Log In
Or create an account -> 
Imperial Library
  • Home
  • About
  • News
  • Upload
  • Forum
  • Help
  • Login/SignUp

Index
Halftitle Title Page Dedication Contents Acknowledgments Introduction to the Revised and Expanded Edition: Thoughts at Age Fifteen
The frame of The Mismeasure of Man Why revise The Mismeasure of Man after fifteen years? Reasons, history and revision of The Mismeasure of Man
1. Introduction 2. American Polygeny and Craniometry before Darwin: Blacks and Indians as Separate, Inferior Species
A shared context of culture Preevolutionary styles of scientific racism: monogenism and polygenism Louis Agassiz—America’s theorist of polygeny Samuel George Morton—empiricist of polygeny
The case of Indian inferiority: Crania Americana The case of the Egyptian catacombs: Crania Aegyptiaca The case of the shifting black mean The final tabulation of 1849 Conclusions
The American school and slavery
3. Measuring Heads: Paul Br oca and the Heyday of Craniology
The allure of numbers
Introduction Francis Galton—apostle of quantification A curtain-raiser with a moral: numbers do not guarantee truth
Masters of craniometry: Paul Broca and his school
The great circle route Selecting characters Averting anomalies
BIG-BRAINED GERMANS SMALL-BRAINED MEN OF EMINENCE LARGE-BRAINED CRIMINALS FLAWS IN A PATTERN OF INCREASE THROUGH TIME
Front and back
THE CRANIAL INDEX THE CASE OF THE FORAMEN MAGNUM
Women’s brains
Postscript
4. Measuring Bodies: Two Case Studies on the Apishness of Undesirables
The ape in all of us: recapitulation The ape in some of us: criminal anthropology
Atavism and criminality Animals and savages as born criminals The stigmata: anatomical, physiological, and social Lombroso’s retreat The influence of criminal anthropology Coda
Epilogue
5. The Hereditarian Theory of IQ: An American Invention
Alfred Binet and the original purposes of the Binet scale
Binet flirts with craniometry Binet’s scale and the birth oflQ The dismantling of Binet’s intentions in America
H. H. Goddard and the menace of the feeble-minded
Intelligence as a Mendelian gene
GODDARD IDENTIFIES THE MORON A UNILINEAR SCALE OF INTELLIGENCE BREAKING THE SCALE INTO MENDELIAN COMPARTMENTS THE PROPER CARE AND FEEDING (BUT NOT BREEDING) OF MORONS
Preventing the immigration and propagation of morons Goddard recants
Lewis M. Terman and the mass marketing of innate IQ
Mass testing and the Stanford-Binet Terman’s technocracy ofinnateness Fossil IQ’s of past geniuses Terman on group differences Terman recants
R. M. Yerkes and the Army Mental Tests: IQ comes of age
Psychology’s great leap forward Results of the army tests A critique of the Army Mental Tests
THE CONTENT OF THE TESTS INADEQUATE CONDITIONS DUBIOUS AND PERVERSE PROCEEDINGS: A PERSONAL TESTIMONY FINAGLING THE SUMMARY STATISTICS: THE PROBLEM OF ZERO VALUES FINAGLING THE SUMMARY STATISTICS: GETTING AROUND OBVIOUS CORRELATIONS WITH ENVIRONMENT
Political impact of the army data
CAN DEMOCRACY SURVIVE AN AVERAGE MENTAL AGE OF THIRTEEN? THE ARMY TESTS AND AGITATION TO RESTRICT IMMIGRATION BRIGHAM’S MONOGRAPH ON AMERICAN INTELLIGENCE: THE TRIUMPH OF RESTRICTION ON IMMIGRATION: BRIGHAM RECANTS
6. The Real Error of Cyril Burt: Factor Analysis and the Reification of Intelligence
The case of Sir Cyril Burt Correlation, cause, and factor analysis
Correlation and cause Correlation in more than two dimensions Factor analysis and its goals The error of reification Rotation and the nonnecessity of principal components
Charles Spearman and general intelligence
The two-factor theory The method of tetrad differences Spearman’s g and the great instauration of psychology Spearman’s g and the theoretical justification oflQ Spearman’s reification o/g Spearman on the inheritance
Cyril Burt and the hereditarian synthesis
The source of Burt’s uncompromising hereditarianism
BURT’S INITIAL “PROOF” OF INNATENESS LATER ARGUMENTS BURT’S BLINDNESS BURT’S POLITICAL USE OF INNATENESS
Burt’s extension of Spearman’s theory Burt on the reification of factors Burt and the political uses of g
L. L. Thurstone and the vectors of mind
Thurstone’s critique and reconstruction The egalitarian interpretation ofPMA’s Spearman and Burt react Oblique axes and second-order g Thurstone on the uses of factor analysis
Epilogue: Arthur Jensen and the resurrection of Spearman’s g A final thought
7. A Positive Conclusion
Debunking as positive science Learning by Debunking Biology and human nature
Epilogue Critique of The Bell Curve
The Bell Curve
Disingenuousness of content Disingenuousness of argument Disingenuousness of program
Ghosts of Bell Curves past
Three Centuries’ Perspectives on Race and Racism
Age-old fallacies of thinking and stinking Racial geometry The moral state of Tahiti—and of Darwin
Bibliography Index Footnotes Copyright Page
  • ← Prev
  • Back
  • Next →
  • ← Prev
  • Back
  • Next →

Chief Librarian: Las Zenow <zenow@riseup.net>
Fork the source code from gitlab
.

This is a mirror of the Tor onion service:
http://kx5thpx2olielkihfyo4jgjqfb7zx7wxr3sd4xzt26ochei4m6f7tayd.onion