ABSTRACT

In a series of provocative conversations with Skeptic magazine Ssenior editor Frank Miele, renowned University of California-Berkeley psychologist Arthur R. Jensen details the evolution of his thoughts on the nature of intelligence, tracing an intellectual odyssey that leads from the programs of the Great Society to the Bell Curve Wars and beyond. Miele cross-examines Jensen's views on general intelligence (the g factor), racial differences in IQ, cultural bias in IQ tests, and whether differences in IQ are due primarily to heredity or to remediable factors such as poverty and discrimination. With characteristic frankness, Jensen also presents his view of the proper role of scientific facts in establishing public policy, such as Affirmative Action. 'Jensenism' the assertion that heredity plays an undeniably greater role than environmental factors in racial (and other) IQ differences, has entered the dictionary and also made Jensen a bitterly controversial figure. Nevertheless, Intelligence, Race, and Genetics carefully underscores the dedicated lifetime of scrupulously scientific research that supports Jensen's conclusions.

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

Jensenism and Skepticism

chapter |9 pages

Prelude

The Man Behind the "Ism"

chapter 1|25 pages

Jensenism

A New Word in the Dictionary

chapter 2|25 pages

What Is Intelligence?

The g Factor and Its Rivals

chapter 3|39 pages

Nature, Nurture, or Both?

Can Heritability Cut Psychology's Gordian Knot?

chapter 4|37 pages

What is Race?

Biological Reality or Cultural Construction?

chapter 5|24 pages

From Jensenism to the Bell Curve Wars

Science, Pseudoscience, and Politics

chapter 6|20 pages

Science and Policy

What's to Be Done?