Amusingly, Razib's post does not include the word "genetic". I can't tell if that was intentional, but in any case, when a trait is highly heritable, that doesn't mean it's genetic. One nice example is accent. It's also a nice example of a trait that a teacher would find really hard to change, unles given huge authority over the kid's entire life. Maybe basic math aptitude is similar.
ETA: this comment is wrong by the technical definition of heritability, see Vladimir_M's replies. I should have said something like "has high correlation between parents and children".
The discussion of accent in that dialog is a neat rhetorical trick, but its main premise is false. If you were to examine the heritability of accent using the standard methods of behavioral genetics, it would turn out to be near zero. (Maybe some confounding factors would yield a small spurious heritability, but there's no way you'd get a "highly heritable" result.)
Some of the other cited facts are also dubious or exaggerated. For example, while accent of adults is no longer as perfectly plastic as before adolescence, it's obviously absurd to cla...
Post by fellow LW reader Razib Khan, who many here probably know from the gnxp site or perhaps from his debate with Eliezer.