Discussions of the meaning of intelligence frequently begin with attempts to separate heredity from environment, or nature from nurture. Such studies can be carried out only in a population in which control can be exercised over the two sets of factors. The control of hereditary factors increases as we go from unrelated children to siblings to twins. When we think of the individual child, we must recognize at once that he is a product of nature and nurture. It is not feasible to assume either that the human organism can develop independently of its genetic basis or that any set of factors can be completely gene-controlled. This point I have developed elsewhere (Stoddard, 1939)
For over a hundred years, psychologists and human biologists have been engaged in an often heated de...
In this article, the authors argue that the overwhelming portion of the literature on intelligence, ...
How do we come to know what we know? Why do some people seem to know more than others? What processe...
Discussions of the meaning of intelligence frequently begin with attempts to separate heredity from ...
The study of genetic contributions to intelligence has been one of the longest-standing controversie...
The past decade has seen a major shift in the genetic study of human intelligence; where classic stu...
were produced in the homosexual community in San Francisco when linkage studies first suggested that...
Introduction : Intelligence is a term that has aroused human curiosity for hundreds of years. Many r...
The history of research on the genetics of intelligence is fraught with social bias. During the euge...
The thesis that intelligence is based on heredity was dramatically revived in 1969 by an article in ...
To further knowledge concerning the nature and nurture of intelligence, we scrutinized how heritabil...
Heritability estimates of general intelligence in adulthood generally range from 75 to 85%, with all...
To further knowledge concerning the nature and nurture of intelligence, we scrutinized how heritabil...
Heritability estimates of general intelligence inadulthood generally range from 75 to 85%, with all ...
ABSTRACT—The past decade has seen a major shift in the genetic study of human intelligence; where cl...
For over a hundred years, psychologists and human biologists have been engaged in an often heated de...
In this article, the authors argue that the overwhelming portion of the literature on intelligence, ...
How do we come to know what we know? Why do some people seem to know more than others? What processe...
Discussions of the meaning of intelligence frequently begin with attempts to separate heredity from ...
The study of genetic contributions to intelligence has been one of the longest-standing controversie...
The past decade has seen a major shift in the genetic study of human intelligence; where classic stu...
were produced in the homosexual community in San Francisco when linkage studies first suggested that...
Introduction : Intelligence is a term that has aroused human curiosity for hundreds of years. Many r...
The history of research on the genetics of intelligence is fraught with social bias. During the euge...
The thesis that intelligence is based on heredity was dramatically revived in 1969 by an article in ...
To further knowledge concerning the nature and nurture of intelligence, we scrutinized how heritabil...
Heritability estimates of general intelligence in adulthood generally range from 75 to 85%, with all...
To further knowledge concerning the nature and nurture of intelligence, we scrutinized how heritabil...
Heritability estimates of general intelligence inadulthood generally range from 75 to 85%, with all ...
ABSTRACT—The past decade has seen a major shift in the genetic study of human intelligence; where cl...
For over a hundred years, psychologists and human biologists have been engaged in an often heated de...
In this article, the authors argue that the overwhelming portion of the literature on intelligence, ...
How do we come to know what we know? Why do some people seem to know more than others? What processe...