see also Bell Curve, The

  IQ testing, 23, 27, 29, 40, 44, 46–47, 49, 367, 372–74, 384, 385–89

  in Burt’s argument of innateness, 310

  craniometry and, 176–78

  education affected by, 41, 179–84, 386–88, 389

  hereditarianism supported in, 182–88, 310

  Spearman’s g and, 293–95

  Ireland, absence of snakes in, 395

  Jackson, George, 172

  Jefferson, Thomas, 63, 64, 402, 412, 422

  Jensen, Arthur, 22, 23, 30, 45, 159, 189, 214, 265–66, 343, 369, 373, 397

  Spearman’s g and, 295, 347–50

  Jews, 38, 377

  army mental tests and, 255, 258

  false beliefs about, 49, 392, 394–98

  Johnson, Lyndon, 30

  Jolson, Al, 39

  Joseph, Chief, 424

  Jouvencel, M. de, 112, 121–22

  Jung, C. G., 143

  juvenilia, 413, 416

  Kallikak family, 26, 198–201

  Goddard’s photographs of, 59, 200, 201, 203

  Kaus, Mickey, 371, 372, 373

  Kemelman, Harry, 19

  Kennedy, John F., 37

  King, Martin Luther, 30

  Kipling, Rudyard, 148

  Kotzebue, Otto von, 414

  Lafitte, Jacques, 267–68

  Lamarckian evolution, 37, 408

  Le Bon, Gustave, 136–37

  Lee Kuan Yew, 368

  left-handedness, 313–14, 401

  Lewontin, R., 23, 353

  Lincoln, Abraham, 64, 66, 422

  Linnaeus, C., 66, 403–6

  Lippmann, Walter, 204, 209–10

  lobotomy, 134–35

  Lombroso, Cesare, 139, 142, 152–73, 174, 179, 210

  retreat in attack on, 162–65

  see also criminal anthropology

  Lovejoy, A. O., 56

  Love’s Labours Lost (Shakespeare), 31

  Luria, Salvador, 45

  Lyell, Charles, 69

  McGee, W. J., 124

  McKim, W. D., 59

  Malay race, 402–4, 409, 410–12

  Mall, Franklin P., 112, 114, 120

  Manouvrier, Léonce, 58, 138, 139, 169

  “Man With the Hoe, The” (Markham), 198–99

  Medawar, Sir Peter, 56n, 135

  meliorism, 419

  Mendel, Gregor, 191–93

  mental age, 46, 179–80, 386

  in army mental tests, 225–29, 252–54

  mental deficiency, 188–204

  Goddard’s unilateral scale of, 189–91

  of immigrants, 194–98

  moral behavior and, 190–91, 210–11

  taxonomy of, 188–89

  see also morons

  mental tests, 40–44, 45, 46, 384–90

  residual variance of (s), 287, 317, 318

  Spearman’s tetrad procedure for, 288–91, 316

  in Thurstone vs. Burt-Spearman schools of factor analysis, 326–46

  two-factor theory of, 286–88, 316, 317, 333

  see also army mental tests; IQ; IQ testing; Spearman’s g

  Middkmarch (Eliot), 61, 129

  Mill, John Stuart, 58, 151, 215, 350, 378

  Millet, Jean François, 199

  miscegenation, 76, 80–81, 380, 398

  Mismeasure of Woman, The (Tavris), 21

  missionaries, 414–16, 420, 421

  molecular biology, 32–33

  Mongolian race, 78, 88, 98–99, 101, 129, 402, 404–5, 409

  mongolism, 164–65

  monogenism, 71–72

  defined, 71

  evolutionary theory and, 105

  slavery defended by, 102

  monstrosus, 404

  Montagu, Ashley, 150, 249–50

  Montessori, Maria, 139, 152

  Moore, T. V., 298–99

  “Moral State of Tahiti, The” (Darwin and FitzRoy), 413–16

  Morgan, Elaine, 139

  morons, 188–204

  army mental tests and, 226–27

  Goddard’s identification of, 188–89

  institutionalization of, 193–94

  preventing immigration and propagation of, 194–201

  Morton, Samuel George, 57, 74, 82–101, 102, 106, 116, 117, 142, 189, 352, 355

  conscious bias of, 92

  corrected values for final tabulation by (table), 98

  on cranial capacity by race (tables), 86–87

  craniometric procedure of, 85, 89–92, 96–97, 100

  finagling of, categorized, 100–101

  finagling of, as unconscious, 87–88, 97, 98–99, 101

  final tabulation by (1849), 98–99

  on Indian inferiority, 26, 88–92

  skull collection of, 83–84, 85

  species defined by, 84

  multiple intelligence, 22, 372, 373

  multiple regression technique, 371, 374–76

  multivariate analysis, 42–43, 47

  see also factor analysis

  Murray, Charles, 22, 23, 30, 31–32, 33, 34–36, 37–38, 48–49, 50, 295, 302n, 325n, 347, 350, 367–90, 397

  Mussolini, Benito, 136

  Myrdal, Gunnar, 53, 55, 114

  National Book Critics Circle award, 44

  National Longitudinal Survey of Youth, 371

  Natural History, 49

  natural selection, 37, 41, 70, 356

  nature vs. nurture, 34, 389

  Nazis, mental testing by, 224n–95n

  “Neo-Lysenkoism, IQ, and the Press” (Davis), 45

  neoteny, 132–35, 363

  in ranking human groups, 149–51

  recapitulation theory vs., 148–49

  New Republic, 370–71, 372

  Newsweek, 389–90

  New Yorker, 48, 50

  New York Times, 371

  Nietzsche, Friedrich Wilhelm, 379

  Nixon, Richard M., 30

  Nott, Josiah C., 101, 102, 380

  Oedipus complex, 143

  Once and Future King, The (White), 363–64

  Ontogeny and Phytogeny (Gould), 143n

  “ontogeny recapitulates phytogeny”, concept of, 142, 143

  Origin of Species (Darwin), 104

  Osborn, Henry Fairfield, 261

  Other America (Harrington), 37

  Parmelee, Maurice, 172

  Pascal, Blaise, 412

  Passel, Peter, 371

  paternalism, 408, 416, 419–21, 423

  Pauling, Linus, 40

  Pearl, Raymond, 286

  Pearson, Karl, 267–68, 270

  Pearson’s r, 240

  Pedagogical Anthropology (Montessori), 139

  pelycosaurian reptiles, 43

  phrenology, 21–22, 57n, 92, 129, 286

  Plato, 51–52, 63, 166, 210, 269, 282, 320

  polygenism, 71–74

  Agassiz as theorist of, 74–82

  defined, 71

  evolutionary theory and, 105

  Morton as empiricist of, 82–101

  slavery justified by, 101–4

  Pope, Alexander, 62

  Powell, J. W., 124

  primary mental abilities (PMA’s), 329–40, 341, 345

  egalitarian interpretation of, 332–37

  primitive peoples:

  children compared with, 145–46

  criminal behavior in, 155–56

  European brains vs., 155–56

  Pritchard, James Cowles, 132

  progress, idea of, 56, 189

  Protagoras, 20

  Pseudodoxia Epidemica (Browne), 391–98

  psychoanalytic theory, recapitulationism in, 143

  Psychological Examining in the United States Army (Yerkes), 225–28

  Psychologie des foules, La (Le Bon), 136–37

  Psychology of Reasoning (Binet), 180

  Public Interest, 45

  punctuated equilibrium, 45

  Pygmalion effect, 387

  quantification:

  in American psychometrics, 222–25

  analys
is, 57–59

  as common style of fallacies, 56–57.

  in craniometry vs. intelligence testing, 140

  Galton as apostle of, 107–9

  later nineteenth century dominated by, 105–6

  in Spearman’s g, 291–93

  races, 380, 398–400

  interfertility of, 71, 84

  monogenist theory of, 71

  polygenist theory of, 71

  unity of, 39–40, 45–46, 405, 407–8, 411, 421

  racial classification, 401–12

  Caucasian race in, 49, 401–2, 409, 410–12

  degenerationism and, 407–8, 409, 410–11

  Malay race in, 402–4, 409, 410–12

  racial prejudice, biological justification of, 62–104

  racial ranking, 403, 404–12, 416

  Agassiz on, 74–82

  cultural context of, 63–70

  in “mongolism,” 164–65

  Morton on, 82–101

  neotenyand, 149–51

  preevolutionary justifications for, 71–74

  in recapitulation theory, 144–51

  racial segregation, polygeny and, 72–82

  ranking as fallacy, 56, 62–63, 189

  Reagan, Ronald, 37

  recapitulation theory, 72, 142–51

  child comparisons in, 144–51

  craniometry and, 144–45

  criminality and, 155–56

  imperialism justified by, 147–48

  influence of, 143

  neoteny vs., 148–51

  ranking of “inferior” groups aided by, 144–51

  reductionism, 27, 34

  reification fallacy, 27, 48, 56, 181, 185, 189

  in factory analysis, 268–69, 280–82, 298–99, 318–22, 326

  hereditarian bias combined with, 303–4

  in Spearman’s g, 251–55, 295–99, 347–50

  in Thurstone’s primary mental abilities (PMA’s), 329–32, 337–40

  Retigio Medici (Browne), 392, 400

  Republic (Plato), 51–52, 63

  Resurrection, (Tolstoy), 151–52, 173

  Retzius, Anders, 131

  Saint-Hilaire, Etienne Geoffroy, 40

  Santayana, George, 371

  science, 36–44

  academic parochialism and, 39–44

  as agent of change, 54–55

  experimental method of, 367

  objectivity vs. preference in, 36–37

  as overriding principle, 52–53

  as socially embedded activity, 53–55, 87–88, 98n

  theory formulation in, 403, 405–6, 411

  Scott, Dred, 380

  Selden, Steven, 201

  sexual Darwinism, initial meaning of, 368

  sexual differences, Darwin’s view of, 418

  Shakespeare, William, 31, 391, 424

  Shearer, Rhonda Roland, 403

  Shockley, William, 24, 60, 369, 397

  Simpson, O. J., 32

  slavery, 398, 408–10, 419, 424

  blaming the victim in, 398

  in Brazil, 417, 422–23

  religious view of, 102, 103–4

  slavery, biological justification of, 63–70, 77–82

  by American polygenists, 101–4

  medical view of, 102–3

  smell, sense of, 391, 392, 394–96

  Smith, Adam, 402

  Smith, Samuel Stanhope, 71

  social class:

  heredity of intelligence and, 305–8

  scientific racism extended to, 112

  social Darwinism, 142, 146, 367–70

  initial meaning of, 368

  social ranking, IQ and, 210–13

  sociobiology, human, 354–62

  sociopaths, mental deficiency and, 190–91, 210–11

  Socrates, 51, 61

  South African Christian Recorder, 413–16

  Spearman, Charles, 43–44, 48, 276n, 372, 373

  Burt and, 265, 267–69, 302, 303–4, 315–18, 319, 320, 322, 330, 344–45

  factor analysis developed by, 267–68, 281, 284, 287

  general intelligence and, 286–302

  on group differences, 300–302

  Jensen and, 350

  “law of constant output” of, 297–98

  method of tetrad differences of, 288–91, 316

  in reaction to Thurstone, 337–40

  recantation of, 298

  on “residual variance” (s), 287, 318

  two-factor theory of, 286–88, 3l6, 317, 333

  Spearman’s g (general intelligence), 35–36, 43, 47, 281–85, 316, 317, 372, 373, 378, 384

  hierarchical view of, summarized, 344–45

  IQ testing justified by, 293–95

  Jensen’s resurrection of, 347–50

  political uses of, 322–26

  reification of, 281–85, 295–99, 347–50

  Spearman on inheritance of, 300–302

  Spearman’s assessment of, 291–93, 318, 319

  Thurstone and, 326–32, 341–45

  Spearman’s s, 257, 317, 318

  Speck, Richard, 174

  Spencer, Herbert, 146

  Spitzka, E. A., 120, 124, 125n

  Spurzheim, J. K., 124

  Stanford-Binet scale, 196, 205, 368, 385, 389

  mass testing and, 204–10

  Terman and, 204–10

  Stephenson, W. A., 333

  sterilization, 365–66

  Stern, W., 386

  Stocking, George, 105

  Stoker, Bram, 152

  Strong, Josiah, 147

  Student as Nigger, The, 19

  Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee, 38

  Study of American Intelligence, A (Brigham), 254

  surrogacy, 396–98, 418

  Systema naturae (Linnaeus), 403

  Tacitus, 155

  Tahitians, 413–16

  Taine, Hippolyte, 169

  Tarde, G., 152, 154

  Tavris, Carol, 21

  taxonomy, lumpers vs. splitters in, 76

  Terman, Lewis M., 29, 109, 187, 196, 204–22, 224, 226, 251, 252, 295, 368, 385, 389

  background and beliefs of, 204–5

  on group differences, 218–21

  Lombroso criticized by, 210

  on past geniuses, 213–18

  recantation of, 221–22

  Stanford-Binet revised and popularized by, 204–10

  technocracy of innateness propounded by, 210–13

  Thomson, Sir Godfrey, 299, 322

  Thorndike, E. L., 177, 190n

  Thurstone, L. L., 22, 47, 269, 276n, 373

  environmentalists attacked by, 336

  factor analysis criticized and reconstructed by, 326–46

  on group factors, 327–29, 333

  Jensen and, 347, 349, 350

  on oblique simple structure axes and second-order g, 341–44, 317, 349

  primary mental abilities as concept of, 329–40, 341, 345

  reaction of Spearman and Burt to, 337–40

  simple structure and rotated axes invented by, 329–32, 341

  on uses of factor analysis, 346

  Tiedemann, Friedrich, 116, 131, 136

  Tobias, P. V., 140–41

  Tolstoy, Leo, 151–52, 173

  Topinard, Paul, 116, 118, 119–20, 126–27, 136, 137, 162–64, 169

  Totem and Taboo (Freud), 143

  Toulmin, Stephen, 355

  Toynbee, Arnold, 72n

  Tuddenham, R. D., 340n–41n

  Turgenev, Ivan, 124, 150

  twins, identical, 48, 59, 265–66, 336

  Types of Mankind (Nott and Gliddon), 380

  Vacher de Lapouge, Count Georges, 257

  Vectors of Mind, The (Thurstone), 326, 327, 344, 346

  Vietnam War, 30

  Virey, J., 132–33

  Vogt, Carl, 135, 145, 147

  Voyage of the Beagle (Darwin), 19, 69n, 415, 417, 419–20, 422–23, 424

  Wagner, Richard, 379

  Wagner, Rudolf, 125, 126

 
Wallace, Alfred Russel, 70

  Wallace, James H., Jr., 201

  Wall Street Journal, 34–35

  Washington, Booker T., 56

  Watson, James, 32

  Wealth of Nations (Smith), 402

  Wheatley, Phillis, 410

  White, Charles, 73–74

  White, T. H., 363–64

  Whitman, Walt, 124, 150, 351

  Wieseltier, Leon, 371

  William IV, King of England, 420

  Wilson, E. O., 329–30, 357n

  Winterhalder, Bruce, 358

  women, 20–21, 368, 397, 415

  Darwin’s view of, 418

  Le Bon’s attack on, 136–37 “metaphysical characteristics” of, 146–47

  neoteny and, 148–51

  in recapitulation theory, 144–48, 149

  scientific racism extended to, 112

  suicide rates of, 147

  supposed extra rib of, 393–94

  supposed lasciviousness of, 398

  women’s brains:

  brains of blacks and white children compared with, 135, 144, 145, 149

  Broca’s study of, 58, 120–21, 127, 135–39

  criminal, 126

  as lobotomy subjects, 135

  in Morton’s procedural omissions, 94, 100

  Yerkes, Robert M., 26, 29, 46, 187, 207, 208, 222–55, 260, 262

  army mental tests conceived by, 223–24

  background of, 222–23

  in critique of army tests, 229–52

  results of army test and, 225–29

  Footnotes

  * The relatively small number of truly informational footnotes can then be placed at the bottom of the page, where they belong.

  * A linguist friend did correctly anticipate the one curious problem that my title would entail. For some reason (and I have done this myself, so I am not casting blame but expressing puzzlement), people tend to mispronounce the first word as “mishmeasure”—leading to unwanted levity and embarrassment in introductions before talks, or in radio interviews. Apparently, or so my friend explained, we anticipate the zh sound to come in “measure”—and we unconsciously try to match the first part of the word to the later sound, therefore saying “mish” instead of “mis.” I find this error fascinating. After all, we make the mistake in anticipation of a sound as yet unsaid, thus indicating (or so I suppose) how our brain monitors language before the fact of expression. Isn’t the form of the error also remarkable? Are we driven to prefer these alliterative, pleasantly repeated combinations of sounds? Does this consonance occur merely for ease of articulation, or is something deeper about cerebral patterning thus revealed? What do such phenomena have to say about the origin and form of poetry? What about the nature and organization of our mental functioning?

  * Peter Medawar (1977, p. 13) has presented other interesting examples of “the illusion embodied in the ambition to attach a single number valuation to complex quantities”—for example, the attempts made by demographers to seek causes for trends in population in a single measure of “reproductive prowess,” or the desire of soil scientists to abstract the “quality” of a soil as a single number.