Posted by Eugene Volokh:
Selecting for Intelligence as Causing Societal Inequality:

   I don't intend to blog much more on this, but since a bunch of people
   raised this point, let me speak to it. The argument (buttressed
   sometimes by citations to the movie Gattaca) is that rich people will
   improve their kids' genes, which will increase social stratification,
   as descendants of the poorer people will find it harder to compete. I
   profoundly disagree with this argument.

   1. If you take this seriously, it would be largely an argument against
   private education (and I've heard the argument made this way), since
   of course private education lets rich parents improve their kids'
   competitiveness relative to poor kids. You might even be upset when
   smart people marry other smart people.

   Would you support "breeding for equality," in which smart people
   self-consciously try to marry dumb people, so their kids wouldn't have
   too much of an unfair advantage? Or how about programs that try to
   persuade smart men that the feminine ideal should indeed be the dumb
   airhead woman (and, of course, to persuade smart women that they
   should marry dumb men)? Yes, I realize that there's potentially a
   significant difference in degree between the IQ benefits to be gained
   by genetic engineering and the IQ benefits to be gained by lay
   genetics (i.e., smart people marrying smart people) or education. But
   I stress the "potentially," and in any event the principle strikes me
   as quite similar.

   2. Technological progress is on balance very good, and generally
   speaking it's disproportionately produced by smart people
   (technologists, businesspeople, and so on). More smart people means
   more chance of cures for disease, of better transportation and
   information technology, of space flight, of good environmental
   inventions, and so on. Yes, it's true that smart people do harm, too;
   if Hitler had been dumber, the 20th century might have been less
   bloody. But on balance, I'm pretty sure that it's good for society
   generally to have more smart people.

   3. Most technologies -- computers, CD players, and the like -- start
   out expensive enough that only rich people or institutions can afford
   them, but then, with technological development and economies of scale,
   the price falls, and more and more people can access the technology.
   Some Americans may be too poor to afford them, but most Americans can
   afford technology that provides most of the key features. Rich people
   can still afford better stuff, but the marginal quality difference
   between what the 90th percentile can afford and what the 50th
   percentile can afford isn't that vast. (Consider, for instance,
   personal computers.)

   So if you're concerned that only the top 5% will ever afford getting
   higher IQ for their kids, that seems highly unlikely. And if you're
   concerned that only the top 70% will afford it, and oppose the
   technology because of the bottom 30%, then I think you have the wrong
   set of priorities. Work on ways to eventually make it accessible even
   to the bottom 30%, rather than denying it to the top 70%.

   There's an old Soviet joke about the man who visits Hell. In Hell,
   there are three giant cauldrons in which the sinners are being boiled.
   On the rim of one stands a regiment of demons, shoulder to shoulder,
   constantly using their pitchforks to smack down the sinners who are
   trying to escape. On the rim of the second walk a few demons, who
   occasionally whack someone down. The rim of the third is empty, but
   no-one is getting out.

   What's going on here?, the visitor asks. "There are three kinds of
   people," the Devil says. (In the original joke, they are Jews,
   Russians, and Ukrainians, but in honor of the Orange Revolution I've
   sworn off Ukrainian jokes . . . .) "The first kind is in the first
   cauldron. When one looks like he's trying to escape, all the rest
   follow him. We need a lot of demons to manage them.

   "The second kind is in the second cauldron. Occasionally someone is
   trying to escape, but the others don't pay any attention. It takes
   just a few demons to deal with this kind.

   "The third kind is in the third cauldron: When one is starting to
   escape, all the others drag him back down by the ankles."

   Don't be that third kind.

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