Lynn in his 2002 book gives an average Slovenian IQ of 95. Which is somewhat low for a European nation, its a few points below Norway, Canada and a point or so above Ireland and Greece. Historically its been stable for the last decade at least (no Flynn effect to the rescue).And since we have a very low birth rate and are part of the European Union I can't see the state's average IQ gong anywhere but down and Its clear we have had a generational brain drain for centuries where the best and brightest would opt to become Germans, Italians or even Hungarians. An alternate explanation is that we are just a slightly high Balcan outlier (Romania having an IQ of 94 might be another such example). I just wanted to get that out of the way to make sure no one thinks I consider my own group to be part of Central Europe in this context.
Looking at a map of Europe it seems Central European nations have the highest European IQ's
I've heard figures of Germans and Dutch being in the 105, 106 range which is almost comparable to East Asians (Hong Kong, Singapore both at 108, North & South Korea at 106), they are somewhat belivable considering that the average IQ of the German population was about 102 as late as 2002. Eastern Central Europe is about a point or two below 100 but seems to be gaining IQ points solidly over the past decade which might point to the fact that the Flynn effect may have a bit left to go.
I've recently stumbled upon this topic on a blog, don't really remember which one. Its also neat since it sort of explains away part of the Ashkenazi anomalously high IQ (the persecution & clergy hypothesis while appealing dosen't really explain why other equally persecuted and Talmud studying Jews don't measure up to the Askhenazi).
What factors do you think have historically led to selection for or against high IQs in the last ~100,000 years? And which ones in the last ~10,000?
Looking at a map of Europe it seems Central European nations have the highest European IQ's
I've heard figures of Germans and Dutch being in the 105, 106 range which is almost comparable to East Asians (Hong Kong, Singapore both at 108, North & South Korea at 106), they are somewhat belivable considering that the average IQ of the German population was about 102 as late as 2002. Eastern Central Europe is about a point or two below 100 but seems to be gaining IQ points solidly over the past decade which might point to the fact that the Flynn effect may have a bit left to go.
I've recently stumbled upon this topic on a blog, don't really remember which one. Its also neat since it sort of explains away part of the Ashkenazi anomalously high IQ (the persecution & clergy hypothesis while appealing dosen't really explain why other equally persecuted and Talmud studying Jews don't measure up to the Askhenazi).
What factors do you think have historically led to selection for or against high IQs in the last ~100,000 years? And which ones in the last ~10,000?
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