.@pseudoerasmus There are plenty behavioral genetic studies from non-WEIRD countries. They produce same results. @hbdchick @whyvert
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Replying to @JayMan471
@JayMan471@hbdchick@whyvert sorry, but 95% developed countries, the other 4% east Asia2 replies 0 retweets 1 like -
Replying to @pseudoerasmus
@JayMan471@hbdchick really you two are something else. I cite a Swedish twin study & 1/2 of you say WEIRD, then the other 1/2 says THE SAME2 replies 0 retweets 1 like -
Replying to @pseudoerasmus
@JayMan471@hbdchick from http://www.nature.com/ng/journal/v47/n7/full/ng.3285.html … and most of those are diseasespic.twitter.com/jyhij9uKXk
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Replying to @pseudoerasmus
JayMan Retweeted JayMan
@pseudoerasmus That would only matter here if they produced different results. They do not. See https://twitter.com/jayman471/status/655005682706575360 …@hbdchickJayMan added,
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Replying to @JayMan471
@JayMan471 this is not about replication! this is about@hbdchick complaining about twin study w WEIRD subjects when almost all are @fsnole11 reply 0 retweets 0 likes -
Replying to @pseudoerasmus
🎃 💀haunted chick 💀 🎃 Retweeted 🎃 💀haunted chick 💀 🎃
@pseudoerasmus yes. because for the 100th time... https://twitter.com/hbdchick/status/657324136381988864 …@JayMan471🎃 💀haunted chick 💀 🎃 added,
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Replying to @hbdchick
@hbdchick@JayMan471 and for the 100th time right back, your general beliefs about h^2 are based on estimates from w.e.i.r.d samples.....1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes -
Replying to @pseudoerasmus
@pseudoerasmus sure. but i highly doubt genetics are related to behavioral traits *only* in w.e.i.r.d. pops.@JayMan4711 reply 0 retweets 0 likes
@pseudoerasmus i know that. for the final time: ALL i was pointing out was that that was a w.e.i.r.d. study and we were discussing non-w.
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