ABOUT THE SPEAKER
James Flynn - Moral philosopher
James Flynn challenges our fundamental assumptions about intelligence.

Why you should listen

Year over year, people fare better on standardized tests, a global phenomenon known as the Flynn Effect. James Flynn, the New Zealand-based researcher who discovered this, believes that environmental factors play a greater role in intelligence than genetics does.

His latest findings, discussed in his 2012 book Are We Getting Smarter?, also suggest that women are not only as intelligent as men, but superior when it comes to executive function. “Women, when exposed to modernity, do equal men for IQ,” Flynn said to TV ONE’s Greg Boyed. “But in the formal educational setting where they apply their intelligence, they’re outperforming men all hollow.”

Flynn, a retired university professor, has written extensively about the connection between ongoing equality and IQ gains, democracy and human rights. He also wrote a compelling book about books, The Torchlight List, in which he lists 200 must-reads.

More profile about the speaker
James Flynn | Speaker | TED.com
TED2013

James Flynn: Why our IQ levels are higher than our grandparents'

Filmed:
4,330,212 views

It's called the "Flynn effect" -- the fact that each generation scores higher on an IQ test than the generation before it. Are we actually getting smarter, or just thinking differently? In this fast-paced spin through the cognitive history of the 20th century, moral philosopher James Flynn suggests that changes in the way we think have had surprising (and not always positive) consequences.
- Moral philosopher
James Flynn challenges our fundamental assumptions about intelligence. Full bio

Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.

00:12
We are going to take a quick voyage
0
791
2399
00:15
over the cognitive history of the 20th century,
1
3190
3507
00:18
because during that century,
2
6697
1789
00:20
our minds have altered dramatically.
3
8486
2914
00:23
As you all know, the cars that people drove in 1900
4
11400
3324
00:26
have altered because the roads are better
5
14724
2074
00:28
and because of technology.
6
16798
2355
00:31
And our minds have altered, too.
7
19153
1969
00:33
We've gone from people who confronted a concrete world
8
21122
3944
00:37
and analyzed that world primarily in terms
9
25066
3399
00:40
of how much it would benefit them
10
28465
2233
00:42
to people who confront a very complex world,
11
30698
4592
00:47
and it's a world where we've had to develop
12
35290
2209
00:49
new mental habits, new habits of mind.
13
37499
3495
00:52
And these include things like
14
40994
1997
00:54
clothing that concrete world with classification,
15
42991
4014
00:59
introducing abstractions that we try to make
16
47005
2922
01:01
logically consistent,
17
49927
2196
01:04
and also taking the hypothetical seriously,
18
52123
2830
01:06
that is, wondering about what might have been
19
54953
2250
01:09
rather than what is.
20
57203
2392
01:11
Now, this dramatic change was drawn to my attention
21
59595
3552
01:15
through massive I.Q. gains over time,
22
63147
3760
01:18
and these have been truly massive.
23
66907
2369
01:21
That is, we don't just get a few more questions right
24
69276
4411
01:25
on I.Q. tests.
25
73687
1473
01:27
We get far more questions right on I.Q. tests
26
75160
3459
01:30
than each succeeding generation
27
78619
2248
01:32
back to the time that they were invented.
28
80867
2910
01:35
Indeed, if you score the people a century ago
29
83777
3298
01:39
against modern norms,
30
87075
1548
01:40
they would have an average I.Q. of 70.
31
88623
3371
01:43
If you score us against their norms,
32
91994
2725
01:46
we would have an average I.Q. of 130.
33
94719
3599
01:50
Now this has raised all sorts of questions.
34
98318
3357
01:53
Were our immediate ancestors
35
101675
1905
01:55
on the verge of mental retardation?
36
103580
3235
01:58
Because 70 is normally the score for mental retardation.
37
106815
4075
02:02
Or are we on the verge of all being gifted?
38
110890
3032
02:05
Because 130 is the cutting line for giftedness.
39
113922
4236
02:10
Now I'm going to try and argue for a third alternative
40
118158
3120
02:13
that's much more illuminating than either of those,
41
121278
4053
02:17
and to put this into perspective,
42
125331
2622
02:19
let's imagine that a Martian came down to Earth
43
127953
2905
02:22
and found a ruined civilization.
44
130858
2835
02:25
And this Martian was an archaeologist,
45
133693
2407
02:28
and they found scores, target scores,
46
136100
2887
02:30
that people had used for shooting.
47
138987
2923
02:33
And first they looked at 1865,
48
141910
2503
02:36
and they found that in a minute,
49
144413
2071
02:38
people had only put one bullet in the bullseye.
50
146484
3709
02:42
And then they found, in 1898,
51
150193
2317
02:44
that they'd put about five bullets in the bullseye in a minute.
52
152510
3784
02:48
And then about 1918 they put a hundred bullets in the bullseye.
53
156294
5227
02:53
And initially, that archaeologist would be baffled.
54
161521
3855
02:57
They would say, look, these tests were designed
55
165376
2597
02:59
to find out how much people were steady of hand,
56
167973
3598
03:03
how keen their eyesight was,
57
171571
2775
03:06
whether they had control of their weapon.
58
174346
2338
03:08
How could these performances have escalated
59
176684
3021
03:11
to this enormous degree?
60
179705
2182
03:13
Well we now know, of course, the answer.
61
181887
2275
03:16
If that Martian looked at battlefields,
62
184162
2812
03:18
they would find that people had only muskets
63
186974
2824
03:21
at the time of the Civil War
64
189798
2064
03:23
and that they had repeating rifles
65
191862
1807
03:25
at the time of the Spanish-American War,
66
193669
3185
03:28
and then they had machine guns
67
196854
1736
03:30
by the time of World War I.
68
198590
2815
03:33
And, in other words, it was the equipment
69
201405
2551
03:35
that was in the hands of the average soldier
70
203956
2167
03:38
that was responsible, not greater keenness of eye
71
206123
3063
03:41
or steadiness of hand.
72
209186
2173
03:43
Now what we have to imagine is the mental artillery
73
211359
3320
03:46
that we have picked up over those hundred years,
74
214679
3493
03:50
and I think again that another thinker will help us here,
75
218172
4063
03:54
and that's Luria.
76
222235
2135
03:56
Luria looked at people
77
224370
2144
03:58
just before they entered the scientific age,
78
226514
3653
04:02
and he found that these people
79
230167
1997
04:04
were resistant to classifying the concrete world.
80
232164
3657
04:07
They wanted to break it up
81
235821
1054
04:08
into little bits that they could use.
82
236875
2590
04:11
He found that they were resistant
83
239465
2290
04:13
to deducing the hypothetical,
84
241755
3501
04:17
to speculating about what might be,
85
245256
2677
04:19
and he found finally that they didn't deal well
86
247933
2637
04:22
with abstractions or using logic on those abstractions.
87
250570
4397
04:26
Now let me give you a sample of some of his interviews.
88
254967
3140
04:30
He talked to the head man of a person
89
258107
2366
04:32
in rural Russia.
90
260473
1832
04:34
They'd only had, as people had in 1900,
91
262305
2474
04:36
about four years of schooling.
92
264779
2181
04:38
And he asked that particular person,
93
266960
2360
04:41
what do crows and fish have in common?
94
269320
3470
04:44
And the fellow said, "Absolutely nothing.
95
272790
3067
04:47
You know, I can eat a fish. I can't eat a crow.
96
275857
2993
04:50
A crow can peck at a fish.
97
278850
2326
04:53
A fish can't do anything to a crow."
98
281176
2851
04:56
And Luria said, "But aren't they both animals?"
99
284027
3226
04:59
And he said, "Of course not.
100
287253
1410
05:00
One's a fish.
101
288663
1987
05:02
The other is a bird."
102
290650
1772
05:04
And he was interested, effectively,
103
292422
2022
05:06
in what he could do with those concrete objects.
104
294444
3668
05:10
And then Luria went to another person,
105
298112
2878
05:12
and he said to them,
106
300990
2183
05:15
"There are no camels in Germany.
107
303173
2696
05:17
Hamburg is a city in Germany.
108
305869
2411
05:20
Are there camels in Hamburg?"
109
308280
2543
05:22
And the fellow said,
110
310823
891
05:23
"Well, if it's large enough, there ought to be camels there."
111
311714
4219
05:27
And Luria said, "But what do my words imply?"
112
315933
3894
05:31
And he said, "Well, maybe it's a small village,
113
319827
2277
05:34
and there's no room for camels."
114
322104
2569
05:36
In other words, he was unwilling to treat this
115
324673
2263
05:38
as anything but a concrete problem,
116
326936
2797
05:41
and he was used to camels being in villages,
117
329733
2558
05:44
and he was quite unable to use the hypothetical,
118
332291
3933
05:48
to ask himself what if there were no camels in Germany.
119
336224
4907
05:53
A third interview was conducted
120
341131
2813
05:55
with someone about the North Pole.
121
343944
2984
05:58
And Luria said, "At the North Pole, there is always snow.
122
346928
4105
06:03
Wherever there is always snow, the bears are white.
123
351033
3955
06:06
What color are the bears at the North Pole?"
124
354988
3279
06:10
And the response was, "Such a thing
125
358267
2402
06:12
is to be settled by testimony.
126
360669
2310
06:14
If a wise person came from the North Pole
127
362979
2824
06:17
and told me the bears were white,
128
365803
1851
06:19
I might believe him,
129
367654
1479
06:21
but every bear that I have seen is a brown bear."
130
369133
4205
06:25
Now you see again, this person has rejected
131
373338
2984
06:28
going beyond the concrete world
132
376322
2195
06:30
and analyzing it through everyday experience,
133
378517
3173
06:33
and it was important to that person
134
381690
1866
06:35
what color bears were --
135
383556
1562
06:37
that is, they had to hunt bears.
136
385118
2281
06:39
They weren't willing to engage in this.
137
387399
2409
06:41
One of them said to Luria,
138
389808
1837
06:43
"How can we solve things that aren't real problems?
139
391645
3500
06:47
None of these problems are real.
140
395145
1891
06:49
How can we address them?"
141
397036
2643
06:51
Now, these three categories --
142
399679
3545
06:55
classification,
143
403224
1491
06:56
using logic on abstractions,
144
404715
2141
06:58
taking the hypothetical seriously --
145
406856
2769
07:01
how much difference do they make in the real world
146
409625
2438
07:04
beyond the testing room?
147
412063
1893
07:05
And let me give you a few illustrations.
148
413956
2970
07:08
First, almost all of us today get a high school diploma.
149
416926
3389
07:12
That is, we've gone from four to eight years of education
150
420315
3397
07:15
to 12 years of formal education,
151
423712
2777
07:18
and 52 percent of Americans
152
426489
1901
07:20
have actually experienced some type of tertiary education.
153
428390
3820
07:24
Now, not only do we have much more education,
154
432210
4032
07:28
and much of that education is scientific,
155
436242
2693
07:30
and you can't do science without classifying the world.
156
438935
4010
07:34
You can't do science without proposing hypotheses.
157
442945
3859
07:38
You can't do science without making it logically consistent.
158
446804
4174
07:42
And even down in grade school, things have changed.
159
450978
3810
07:46
In 1910, they looked at the examinations
160
454788
2934
07:49
that the state of Ohio gave to 14-year-olds,
161
457722
3820
07:53
and they found that they were all
162
461542
1606
07:55
for socially valued concrete information.
163
463148
3435
07:58
They were things like,
164
466583
1331
07:59
what are the capitals of the 44 or 45 states
165
467914
2887
08:02
that existed at that time?
166
470801
2374
08:05
When they looked at the exams
167
473175
1578
08:06
that the state of Ohio gave in 1990,
168
474753
3147
08:09
they were all about abstractions.
169
477900
2386
08:12
They were things like,
170
480286
1593
08:13
why is the largest city of a state rarely the capital?
171
481879
5134
08:19
And you were supposed to think, well,
172
487013
1564
08:20
the state legislature was rural-controlled,
173
488577
3214
08:23
and they hated the big city,
174
491791
2098
08:25
so rather than putting the capital in a big city,
175
493889
2593
08:28
they put it in a county seat.
176
496482
1438
08:29
They put it in Albany rather than New York.
177
497920
2736
08:32
They put it in Harrisburg rather than Philadelphia.
178
500656
3056
08:35
And so forth.
179
503712
1935
08:37
So the tenor of education has changed.
180
505647
2431
08:40
We are educating people to take the hypothetical seriously,
181
508078
4034
08:44
to use abstractions, and to link them logically.
182
512112
3578
08:47
What about employment?
183
515690
2381
08:50
Well, in 1900, three percent of Americans
184
518071
3900
08:53
practiced professions that were cognitively demanding.
185
521971
3542
08:57
Only three percent were lawyers or doctors or teachers.
186
525513
4055
09:01
Today, 35 percent of Americans
187
529568
2863
09:04
practice cognitively demanding professions,
188
532431
3319
09:07
not only to the professions proper like lawyer
189
535750
2626
09:10
or doctor or scientist or lecturer,
190
538376
2549
09:12
but many, many sub-professions
191
540925
1818
09:14
having to do with being a technician,
192
542743
1941
09:16
a computer programmer.
193
544684
2025
09:18
A whole range of professions now make cognitive demands.
194
546709
4324
09:23
And we can only meet the terms of employment
195
551033
2930
09:25
in the modern world by being cognitively
196
553963
2497
09:28
far more flexible.
197
556460
2261
09:30
And it's not just that we have many more people
198
558721
3223
09:33
in cognitively demanding professions.
199
561944
2990
09:36
The professions have been upgraded.
200
564934
2403
09:39
Compare the doctor in 1900,
201
567337
2111
09:41
who really had only a few tricks up his sleeve,
202
569448
3049
09:44
with the modern general practitioner or specialist,
203
572497
2808
09:47
with years of scientific training.
204
575305
2679
09:49
Compare the banker in 1900,
205
577984
2269
09:52
who really just needed a good accountant
206
580253
2413
09:54
and to know who was trustworthy in the local community
207
582666
3176
09:57
for paying back their mortgage.
208
585842
2291
10:00
Well, the merchant bankers who brought the world to their knees
209
588133
3229
10:03
may have been morally remiss,
210
591362
1766
10:05
but they were cognitively very agile.
211
593128
3139
10:08
They went far beyond that 1900 banker.
212
596267
4611
10:12
They had to look at computer projections
213
600878
2167
10:15
for the housing market.
214
603045
2000
10:17
They had to get complicated CDO-squared
215
605045
3905
10:20
in order to bundle debt together
216
608950
2450
10:23
and make debt look as if it were actually a profitable asset.
217
611400
3759
10:27
They had to prepare a case to get rating agencies
218
615159
3100
10:30
to give it a AAA,
219
618259
1111
10:31
though in many cases, they had virtually bribed the rating agencies.
220
619370
4234
10:35
And they also, of course, had to get people
221
623604
2029
10:37
to accept these so-called assets
222
625633
2687
10:40
and pay money for them
223
628320
1500
10:41
even though they were highly vulnerable.
224
629820
2587
10:44
Or take a farmer today.
225
632407
1590
10:45
I take the farm manager of today as very different
226
633997
3280
10:49
from the farmer of 1900.
227
637277
2491
10:51
So it hasn't just been the spread
228
639768
1838
10:53
of cognitively demanding professions.
229
641606
3191
10:56
It's also been the upgrading of tasks
230
644797
2380
10:59
like lawyer and doctor and what have you
231
647177
2567
11:01
that have made demands on our cognitive faculties.
232
649744
3777
11:05
But I've talked about education and employment.
233
653521
3159
11:08
Some of the habits of mind that we have developed
234
656680
3339
11:12
over the 20th century
235
660019
1607
11:13
have paid off in unexpected areas.
236
661626
2595
11:16
I'm primarily a moral philosopher.
237
664221
2271
11:18
I merely have a holiday in psychology,
238
666492
3688
11:22
and what interests me in general is moral debate.
239
670180
4408
11:26
Now over the last century,
240
674588
2731
11:29
in developed nations like America,
241
677319
2350
11:31
moral debate has escalated
242
679669
1981
11:33
because we take the hypothetical seriously,
243
681650
3339
11:36
and we also take universals seriously
244
684989
3215
11:40
and look for logical connections.
245
688204
2796
11:43
When I came home in 1955 from university
246
691000
3735
11:46
at the time of Martin Luther King,
247
694735
2307
11:49
a lot of people came home at that time
248
697042
2322
11:51
and started having arguments with their parents and grandparents.
249
699364
3750
11:55
My father was born in 1885,
250
703114
3228
11:58
and he was mildly racially biased.
251
706342
2563
12:00
As an Irishman, he hated the English so much
252
708905
2103
12:03
he didn't have much emotion for anyone else.
253
711008
2321
12:05
(Laughter)
254
713329
3271
12:08
But he did have a sense that black people were inferior.
255
716600
4508
12:13
And when we said to our parents and grandparents,
256
721108
2848
12:15
"How would you feel if tomorrow morning you woke up black?"
257
723956
4493
12:20
they said that is the dumbest thing you've ever said.
258
728449
3621
12:24
Who have you ever known who woke up in the morning --
259
732070
2502
12:26
(Laughter) --
260
734572
2402
12:28
that turned black?
261
736974
1230
12:30
In other words, they were fixed in the concrete
262
738204
3516
12:33
mores and attitudes they had inherited.
263
741720
3513
12:37
They would not take the hypothetical seriously,
264
745233
3011
12:40
and without the hypothetical,
265
748244
1484
12:41
it's very difficult to get moral argument off the ground.
266
749728
4019
12:45
You have to say, imagine you were
267
753747
2635
12:48
in Iran, and imagine that your relatives
268
756382
5585
12:53
all suffered from collateral damage
269
761967
2700
12:56
even though they had done no wrong.
270
764667
1946
12:58
How would you feel about that?
271
766613
2061
13:00
And if someone of the older generation says,
272
768674
2720
13:03
well, our government takes care of us,
273
771394
1930
13:05
and it's up to their government to take care of them,
274
773324
2943
13:08
they're just not willing to take the hypothetical seriously.
275
776267
4068
13:12
Or take an Islamic father whose daughter has been raped,
276
780335
3367
13:15
and he feels he's honor-bound to kill her.
277
783702
3210
13:18
Well, he's treating his mores
278
786912
2360
13:21
as if they were sticks and stones and rocks that he had inherited,
279
789272
3900
13:25
and they're unmovable in any way by logic.
280
793172
2645
13:27
They're just inherited mores.
281
795817
2576
13:30
Today we would say something like,
282
798393
2201
13:32
well, imagine you were knocked unconscious and sodomized.
283
800594
3577
13:36
Would you deserve to be killed?
284
804171
1673
13:37
And he would say, well that's not in the Koran.
285
805844
2895
13:40
That's not one of the principles I've got.
286
808739
4022
13:44
Well you, today, universalize your principles.
287
812761
2841
13:47
You state them as abstractions and you use logic on them.
288
815602
3557
13:51
If you have a principle such as,
289
819159
2273
13:53
people shouldn't suffer unless they're guilty of something,
290
821432
3646
13:57
then to exclude black people
291
825078
2096
13:59
you've got to make exceptions, don't you?
292
827174
2498
14:01
You have to say, well, blackness of skin,
293
829672
2988
14:04
you couldn't suffer just for that.
294
832660
2623
14:07
It must be that blacks are somehow tainted.
295
835283
3263
14:10
And then we can bring empirical evidence to bear, can't we,
296
838546
3167
14:13
and say, well how can you consider all blacks tainted
297
841713
2916
14:16
when St. Augustine was black and Thomas Sowell is black.
298
844629
3794
14:20
And you can get moral argument off the ground, then,
299
848423
3425
14:23
because you're not treating moral principles as concrete entities.
300
851848
4554
14:28
You're treating them as universals,
301
856402
1937
14:30
to be rendered consistent by logic.
302
858339
2779
14:33
Now how did all of this arise out of I.Q. tests?
303
861118
3130
14:36
That's what initially got me going on cognitive history.
304
864248
4010
14:40
If you look at the I.Q. test,
305
868258
1885
14:42
you find the gains have been greatest in certain areas.
306
870143
3985
14:46
The similarities subtest of the Wechsler
307
874128
2603
14:48
is about classification,
308
876731
2269
14:51
and we have made enormous gains
309
879000
2080
14:53
on that classification subtest.
310
881080
3110
14:56
There are other parts of the I.Q. test battery
311
884190
3281
14:59
that are about using logic on abstractions.
312
887471
3096
15:02
Some of you may have taken Raven's Progressive Matrices,
313
890567
3474
15:06
and it's all about analogies.
314
894041
2538
15:08
And in 1900, people could do simple analogies.
315
896579
3856
15:12
That is, if you said to them, cats are like wildcats.
316
900435
4345
15:16
What are dogs like?
317
904780
1576
15:18
They would say wolves.
318
906356
2092
15:20
But by 1960, people could attack Raven's
319
908448
3544
15:23
on a much more sophisticated level.
320
911992
2650
15:26
If you said, we've got two squares followed by a triangle,
321
914642
4507
15:31
what follows two circles?
322
919149
2236
15:33
They could say a semicircle.
323
921385
2287
15:35
Just as a triangle is half of a square,
324
923672
2178
15:37
a semicircle is half of a circle.
325
925850
2718
15:40
By 2010, college graduates, if you said
326
928568
3593
15:44
two circles followed by a semicircle,
327
932161
3235
15:47
two sixteens followed by what,
328
935396
2790
15:50
they would say eight, because eight is half of 16.
329
938186
3736
15:53
That is, they had moved so far from the concrete world
330
941922
2866
15:56
that they could even ignore
331
944788
2293
15:59
the appearance of the symbols that were involved in the question.
332
947081
4523
16:03
Now, I should say one thing that's very disheartening.
333
951604
3164
16:06
We haven't made progress on all fronts.
334
954768
2872
16:09
One of the ways in which we would like to deal
335
957640
2764
16:12
with the sophistication of the modern world
336
960404
2198
16:14
is through politics,
337
962602
2036
16:16
and sadly you can have humane moral principles,
338
964638
3335
16:19
you can classify, you can use logic on abstractions,
339
967973
4420
16:24
and if you're ignorant of history and of other countries,
340
972393
2930
16:27
you can't do politics.
341
975323
2427
16:29
We've noticed, in a trend among young Americans,
342
977750
3020
16:32
that they read less history and less literature
343
980770
2875
16:35
and less material about foreign lands,
344
983645
2610
16:38
and they're essentially ahistorical.
345
986255
1695
16:39
They live in the bubble of the present.
346
987950
2117
16:42
They don't know the Korean War from the war in Vietnam.
347
990067
2856
16:44
They don't know who was an ally of America in World War II.
348
992923
4183
16:49
Think how different America would be
349
997106
2621
16:51
if every American knew that this is the fifth time
350
999727
3596
16:55
Western armies have gone to Afghanistan to put its house in order,
351
1003323
4094
16:59
and if they had some idea of exactly what had happened
352
1007417
3364
17:02
on those four previous occasions.
353
1010781
2325
17:05
(Laughter)
354
1013106
950
17:06
And that is, they had barely left,
355
1014056
1948
17:08
and there wasn't a trace in the sand.
356
1016004
2332
17:10
Or imagine how different things would be
357
1018336
3208
17:13
if most Americans knew that we had been lied
358
1021544
2756
17:16
into four of our last six wars.
359
1024300
2925
17:19
You know, the Spanish didn't sink the battleship Maine,
360
1027225
2934
17:22
the Lusitania was not an innocent vessel
361
1030159
2258
17:24
but was loaded with munitions,
362
1032417
2633
17:27
the North Vietnamese did not attack the Seventh Fleet,
363
1035050
4078
17:31
and, of course, Saddam Hussein hated al Qaeda
364
1039128
3568
17:34
and had nothing to do with it,
365
1042696
1909
17:36
and yet the administration convinced 45 percent of the people
366
1044605
3803
17:40
that they were brothers in arms,
367
1048408
1544
17:41
when he would hang one from the nearest lamppost.
368
1049952
3879
17:45
But I don't want to end on a pessimistic note.
369
1053831
3469
17:49
The 20th century has shown enormous cognitive reserves
370
1057300
4518
17:53
in ordinary people that we have now realized,
371
1061818
3653
17:57
and the aristocracy was convinced
372
1065471
2064
17:59
that the average person couldn't make it,
373
1067535
2179
18:01
that they could never share their mindset
374
1069714
2966
18:04
or their cognitive abilities.
375
1072680
2606
18:07
Lord Curzon once said
376
1075286
1714
18:09
he saw people bathing in the North Sea,
377
1077000
2264
18:11
and he said, "Why did no one tell me
378
1079264
1663
18:12
what white bodies the lower orders have?"
379
1080927
2976
18:15
As if they were a reptile.
380
1083903
2351
18:18
Well, Dickens was right and he was wrong. [Correction: Rudyard Kipling]
381
1086254
3050
18:21
[Kipling] said, "The colonel's lady and Judy O'Grady
382
1089304
3710
18:25
are sisters underneath the skin."
383
1093014
3209
18:28
(Applause)
384
1096223
4000

▲Back to top

ABOUT THE SPEAKER
James Flynn - Moral philosopher
James Flynn challenges our fundamental assumptions about intelligence.

Why you should listen

Year over year, people fare better on standardized tests, a global phenomenon known as the Flynn Effect. James Flynn, the New Zealand-based researcher who discovered this, believes that environmental factors play a greater role in intelligence than genetics does.

His latest findings, discussed in his 2012 book Are We Getting Smarter?, also suggest that women are not only as intelligent as men, but superior when it comes to executive function. “Women, when exposed to modernity, do equal men for IQ,” Flynn said to TV ONE’s Greg Boyed. “But in the formal educational setting where they apply their intelligence, they’re outperforming men all hollow.”

Flynn, a retired university professor, has written extensively about the connection between ongoing equality and IQ gains, democracy and human rights. He also wrote a compelling book about books, The Torchlight List, in which he lists 200 must-reads.

More profile about the speaker
James Flynn | Speaker | TED.com