The Bell Curve Wars: Race, Intelligence, and the Future of AmericaThe Bell Curve by Richard J. Herrnstein and Charles Murray has generated a firestorm of debate, confirming for some their secret belief in the innate inferiority of certain ”races” or ethnic groups, angering many who view the book as an ill-concealed racist manifesto, and worrying untold others who fear the further racial polarization of American society. In The Bell Curve Wars, a group of our country's most distinguished intellectuals dismantles the alleged scientific foundations and criticizes the alarming public policy conclusions of this incendiary book.Anyone who has wondered about the connection among genes, race, and intelligence, all those anxious about racial antagonisms in our nation, those who question the efficacy of social welfare programs, all those troubled but unconvinced by Herrnstein and Murray's book, will want to read The Bell Curve Wars. |
Contents
Introduction | 1 |
Cracking Open the IQ | 23 |
Race IQ and Scientism | 36 |
Copyright | |
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affirmative action African Americans American society argue argument authors B/W gap behavior believe Bell Curve Bell Curve's black and white book's century Charles Murray claim cognitive ability cognitive elite conclusions conservative controversy correlation course crime culture differences in intelligence differences in IQ economic effects ences environment environmental equal ethnic differences ethnic groups European evidence explain fact factors Flynn Effect genes genetic differences hereditarian heritability Herrnstein and Murray high IQ Howard Gardner human important individuals inequality inferior intellectual intervention IQ differences IQ scores IQ tests issue Jensen Jews less low IQ mean ment Michael Lind Mickey Kaus moral mothers Murray and Herrnstein Murray-Herrnstein Murray's nation percent performance political poor population poverty programs question race racism reason Republic Richard Herrnstein scientific scientists slavery social socioeconomic status standard deviation suggest theory tion trait underclass variance women