Having children is easy. Any idiot can do it; many of them do; some of them have dozen children.
Is it more beneficial for a society when smart people have children? Yes, it is... but good luck explaining why without saying something politically offensive.
Are people with better genes and higher IQ inherently more worthy? Nice try, Hitler! Do smart people provide better education and other support for their children? This should be solved by social engineering; we should provide better schools for everyone, maybe give everyone free books, etc.
If you are not allowed to specifically praise smart people (and only smart people!) for having more children, then having children cannot provide the same status for smart people as their careers can. A smart person in IT can proudly say they do something that 99% of people don't understand. They even don't have to say it; everyone already knows. A smart parent with well-mannered and educated smart children... is still perceived on the same level as an average parent with the same number of average children. You can do a better work, but most people won't recognize it, so it will not give you status. There is no "best parent in the city" award you could show everyone; no official ladder to climb.
You cannot say "X is better at being a parent than Y" without saying "children of X are better than children of Y". And the latter is very offensive. "My child is better than your child" is more offensive than "my understanding of quantum physics is better than your understanding of quantum physics".
It seems like there's an easy way around this problem. Praise people who are responsible and financially well-off for having more kids. These traits are correlated with good genes and IQ, so it'll have the same effect.
It seems like we already do this to some extent. I hear others condemning people with who are irresponsible and low-income for having too many children fairly frequently. It's just that we fail to extend this behavior in the other direction, to praising responsible people for having children.
I'm not sure why this is. It could be for one...
This is a somewhat modified version of a Facebook post I made a few days ago, incorporating some of the comments there. I think the Less Wrong readership may have interesting thoughts on the subject.
In recent times, especially in the developed world and among higher socio-economic status families everywhere in the world, it's common for teenagers (and even younger children) to be encouraged to think in systematic ways about their career choice, but it's relatively rare for them to be encouraged to think in systematic ways about how many children they'll have or how they'll raise their children. A lot of teenagers do have views on the subject of children, but they're not encouraged to have views, and they're not encouraged to refine those views. With career choice, although there's still probably a lot of room for improvement in the quality of advice and guidance offered, people at least in principle acknowledge its importance.
What do you think explains the disparity? Here are some explanations with my thoughts on them:
What do you think of these explanations? Any others I'm missing? Correctness of the explanations at a factual level? Importance as explanations?
PS: Some of my other recent posts have been based on stuff I wrote up in connection with working for Cognito Mentoring, but this one isn't, though it's possible it might inform my later work for Cognito Mentoring.