I found the JRH material I was looking for on pages 381-382 in the
discussion of child-to-parent effects. Simplified, the idea is this: If
similarities in the way parents treat their children don't account for
similarities in the children's behavior (as per behavior genetics findings),
why should *differences* in the way parents treat their children account for
*differences* in the children's behavior behavior?
Hmm...
---
To make changes to your subscription contact:
Bill Southerly ([email protected])