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The heritability claim depends on two assumptions: that we can define and measure intelligence; and that we can unpick the contributions of genes and environment.
Attempts to measure intelligence stretch back to early last century, when the French psychologist Alfred Binet devised a series of tests for schoolchildren of different ages, to help teachers identify those who could benefit from extra help. Defining the average score for each age as 100, he then compared the performance of each child with the average for their age group to calculate the child's Intelligence Quotient, or IQ.
By the 1920s, however, tests had been developed for adults and their purpose had changed. They were now believed to provide a fixed measure by which a person's capacity could be...