Intelligence research connects to numerous aspects of life and society. The same characteristic that forecasts job success can also influence longevity and physical wellbeing. Beyond individual outcomes, a nation's mean IQ correlates positively with economic success and negatively with criminality. However, this societal relevance causes some to oppose intelligence research, fearing it necessarily produces harmful social policies—particularly when discussing genetic influences.
This concern is longstanding. Walter Lippmann worried intelligence testing could become an "instrument of cruelty" if intelligence were viewed as fixed and inherited. Decades later, critics of The Bell Curve believed it aimed to dismantle affirmative action and welfare programs.
The reality is more nuanced. Intelligence research is neither politically liberal nor conservative. Facts themselves are value-neutral; their application for beneficial or detrimental purposes is separate from their veracity. Like other scientific domains, intelligence findings can support various policies. No single policy follows inevitably from intelligence research.
Justifying Current Conditions?
The positive associations between IQ and income, status, and prestige—combined with apparent meritocracy—might suggest intelligence research merely validates existing inequality. Additionally, evidence that effective instruction cannot fully equalize children's abilities might imply that improving education for lower-performing students wastes resources.
This reasoning is flawed practically and philosophically. Social science findings can change over time. For instance, the relationship between IQ and mortality reversed after World War II. More fundamentally, David Hume recognized that factual statements (what is) lack logical connection to moral judgments (what ought to be). Facts describe reality without prescribing how things should be. The lead poisoning example illustrates this: society recognized high blood lead levels as undesirable and enacted changes, demonstrating that current realities need not remain fixed.
The moralistic fallacy occurs when people insist facts must align with their preferences about how the world should function. This can range from rejecting inconvenient evidence to extreme censorship of scientific truths deemed socially dangerous. Reality, however, disregards human preferences—evolution operated for millions of years producing individual and group differences before humans could express opinions about them.
Multiple Policy Perspectives
Identical facts often support contrasting policies. Information about genetic influences on achievement could prompt either reduced opportunities for low-IQ individuals or increased educational funding for genetically disadvantaged students. Immigration policy provides another example: intelligence research could justify either restrictive screening to protect welfare systems and prevent brain drain, or welcoming policies recognizing that migrants represent a positively selected, higher-IQ sample likely to contribute economically.
Hereditarian Versus Environmental Views
Many assume environmental theories offer more optimism for change than genetic explanations. Yet twentieth-century history demonstrates that totalitarian regimes based on both genetic theories (Nazi Germany) and environmental theories (Soviet Union, Communist China, Khmer Rouge) produced millions of deaths and genocide. Neither perspective is inherently benign.
Genetic information need not breed fatalism. It can encourage compassion—understanding that unemployment among low-g individuals partially reflects genetics rather than character flaws might strengthen support for social safety nets. Genetic knowledge can also facilitate better personal decisions.
Historical eugenics abuses occurred because individual rights were subordinated to societal goals. Preventing future harms requires legislation protecting universal human rights, individual liberty, and dignity.
Developing Sound Policies
Effective g-conscious policies should: avoid overpromising results, rely on facts rather than wishful thinking, and acknowledge genetic influences. Such policies would focus on preparing students for appropriate educational paths, matching curricula to abilities, and valuing technical careers equally with college education. Critically, policies informed by intelligence research better accommodate low-g individuals' needs—a frequently overlooked population without advocacy groups.
Intelligence research need not produce unfavorable outcomes. Scientific knowledge can serve good or harmful ends. Understanding intelligence provides insight for creating effective, humane policies.
From Chapter 33 of "In the Know: Debunking 35 Myths About Human Intelligence" by Dr. Russell Warne (2020)