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If you were forced to choose, would you rather gain 20 IQ points but lose 3 inches of height, or lose 20 IQ points but gain 3 inches of height?
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IQ isnt fixed you can raise it by 20 with habits, gimme that height…If you were forced to choose, would you rather gain 20 IQ points but lose 3 inches of height, or lose 20 IQ points but gain 3 inches of height?








nigga gonna become so smart he'll finally realize to kill himself
20 points with habits is impossibleIQ isnt fixed you can raise it by 20 with habits, gimme that height…
Id rather be a chad downie
Wrong. I work in the medical field, did research throughout college on it. Sick and tired of mongoloids like you blabbing lies.20 points with habits is impossible
Flynn Effect is generational and it’s only 3 points every 10 yearsWrong. I work in the medical field, did research throughout college on it. Sick and tired of mongoloids like you blabbing lies.
The brain in essence is a muscle faggot
Sources:
The Flynn Effect (Flynn, 1984, 2009)
Training Fluid Intelligence (Jaeggi et al., 2008)
Desirable Difficulties (Bjork & Bjork, 1994, 2011)
Faggot nigger
The guy you're responding to has never even stepped foot on a college campus. Another retarded ragebaiter trying to get reps and be obnoxious for no reason. Clavicular ruined this place.Flynn Effect is generational and it’s only 3 points every 10 years
The second source makes no mention of a 20 point boost in IQ, the results aren’t in IQ points
The third source makes no mention of IQ at all
The last two sources are about enhancing performance through learning which does correlate with IQ but no increase in IQ is needed to learn and improve at a task
Twins studies like this: https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC2889158/ and Bouchard & Lykken (1990) demonstrate how highly heritable IQ is and so does the Wilson Effect
This paper found the highest difference in IQ before and after testing to be about 6 points, but the various standard error values for each test created a wide margin. It’s additionally interesting that in the paper above the power of the test when examining the results of three treatments was 99% which could result in increasing false positives.How Much Does Education Improve Intelligence? A Meta-Analysis - PMC
Intelligence test scores and educational duration are positively correlated. This correlation could be interpreted in two ways: Students with greater propensity for intelligence go on to complete more education, or a longer education increases ...pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
@Bryce
Great arguments iqcel, thought everyone here had low neurons in their grey matter.Flynn Effect is generational and it’s only 3 points every 10 years
The second source makes no mention of a 20 point boost in IQ, the results aren’t in IQ points
The third source makes no mention of IQ at all
The last two sources are about enhancing performance through learning which does correlate with IQ but no increase in IQ is needed to learn and improve at a task
Twins studies like this: https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC2889158/ and Bouchard & Lykken (1990) demonstrate how highly heritable IQ is and so does the Wilson Effect
This paper found the highest difference in IQ before and after testing to be about 6 points, but the various standard error values for each test created a wide margin. It’s additionally interesting that in the paper above the power of the test when examining the results of three treatments was 99% which could result in increasing false positives.How Much Does Education Improve Intelligence? A Meta-Analysis - PMC
Intelligence test scores and educational duration are positively correlated. This correlation could be interpreted in two ways: Students with greater propensity for intelligence go on to complete more education, or a longer education increases ...pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
@Bryce
damnGreat arguments iqcel, thought everyone here had low neurons in their grey matter.
However, high heritability does not mean immutability. This is the fundamental error in your argument. Height is ~90% heritable yet average height rose 10cm over a century due to nutrition. More critically, Turkheimer et al. (2003) showed that in impoverished families, heritability of IQ drops to near zero while shared environment accounts for 60% of variance, the opposite of what twin studies from affluent Western samples show. Those twin studies are not universal constants they describe specific populations under specific conditions.
There is direct empirical evidence for ~20-point gains. Duyme et al. (1999, PNAS) tracked severely deprived children (mean IQ = 77) adopted between ages 4–6 and found gains of up to 19.5 IQ points in high-SES adoptive homes. Separately, the introduction of iodized salt raised IQs by approximately 15 points in iodine-deficient U.S. regions (Feyrer, Politi & Weil), and a Chinese meta-analysis documented 12–17 point gains from iodine supplementation programs. These are peer-reviewed, replicated findings.
The Flynn Effect itself makes the case. Dutch military IQ scores rose approximately 20 points between 1952 and 1982, within a single generation. No genetic change can explain that. You are correct the rate is ~3 points per decade and that heritability is real and significant. But the cumulative and context-specific evidence shows environments absolutely can move IQ by 20 points. Obviously situational, so maybe I was being slightly hyperbolic with 20 points.
While I did go to college and work in the medical field now… Going to college != being intelligent you absolute mongoloid JFLThe guy you're responding to has never even stepped foot on a college campus. Another retarded ragebaiter trying to get reps and be obnoxious for no reason. Clavicular ruined this place.

