Medina,
I think we're talking about two different things, but thanks for providing the info you did.
I'm talking about the infant/toddler years and saying that proper care and engagement is critical, and that if a kid lacks it, no amount of genetics is going to salvage that. You could breed two super-geniuses with sci-fi technology to make sure the kid gets all the best traits, and an uncared-for child is still going to be permanently stunted, and in worst cases, feral (there are unfortunately recorded instances of that--not the super-genius-alien breeding part). I have anecdotal evidence to add there, but it is anecdotal. You have a crucial stage of development in the first few years, and if you stunt that environmentally, no amount of genetics is going to make you really smart, or even of normal intelligence. That is my assertion, anyway.
If I'm understanding you correctly, you're talking about once a kid gets through that stage with no problems, their genetics will either catapult them to a level of corresponding greatness, or curtail their ability to exceed a certain threshold, regardless of their home life, socioeconomic circumstance, and other environmental factors. I think that makes sense and I don't dispute it.
I'm not going to go looking for it now, but I think I've seen data in the past showing a positive correlation between activities like reading to your child, talking to them regularly, doing little games and puzzles with them, and their intelligence outcome. But again, if I understand you correctly, that doesn't contradict anything you're saying.
The problem, as you noted, is how to operationalize any good experiment to test the hypothesis. Proving the counterfactual in either case is a really tough ask, and if it can be done at all, I don't think it could be done ethically.
This is the Nature vs Nurture debate. It is a long-running debate and there really isn't a 100% consensus but there are some general parameters.
It seems pretty clear that I am more on the nature side than you but I am not at all stating that nurture is 100% irrelevant. The Head Start example, however, is telling. Head Start REALLY helps kindergarten performance but the impact dissipates as the child ages.
I guess my position (leaning more nature than yours) is something like this:
At the very high and very low ends of the IQ spectrum, I tend to think that nature predominates and nurture is more-or-less irrelevant. IE:
Mean IQ is approximately 100 with a Standard Deviation of approximately 15. Contra your theory, I think that a super-genius (whether naturally occurring or sci-fi created) is going to be fine no matter how awful their upbringing. Basically I would say that anyone above about 115 (one SD above mean) is just plain smart enough to overcome poor upbringing so it doesn't much matter. Similarly, at the other end of the scale, I would say that anyone under about 85 (one SD below mean) is just not smart enough to accomplish much no matter how great their upbringing.
Note that when I say that, I mean IN THE LONG run. Ie, an 85 IQ kid with REALLY good parenting is probably going to be a better student in Kindergarten and early Elementary than a 15 IQ kid with REALLY bad parenting. However, the difference caused by nurture is temporary unlike the "nature" difference which is permanent so over time the high-IQ poorly-parented kid will overtake the low-IQ well-parented kid and eventually, certainly long before HS Graduation the 115 IQ kid will have completely overcome the initial advantage enjoyed by the well-parented 85-IQ kid.
That being said, only approximately 16% of people have IQ of 115 and above and another 16% have IQ of 85 and below. The other roughly 2/3 of the population is within +/- 1 SD of average IQ. I think that the closer you get to average, the more impact parenting can have. For the ~50% of the population with IQ's of 90-110 parenting matters a lot because they are:
- Not so smart that long-term success is more-or-less inevitable like the 115+ kids, and
- Not so dull that long-term success is more-or-less impossible like the 85- kids.
For this half of the population, things can go different ways.
It might help to think of it with an analogy. If you think of racing cars, I think IQ is like the car and parenting is like the driver. At the very low end, if you are driving a 1982 Pinto (sub 85 IQ kid), you aren't going to get good lap times no matter how great of a driver you are. At the very high end, if you are driving a McClaren F1 (115 IQ kid), you are going to get very good lap times even if you don't really know how to drive.
Where I think nurture matters the most is if you are closer to average so, in this analogy, if you are racing a Toyota Corrolla against a Honda Accord (I have no idea of the relative performance of those two, I'm just assuming they are both average and about the same) the better driver is going to win every time.
Just to clarify, I'm not asserting that 85 and 115 are the EXACT points where nurture becomes more-or-less irrelevant and nature predominates. What I am saying is that I think there ARE points where that happens. It is probably more of a gradual shift. I am saying that I think that as you move away from average (in either direction) the impact of nature becomes stronger relative to nurture and eventually you will reach a point (again, in either direction) at which nurture is basically irrelevant.