Human Beings Are Getting Dumber, Says Study

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Just look at all the amazing innovations modern technology has given us: at-home HIV tests, motion-activated screwdrivers and self-inflating tires. It’s easy to look down on our prehistoric ancestors for their primitive, electric screwdriver-less way of life. But one scientist says we shouldn’t be so quick to judge.

In a two-part paper published in the journal Trends in Genetics, Stanford University researcher Gerald Crabtree suggests that evolution is, in fact, making us dumber — and that human intelligence may have actually peaked before our hunter-gatherer predecessors left Africa.

(MORE: Creationists Boycott Dr Pepper Over ‘Evolution of Flavor’ Ad)

The reason? Life on the veldt was tough, and prehistoric humans’ genes were constantly subjected to selective pressure in an environment where the species’ survival depended on it. For humans, that meant getting smarter. ”The development of our intellectual abilities and the optimization of thousands of intelligence genes probably occurred in relatively non-verbal, dispersed groups of peoples before our ancestors emerged from Africa,” Crabtree said in a news release.

The urbanization that followed the development of agriculture simplified survival by removing some of its challenges, which likely weakened natural selection’s ability to eliminate mutations associated with deficiencies in intelligence. Crabtree estimates that over the last 3,000 years (about 120 generations), humans have sustained at least two mutations that have eroded our intellectual and emotional intelligence.

“A hunter-gatherer who did not correctly conceive a solution to providing food or shelter probably died, along with his or her progeny, whereas a modern Wall Street executive that made a similar conceptual mistake would receive a substantial bonus and be a more attractive mate,” Crabtree wrote in the paper. He also noted that the average Athenian from 1000 B.C. would rank among the smartest and most emotionally stable in today’s society.

Not everybody agrees with Crabtree’s reasoning, however. Steve Jones, a geneticist at University College London, believes there is insufficient data to support his theory. ”Never mind the hypothesis, give me the data, and there aren’t any,” Jones told The Independent. “I could just as well argue that mutations have reduced our aggression, our depression and our penis length, but no journal would publish that. Why do they publish this?”

Crabtree does argue that no matter how deteriorated our intellectual abilities may have become over the millennia, advancements in technology will someday render these changes insignificant.

“I think we will know each of the millions of human mutations that can compromise our intellectual function and how each of these mutations interact with each other and other processes as well as environmental influences,” Crabtree said in the release. “At that time, we may be able to magically correct any mutation that has occurred in all cells of any organism at any developmental stage. Thus, the brutish process of natural selection will be unnecessary.”

MORE: South Korean Textbooks Reject Evolution

116 comments
SeanThayer
SeanThayer

To answer Steve Jones' question: because it's an interesting hypothesis.

A couple of thoughts I have on this:

1.We have a great deal of knowledge today on how natural selection works. It's fairly easy to see that there is little to no selection for intelligence happening in today's human environment. Even when individuals become successful and essentially out compete their peers because of superior intelligence that does not translate into survival or greater reproduction. Because of this it seems we have every reason to expect that under the current environment intelligence will diminish; even if we have no evidence that this has in fact occurred.

2. The lack of selection I'm talking about above is only true for abstract intelligence. We think of our environment as being easily survived compared to life on the Savannah but that is only partly because it suits us and largely because we are adapted to it. Take a hunter gatherer from 10,000 BC and dump him in present day Los Angeles; with no guidance his odds of survival start to look pretty slim. Just look to the infamous "Darwin Awards" for inspiration on the thousands of ways stupidity can kill you(or geld you) in the modern world. I suppose it does take a certain amount of intelligence to understand that replacing an electrical fuse with .22 caliber ammunition is a bad idea. Traffic accidents are the number one cause of violent death in the U.S. so if nothing else there is at least a fair amount of environmental pressure to become a better driver - reaction, coordination, spatial reasoning, planning.

3.We broadly define intelligence as the ability to assimilate and utilize information. But this is a definition that can be used to make even the brightest human appear less intelligent than a chimp or even a dog in certain situations. Chimps are thought to have super-human working memory and subitizing ability. Ayuma the chimp is better at a working memory game than any human, even with equal training. The point is that there is much confusion about what intelligence means because we define it broadly but we measure it - by necessity - very narrowly. The original purpose of the brain is simply to conduct the body's physical movements. Therefore all intelligence however abstract is exapted from this purpose. And therefore it is also reasonable to expect that an adaptation toward increased intelligence in one area might effect a decrease in another. 

The Flyn effect seems to directly contradict Crabtree's hypothesis. But I would argue that because of our chronic conflation of many specific measures of intelligence with our extremely broad definition of general intelligence, we could find evidence that humans are both getting smarter and getting "dumber" simultaneously.

nesha
nesha

"Human beings are getting dumber"...around the world or here in the U.S.?   Thanks to the teacher's union and decades of absurd dallying with teaching "techniques" and curriculum, it is clear the U.S. is getting dumber in total numbers. Certainly, we will always have extremely bright, motivated students who become productive adults, but, our last election is empirical evidence that the "DUMBING DOWN OF AMERICA" has been successfully accomplished by the predominant number of teachers.  FYI: the phrase "Dumbing Down of America" was coined by none other than a respected democrat, the late N.Y. U.S. Senator Daniel "Patrick" Moynihan.    

Also, the late attorney for the UNITED FEDERATION FOR TEACHERS for over 20 years said at a convention:   

"When schoolchildren start paying union dues, that’s when I’ll start representing the interests of school children."

This helps to explain why human beings, here in America, are getting dumber. You cannot ascribe such a comment, implied by the article,  to include each person on the planet. 

nesha
nesha

KIM KARDASHIAN & KANYE WEST......do I need to say more?

nesha
nesha like.author.displayName 1 Like

When you have over one half million marriages (and more non married couples) between blacks and whites, what else do you expect?   It is a simple matter of DILUTION.

RobertMiller1
RobertMiller1

@nesha 

the funny thing is they are taught it is streanthening humanity when history shows diverse nations do not last every nation that practiced divercity failed


JamesSavik
JamesSavik like.author.displayName 1 Like

>>Human Beings Are Getting Dumber, Says Study

That explains a lot about the last election.

JimBalter
JimBalter

If wanted to provide anecdotal evidence for Crabtree's otherwise baseless supposition, they could point to many of the comments here.

JimBalter
JimBalter

Who cares what some geneticist "suggests"? It's an argument from authority. The *evidence* is to the contrary, in the form of the Flynn effect ... IQ tests have to keep being recalibrated because the average score keeps rising.

RobertMiller1
RobertMiller1

@JimBalter 

wrong in the USA alone the average IQ has fallen 20 base points in the last 70 years intergration caused most of this, we have fallen fron 3th in inteligence to 19 on a worlds ranking in the last 70 years


JimBalter
JimBalter

@RobertMiller1 P.S. Learn some grammar and punctuation. If anyone is pulling down the U.S. average intelligence (not IQ -- the average IQ is 100 because it's calibrated that way; duh) it's your stock, whatever that is.

JimBalter
JimBalter

This illiterate can't even spell "you're".  Then he cites a paper that not only doesn't support his claims but has no evidence behind it. As I said, if anyone is bringing down the average IQ, it's him and his kin. Nothing more needs to be said.

RobertMiller1
RobertMiller1

@JimBalter @RobertMiller1 

FYI here is the link to the facts on the declining IQ baboon

http://uhaweb.hartford.edu/BRBAKER/

Read more: http://newsfeed.time.com/2012/11/15/research-suggests-humans-are-evolving-to-be-dumber/#ixzz2Q8rtDxLk


    The larger the human population grows, the average human I. Q seems to drop. Now how is this possible? Studies show that since the nineteen fifties the average I. Q has dropped a total of three points. This is alarming and confusing at the same time. How with all of our medical and technological advancements is this occurring?  Many charts that I have found showed that the average I. Q was at its peak in nineteen fifty that was sixty years ago. Many blame this fall of global I. Q on the fall of the Soviet Union. In the soviet unions control of Eastern Europe, their children were forced to be schooled in far more advanced subjects than modern students. It was a race to attempt to beat the west technologically. In turn the west also made their students study harder and learn more thusly making the average I. Q greatly superior than it had been for many years. Without this compaction the schooling that was installed in a time of panic was called off. Recent studies show that the is now Falling at a rapid rate. 
    The average I.Q. for 2011 is calculated to be 88.54 this is the lowest I.Q. rate in years.

JamesSavik
JamesSavik

@JimBalterhow come smart phones keep getting smarter and people using them keep getting dumber?



AllanHytowitz
AllanHytowitz

Crabtrees argument that humanity is about to become the Eloi is as valid as measuring IQ by counting the bumps on a person's head.

His argument about the evolutionary biological loss of intellect totally ignores the evolutionary cultural gain in intellect.  

Despite his comments about the "intellect" of an Athenian in 1000 BCE, the time period was shortly after the demise of Socrates, the World's First Certified Dyslexic, who viewed reading and writing to be an abomination mostly from his disability to master it.  Without the heresy and disobedience of his student Plato, we would never know of the bigoted  "wisdom" of Socrates.

Instead our survival as individuals and as a species has gone from the Age of Information (Orwell's "Information is Power") to the Age of Information Overload in which our survival as individuals and as a species is dependent on filtering OUT the specious data that consumes and wastes our time.  (You can read about it in your local newspaper, if you can find one.)

And comparing Sumerian letter writing to Native Americans pictographs is specious, since 90% of Native Americans likely have dyslexia and and are still not able to master the flexibility of letter-based writing systems.  That too will change with the upcoming advent of lenses that eliminate the chromatic-induced photoreceptor problems that likely cause dyslexia symptoms.

And the verification of dyslexia type symptoms as being chromatically based can be determined by viewing the free acuity tests at http://www.dyop.org/documents/ColorScreening.html



bcaa12
bcaa12

the argument could also go the other way around that intelligence has simply changed from the natural adaptive, to technological abstract, in the last 100 years there has been more abstract advancement of knowledge than in the actual natural arena. there is probably more evidence that the adaptation is towards ever more organized social structures rather than brute survival.

manjeetchaturve
manjeetchaturve

Since they could not invent a non - warring, non - exploitative, non - unequal, non - discriminating, 'without borders' world how long they would be called smart? And yes, they are killing their own environment in which they want to survive.  What else is dumbness?

mrbomb13
mrbomb13 like.author.displayName 1 Like

Must have been a slow day in the Time Magazine newsroom...

Is the writer of this article aware of the Multiple Intelligences Theory proposed by Howard Gardner?

In his writings, Gardner expressed that each of us are intelligent in different ways.  Some of us learn better through reading, others through viewing pictures, others through engaging in physical activities (i.e. hunter-gatherers), etc..

Just because today's human beings do not excel at hunter-gatherer type behaviors DOES NOT mean that "we as a whole are getting dumber."  It's amazing that JuJu Kim (the article's writer) did not catch that over-generalization as he was typing this piece.

Articles like this would not, "have gone to press" (to borrow an old phrase) even 10 years ago.  

Time Magazine should know better.

JimBalter
JimBalter

@mrbomb13 Um, the author of the piece is just reporting what Crabtree said ... there is no basis for the assertion that the author didn't catch errors in the Crabtree's claims.

epitygxanwn
epitygxanwn

@mrbomb13  But interesting though it is, Gardner's theory has not won universal acceptance yet.

mrbomb13
mrbomb13

@epitygxanwn @mrbomb13 

First, thank you for replying to my comment.  A couple of additional comments in response:

1) From a review of the literature, I agree that Multiple Intelligence Theory has received some criticism from those in the field.  However, that criticism has focused on the statistical applications (regarding the variable, "g"), and not the more qualitative aspects of the theory (i.e. "Are you a visual-learner, or a book-learner?")

2) From a personal anecdotal perspective, I was trained to be a Secondary Education Teacher, and earned my certification in 2010 (in Social Studies, and then English in 2011).  In my training, we were exposed to Howard Gardner's Theory on Multiple Intelligence.  As a teacher, I also encountered other colleagues who learned the theory in their training as well.  Furthermore, to exhibit how the theory has held up over time, my grandmother (a former special education teacher with 25 years experience, who retired in the early 1990s) was well-versed in the theory as well.

In summary, the point of sharing that perspective was to show that (while the theory has been subjected to criticism) the theory can be used in practical, qualitative applications in both psychology and education.

mrbomb13
mrbomb13

@epitygxanwn @mrbomb13 

I included literature on educational psychology, general psychology, and teaching pedagogy (from beginner to advanced).  Increasingly, the Education profession is delving into psychology for insights into ways students learn, think, and remember/retain information.  

My peers and I was certainly given a broad background during my teacher training, and I have no doubt that the upcoming teacher candidates are receiving similar training as well. In fact, in Pennsylvania, all teacher candidates - whether elementary or secondary - must complete 12 credits of special education (as disabled students are increasingly being mainstreamed into regular education classrooms).

I did not include research on cognitive science, because "scientific training" was never a part of my training.  However, I could see the false dichotomy in the "book learner v. visual learner."  You're right - pictures within the text help to paint a clearer picture for learners and readers alike (especially in 300-page tomes).

My using of Multiple Intelligence Theory as an example was driven by the article's odd question of, "were we getting dumber."  Admittedly, the theory isn't perfect, but (to me) it seems that using a mix of those intelligences have helped us to become more efficient "hunter-gatherers," and have therefore helped human beings endure.  Change is a constant, and we seem to be pretty good at it.

epitygxanwn
epitygxanwn like.author.displayName 1 Like

@mrbomb13 @epitygxanwn How wide was your "review of the literature"? Did you include the literature on cognitive science, or were you looking just at education?

It is, after all, the results of cognitive science that suggest your "book learner vs. visual learner" is a false dichotomy: books teach far more effectively for ALL learners when they use visualization techniques well. The days are long over when a scholar like Hermann Weyl could publish a 300 page book claiming to teach a topic with only 3 figures;)

John
John

One of the factors that I think dumbs down the population is that at the current time we have very few real challenges.  Everything is either mechanized, or electronic, or given to us by the government.  The general population just has it too easy.

If we had to struggle to even survive, the dumb ones wouldn't, and if intelligence has a genetic component, the average intelligence of the population would go up

RobertMiller1
RobertMiller1

@John I agree but if North Korea would launch a EMP nuke at the USA then you will find the collage educated would probably not survive, these people have no clue to hard work or the process to even find clean water in a natural environment and water would be the most important aspect to survival, a human can only last 3 days with out water.

With 120 cases of STD's in america the life style these people lead would surly guarantee there demise.

JimBalter
JimBalter

@John There are a lot of challenges to living in the Third World. Your logic would have it that those populations are more intelligent.

WilliamBarnes
WilliamBarnes

@John  We have very few real challenges? I would say the contrary is true. More challenges than ever before, actually. Perhaps on a day to day urban basis we have fewer (needless) decisions to make due to tecnology, but this tecnology is responsible for uncountable other problems from A to Z that we haven't learned to deal with and is putting a validation date on "life as we know it" on the planet. I guess we better get smart quick (or else).

epitygxanwn
epitygxanwn

@John That is the first thing I thought of when I read this headline too, but then in the body of the article they say it has been going on since long before the start of the modern age.

Still, it reminds me of Scott Adams' "The Dilbert Future".

BarryNeilson
BarryNeilson like.author.displayName 1 Like

"Recent polls have shown a fifth of Americans can't locate the U.S. on a world map. Why do you think this is?"

"I personally believe that U.S. Americans are unable to do so because, uh, some people out there in our nation don't have maps and, uh, I believe that our education like such as in South Africa and, uh, the Iraq, everywhere like such as, and, I believe that they should, our education over HERE in the U.S. should help the U.S., uh, or, uh, should help South Africa and should help the Iraq and the Asian countries, so we will be able to build up our future, for our children." - Caitlin Upton (2007 Miss Teen USA pageant)

I don't know about anybody else, but this particular human isn't too bright.

JimBalter
JimBalter

@BarryNeilson "I don't know about anybody else, but this particular human isn't too bright."

Neither is anyone who thinks that anecdote is relevant to this article.

BarryNeilson
BarryNeilson like.author.displayName 1 Like

Ah . Well it does actually require a little extra brain power to understand the comment, and it's associated connection with the article.  I'm sorry you failed to do so. Perhaps you might reconsider your reading level: "Run Spot Run" is perfect for children.

BarryNeilson
BarryNeilson

@JimBalter You have lost your argument and have nothing left to cling to but lame name calling. You have lied and you have continued this thread after saying that you would not.  You make erroneous statements of things of which you cannot possibly know. You demonstrate with every word that you are a venomous and hateful person. You sir, are the evidence that dump people can pretend to be intelligent but their bluff will sooner or later be called - and I have called you for what you are.  A twisted lonely little rain man with nothing in life but self sorrow and forum flaming. 

BarryNeilson
BarryNeilson

@JimBalter @BarryNeilson So let me get this right.  After categoricially stating that you'd say no more to or of me, here you are, three months later, continuing to troll and make delusional abuses.  You need to get over my initial tongue-in-cheek posting, and you need to get over yourself. It is possible to be bright without being a complete self-absorbed tool - I suggest you learn how.

JimBalter
JimBalter

@BarryNeilson One more comment ... your tu quoque fallacy further confirms what I wrote of you. Your statements were not made in retaliation for anything, that's an after-the-fact rationalization by a pathetic coward. You started this with your "pointed comment" that "this particular human isn't too bright". It remains a simple fact, apparently beyond your comprehension, that  anecdotes are irrelevant to statistical distributions.

BarryNeilson
BarryNeilson like.author.displayName like.author.displayName 2 Like

You've made many pointed comments against other people abusing them directly rather than challenging their respective statements.  You deserve every comment I made in retaliation.

If you cannot handle the heat in the forums, I suggest you stop lighting the flames.

JimBalter
JimBalter

@BarryNeilson The point was the irrelevance of anecdotes about one unintelligent person to this article, about statistical distributions of intelligence. Rather than address the substance, you attacked my brain power and my reading ability, and now absurdly take my factual counter to those silly ad hominems as narcissism and attack my interpersonal ability and say I'm a child. You not only confirm my original statement about not being bright, but you also demonstrate that you are an immature and dishonest person. The web, and the planet, is full of such tedious boring garbage as you ... which is the last I will say to or of you.

BarryNeilson
BarryNeilson

An IQ of 170 says you.  The internet abounds with egotists of no interpersonal ability.  However, I will see your narcisistic bluff and raise you one engorged ego.  Plus, you can keep your Dunning-Kruger effect; children with high IQ's are still children. 

JimBalter
JimBalter

@BarryNeilson I have an IQ of 170, I understand the comment, and I understand that anecdotes are irrelevant to statistical distributions ... unlike you, Mr. Dunning-Kruger effect.

epitygxanwn
epitygxanwn like.author.displayName like.author.displayName 2 Like

@BarryNeilson Even more scary, a lot of girls are being brought up looking UP to 'figures' like Catilin!

Come to think of it, that explains Sarah Palin, too:(

ghintlia
ghintlia

Sure thing.  Since when did our ancestors bring us electricty, lamps, airplanes, and especially personal computers that started hiting the US around 1980.  Possibly since illegal drugs are making mush of some peoples brains those are the ones that do not contribute much to our high technological society.  The others are fine!!!

kc2siz
kc2siz

Assuming that the selective pressure that originally resulted in our intelligence has waned, the result should be static, not decreasing, intelligence. Our intelligence should decrease only if there is some selective advantage to being dumb, yet no one has argued for this conclusion and it is difficult to imagine a scenario in which there would be some long term advantage attached to stupidity. 

JimBalter
JimBalter

@kc2siz The brain uses a large fraction of the body's resources, so there is in fact considerable selective pressure against high cognitive function. There are, of course, also considerable environmental counterpressures, contra Crabtree. At best he could argue that the *rate* of increase of intelligence has slowed ... that's a reasonable view.

killerdrgn
killerdrgn

@kc2siz There doesn't have to be actual pressures for an overall decline in average intelligence. The less intelligent just have to breed more than the intelligent ones. And as this process is happening (Teen Mom's anyone?) I would believe that there could be at least a slight truth to the declining average intelligence of humanity.

gradkiss
gradkiss

The great thing to accomplish here would be for everyone to join together and insure we are the intelligent ones...but then the current laws guarding intellectual intelligence would destroy the movement.

John
John like.author.displayName 1 Like

@gradkiss  There are organizations like that, Mensa, for instance.  However, I have
known people who are book smart, but when it comes to anything
practical, are dumb as rocks.   I have also known people who were not
book smart and were the cleverest and most ingenious people I have ever met
in practical matters and in the wisdom they possessed.

WilliamBarnes
WilliamBarnes

@John @gradkiss Wow! When people start using adjectives like "book smart" I guess we really are going downhill. It must be something like "Book Smart" people Verses "Stare at the wall - (smoke crack) Drool get pregnant adolescent" people. 

gradkiss
gradkiss

@John @gradkiss  

Creative Commons and the open source movement is removing some of the unwarrented conclusions of using a token coin or currency. (Physics) Plus adding a bit of freedom without the concern of betraying the legal governing establishment.

Many people today are without the usual certifications that example what the uS desires for education.

ref:
http://opensourceecology.org/wiki/Global_Village_Construction_Set

A man's soul is empowered by that individual being able to accomplish practical things on his own.

You are right about one thing, that even Einstein remarked and said...

"Any intelligent fool can make things bigger, more complex, and more violent. It takes a touch of genius -- and a lot of courage -- to move in the opposite direction."

Have a great day...