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Measuring intelligence: facts and fallacies

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The testing of intelligence has a long and controversial history.

Claims that it is a pseudo-science or a weapon of ideological warfare have been commonplace and there is not even a consensus as to whether intelligence exists and, if it does, whether it can be measured.

As a result the debate about it has centred on the nurture versus nature controversy and especially on alleged racial differences and the heritability of intelligence - all of which have major policy implications.

This book aims to penetrate the mists of controversy, ideology and prejudice by providing a clear non-mathematical framework for the definition and measurement of intelligence derived from modern factor analysis.

Building on this framework and drawing on everyday ideas the author address key controversies in a clear and accessible style and explores some of the claims made by well known writers in the field such as Stephen Jay Gould and Michael Howe.

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£110.00
Product Details
Cambridge University Press
1107149991 / 9781107149991
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
153.93
26/08/2004
England
English
168 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%