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The Bell Curve: Intelligence and Class Structure in American Life (A Free Press Paperbacks Book) Paperback – Illustrated, January 10, 1996

4.7 4.7 out of 5 stars 1,690 ratings

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The controversial book linking intelligence to class and race in modern society, and what public policy can do to mitigate socioeconomic differences in IQ, birth rate, crime, fertility, welfare, and poverty.
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Editorial Reviews

Review

Michael Novak National Review Our intellectual landscape has been disrupted by the equivalent of an earthquake.

David Brooks
The Wall Street Journal Has already kicked up more reaction than any social?science book this decade.

Peter Brimelow
Forbes Long-awaited...massive, meticulous, minutely detailed, clear. Like Darwin's Origin of Species -- the intellectual event with which it is being seriously compared -- The Bell Curve offers a new synthesis of research...and a hypothesis of far-reaching explanatory power.

Milton Friedman This brilliant, original, objective, and lucidly written book will force you to rethink your biases and prejudices about the role that individual difference in intelligence plays in our economy, our policy, and our society.

Chester E. Finn, Jr.
Commentary The Bell Curve's implications will be as profound for the beginning of the new century as Michael Harrington's discovery of "the other America" was for the final part of the old. Richard Herrnstein's bequest to us is a work of great value. Charles Murray's contribution goes on.

Prof. Thomas J. Bouchard
Contemporary Psychology [The authors] have been cast as racists and elitists and The Bell Curve has been dismissed as pseudoscience....The book's message cannot be dismissed so easily. Herrnstein and Murray have written one of the most provocative social science books published in many years....This is a superbly written and exceedingly well documented book.

Christopher Caldwell
American Spectator The Bell Curve is a comprehensive treatment of its subject,never mean-spirited or gloating. It gives a fair hearing to those who dissent scientifically from its propositions -- in fact, it bends over backward to be fair....Among the dozens of hostile articles that have thus far appeared, none has successfully refuted any of its science.

Malcolme W. Browne
The New York Times Book Review Mr. Murray and Mr. Herrnstein write that "for the last 30 years, the concept of intelligence has been a pariah in the world of ideas," and that the time has come to rehabilitate rational discourse on the subject. It is hard to imagine a democratic society doing otherwise.

Prof. Eugene D. Genovese
National Review Richard Herrnstein and Charles Murray might not feel at home with Daniel Patrick Moynihan and Lani Guinier, but they should....They have all [made] brave attempts to force a national debate on urgent matters that will not go away. And they have met the same fate. Once again, academia and the mass media are straining every muscle to suppress debate.

Prof. Earl Hunt
American Scientist The first reactions to The Bell Curve were expressions of public outrage. In the second round of reaction, some commentators suggested that Herrnstein and Murray were merely bringing up facts that were well known in the scientific community, but perhaps best not discussed in public. A Papua New Guinea language has a term for this, Mokita. It means "truth that we all know, but agree not to talk about." ...There are fascinating questions here for those interested in the interactions between sociology, economics, anthropology and cognitive science. We do not have the answers yet. We may need them soon, for policy makers who rely on Mokita are flying blind.

About the Author

Richard J. Herrnstein held the Edger Pierce Chair in Psychology at Harvard University until his death in 1994.

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Free Press; Illustrated edition (January 10, 1996)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Paperback ‏ : ‎ 912 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0684824299
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0684824291
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 2.31 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 6.13 x 1.6 x 9.25 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.7 4.7 out of 5 stars 1,690 ratings

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Customer reviews

4.7 out of 5 stars
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Everybody should read this controversial book. In my review I have pictures of the table of contents. This is a huge book but I thought it would give a better idea to future readers of the ideology behind the book and topics that are discussed. All in all this is a huge book with medium print. It would make a great gift to a politically minded loved one. I personally gifted my copy to my husband who is such a person. He loved it! Thanks for taking the time to read. Happy shopping!
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Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on February 4, 2016
"The Coming of the Custodial State" says, on page 523, "When a society reaches a certain overall affluence, the haves begin to feel sympathy toward, if not guilt about, the condition of the have-nots. Thus dawns the welfare state - the attempt to raise the poor and the needy out of their plight ... Over the next decades [moving forward from 1994] it will become broadly accepted by the cognitive elite that the people we now refer to as the underclass are in that condition through no fault of their own but because of inherent shortcomings about which little can be done. Politicians and intellectuals alike will become much more open about the role of dysfunctional behavior in the underclass, accepting that addiction, violence, unavailability for work, child abuse, and family disorganization will keep most members of the underclass from fending for themselves."

I've chosen 1 sequence from 1 page concluding the book. I could have chosen a thousand sequences as telling as this. Also, by 1994, it wasn't all too prescient to predict that the Paternalistic state of whites to blacks would continue to grow as the IQ influences of both genes and environment would combine to accelerate and exacerbate the demise of dysfunctional families in the per-child welfare system, thus widening gaps right before our eyes all the way up to 2016. As Herrnstein and Murray point out early, gains made in the 1970s and early 1980s, gains made through integration, had already begun to show reversals by the early 1990s as poor mothers became younger and less affiliated with their children's father. Bad neighborhoods not only became worse; they became bigger. An entire generation has come since then, and the snowball is getting bigger. Good neighborhoods became more isolated.

Like anybody, I have to evaluate the book by what I bring to the book. Some disclosure: I know a genius, a co-worker, and he is as intellectually functional as anybody I know. Socially, he is difficult to predict. Although his IQ is doubtless in the 140 plus range and he works probability questions without pause, as well as doing long division in his head, speaking to him in the hallway can be a challenge. He is married, has raised his polite children, and is ready to retire. I have often wondered if his obesity is a sign of his eccentric ability or an exception. I would not trade places with him. My wife's first husband was an exceptional engineer, an expert on so many of the structures we see in our civil society. Socially, he was an impossible presence to enjoy. His flat sense of humor, his social dependency, his physical laziness, and his deadbeat dad habits led him to drunken helplessness around his own family. The court had to tell him to pay child support, not a manifestation of the typical characterization of "Very bright" on Bell Curve's many charts.

So why, in 2016, should people still read this book? (I would like you to, but it's not fun, and like so many other things that give satisfaction, it also enrages.) I believe the overall premise of the book is to clarify the upward mobility that we have had and continue to have in this country. SES, social economic status, consistently plays less of a role in life success than IQ. This book will bombard you with factual studies that indicate significant differences between poor who are less intelligent and poor who are more intelligent. Regarding IQ scores, SAT performances, higher education, lower crime rate, change in income, age at marriage, age and marital status during first pregnancy, amount of divorces (everything but number of tattoos and music preference), the book repeatedly reports that starting poor was less of a factor than starting off with lower intelligence indicators. The poor in this country, but mostly in regard to the smarter of that class, have a long, illustrious record of moving up to middle class and beyond.

So in effect, the book does not ask readers to stop making excuses. It urges readers to shift their guilt from man-made, societal problems like inner cities and coal-mining communities to Natural-made differences. And this would just be common sense, and the "cognitive elite" who don't watch Jeopardy and who don't look at or believe data simply can't be very "elite" if this needs 575 pages of explanation. Clearly, Herrnstein and Murray set out to cover all bases. As soon as a crack in the argument was suggested, it was addressed, and it was addressed with calm, thorough, rational information. East Asians are smarter than whites, more so in math. Whites are smarter than blacks, and East Asians are smarter than blacks by a wide margin regardless of economic background, school choice, favoritism or discrimination, or any other strain of SES.

But I am not finished with this book's bottom line, because of the liberal mindset that welcomes and encourages the indoctrination of service. In other words, I see many of our nation's brightest, from Baby-boomer flower children to Millennials (a higher percentage of the former), trapped in the dumbness of "white guilt". This notion should be, in the spirit of the book, examined logically and not emotionally. Is the white guilt as it has existed since 1964 working? The most valuable insight this book provides is not the answer "no" but the explanation behind that no, and the resounding impact of that "NO!" Paternalism for the less intelligent is failing the less intelligent; only a diabolical liberal whose real plot is to push the poor further down and further away would continue to throw government benefits at people in hopes they'll become dependent on them: a teenage mother from a rough neighborhood in Baltimore is enabled to have a second child, then a third, with Head Start then available. The father(s) is less inclined to be present, more inclined to repeat the process with another single mother. The family, such as it is, will propagate a lower Intelligence Quotient among this specific population. Illegal activities such as drugs and gang violence are much more likely. All the while, liberal whites believe their advocacy is helping because, stupidly, it only takes short term consequences into account. The next generation will be more than 1-2 standard deviations below because of the clearly recognizable "malleability" of intelligence.
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Reviewed in the United States on December 7, 2012
If you're reading any of the reviews here, I'm betting you already have an impression of what this book is about. And odds are, this impression is based on a false projection made on just two chapters of the book.

Let's clear up some confusion here: This is **NOT** a book about race. Nor is it primarily a book on political policy.

While it sure is a shame that critics (and sociology professors) have completely misrepresented the book's content, inane criticisms like these do nothing but generate even more interest in this book. Perhaps the unnecessary controversy was a good thing in that respect.

All this book argues is that (gasp!) IQ plays a significant role in someone's life outcome. The subtitle of the book is probably a more direct indication of the book's content than the main title itself. Rather than socioeconomic status, class structure over time is more closely linked with intelligence.

Where the controversy starts to develop is when the subject of heritability of IQ comes in. More on that in a moment...

At over nine-hundred pages long and with over a thousand references/footnotes, this is one hefty text, and it's a shame so much focus has been put on seventy pages that deal with ethnic differences in cognitive ability. Early on in the book the authors lay out six points they seek to defend. They are as follows:

"1. There is such a thing as a general factor of cognitive ability on which human beings differ."

I think we can all agree that some people are smarter than others.

"2. 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."

Again, nothing controversial if you are already familiar with the correlation between IQ scores and the ability to do cognitively demanding tasks.

"3. IQ scores match, to a first degree, whatever it is that people mean when they use the word intelligent or smart in ordinary language."

See my previous comment above.

"4. IQ scores are stable, although not perfectly so, over much of a person's life."

Here those thinking you can "raise" IQ by certain measures might find some disagreement.

"5. Properly administered IQ tests are not demonstrably biased against social, economic, ethnic, or racial groups."

Unless one judges only from IQ test results, this point seems to be beyond dispute. The only "bias" these tests appear to have is against those who are not good at IQ tests, and thus do not have the cognitive ability to solve the types of problems present in them.

"6. Cognitive ability is substantially heritable, apparently no less than 40 percent and no more than 80 percent."

This is the most controversial of the six points, especially the implication it has for different ethnic groups.

Those are the six points the book argues over the course of the hundreds of pages it contains. Alongside this, The Bell Curve attempts to cover various trends based on IQ and it's heritability as well as what they might lead to.

From what I've read elsewhere as well as from this book, I've come to conclude IQ definitely can massive predictive power in the life outcome of any given person. While it's not "destiny" per se, when we are talking about group averages of millions of people, very clear patterns emerge based on IQ. Among these are patterns in financial status, family matters, citizenship, and criminality.

If I had to sum up this book in just five points, they would be as follows:

1. IQ plays a big role in life outcome - especially in terms of financial power. Family and parenting habits differ for those who are on the right side of the bell curve distribution of IQ scores.

2. IQ is probably at least 50% inherited. This is based on longitudinal twin studies, among other things. I know the book states anywhere from 40% to 80%, but after looking at the data and reading an article by science journalist Matt Ridley ("Is IQ in the Genes? Twins Give Us Two Answers"), it appears that the percentage varies from person to person.

3. We are becoming a more complex society that depends on high IQ. The IT sector is growing and the simple manufactoring jobs are becoming obsolete over time. The former are what the highly intelligent thrive with, the latter are what the less intelligent depend on.

4. Because people with similar IQs tend to mate with each other and tend to be isolated from the rest of society, we are becoming a divided nation due to differences in intelligence.

5. These bright individuals are becoming culturally and physically isolated from the lower cognitive classes. The latter comes in the form of both gated communities, and isolated workplace offices that are disconnected from those doing the menial jobs of any given firm.

Points 3-5 is what makes the book so scary. The highly intelligent tend to gain the most financial power as well as a sizable political influence in some respects. Combine this with the fact that they are becoming more culturally and physically isolated from the rest of the population: what does this actually lead to?

Hard to say, but Latin America seems like a good example of this "cognitive partitioning" as Herrnstein and Murray put it. Rich and affluent persons live in gated mansions to keep the poorer persons from ever coming into contact with them. Society divides into haves and have nots unlike anything we've ever seen...

I will conclude this review by saying that while the statistical specifics may have changed since the book was released, I think the book is largely accurate in most of it's broader conclusions.

Ultimately you as the reader should decided for yourself whether the book has merit.
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Top reviews from other countries

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Just Another Sean
5.0 out of 5 stars No myths, only facts and statistics.
Reviewed in Canada on February 27, 2023
An excellent look at IQ and society. There's nothing really controversial in this book at all, just data some people would rather not be faced with. Book itself arrived in perfect condition other than a small kink on the rear cover. Nothing to complain about.
2 people found this helpful
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Joel
5.0 out of 5 stars Not only interesting but revealing.
Reviewed in Mexico on September 10, 2021
Very interesting topic.
poleo
5.0 out of 5 stars Wie erwartet
Reviewed in Germany on June 19, 2023
Wollte es lesen
One person found this helpful
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Rejeev Divakaran
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent book on a controversial topic
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on January 26, 2022
An outstanding book on a controversial social issue. Many people may disagree with his opinions, however, you cannot keep a blind eye on this or accuse it of pseudoscience. I disagree on many important aspects. A few of them are below.
Authors have mentioned that the IQ score improves over generations (in the US as well as in many other countries), This may not be due to genetic changes rather it may be due to environmental/cultural changes. That in turn indicates that the influence of environment/culture has a significant impact on IQ (which is contrary to the main theme of the book). There is not much discussion on this. Also in another chapter authors indicate that the IQ of the US population decreasing over generations due to the low birth rate among educated women. This is contradicting the previous observation.
Another thing I disagree with is their opinion that difference in IQ is leading to stratification and class difference.
Despite these disagreements, the book discusses many important aspects of social science that most scientists avoid for political correctness.
A few points are below.
* IQ is in part inborn (part of it hereditary, part random), and part environmental.
* Most of the life skills (education, job performance, law obedience, etc) are highly correlated to IQ. This is difficult to believe but his arguments are compelling.
* There is a significant difference in IQ between ethnic groups. Very difficult to believe, however they claim that there is ample evidence. It is not clear though if this difference is due to genes or cultural differences. My personal observation is that Asians do better in Science because parents encourage kids in STEM subjects for better employment opportunities. The bar for such controversial claims should be high.
* Unequal representation of different ethnic groups in employment or higher education not necessarily due to discrimination.

When they discuss the rationale for affirmative action, I felt one justification left out. It (affirmative action) is like representative participation (a legislative body is not elected based on the best qualification for legislation rather a quota for each region). When you are allocating a scarce resource (college admissions), it has to be equal among different parties as the resource itself has not produced the higher IQ of the applicants. However there is one catch - race and sex are not the only discrepancies, there will be huge discrepancies between urban and rural as well as different regions of the country.
I appreciate the authors for the courage to present such a controversial topic also done in a fair way (I think so).
8 people found this helpful
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Amazon Customer
5.0 out of 5 stars A classic I have always wanted to read
Reviewed in France on June 9, 2017
This is a landmark book that in its days caused much uproar, accused of being racist behind the guise of science. I certainly don't agree with that. It has the merit of making you think and question everything and anything we take as absolute and proven truths.
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