Germans are the most intelligent people in Europe, well ahead of the British (in eighth place) and the French (15th), according to a new study by Northern Ireland’s University of Ulster, The Times reported yesterday.
With an average intelligence quotient (IQ) of 107, the Germans ranked a scintilla of brainpower above the Dutch who also scored 107, the Polish (106), the Swedish (104) and the Italians (102).
They all came out better in the intelligence stakes than the British who rated an even 100 IQ according to the study, ahead of the Spanish (98) and the French (94) who could only comfort themselves by checking the study results for Bulgarians, Romanians, the Turkish and Serbians who languished at the bottom of the table on 89.
Professor Richard Lynn, who headed the study, caused controversy last year by claiming that men were more intelligent than women by about five IQ points on average.
He also aroused controversy when the 1994 book The Bell Curve, which alleged that whites had a higher natural IQ than blacks, cited his work.
Flynn explained the higher IQs in northern European countries by saying that populations in the colder, more challenging environments of Northern Europe had developed larger brains than those in warmer climates further south.
“The early human beings in northerly areas had to survive during cold winters when there were no plant foods and they were forced to hunt big game,” he said.
“The main environmental influence on IQ is diet, and people in southeast Europe would have had less of the proteins, minerals and vitamins provided by meat which are essential for brain development.”
The average brain size in Northern and Central Europe is 1,320cc and in southeast Europe it is 1,312cc, according to his studies. He ascribes the differences between British and French intelligence levels to the results of military conflict.
He described it as "a hitherto unrecognised law of history" that "the side with the higher IQ normally wins, unless they are hugely outnumbered, as Germany was after 1942", The Times reported.
http://www.7days.ae/2006/03/28/german-brains.html