Cover of the first edition
| |
Authors | Richard J. Herrnstein Charles Murray |
---|---|
Subject | Intelligence |
Publisher | Free Press |
Publication date
| 1994 |
Media type | Print (hardcover and paperback) |
Pages | 845 |
ISBN | 0-02-914673-9 |
OCLC | 30913157 |
305.9/082 20 | |
LC Class | BF431 .H398 1994 |
The Bell Curve: Intelligence and Class Structure in American Life is a 1994 book by psychologist Richard J. Herrnstein and political scientist Charles Murray, in which the authors argue that human intelligence is substantially influenced by both inherited and environmental factors and that it is a better predictor of many personal outcomes, including financial income, job performance, birth out of wedlock, and involvement in crime than are an individual's parental socioeconomic status. They also argue that those with high intelligence, the "cognitive elite", are becoming separated from those of average and below-average intelligence. The book was controversial, especially where the authors wrote about racial differences in intelligence and discussed the implications of those differences.
Shortly after its publication, many people rallied both in criticism and defense of the book. A number of critical texts were written in response to it.
Synopsis
The Bell Curve, published in 1994, was written by Richard
Herrnstein and Charles Murray to explain the variations in intelligence
in American society, warn of some consequences of that variation, and
propose social policies for mitigating the worst of the consequences.
The book's title comes from the bell-shaped normal distribution of intelligence quotient (IQ) scores in a population.
Introduction
The book starts with an introduction that appraises the history of the concept of intelligence from Francis Galton to modern times. Spearman's introduction of the general factor of intelligence
and other early advances in research on intelligence are discussed
along with a consideration of links between intelligence testing and
racial politics. The 1960s are identified as the period in American
history when social problems were increasingly attributed to forces
outside the individual. This egalitarian ethos, Herrnstein and Murray
argue, cannot accommodate biologically based individual differences.
The introduction states six of the authors' assumptions, which they claim to be "beyond significant technical dispute":
- There is such a difference as a general factor of cognitive ability on which human beings differ.
- All standardized tests of academic aptitude or achievement measure this general factor to some degree, but IQ tests expressly designed for that purpose measure it most accurately.
- IQ scores match, to a first degree, whatever it is that people mean when they use the word intelligent, or smart in ordinary language.
- IQ scores are stable, although not perfectly so, over much of a person's life.
- Properly administered IQ tests are not demonstrably biased against social, economic, ethnic, or racial groups.
- Cognitive ability is substantially heritable, apparently no less than 40 percent and no more than 80 percent.
At the close of the introduction, the authors warn the reader against committing the ecological fallacy
of inferring things about individuals based on the aggregate data
presented in the book. They also assert that intelligence is just one of
many valuable human attributes and one whose importance among human
virtues is overrated.
Part I. The Emergence of a Cognitive Elite
In
the first part of the book Herrnstein and Murray chart how American
society was transformed in the 20th century. They argue that America
evolved from a society where social origin largely determined one's
social status to one where cognitive ability is the leading determinant
of status. The growth in college attendance, a more efficient
recruitment of cognitive ability, and the sorting of cognitive ability
by selective colleges are identified as important drivers of this
evolution. Increased occupational sorting by cognitive ability is
discussed. The argument is made, based on published meta-analyses, that
cognitive ability is the best predictor of worker productivity.
Herrnstein and Murray argue that due to increasing returns to
cognitive ability, a cognitive elite is being formed in America. This
elite is getting richer and progressively more segregated from the rest
of society.
Part II. Cognitive Classes and Social Behavior
The
second part describes how cognitive ability is related to social
behaviors: high ability predicts socially desirable behavior, low
ability undesirable behavior. The argument is made that group
differences in social outcomes are better explained by intelligence
differences rather than socioeconomic status, a perspective, the authors
argue, that has been neglected in research.
The analyses reported in this part of the book were done using data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Labor Market Experience of Youth (NLSY), a study conducted by the United States Department of Labor's Bureau of Labor Statistics tracking thousands of Americans starting in the 1980s. Only non-Hispanic whites
are included in the analyses so as to demonstrate that the
relationships between cognitive ability and social behavior are not
driven by race or ethnicity.
Herrnstein and Murray argue that intelligence is a better
predictor of individuals' outcomes than parental socioeconomic status.
This argument is based on analyses where individuals' IQ scores are
shown to better predict their outcomes as adults than the socioeconomic
status of their parents. Such results are reported for many outcomes,
including poverty, dropping out of school, unemployment, marriage,
divorce, illegitimacy, welfare dependency, criminal offending, and the
probability of voting in elections.
All participants in the NLSY took the Armed Services Vocational Aptitude Battery
(ASVAB), a battery of ten tests taken by all who apply for entry into
the armed services. (Some had taken an IQ test in high school, and the
median correlation of the Armed Forces Qualification Test (AFQT)
scores and those IQ test scores was .81). Participants were later
evaluated for social and economic outcomes. In general, IQ/AFQT scores
were a better predictor of life outcomes than social class
background. Similarly, after statistically controlling for differences
in IQ, many outcome differences between racial-ethnic groups
disappeared.
IQ | <75 font="">75> | 75–90 | 90–110 | 110–125 | >125 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
US population distribution | 5 | 20 | 50 | 20 | 5 |
Married by age 30 | 72 | 81 | 81 | 72 | 67 |
Out of labor force more than 1 month out of year (men) | 22 | 19 | 15 | 14 | 10 |
Unemployed more than 1 month out of year (men) | 12 | 10 | 7 | 7 | 2 |
Divorced in 5 years | 21 | 22 | 23 | 15 | 9 |
% of children w/ IQ in bottom decile (mothers) | 39 | 17 | 6 | 7 | – |
Had an illegitimate baby (mothers) | 32 | 17 | 8 | 4 | 2 |
Lives in poverty | 30 | 16 | 6 | 3 | 2 |
Ever incarcerated (men) | 7 | 7 | 3 | 1 | 0 |
Chronic welfare recipient (mothers) | 31 | 17 | 8 | 2 | 0 |
High school dropout | 55 | 35 | 6 | 0.4 | 0 |
Scored "Yes" on "Middle Class Values Index"[c 1] | 16 | 30 | 50 | 67 | 74 |
Values are the percentage of each IQ sub-population, among non-Hispanic whites only, fitting each descriptor.
- According
to Herrnstein & Murray the "Middle Class Values Index" was intended
"to identify among the NLSY population, in their young adulthood when
the index was scored, those people who are getting along with their
lives in ways that fit the middle-class stereotype." To score "Yes" on
the index, a NLSY subject had to meet all four of the following
criteria:
- Received at least a high-school diploma
- Never interviewed while incarcerated
- Still married to one's first spouse
- Men only: In the labor force, even if not employed
- Women only: Never gave birth outside of marriage
Part III. The National Context
This
part of the book discusses ethnic differences in cognitive ability and
social behavior. Herrnstein and Murray report that Asian Americans have a
higher mean IQ than white Americans, who in turn outscore black
Americans. The book argues that the black-white gap is not due to test
bias, noting that IQ tests do not tend to underpredict the school or job
performance of black individuals and that the gap is larger on
apparently culturally neutral test items than on more culturally loaded
items. The authors also note that adjusting for socioeconomic status
does not eliminate the black-white IQ gap. However, they argue that the
gap is narrowing.
According to Herrnstein and Murray, the high heritability of IQ
within races does not necessarily mean that the cause of differences
between races is genetic. On the other hand, they discuss lines of
evidence that have been used to support the thesis that the black-white
gap is at least partly genetic, such as Spearman's hypothesis.
They also discuss possible environmental explanations of the gap, such
as the observed generational increases in IQ, for which they coin the
term Flynn effect. At the close of this discussion, they write:
If the reader is now convinced that either the genetic or environmental explanation has won out to the exclusion of the other, we have not done a sufficiently good job of presenting one side or the other. It seems highly likely to us that both genes and environment have something to do with racial differences. What might the mix be? We are resolutely agnostic on that issue; as far as we can determine, the evidence does not yet justify an estimate.
The authors also stress that regardless of the causes of differences, people should be treated no differently.
In Part III, the authors also repeat many of the analyses from
Part II, but now compare whites to blacks and Hispanics in the NLSY
dataset. They find that after controlling for IQ, many differences in
social outcomes between races are diminished.
The authors discuss the possibility that high birth rates among
those with lower IQs may exert a downward pressure on the national
distribution of cognitive ability. They argue that immigration may also
have a similar effect.
At the close of Part III, Herrnstein and Murray discuss the
relation of IQ to social problems. Using the NLSY data, they show that
social problems increase as a monotonic function of lower IQ.
Living Together
In this final chapter, the authors discuss the relevance of cognitive ability for understanding major social issues in America.
Evidence for experimental attempts to raise intelligence is
reviewed. The authors conclude that currently there are no means to
boost intelligence by more than a modest degree.
The authors criticize the "levelling" of general and secondary education and defend gifted education. They offer a critical overview of affirmative action policies in colleges and workplaces, arguing that their goal should be equality of opportunity rather than equal outcomes.
Herrnstein and Murray offer a pessimistic portrait of America's
future. They predict that a cognitive elite will further isolate itself
from the rest of society, while the quality of life deteriorates for
those at the bottom of the cognitive scale. As an antidote to this
prognosis, they offer a vision of society where differences in ability
are recognized and everybody can have a valued place, stressing the role
of local communities and clear moral rules that apply to everybody.
Policy recommendations
Herrnstein and Murray argued the average genetic IQ of the United
States is declining, owing to the tendency of the more intelligent
having fewer children than the less intelligent, the generation length
to be shorter for the less intelligent, and the large-scale immigration
to the United States of those with low intelligence. Discussing a
possible future political outcome of an intellectually stratified
society, the authors stated that they "fear that a new kind of
conservatism is becoming the dominant ideology of the affluent—not in
the social tradition of an Edmund Burke or in the economic tradition of
an Adam Smith but 'conservatism' along Latin American lines, where to be
conservative has often meant doing whatever is necessary to preserve
the mansions on the hills from the menace of the slums below."
Moreover, they fear that increasing welfare will create a "custodial
state" in "a high-tech and more lavish version of the Indian reservation
for some substantial minority of the nation's population." They also
predict increasing totalitarianism:
"It is difficult to imagine the United States preserving its heritage
of individualism, equal rights before the law, free people running their
own lives, once it is accepted that a significant part of the
population must be made permanent wards of the states."
The authors recommended the elimination of welfare policies that encourage poor women to have babies:
We can imagine no recommendation for using the government to manipulate fertility that does not have dangers. But this highlights the problem: The United States already has policies that inadvertently social-engineer who has babies, and it is encouraging the wrong women. "If the United States did as much to encourage high-IQ women to have babies as it now does to encourage low-IQ women, it would rightly be described as engaging in aggressive manipulation of fertility." The technically precise description of America's fertility policy is that it subsidizes births among poor women, who are also disproportionately at the low end of the intelligence distribution. We urge generally that these policies, represented by the extensive network of cash and services for low-income women who have babies, be ended. The government should stop subsidizing births to anyone rich or poor. The other generic recommendation, as close to harmless as any government program we can imagine, is to make it easy for women to make good on their prior decision not to get pregnant by making available birth control mechanisms that are increasingly flexible, foolproof, inexpensive, and safe.
Media reception
The Bell Curve
received a great deal of media attention. The book was not distributed
in advance to the media, except for a few select reviewers picked by
Murray and the publisher, which delayed more detailed critiques for
months and years after the book's release. Stephen Jay Gould, reviewing the book in The New Yorker,
said that the book "contains no new arguments and presents no
compelling data to support its anachronistic social Darwinism" and said
that the "authors omit facts, misuse statistical methods, and seem
unwilling to admit the consequence of their own words."
A 1995 article by Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting writer Jim Naureckas
criticized the media response, saying that "While many of these
discussions included sharp criticisms of the book, media accounts showed
a disturbing tendency to accept Murray and Herrnstein's premises and
evidence even while debating their conclusions".
After reviewers had more time to review the book's research and conclusions, more significant criticisms begin to appear. Nicholas Lemann, writing in Slate,
said that later reviews showed the book was "full of mistakes ranging
from sloppy reasoning to mis-citations of sources to outright
mathematical errors." Lemann said that "Unsurprisingly, all the mistakes are in the direction of supporting the authors' thesis."
Peer review
Herrnstein and Murray were criticized for not submitting their work to peer review before publication, an omission many have seen as incompatible with their presentation of it as a scholarly text. A writer at the online publication Slate magazine
complained that the book was not circulated in galley proofs, a common
practice to allow potential reviewers and media professionals an
opportunity to prepare for the book's arrival.
Mainstream Science on Intelligence
Fifty-two professors, most of them researchers in intelligence and related fields, signed "Mainstream Science on Intelligence", an opinion statement endorsing a number of the views presented in The Bell Curve. The statement was written by psychologist Linda Gottfredson and published in The Wall Street Journal in 1994 and subsequently reprinted in Intelligence,
an academic journal. Of the 131 who were invited by mail to sign the
document, 100 responded, with 52 agreeing to sign and 48 declining.
Eleven of the 48 who declined to sign claimed that the statement or some
part thereof did not represent the mainstream view of intelligence.
APA task force report
In response to the controversy surrounding The Bell Curve, the American Psychological Association's
Board of Scientific Affairs established a special task force to publish
an investigative report focusing solely on the research presented in
the book, not necessarily the policy recommendations that were made.
Regarding explanations for racial differences, the APA task force stated:
The cause of that differential is not known; it is apparently not due to any simple form of bias in the content or administration of the tests themselves. The Flynn effect shows that environmental factors can produce differences of at least this magnitude, but that effect is mysterious in its own right. Several culturally based explanations of the Black/White IQ differential have been proposed; some are plausible, but so far none has been conclusively supported. There is even less empirical support for a genetic interpretation. In short, no adequate explanation of the differential between the IQ means of Blacks and Whites is presently available.
The APA journal that published the statement, American Psychologist, subsequently published eleven critical responses in January 1997.
Criticisms
Many criticisms were collected in the book The Bell Curve Debate.
Criticism of assumptions
Criticism by Stephen Jay Gould
Stephen Jay Gould wrote that the "entire argument" of the authors of The Bell Curve rests on four unsupported, and mostly false, assumptions about intelligence:
- Intelligence must be reducible to a single number.
- Intelligence must be capable of rank ordering people in a linear order.
- Intelligence must be primarily genetically based.
- Intelligence must be essentially immutable.
In a 1995 interview with Frank Miele of Skeptic, Murray denied making each of these four assumptions.
Criticism by James Heckman
The Nobel Memorial Prize-winning economist James Heckman considers two assumptions made in the book to be questionable: that g accounts for correlation across test scores and performance in society, and that g cannot be manipulated. Heckman's reanalysis of the evidence used in The Bell Curve found contradictions:
- The factors that explain wages receive different weights than the factors that explain test scores. More than g is required to explain either.
- Other factors besides g contribute to social performance, and they can be manipulated.
In response, Murray argued that this was a straw man and that the book does not argue that g or IQ are totally immutable or the only factors affecting outcomes.
In a 2005 interview, Heckman praised The Bell Curve for
breaking "a taboo by showing that differences in ability existed and
predicted a variety of socioeconomic outcomes" and for playing "a very
important role in raising the issue of differences in ability and their
importance" and stated that he was "a bigger fan of [The Bell Curve]
than you might think." However, he also maintained that Herrnstein and
Murray overestimated the role of heredity in determining intelligence
differences.
Criticism of statistical methods
Claude S. Fischer, Michael Hout, Martín Sánchez Jankowski, Samuel R. Lucas, Ann Swidler, and Kim Voss in the book Inequality by Design recalculated the effect of socioeconomic status, using the same variables as The Bell Curve,
but weighting them differently. They found that if IQ scores are
adjusted, as Herrnstein and Murray did, to eliminate the effect of education, the ability of IQ to predict poverty
can become dramatically larger, by as much as 61 percent for whites and
74 percent for blacks. According to the authors, Herrnstein and
Murray's finding that IQ predicts poverty much better than socioeconomic
status is substantially a result of the way they handled the
statistics.
In August 1995, National Bureau of Economic Research economist Sanders Korenman and Harvard University sociologist Christopher Winship argued that measurement error was not properly handled by Herrnstein and Murray. Korenman and Winship concluded: "... there
is evidence of substantial bias due to measurement error in their
estimates of the effects of parents' socioeconomic status. In addition,
Herrnstein and Murray's measure of parental socioeconomic status (SES)
fails to capture the effects of important elements of family background
(such as single-parent family structure at age 14). As a result, their
analysis gives an exaggerated impression of the importance of IQ
relative to parents' SES, and relative to family background more
generally. Estimates based on a variety of methods, including analyses
of siblings, suggest that parental family background is at least as
important, and may be more important than IQ in determining
socioeconomic success in adulthood."
In the book Intelligence, Genes, and Success: Scientists Respond to The Bell Curve,
a group of social scientists and statisticians analyzes the
genetics-intelligence link, the concept of intelligence, the
malleability of intelligence and the effects of education, the
relationship between cognitive ability, wages and meritocracy, pathways to racial and ethnic inequalities in health, and the question of public policy.
This work argues that much of the public response was polemic, and
failed to analyze the details of the science and validity of the
statistical arguments underlying the book's conclusions.
Criticism of use of AFQT
William J. Matthews writes that part of The Bell Curve's analysis is based on the AFQT "which is not an IQ test but designed to predict performance of certain criterion variables". The AFQT covers subjects such as trigonometry.
Heckman observed that the AFQT was designed only to predict
success in military training schools and that most of these tests appear
to be achievement tests rather than ability tests, measuring factual
knowledge and not pure ability. He continues:
Ironically, the authors delete from their composite AFQT score a timed test of numerical operations because it is not highly correlated with the other tests. Yet it is well known that in the data they use, this subtest is the single best predictor of earnings of all the AFQT test components. The fact that many of the subtests are only weakly correlated with each other, and that the best predictor of earnings is only weakly correlated with their "g-loaded" score, only heightens doubts that a single-ability model is a satisfactory description of human intelligence. It also drives home the point that the "g-loading" so strongly emphasized by Murray and Herrnstein measures only agreement among tests—not predictive power for socioeconomic outcomes. By the same token, one could also argue that the authors have biased their empirical analysis against the conclusions they obtain by disregarding the test with the greatest predictive power.
Janet Currie and Duncan Thomas presented evidence suggesting AFQT
scores are likely better markers for family background than
"intelligence" in a 1999 study:
Herrnstein and Murray report that conditional on maternal "intelligence" (AFQT scores), child test scores are little affected by variations in socio-economic status. Using the same data, we demonstrate their finding is very fragile.
Cognitive sorting
Charles
R. Tittle and Thomas Rotolo found that the more the written, IQ-like,
examinations are used as screening devices for occupational access, the
stronger the relationship between IQ and income. Thus, rather than
higher IQ leading to status attainment because it indicates skills
needed in a modern society, IQ may reflect the same test-taking
abilities used in artificial screening devices by which status groups
protect their domains.
Min-Hsiung Huang and Robert M. Hauser
write that Herrnstein and Murray provide scant evidence of growth in
cognitive sorting. Using data from the General Social Survey, they
tested each of these hypotheses using a short verbal ability test which
was administered to about 12,500 American adults between 1974 and 1994;
the results provided no support for any of the trend hypotheses advanced
by Herrnstein and Murray. One chart in The Bell Curve purports
to show that people with IQs above 120 have become "rapidly more
concentrated" in high-IQ occupations since 1940. But Robert Hauser and
his colleague Min-Hsiung Huang retested the data and came up with
estimates that fell "well below those of Herrnstein and Murray." They
add that the data, properly used, "do not tell us anything except that
selected, highly educated occupation groups have grown rapidly since
1940."
In 1972, Noam Chomsky questioned Herrnstein's idea that society was developing towards a meritocracy.
Chomsky criticized the assumptions that people only seek occupations
based on material gain. He argued that Herrnstein would not want to
become a baker or lumberjack even if he could earn more money that way.
He also criticized the assumption that such a society would be fair with
pay based on value of contributions. He argued that because there are
already unjust great inequalities, people will often be paid, not for
valuable contributions to society, but to preserve such inequalities.
Race and intelligence
One part of the controversy concerned the parts of the book which
dealt with racial group differences on IQ and the consequences of this.
The authors were reported throughout the popular press as arguing that
these IQ differences are strictly genetic, when in fact they attributed
IQ differences to both genes and the environment in chapter 13: "It
seems highly likely to us that both genes and the environment have
something to do with racial differences." The introduction to the
chapter more cautiously states, "The debate about whether and how much
genes and environment have to do with ethnic differences remains
unresolved."
When several prominent critics turned this into an "assumption"
that the authors had attributed most or all of the racial differences in
IQ to genes, co-author Charles Murray responded by quoting two passages
from the book:
- If the reader is now convinced that either the genetic or environmental explanation has won out to the exclusion of the other, we have not done a sufficiently good job of presenting one side or the other. It seems highly likely to us that both genes and the environment have something to do with racial differences. What might the mix be? We are resolutely agnostic on that issue; as far as we can determine, the evidence does not justify an estimate. (p. 311)
- ... If tomorrow you knew beyond a shadow of a doubt that all the cognitive differences between races were 100 percent genetic in origin, nothing of any significance should change. The knowledge would give you no reason to treat individuals differently than if ethnic differences were 100 percent environmental ...
In an article praising the book, economist Thomas Sowell criticized some of its aspects, including some of its arguments about race and the malleability of IQ:
When European immigrant groups in the United States scored below the national average on mental tests, they scored lowest on the abstract parts of those tests. So did white mountaineer children in the United States tested back in the early 1930s ... Strangely, Herrnstein and Murray refer to "folklore" that "Jews and other immigrant groups were thought to be below average in intelligence." It was neither folklore nor anything as subjective as thoughts. It was based on hard data, as hard as any data in The Bell Curve. These groups repeatedly tested below average on the mental tests of the World War I era, both in the army and in civilian life. For Jews, it is clear that later tests showed radically different results—during an era when there was very little intermarriage to change the genetic makeup of American Jews.
Rushton (1997) as well as Cochran et al. (2005) have argued that the early testing does in fact support a high average Jewish IQ.
Columnist Bob Herbert, writing for The New York Times,
described the book as "a scabrous piece of racial pornography
masquerading as serious scholarship." "Mr. Murray can protest all he
wants," wrote Herbert; "his book is just a genteel way of calling
somebody a nigger."
In 1996, Stephen Jay Gould released a revised and expanded edition of his 1981 book The Mismeasure of Man, intended to more directly refute many of The Bell Curve's claims regarding race and intelligence, and arguing that the evidence for heritability of IQ did not indicate a genetic origin to group differences in intelligence. This book has in turn been criticized.
Psychologist David Marks has suggested that the ASVAB test used in the analyses of The Bell Curve
correlates highly with measures of literacy, and argues that the ASVAB
test in fact is not a measure of general intelligence but of literacy.
Melvin Konner, professor of anthropology and associate professor of psychiatry and neurology at Emory University, called Bell Curve a "deliberate assault on efforts to improve the school performance of African-Americans":
This book presented strong evidence that genes play a role in intelligence but linked it to the unsupported claim that genes explain the small but consistent black-white difference in IQ. The juxtaposition of good argument with a bad one seemed politically motivated, and persuasive refutations soon appeared. Actually, African-Americans have excelled in virtually every enriched environment they have been placed in, most of which they were previously barred from, and this in only the first decade or two of improved but still not equal opportunity. It is likely that the real curves for the two races will one day be superimposable on each other, but this may require decades of change and different environments for different people. Claims about genetic potential are meaningless except in light of this requirement.
In 1995, Noam Chomsky criticized the book's conclusions about race and the notion that Blacks and people with lower IQs having more children is even a problem.
Rutledge M. Dennis suggests that through soundbites of works like Jensen's famous study on the achievement gap, and Herrnstein and Murray's book The Bell Curve,
the media "paints a picture of Blacks and other people of color as
collective biological illiterates—as not only intellectually unfit but
evil and criminal as well," thus providing, he says "the logic and
justification for those who would further disenfranchise and exclude
racial and ethnic minorities."
Charles Lane pointed out that 17 of the researchers whose work is referenced by the book have also contributed to Mankind Quarterly,
a journal of anthropology founded in 1960 in Edinburgh, which has been
viewed as supporting the theory of the genetic superiority of white
people. David Bartholomew reports Murray's response as part of the controversy over the Bell Curve.
In his afterword to the 1996 Free Press edition of the Bell Curve,
Murray responded that the book "draws its evidence from more than a
thousand scholars" and among the researchers mentioned in Lane's list
"are some of the most respected psychologists of our time and that
almost all of the sources referred to as tainted are articles published
in leading refereed journals."
The Bell Curve Wars: Race, Intelligence, and the Future of America
is a collection of articles published in reaction to the book. Edited
by Steven Fraser, the writers of these essays do not have a specific
viewpoint concerning the content of The Bell Curve, but express
their own critiques of various aspects of the book, including the
research methods used, the alleged hidden biases in the research and the
policies suggested as a result of the conclusions drawn by the authors. Fraser writes that "by scrutinizing the footnotes and bibliography in The Bell Curve,
readers can more easily recognize the project for what it is: a chilly
synthesis of the work of disreputable race theorists and eccentric eugenicists".
Allegations of racism
Since
the book provided statistical data making the assertion that blacks
were, on average, less intelligent than whites, some people have feared
that The Bell Curve could be used by extremists to justify genocide and hate crimes. Much of the work referenced by The Bell Curve was funded by the Pioneer Fund, which aims to advance the scientific study of heredity and human differences, and has been accused of promoting scientific racism.
Murray criticized the characterization of the Pioneer Fund as a racist
organization, arguing that it has as much relationship to its founder as
"Henry Ford and today's Ford Foundation."
Evolutionary biologist Joseph L. Graves described The Bell Curve
as an example of racist science, containing all the types of errors in
the application of scientific method that have characterized the history
of scientific racism:
- claims that are not supported by the data given
- errors in calculation that invariably support the hypothesis
- no mention of data that contradict the hypothesis
- no mention of theories and data that conflict with core assumptions
- bold policy recommendations that are consistent with those advocated by racists.
Eric Siegel published on the Scientific American blog that the book
"endorses prejudice by virtue of what it does not say. Nowhere does the
book address why it investigates racial differences in IQ. By never
spelling out a reason for reporting on these differences in the first
place, the authors transmit an unspoken yet unequivocal conclusion: Race
is a helpful indicator as to whether a person is likely to hold certain
capabilities. Even if we assume the presented data trends are sound,
the book leaves the reader on his or her own to deduce how to best put
these insights to use. The net effect is to tacitly condone the
prejudgment of individuals based on race." Similarly, Howard Gardner accused the authors of engaging in "scholarly brinkmanship",
arguing that "Whether concerning an issue of science, policy, or
rhetoric, the authors come dangerously close to embracing the most
extreme positions, yet in the end shy away from doing so...Scholarly
brinkmanship encourages the reader to draw the strongest conclusions,
while allowing the authors to disavow this intention."