dangerous animals from around the world, photos of nascent supernovae or mastered Playstations Dragonball Warrior they are more likely to want to do this than to fletch or learn who begat whom. IQ tests do not favour rote learners but adapters and lateral thinkers. Children over the last hundred years have been recipients of ever more stimulation. Parents more likely to be responsive and attentive even if they are not a child may seen but not heard but it is likely the TV, computer or console will be unseen but heard!
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The world is getting smarter

Submitted by Visitor (not verified) on January 6, 2008 - 16:54.
Tim Wills wrote: "Parents more likely to be responsive and attentive even if they are not a child may seen but not heard but it is likely the TV, computer or console will be unseen but heard! The words are simple yet I don't get any of it. Must be that Tim Wills is be much younger than I am.
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KISS and Other Nonsense

Submitted by Visitor (not verified) on December 13, 2007 - 05:24.
KISS, your approach is the whole problem with "pop" culture (the "hoi polloi"), the culture of those ruled by economic and intellectual elites. You guys at the bottom may think you're smart or something because you appreciate Dickens yet find Pynchon and Joyce incomprehensible, or think partial differential equations are for "geeks" to worry about, but research clearly shows a link between the ability to comprehend and make sense of sophisticated verbal patterns AND the ability to make sense of complex patterns in general. Wouldn't you agree that being able to make sense of life instead of making bad decisions all the time is a fine skill that everyone ought to have? I try hard not to laugh at those of my students who say they don't read books, ever, and simply mention that they, literally, could be getting smarter just by reading new or interesting literary works that challenge their brain to make some sense out of.
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Enlightenment

Submitted by Cameron (not verified) on December 20, 2007 - 13:08.
I particularly enjoyed the observation that "for the first time in human history, some people's superior mental abilities are making superior mental environments available to everyone", although I would dispute the fact that it is the "first time". I was reminded of another time in history, the 18th century Scottish Enlightenment (for more information on that phenomenon see Arthur Herman's book "The Scottish Enlightenment -the Scots invention of the Modern World; Fourth Estate, 2001.) In my view, that "Enlightenment" was clearly founded on the Reformation of Religion in the 16th century and the subsequent outpouring of Christian zeal that was the main driving force of the remarkable popular petition of 1638, the Scots National Covenant. The bottom line was that the presbyterian visionaries wanted everyone to be able to read the Bible for themselves i.e. the whole population had to be educated not just the elite. Relating to God and His superior mental abilities certainly changed the mental environment of Scotland. It was not education of itself that made the difference. As renowned philosopher, and no friend of religion, David Hume noted at the time, the religion of John Knox "consecrated .... every individual and, in his own eyes, bestowed a character upon him much superior to what forms and ceremonious institutions could alone offer." The creative genes of the Father produced in his children an incredible creativity across many and varied fields of human endeavour including philosophy, economics, science and industry. The influence was spread across the world from the founding of the United States to the mission fields of Africa. Historically proven to work!
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