As it stands, the nature-nurture debate is wrong, pro­poses David Shenk in his book on the sub­ject, The Genius in All of Us. Shenk sub­mits the idea that we over­es­ti­mate the effect genes have on many her­i­ta­ble traits, espe­cially intel­li­gence (or that ever-elusive ‘genius’).

Accord­ing to Shenk, and he is per­sua­sive, none of this stuff is genet­i­cally deter­mined, if by “deter­mined” you mean exclu­sively or largely dic­tated by genes. Instead, “one large group of sci­en­tists,” a “van­guard” that Shenk has labeled “the inter­ac­tion­ists,” insists that the old genes-plus-environment model (G+E) must be jet­ti­soned and replaced by a model they call GxE, empha­siz­ing “the dynamic inter­ac­tion between genes and the envi­ron­ment.” They don’t dis­count hered­ity, as the old blank-slate hypoth­e­sis of human nature once did. Instead, they assert that “genes pow­er­fully influ­ence the for­ma­tion of all traits, from eye color to intel­li­gence, but rarely dic­tate pre­cisely what those traits will be.”

The Hacker News dis­cus­sion on this arti­cle is as eru­dite as ever, and through it I dis­cov­ered the story of Lás­zló Pol­gár and his three daughters:

[Chess grand­mas­ter Judit Pol­gár] and her two older sis­ters, Grand­mas­ter Susan and Inter­na­tional Mas­ter Sofia, were part of an edu­ca­tional exper­i­ment car­ried out by their father Lás­zló Pol­gár, in an attempt to prove that chil­dren could make excep­tional achieve­ments if trained in a spe­cial­ist sub­ject from a very early age. “Geniuses are made, not born,” was László’s the­sis. He and his wife Klara edu­cated their three daugh­ters at home, with chess as the spe­cial­ist sub­ject. How­ever, chess was not taught to the exclu­sion of every­thing else. Each of them has sev­eral diplo­mas and speaks four to eight languages.

Shenk’s book sounds like a scientifically-rigourous ver­sion of Gladwell’s lat­est.

via Intel­li­gent Life