RE: Better people

From: Theta 8008 (ubergoo@hotmail.com)
Date: Fri Jun 04 1999 - 22:48:41 MDT


8008

>Is this a serious requests for references on the >genetic influence of
>human
>performance? [the list is BIG] Or are you asserting >that there is "NO"
>gentic differentiation?
>I would question the word "most" in the previous >reply,however.

     I have read various articles about intelligence which favor genetics
and others which favor environment as the larger cause for whether a person
is intelligent or creative or not. Personally, I think that as long as
genetics has provided you with a working brain, that the rest is pretty much
up to you. A favorable, stimulating environment helps, but the lack of such
can be made up for.

     No one in my family is anywhere near as intelligent or creative as I
am. I am pretty sure that I was not switched at the hospital, so unless I am
a throwback to some forgotten genius in the mists of my family's ancient
history, I figure that I did not INHERIT my intellect. Likewise, the
environment that I grew up in was very far from encouraging.

     As a very small child, my earliest perception about myself and others
was of a fundamental difference. It was "intelligence" (even if I did not
yet know the word, I had the feeling of it). I consciously took on the
purpose and ambition of enhancing this difference. As a child, this meant
study, greedily taking in whatever knowledge that I could get. As I got
older, I started to think more about intelligence itself: clear and
efficient perception, cognition and communication. So, from then to now, I
have played around with memory improvement, semantics, creativity
enhancement, brain nutrition and so on.

     Anyway, the point of this biography is that my intellect is a product
of neither my genes nor my environment. That is even more true for my
aesthetics, values and purposes. I may be very rare in this; but certainly
not unique. I would rank genetics as the least important factor, then
environment and then self-determinism as the most important factor of all.

     With equal "evidence" available to support seemingly contradictory
theories, I look to my own experience. Of course, if geneticists can grow a
"better" brain, that would certainly make a difference.

                                             Zero

Telesis Foundation for Applied Memetics
http://telesis.veindance.com

CHAOSMOS: The Product is The Process
http://www.angelfire.com/biz2/ubergoo/chaosmos.html

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