If Schizophrenia is skyrocketing due to its maladaptiveness diminishing, what's so adaptive about it that it's taking over the gene pool?
If Schizophrenia is skyrocketing due to its maladaptiveness diminishing, what's so adaptive about it that it's taking over the gene pool?
What? When something becomes less deadly, its frequency increases. That trend does not continue to the point of taking over the gene pool, and it shouldn't surprise you that the trend doesn't continue to that point.
A recent entry from the West Hunters blog (written by Gregory Cochran and Henry Harpending with whom most LWers are probably already familiar with) caught my eye:
Seems quite coherent. It meshes well with findings that the more children parents have the less they subscribe to nurture, since they finally, possibly for the first time ever, get some hands on experience with the nurture (nurture as in stuff like upbringing not nurture as in lead paint) versus. nature issue. Note that today urban, educated, highly intelligent people are less likley to have children than possibly ever, how is this likley to effect intellectual fashions?
Perhaps somewhat related to this is also the transition in the past 150 years (the time frame depending on where exactly you live) from agricultural communities, that often raised livestock to urban living. What exactly "variation" and "heredity" might mean in a intuitive way thus comes another source short with no clear replacement.