Psychohistorian comments on Why Don’t We Apply What We Know About Twins to Everybody Else? - Less Wrong
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Freakonomics looked at this, coming up with some interesting conclusions. For one thing, reading to your children didn't seem to have any effect on education scores, but owning books did (did the babies inherit book-reading genes?). Another example: adopted children tended to conform to the lifestyle predicted by their biological parents, not their adoptive parents, in regards to crime and income (which implies some uncomfortable ideas about poverty and class). I don't remember the exact details of their analysis, but the general approach was to take commonly accepted statistical measurements and check for correlations. The most specious claim in the book (AFAIK) was that legalized abortion leads to lowered crime-rate twenty years down the road; while this is probably true, I don't think the evidence demonstrates anything beyond correlation. His chapter on babies, though, was pretty good.
I've only met one pair of twins who were distinctively divergent (though both were in the military), but I believe they were fraternal.
The abortion claim was pretty well backed up by numbers; crime declines began earlier in states that legalized earlier, and crime fell by less in states where fewer providers existed. Moreover, the theory behind it makes perfect sense: higher capital investment (be it time or money) in children tends to lead to better life-outcomes; children who would otherwise have been aborted receive lower capital investment, either because their parents aren't ready for them financially, or because their parents don't like them as much.
I find their claim extremely dubious - abortion availability correlates with too many political and demographic variables for tests like that to work, and worldwide there seems to be no relation between abortion availability and crime at all.