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7/9/2025, 4:28:40 PM
>>212516640
I already told you >>212515714
>see pages 24 and 25 for the result I talked about.
>you spending an average amount relative to your income on your kids
Obviously average income families with 10 or 12 children will be able to spend vastly less on their kids than average income families with 1 or 2 children, yet the families with 10 or 12 children end up having children grow up to be basically just as successful.
>them getting a job at a company because of their last name
Last name is only inherited from the paternal side, so if your model says that this is an important factor then your model would predict that The paternal grandfather would be much more correlated with occupational status than maternal grandfather.
But this is not the result that is observed. Like a genetic model of social success would predict, the maternal grandparent is equally correlated with occupational status than the paternal grandparent.
see page 22 and 23
https://milkyeggs.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/02/ClarkGlasgow2021.pdf
What is more correlated with the paternal grandfather is wealth because in english culture the eldest son typically inherits the property since it is usually not practical to split it.
and what exactly is the environmental-cultural "wealth is inherited" model explanation for why the socioeconomic status of relatives are correlated according to their degree of shared ancestry?
I already told you >>212515714
>see pages 24 and 25 for the result I talked about.
>you spending an average amount relative to your income on your kids
Obviously average income families with 10 or 12 children will be able to spend vastly less on their kids than average income families with 1 or 2 children, yet the families with 10 or 12 children end up having children grow up to be basically just as successful.
>them getting a job at a company because of their last name
Last name is only inherited from the paternal side, so if your model says that this is an important factor then your model would predict that The paternal grandfather would be much more correlated with occupational status than maternal grandfather.
But this is not the result that is observed. Like a genetic model of social success would predict, the maternal grandparent is equally correlated with occupational status than the paternal grandparent.
see page 22 and 23
https://milkyeggs.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/02/ClarkGlasgow2021.pdf
What is more correlated with the paternal grandfather is wealth because in english culture the eldest son typically inherits the property since it is usually not practical to split it.
and what exactly is the environmental-cultural "wealth is inherited" model explanation for why the socioeconomic status of relatives are correlated according to their degree of shared ancestry?
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