monty wrote:
Awesomelyglorious wrote:
Many studies on personality find that genetics accounts for about 50% of variation in many personality characteristics.
I agree - it might be somewhat higher, might be somewhat lower, but genetics are quite important. The idea that we can be 'whatever we want' is partly a myth. We can do incredible things if we are motivated, but there are limits based on biology.
Well, I am getting my numbers from a paper called "The Case for a Nietzschean Moral Psychology" by professors Brian Leiter and Joshua Knobe
Which has the following quotes:
pg 15-16 wrote:
Almost every personality trait that has been studied by behavioral geneticists has turned out to be heritable to a surprising degree. So, for example, a recent review of five studies in five different countries (comprising a total sample size of 24,000 twins) estimates that genetic factors explain 60% of the variance in extraversion and 50% of the variance in neuroticism (Loehlin 1992).
pg 16 wrote:
Now consider, by contrast, the fact that behavioral geneticists routinely find effects that explain fifty percent of the variance in trait measures.
pg 18 wrote:
A number of studies have examined the causes of violent behavior among children, and all show a strong influence of genetics. One recent study using 1,523 pairs of twins found a heritability of 70% (Eley, Lichtenstein & Stevenson 1999). Other studies yield percentages that are lower but still surprisingly high — 60% (Edelbrock, Rende, Plomin & Thompson 1995) 49% (Deater-Deckard & Plomin 1999) and 60% (Schmitz, Fulker & Mrazek 1995).
Paper found here:
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm? ... _id=816224