Quote Originally Posted by TomOfSweden View Post
High testosterone levels means bigger placenta and therefore bigger baby and therefore bigger brain. Bigger brain means smarter.
Bigger brain does not mean smarter. Human beings only use about 3 percent of their brain anyways, and this number actually goes DOWN as the brain increases in size, for the most part. (Sidenote: autistic children and children with certain other neural disorders actually use more of their brain. Maybe they are really more intelligent than we are). A child CAN be smarter and have a bigger brain, but a more intelligent child can actually have a smaller than normal brain. Intelligence is in no way linked to brain size. At least, not by any credited studies. Aside from that, children with a number of neural genetic disorders actually have larger brains than normal... most of them are considered "mentally retarded", which would mean they are not, in a conventional sense, considered intelligent.


Quote Originally Posted by TomOfSweden View Post
I read a report not long ago linking high testosterone levels in the womb to autism. Basically, since big brains are favoured this mechanic is selected for so we get a situation where the selected genes have now hit a roof for how high it can go and still be useful. These are one of the proofs that we're still right in the middle of human evolution.
Autism is generally defined, on a cellular level, as the brain not going through a natural process which is basically like pruning- cells we don't need for cultural reasons are "cut out". This happens to all human beings- babies are born with 100,000,000,000 brain cells... Adults generally have 5 million. You do the math there. I had a professor explain it like this... Our brains are born with a bunch of back roads... so as infants, it takes awhile to get to a thought... by the time we are adults, we have built our brain into super high ways, it doesn't take as long to complete a thought, but there are fewer exits. Autistic children never build highways in their minds. And many "geniuses" have been thought to have had some form of high functioning autism-Beethoven included. That would make both you and fetishdj right. And there have been NO conclusive decisions on what it is that causes autism. Period. There have been theories, which have been tested out and found correct in some studies and false in others. There are no real answers right now. Just "maybes".

Quote Originally Posted by TomOfSweden View Post
I'm pretty sure few people can agree on how to measure intelligence.
Very few people indeed agree on how to measure intelligence. Even the usual things to measure intelligence are very flawed. For instance, the Stanford-Binet IQ test. I have a friend who scored just above average on that test. By maybe a point. She can do complicated math problems correctly in her head. Like... Calculus 6 level math problems. That doesn't sound like average intelligence to me. I have another friend who scored well into the "genius" category. She herself insists she is nothing special, she's just always enjoyed puzzles-which is exactly what that test is. There are something like 20 or 30 definitions of intelligence that are used in psychological circles today. No one can really agree on what makes a person intelligent. IQ tests in general are difficult because they are very biased towards race, gender, and even age.