Vampyr, on 2015-June-11, 12:13, said:
Going back to a bit earlier in the thread.... I am sure we all remember the publication of the book
The Bell Curve and the furore that accompanied it. I have never read the book, but I am sure that a graph like this would be consistent with its findings:
http://www.my-iq.net/images/700-1.png
This image is very popular and is used on numerous websites. Now, ignoring all of the problems associated with the production of this graph, suppose there seemed to be some truth in the differences in intelligence and it seemed that it might be genetic. Would it be considered taboo to do any research to investigate whether this was true?
Are there things we consider too abhorrent to even investigate?
I am not sure on that, but I suspect the answer is 'yes'.
Consider: during WWII, some doctors in the German concentration camp system performed a lot of experiments. For example, and far from the most abhorrent, they immersed prisoners in ice water for varying periods of time and then applied different forms of treatment. There was a 'legitimate' purpose to this, and it wasn't just about torturing their subjects. Air force personnel and seamen were often required to abandon their plane or ship/submarine in the cold waters of the Baltic, the North Sea, the Atlantic and so on, and hypothermia was little understood. I gather that to this day the human data obtained by these doctors is unique....for what I trust are obvious reasons, the research was not duplicated. The result was an ethical controversy within the medical profession post-war: should we use this data or should we refuse due to the horrific circumstances in which it was collected? After all, even if the experimenters found something that 'worked', they'd move onto another experiment and the subject sooner or later died a nasty death.
However, the notion that there may be innate cognitive differences associated with different ethnic backgrounds doesn't seem to me to be at all abhorrent, for two reasons.
The first is that as I understand matters, nobody, other than the most rabid racists, would suggest that the best of one category would be worse than the least of another. We are speaking of large populations, with wide variety within populations. We are speaking of complex topics when we speak of intelligence.
At best, the proponents of the notion that there are genetically based cognitive differences between genders and between ethnic groups argue that on average such differences can be seen measured across populations. I know of no-one, other than bigots, who would argue that it is impossible for a woman to be as smart as a man, or that it is impossible for a white person to be as mathematically gifted as an 'oriental'.
Thus at one level, admittedly probably not the level at which the media and racists would discuss the notion, the question of whether such differences exist should have no impact, since we should judge all individuals based on who they are, and what abilities they possess, and not on whether that individual is male, female, Asian, African, etc.
The second reason is that a lot of people already believe that such differences exist, and base their attitudes on this. There is compelling evidence that populations asserted by some to be inferior will be influenced in their performance by that cultural belief.
It may be my bias, rather than rational argument, but I suspect that a properly designed testing of these alleged differences would reveal that it is impossible to demonstrate any significant difference between the sexes or 'races' once one eliminates or accounts for the effect of culture.
However, and I repeat myself: even if significant differences were revealed, in no rational society would this be justification for systemic discrimination against anyone.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari