JASON RICHWINE
There is a large discrepancy between what educated
laypeople believe about cognitive science and what experts actually know.
Journalists are steeped in the lay wisdom, so they are
repeatedly surprised when someone forthrightly discusses the real science of
mental ability. [And] if that science happens to deal with group differences in
average IQ...
* FAGETABOUTIT!
...the journalists’ surprise turns into shock and
disdain.
Experts who speak publicly about IQ differences end up
portrayed as weird contrarians at best, and peddlers of racist pseudoscience at
worst.
I’m speaking from experience.
* THE AUTHOR: JASON RICHWINE (WRITING IN POLITICO)
* GOOGLE DR. RICHWINE. YES... YOU'LL FIND PRO AND CON
REPORTING AND EDITORIALIZING CONCERNING HIM... BUT NO STRAIGHT BIO - WHICH I
FIND VERY INTERESTING. HERE IS A GUY WHO WAS A CONSERVATIVE MOVER AND SHAKER...
WITH A PH.D FROM HARVARD... AND YET I CAN'T SEEM TO FIND ALL THAT MUCH PURE
INFO ABOUT HIM... HIS RESUME... DETAILS OF HIS ACADEMIC CAREER.
* FOLKS... WHEN WIKIPEDIA DOESN'T HAVE A DEDICATED ENTRY
TO A GUY LIKE RICHWINE... (*PAUSE*)... YA GOTTA WONDER WHY.
* ANYWAY... NOTE... WHILE I COULDN'T FIND A SOLID BIOGRAPHICAL
LINK TO GIVE YOU, I DID LINK JASON RICHWINE'S NAME UP ABOVE TO - OF ALL THINGS
- A "THINKPROGRESS.ORG" PIECE WRITTEN BY DR. RICHWINE WHICH WAS A
RESPONSE TO A HIT PIECE THINKPROGRESS HAD PREVIOUSLY DONE ON HIM. (KUDOS TO
THINKPROGRESS FOR GIVING RICHWINE AN OPPORTUNITY TO DEFEND HIMSELF.)
* ANYWAY... BACK TO RICHWINE'S LATEST PIECE:
My Harvard Ph.D. dissertation contains some
scientifically unremarkable statements about ethnic differences in average IQ,
including the IQ difference between Hispanics and non-Hispanic whites. For four
years, the dissertation did what almost every other dissertation does —
collected dust in the university library. But when it was unearthed in the
midst of the immigration debate... I experienced the vilification firsthand.
For people who have studied mental ability, what’s truly
frustrating is the déjà vu they feel each time a media firestorm like this one
erupts.
Attempts by experts in the field to defend the embattled
messenger inevitably fall on deaf ears.
When the firestorm is over, the media’s mindset always
resets to a state of comfortable ignorance, ready to be shocked all over again
when the next messenger comes along.
At stake here, incidentally, is not just knowledge for
the sake of knowledge, but also how science informs public policy. The U.S.
education system, for example, is suffused with mental testing, yet few in the
political classes understand cognitive ability research. Angry and repeated
condemnations of the science will not help.
What scholars of mental ability know, but have never
successfully gotten the media to understand, is that a scientific consensus,
based on an extensive and consistent literature, has long been reached on many
of the questions that still seem controversial to journalists.
* AND UNLIKE THE FALSE "CONSENSUS" ON GLOBAL
WARMING, THE COGNITIVE ABILITY RESEARCH HAS NOT BEEN DISCREDITED BY THE PAST 15
YEARS OF ACTUAL OCCURRENCE!
For example, virtually all psychologists believe there is
a general mental ability factor (referred to colloquially as “intelligence”)
that explains much of an individual’s performance on cognitive tests. IQ tests
approximately measure this general factor. Psychologists recognize that a
person’s IQ score, which is influenced by both genetic and environmental
factors, usually remains stable upon reaching adolescence. And they know that
IQ scores are correlated with educational attainment, income, and many other
socioeconomic outcomes.
* ALL TRUE!
In terms of group differences, people of northeast Asian
descent have higher average IQ scores than people of European lineage...
* SO MUCH FOR THE SCIENCE BEING A WHITE RACIST PLOT...
(*SMIRK*)
...who in turn have higher average scores than people of
sub-Saharan African descent.
The average score for Hispanic Americans falls somewhere
between the white and black American averages.
* HOW'BOUT FOR "WHITE HISPANICS?" (KIDDING!
JUST KIDDING!)
Psychologists have tested and long rejected the notion
that score differences can be explained simply by biased test questions.
* IT'S TRUE! I KNOW SOME OF YOU DON'T WANT TO BELIEVE
THIS... BUT IT IS INDEED TRUE!
It is possible that genetic factors could influence IQ
differences among ethnic groups, but many scientists are withholding judgment
until DNA studies are able to link specific gene combinations with IQ.
[O]ver the years, psychologists have put together
statements, reports, and even books aimed at synthesizing expert opinion on IQ.
Many of these efforts were made in explicit response to the periodic media
firestorms that engulfed people who spoke publicly about cognitive science.
It’s worth reviewing some of those incidents and detailing the scholarly
responses — responses that are invariably forgotten before the next furor
begins. I’ll place my own experience in that context.
Let’s start 25 years ago, with the publication of The IQ
Controversy, a book by Mark Snyderman and Stanley Rothman. The authors surveyed
more than 1,000 experts in the field of cognitive science to develop a picture
of what the mainstream really looks like. It was very similar to the
description I’ve supplied above. Snyderman and Rothman then systematically
analyzed television, newspaper, and magazine coverage of IQ issues. They were
alarmed to find that the media were presenting a much different picture than
what the expert survey showed. Based on media portrayals, it would seem that
most experts think IQ scores have little meaning, that genes have no influence
on IQ, and that the tests are hopelessly biased. “Our work demonstrates that,
by any reasonable standard, media coverage of the IQ controversy has been quite
inaccurate,” the authors concluded.
* IS ANYONE SURPRISED...??? ANYONE AT ALL...???
In conducting the expert survey and contrasting the
results with media depictions of IQ research, one would think Snyderman and
Rothman had performed a valuable service. Surely public discussion of IQ would
now be more firmly grounded in science?
It didn’t happen.
Richard Herrnstein and Charles Murray’s The Bell Curve
was published in 1994, and real science was hard to find in the media circus
that ensued.
Herrnstein and Murray’s central claim about IQ differences
shaping class divisions continues to be the subject of reasoned debate among
social scientists. But non-experts in the media questioned whether IQ is even a
valid concept. Intelligence research – psychometrics — is a pseudoscience, they
said. The tests are meaningless, elitist, biased against women and minorities,
important only to genetic determinists. And even to discuss group differences
in IQ was called racist.
(*ROLLING MY EYES*)
In short, the media did everything Snyderman and Rothman
had warned against six years earlier. As a consequence, the interesting policy
implications explored by Herrnstein and Murray were lost in the firestorm.
The American Psychological Association (APA) tried to set
the record straight in 1996 with a report written by a committee of experts.
Among the specific conclusions drawn by the APA were that IQ tests reliably
measure a real human trait, that ethnic differences in average IQ exist, that
good tests of IQ are not culturally biased against minority groups, and that IQ
is a product of both genetic inheritance and early childhood environment.
(*SHRUG*)
Another report signed by 52 experts, entitled “Mainstream
Science on Intelligence,” stated similar facts and was printed in the Wall
Street Journal.
* I KNOW... I KNOW... BUT TO THOSE OF YOU WHO THINK OF
THE WSJ AS "CONSERVATIVE," EVEN "RACIST," REMEMBER THAT
THIS IS THE SAME NEWSPAPER THAT EDITORIALLY AS WELL AS VIA STRAIGHT NEWS COVERAGE
IS UNIVERSALLY ACKNOWLEDGED AS "PRO-IMMIGRATION," EVEN AS SUPPORTIVE
OF "OPEN BORDERS." ANTI-HISPANIC THEY CERTAINLY AREN'T.
“These may be harbingers of a shift in the media’s
treatment of intelligence,” an optimistic Charles Murray wrote at the time.
“There is now a real chance that the press will begin to discover that it has
been missing the story.”
(*SADLY SHAKING MY HEAD*)
He was wrong.
The APA report fell down the memory hole, and the media’s
understanding of IQ again fell back to that state of comfortable misinformation
that Snyderman and Rothman had observed years earlier.
So when Larry Summers, then the president of Harvard
University, speculated in 2005 that women might be naturally less gifted in
math and science, the intense backlash contributed to his ouster.
* REMEMBER THAT, FOLKS...? (I DO!)
Two years later, when famed scientist James Watson noted
the low average IQ scores of sub-Saharan Africans, he was forced to resign from
his lab, taking his Nobel Prize with him.
* GEEZUS...
(*JUST SHAKING MY HEAD*)
When a Harvard law student was discovered in 2010 to have
suggested in a private email that the black-white IQ gap might have a genetic
component, the dean publicly condemned her amid a campus-wide outcry. Only
profuse apologies seem to have saved her career.
In none of these cases did an appeal to science tamp down
the controversy or help to prevent future ones. My own time in the media
crosshairs would be no different.
So what did I write that created such a fuss?
In brief, my dissertation shows that recent immigrants
score lower than U.S.-born whites on a variety of cognitive tests. Using
statistical analysis, it suggests that the test-score differential is due
primarily to a real cognitive deficit rather than to culture or language bias.
(*PURSED LIPS*)
* SUGGESTS, FOLKS... SUGGESTS...
It analyzes how that deficit could affect socioeconomic
assimilation, and concludes by exploring how IQ selection might be
incorporated, as one factor among many, into immigration policy.
Because a large number of recent immigrants are from
Latin America, I reviewed the literature showing that Hispanic IQ scores fall
between white and black scores in the United States. This fact isn’t
controversial among experts, but citing it seems to have fueled much of the
media backlash. And what a backlash it was. It started back in May when I
coauthored an unrelated study that estimates the fiscal cost of granting
amnesty to illegal immigrants. Opponents seeking to discredit that study
pointed to my dissertation, and the firestorm was lit. Reporters pulled the
dissertation quotes they found “shocking” and featured them in news stories
about anti-immigration extremism. Well-established scientific findings were
treated as self-evidently wrong — and likely the product of bigotry.
* YEP... THAT'S EXACTLY WHAT HAPPENED.
The professional commentators eagerly ran with that
theme. Jennifer Rubin of the Washington Post called me a “fringe character.” Will
Wilkinson of the Economist decried my “repugnant prejudice.” The New York Daily
News published an unsigned editorial describing me as “the most twisted sort of
intellectual” who is “peddling offensive tripe.” The Guardian’s Ana Marie Cox,
whose quote began this article, called me a “bigot” and a “more subtle and
dangerous kind of extremist.”
As with all the past incidents, most reporters learned
nothing about IQ and seemed indifferent to any lessons for public policy.
* HUMAN NATURE, MY FRIEND... HUMAN NATURE. MOST PEOPLE
HAVE CLOSED MINDS.
The works of mainstream scholars designed to educate lay
people — The IQ Controversy, the APA report, “Mainstream Science on
Intelligence,” etc. — were nowhere to be found.
Not all the media coverage was divorced from real
science. Journalists such as Robert VerBruggen and Michael Barone wrote
insightful reaction pieces. And the science-oriented blogosphere, which is
increasingly the go-to place for expert commentary, provided some of the best
coverage. But it’s difficult to have a mature policy conversation when other
journalists are doing little more than name-calling. It’s like convening a
scientific conference on the causes of autism, only to have the participants
drowned out by anti-vaccine protesters.
For too many people confronted with IQ issues, emotion
trumps reason.
* SAME APPLIES TO MANY POLICY ISSUES. THIS IS WHAT THE
LEFT COUNTS UPON AND USES TO MANIPULATE PEOPLE RATHER THAN CONVINCE THEM VIA
FACT AND REASON.
Some are even angry that I never apologized for my work.
I find that sentiment baffling. Apologize for stating empirical facts relevant
to public policy? I could never be so craven. And apologize to whom — people
who don’t like those facts? The demands for an apology illustrate the
emotionalism that often governs our political discourse.
(*NOD*)
What causes so many in the media to react emotionally
when it comes to IQ?
Snyderman and Rothman believe it is a naturally
uncomfortable topic in modern liberal democracies. The possibility of
intractable differences among people does not fit easily into the worldview of
journalists and other members of the intellectual class who have an aversion to
inequality. The unfortunate — but all too human — reaction is to avoid
seriously grappling with inconvenient truths. And I suspect the people who lash
out in anger are the ones who are most internally conflicted.
But I see little value in speculating further about
causes. Change is what’s needed. And the first thing for reporters, commentators,
and non-experts to do is to stop demonizing public discussion of IQ
differences. Stop calling names. Stop trying to get people fired. Most of all,
stop making pronouncements about research without first reading the literature
or consulting people who have.
* HEAR! HEAR!
This is not just about academic freedom or any one
scholar’s reputation. Cognitive differences can inform our understanding of a
number of policy issues — everything from education, to military recruitment,
to employment discrimination to, yes, immigration.
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