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(PHOTO: Richard Dawkins, as photographed by Mike Cornwell.)
According to a new study by British evolutionary psychologist Satoshi Kanazawa, social, political, and religious viewpoints that are “evolutionarily novel"—meaning relatively new to human history—are more likely to be held by people of higher intelligence. Among the values Kanazawa classifies as being novel are “caring about an indefinite number of genetically unrelated strangers you never meet or interact with” (liberalism), and failing to “perceive agency and intention...at work behind otherwise natural phenomena” (atheism).
Kanazawa is set to publish his findings in an upcoming issue of Social Psychology Quarterly; at the moment only the abstract of Why Liberals and Atheists Are More Intelligent is available, but you can read a detailed press release here.
(Whatever else you might think of his work, the guy knows how to write a title: Earlier papers of his include 2001’s Why Single Men Might Abhor Foreign Cultures, and 2004’s Why Beautiful People are More Intelligent.)
