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Main Claims of My New Book

Selfish Reasons to Have More Kids Why Making More Libertarians Is Easier Than You Think Bryan Caplan Dep’t of Economics Mercatus Center George Mason University. Main Claims of My New Book. Parents are far from miserable, but they do endure a lot of needless unhappiness – especially today.

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Main Claims of My New Book

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  1. Selfish Reasons to Have More KidsWhy Making More Libertarians Is Easier Than You ThinkBryan CaplanDep’t of EconomicsMercatus CenterGeorge Mason University

  2. Main Claims of My New Book • Parents are far from miserable, but they do endure a lot of needless unhappiness – especially today. • Why “needless”? Because contrary to almost everyone, upbringing/ nature/parenting has little long-run effect on children. • Traits do run in families, but the reason is almost entirely heredity/ nature/genes. • How do we know? Adoption and twin research. • If families adopt, any family similarity probably reflects nurture. Adoption studies find little long-run resemblance. • If identical twins are more similar than fraternal twins, excess similarity probably reflects nature. Twin studies find identical twins are much more similar than fraternal twins.

  3. Quick Life Lessons for Parents • Life Lesson #1: Lighten up. • Focus on enjoying the journey, not molding your child into your preferred shape. • Life Lesson #2: Have more kids. • The kids you want are cheaper than you think, so stock up.

  4. Nature, Nurture, and Politics, I • My book covers adoption and twin research on all the main traits parents hope to foster: health, intelligence, happiness, success, character, values, and appreciation. • To get a feel for the evidence, let’s focus on a subset of values that everyone here cares about: politics. • Politics clearly run in families. But why?

  5. The Friedmans: Nature or Nurture? Milton Friedman, father of David Friedman, father of Patri Friedman

  6. Nature, Nurture, and Politics, II • Twin researchers do find a large nurture effect for which party you say you belong to. • But for deeper measures – whether you vote, how you vote, and your actual issue positions – nature is usually considerably more important. • Nature, nurture, and issue positions: Massive twin study by Alford et al, “Are Political Orientations Genetically Transmitted?” APSR 2005. • Intuitively, “heritability” is correlation between identical twins raised apart; “shared environment” is correlation between adoptees raised together. • Issues with clear libertarian position highlighted.

  7. Making Libertarians • Adoption and twin research is especially hopeful if you’re “weird” – and want your kids to be weird with you. • Why? Because weird parents tend to have weird kids, whether or not they actively educate/brainwash them. • If you’re here, you’re probably weirdly libertarian. Genetics alone will tend to make your kids libertarian. • General principle: The best way to change your kids is to find a spouse who resembles the kids you want to have. • Application: Want to hedge your bets for libertarian kids? Find a libertarian spouse.

  8. Natalism for Liberty • I’m aiming my book at a general audience, but it is both realistic and desirable for my themes to become conventional wisdom among libertarians. • Realistic: Libertarians are already unusually open to… • Using econ in daily life. • Politically incorrect science. • The idea that intentions do not equal results. • Desirable: Libertarians who take me seriously will… • Avoid lots of unnecessary parental unhappiness. • Create more awesome people to enjoy future seminars. • Increase the frequency of libertarian genes – and the long-run prospects for liberty. • Moral: Having more kids is a great way for libertarians to do good while doing well.

  9. On sale April 12, 2011 from Basic Books

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