Ref: Pantas atheis di NKRI ditangkap dan dipenjarakan, karena tak pandai 
menipu. hehehe 

http://www.businessweek.com/lifestyle/content/healthday/636619.html

Do Liberals, Atheists Have Higher IQs?
Study links intelligence test scores with key beliefs and male monogamy
By Jennifer Thomas
HealthDay Reporter

TUESDAY, March 9 (HealthDay News) -- People who consider themselves liberals or 
atheists tend to have higher IQs than those who are more religious or 
conservative, a new study suggests.
Higher IQs also seem to make men less likely to cheat. Men with higher IQs 
place a higher value on sexual fidelity than men with lower IQs, although the 
same association with intelligence and monogamy was not found in women, 
according to the study.

The reasons underlying the differences can be explained by evolution, contends 
study author Satoshi Kanazawa, an evolutionary psychologist at the London 
School of Economics and Political Science.

In evolutionary terms, religion stems from humans' tendency to try to make 
sense of natural phenomenon. "Humans are evolutionarily designed to be 
paranoid, and they believe in God because they are paranoid," Kanazawa said. 
"This innate bias toward paranoia served humans well when self-preservation and 
protection of their families and clans depended on extreme vigilance to all 
potential dangers."

Likewise, humans have probably also evolved to have a natural tendency toward 
being conservative, which Kanazawa defines as having a strong preference toward 
caring for relatives and friends.

The purpose of intelligence, on the other hand, is to help humans cope with and 
solve novel problems. Therefore, more intelligent people are more likely to 
have religious and political preferences that go against the grain, such as 
atheism or a rejection of a higher power, and liberalism, which is 
provisionally defined in the study as caring about people who are unrelated to 
you.

"More intelligent individuals are more likely to recognize and comprehend 
evolutionarily novel entities and situations," Kanazawa said. "Some of these 
evolutionarily novel entities and situations form the basis of values, 
preferences and lifestyles."

The study is published in the March issue of Social Psychology Quarterly.

But experts were quick to question the findings.

Ilya Somin, an associate professor of law at George Mason University, took 
issue with the study's definition of liberalism. "Concern for others not 
related to you" could apply to any political outlook, including religious and 
social conservatives who donate large amounts of money to churches, or even 
libertarians, who believe unfettered market forces provide the greatest 
benefits to all.

"He has an idiosyncratic definition about liberals caring about people who are 
not genetically related to them," Somin said. "That could be perfectly 
consistent with being a libertarian or a conservative as well."

In the study, Kanazawa used data from the National Longitudinal Study of 
Adolescent Health, which began when participants were in grades 7 through 12, 
and the General Social Survey, another large national sample.

Young adults who identified themselves as "very liberal" had an average IQ of 
106 during adolescence, compared to an average IQ of 95 for those who were 
"very conservative."

Young adults who identified themselves as "not at all religious" had an average 
IQ of 103 during adolescence, while those who identified themselves as "very 
religious" had an average IQ of 97.

Though you might suspect Kanazawa is a liberal, he's not. Kanazawa said he's a 
libertarian who "despises" liberals.

Nor does Kanazawa believe smarter people are more likely to be liberal because 
those views are more correct. Instead, "it's more likely that humans are 
designed to be conservative and religious," and that liberalism and atheism 
appeal to the intelligent because they are more contrary to people's 
evolutionary instinct.

As for the findings on monogamy, our ancestors were probably "mildly 
polygamous," Kanazawa explained, in that men were not expected to be sexually 
exclusive, though women were. That means being sexually exclusive is 
evolutionarily novel for men, but not for women. Therefore, men with higher IQs 
have a preference for monogamy, but intelligence makes no difference for 
women's attitudes toward sexual exclusivity.

There was not enough data on people who had very high IQs -- in the 140 and 
above range -- so it's unknown if they tend to be liberal non-believers who'd 
never cheat on their wife.

If you're a fan of Fox News or an avid churchgoer and are feeling put out by 
the findings, Kanazawa said you shouldn't be. "One should never take scientific 
findings personally, because they are empirical generalizations and there are 
always individual exceptions," he noted.

Kanazawa is no stranger to provocative research. In an earlier study, he found 
that more intelligent people tend to stay up later than less intelligent 
people. Because early humans lacked artificial light, they tended to wake up 
shortly before dawn and go to sleep shortly after dusk, while being nocturnal 
is evolutionarily novel, his findings suggested.

More information

The U.S. National Library of Medicine has more on IQ.


SOURCES: Satoshi Kanazawa, Ph.D., evolutionary psychologist, London School of 
Economics and Political Science, London, U.K.; Ilya Somin, J.D., associate 
professor, law, George Mason University, Arlington, Va.; March 2010, Social 
Psychology Quarterly

Copyright © 2010 HealthDay. All rights reserved.


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