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Intelligence and childlessness
Institution:4. Department of Psychology, Faculty of Psychology and Education, University of Tehran, Tehran, Iran;5. School of Cognitive Sciences, Institute for Research in Fundamental Sciences, Tehran, Iran;1. Washington University in St. Louis, United States;2. National Research Center for Dementia, Chosun University, Gwangju, Republic of Korea;3. Department of Psychology, Technische Universität Chemnitz, Germany;4. Center Leo Apostel for Interdisciplinary Research, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium;5. Department of Psychology, Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul Department of Psychology, Brazil;6. Department of Psychology, University of Tartu, Estonia;7. Estonian National Defense College, Estonia
Abstract:Demographers debate why people have children in advanced industrial societies where children are net economic costs. From an evolutionary perspective, however, the important question is why some individuals choose not to have children. Recent theoretical developments in evolutionary psychology suggest that more intelligent individuals may be more likely to prefer to remain childless than less intelligent individuals. Analyses of the National Child Development Study show that more intelligent men and women express preference to remain childless early in their reproductive careers, but only more intelligent women (not more intelligent men) are more likely to remain childless by the end of their reproductive careers. Controlling for education and earnings does not at all attenuate the association between childhood general intelligence and lifetime childlessness among women. One-standard-deviation increase in childhood general intelligence (15 IQ points) decreases women’s odds of parenthood by 21–25%. Because women have a greater impact on the average intelligence of future generations, the dysgenic fertility among women is predicted to lead to a decline in the average intelligence of the population in advanced industrial nations.
Keywords:Value for children  Parenthood  Childlessness  General intelligence  Savanna-IQ Interaction Hypothesis  The Lynn-Flynn Effect
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