D
droid
Guest
And surely, working class kids are less likely to be familiar with classical composers?
And surely, working class kids are less likely to be familiar with classical composers?
And surely, working class kids are less likely to be familiar with classical composers?
You're conflating several things here, though, and I'm not sure that it is helpful. I would be more interested in learning exactly what is heritable and why. As far as I'm aware, no one on the genetics side thinks that it is all nature, but rather that it is both nature and nurture, which seems reasonable to me, though perhaps this reflects my lack of understanding, or indeed, my structural racism. Does being able to run fast have a genetic component? Hand-eye coordination? Is it the case that physical attributes have a genetic component, whereas there is a mysterious 'mental' set of distinctly non-physical attributes that accrue to the child from birth?
Does being able to run fast have a genetic component? Hand-eye coordination?
Although athletes train too -- I mean, they don't simply walk onto the track or field fully formed -- so presumably there is a nurture component to the ostensibly physical as as well.
"Intelligence" has had from the beginning a bit of a dual meaning. A reference to the quality of one's intelligence could mean how clued-in one was, how much "intelligence" of the outside world one was plugged into. And then also the ability to process that "intelligence", to discriminate between significant and insignificant features, to discern finer points of distinction and so on. Intelligence in this sense can be relative to a domain: I know lots about English Literature, and can say "intelligent" things about it, but very little about JCBs.
Novel problems.