Intelligence: A New LookTransaction Publishers - Всего страниц: 227 The concept and measurement of intelligence present a curious paradox. On the one hand, scientists, fluent in the complex statistics of intelligence-testing theories, devote their lives to exploration of cognitive abilities. On the other hand, the media, and inexpert, cross-disciplinary scientists decry the effort as socially divisive and useless in practice. In the past decade, our understanding of testing has radically changed. Better selected samples have extended evidence on the role of heredity and environment in intelligence. There is new evidence on biology and behavior. Advances in molecular genetics have enabled us to discover DMA markers which can identify and isolate a gene for simple genetic traits, paving the way for the study of multiple gene traits, such as intelligence. Hans Eysenck believes these recent developments approximate a general paradigm which could form the basis for future research. He explores the many special abilities--verbal, numerical, visuo-spatial memory--that contribute to our cognitive behavior. He examines pathbreaking work on "multiple" intelligence, and the notion of "social" or "practical" intelligence and considers whether these new ideas have any scientific meaning. Eysenck also includes a study of creativity and intuition--as well as the production of works of art and science--identifying special factors that interact with general intelligence to produce predictable effects in the actual world. The work that Hans Eysenck has put together over the last fifty years in research into individual differences constitutes most of what anyone means by the structure and biological basis of personality and intelligence. A giant in the field of psychology, Eysenck almost single-handedly restructured and reordered his profession. Intelligence is Eysenck's final book and the third in a series of his works from Transaction. |
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... University , 35 Berrue Circle , Piscataway , New Jersey 08854-8042 . This book is printed on acid - free paper that meets the American National Standard for Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials . Library of Congress Number ...
... test- ing would ever make such an outrageous statement . To take just one or two examples : IQ predicts with considerable precision a child's scho- lastic achievement , or a youth's success at university . 8 Intelligence.
... university . In the famous Isle of Wight study , for instance , all five year olds on the island were IQ tested , that is , before they even went to school . Their final school grades at the age of sixteen years were predicted very ...
... university , an IQ of 115 would be pretty well the lowest limit , leading to a modest lower second or even third- class degree . For a first , something like 125 would be required at a minimum . Professors would clock in at 130 or above ...
... University College , London ( and incidentally one of my teachers ! ) ; Binet's pala- din was Leo Thurstone , professor of psychology at Chicago ( and inci- dentally one of my friends ! ) . Both came to psychology from the " hard ...
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Intelligence Reaction Time and Inspection Time | 49 |
The Biological Basis of Intelligence | 61 |
What is the Use of IQ Tests? | 81 |
Can We Improve IQ? | 97 |
Many Intelligences? | 107 |
Conditions for Excellence and Achievement | 135 |
Genius and Heredity | 147 |
Psychopathology and Creativity | 161 |
Cognition and Creativity | 173 |
Much Ado about IQ | 187 |
Endnotes References and Comments | 197 |
Mainstream Science on Intelligence | 213 |
Index | 221 |