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E-grāmata: Understanding Intelligence

  • Formāts: EPUB+DRM
  • Sērija : Understanding Life
  • Izdošanas datums: 03-Feb-2022
  • Izdevniecība: Cambridge University Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781108944861
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  • Formāts: EPUB+DRM
  • Sērija : Understanding Life
  • Izdošanas datums: 03-Feb-2022
  • Izdevniecība: Cambridge University Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781108944861
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Have you ever wondered why psychologists still can't agree on what intelligence is? Or felt dismayed by debates around individual differences? Criticising the pitfalls of IQ testing, this book explains the true nature of intelligent systems, and their evolution from cells to brains to culture and human minds. Understanding Intelligence debunks many of the myths and misunderstandings surrounding intelligence. It takes a new look at the nature of the environment and the development of 'talent' and achievement. This brings fresh and radical implications for promoting intelligence and creativity, and prompts readers to reconsider their own possibilities and aspirations. Providing a broad context to the subject, the author also unmasks the ideological distortions of intelligence in racism and eugenics, and the suppressed expectations across social classes and genders. This book is a must-read for anyone curious about our own intelligence.

This accessible book explains the origins and evolution of intelligence, for everyone curious about the concept, and suspicious of IQ. Enlightened by the most recent research, it encourages readers of all levels to think more clearly about issues in development and education, and the debates and controversies surrounding the subject.

Recenzijas

'Ken Richardson has written a masterful book about intelligence. In contrast to what leading behavioural geneticists and psychometrically oriented psychologists see as the moderately or highly heritable trait of general intelligence (IQ), Richardson explains why psychometric and behavioural genetic arguments fail, and how intelligence should be seen as a socially acquired characteristic. A longstanding expert on intelligence, he writes in a manner that can be understood by both academic and general readers. I strongly recommend this book as an accessible and important counterweight to mainstream descriptions of intelligence in the fields of psychology and behavioural genetics, and in the media.' Jay Joseph, Psy.D., psychologist and author, Oakland, California, USA 'Ken Richardson's Understanding Intelligence is a timely and important addition to Cambridge University Press's groundbreaking Understanding Life series. Richardson provides a "natural history of intelligence", and no facet of that complex topic goes untouched adaptive evolution, embryology, endocrinology, circadian rhythms, neural networks, cooperative hunting. In our current moment, where scholars and politicians alike are calling for gene-guided education and appealing to innate differences as the cause of racial disparities, Richardson debunks myth after myth about cognitive ability: that the brain is best conceptualised as a machine, that IQ tests measure intelligence, that different racial groups have naturally different intellectual aptitudes, that the genome is a programme for cognitive development. The esteemed psychologist, in exchange, offers a vision of intelligence as a dynamic, interactive, developing, adaptive system a system that allows every person to intellectually flourish, if only they are given the opportunity.' James Tabery, Professor of Philosophy, University of Utah, USA 'For decades, Ken Richardson has been a leading voice within the critical approaches to intelligence in psychology. He patiently and determinedly interrogated the often taken for granted assumptions and myths about the meaning of intelligence, about how it can be measured and tested, about its heritability or its applicability as a measure of intellectual ability in the school or the workplace. Understanding Intelligence provides a thoroughly researched and persuasively argued up-to-date overview of this important work. It is sure to become an indispensable resource for both academics and practitioners, and indeed for anyone interested in one of psychology's most controversial, and flawed, concepts.' Jovan Byford, Senior Lecturer in Psychology, The Open University, UK

Papildus informācija

This accessible book explains the origins, evolution, and nature of intelligence, from single cells to human culture and cognition.
Foreword xv
Preface xvii
1 Testing, Testing
1(24)
An Unnatural Measure
2(2)
Physiological Testing
4(1)
`We Classify'
5(1)
Original Mental Endowment
6(1)
Mass Testing
7(1)
And in Britain
8(1)
Validity Vacuum
8(1)
Score Patterns
9(2)
Scores Agree --It Must Be `g'
11(2)
Predictive Validity
13(1)
Differences in What?
14(4)
Real-Life Complexity
18(1)
Familiarity and Class
19(1)
Not Intelligence
19(1)
Other Ideas
20(2)
Use of IQ Tests
22(1)
Back to Physiology
23(2)
2 In the Genes?
25(19)
An Agricultural Model
26(4)
Cyril Burt's Twin Correlations
30(1)
Other Twins Reared Apart
31(1)
Really Reared Apart?
32(1)
`Classical' Twin Studies
32(1)
More False Assumptions
33(2)
Make-Do Data
35(1)
Adopted Children's IQs
35(2)
DNA: The Genie Out of the Bottle?
37(2)
Polygenic Scores
39(1)
Or Just Another Damp Squib?
40(3)
Precision Science?
43(1)
3 Intelligent Systems
44(22)
In the Beginning
45(2)
Then There Was Life ...
47(1)
They Became Systems
48(1)
Intelligent Life
49(2)
The Environment
51(1)
Why No Genes?
52(1)
We've Had It All Wrong
53(1)
Sensing Change
54(1)
Networks, Loops, and Tunes
55(2)
Intelligent Behaviour
57(1)
How Genes Are (Intelligently) Used
58(3)
Strange Codes: Impossible Programmes
61(2)
Heritability Futility
63(3)
4 Intelligence Evolving
66(20)
Change and Complexity
67(1)
Cells Get Together
68(2)
Multicellular Systems
70(2)
Physiology: The Intelligence of Multicellular Organisms
72(1)
Not a Machine
73(2)
Hormones Work in Concert
75(1)
Coordinated Adaptability
75(2)
Rhythms
77(2)
Behaviour
79(1)
Nervous Systems
80(2)
Network Function
82(2)
A New Intelligence: Why?
84(2)
5 Intelligent Development
86(19)
Why Development?
87(1)
One Becomes Many
88(2)
Knowing What to Become
90(1)
Morphogen Harmonies
91(2)
Sticking to a Course
93(1)
Choosing Alternatives
94(2)
Developing Brains
96(1)
Life-Long Development
97(1)
Developmental Maps?
98(2)
Innate or Developed?
100(1)
Genetic Causes
101(2)
Development and Evolution
103(2)
6 Intelligent Machine?
105(21)
What the Brain Is For
107(1)
The Intelligent Solution
108(4)
Brain Structure
112(4)
Senses Together
116(1)
Cognitive Intelligence
117(2)
Experience-Dependence
119(1)
Intelligence with Feeling
120(2)
MRI: Seeing Intelligence?
122(4)
7 Becoming Human
126(22)
Swarm Intelligence
127(1)
Shoals, Flocks, and Herds
128(1)
Mammal Intelligence
129(1)
Cooperative Hunting
130(2)
Cooperative Apes?
132(1)
Human Evolution
133(1)
Homo sapiens
134(1)
Fit for Social Life
135(2)
The Social Brain
137(2)
Culture
139(2)
Cultured Intelligence
141(1)
Incorporation into a Social World
142(1)
Thinking and Reasoning
142(2)
Language
144(1)
Memory
145(1)
Science Is a Cultural Tool
146(1)
A Brain for Culture
146(2)
8 Individual Differences
148(20)
Order and Control
148(1)
Robert Plomin's Genie
149(1)
Charles Murray's Human Diversity
150(1)
Kevin Mitchell's Account
151(1)
Passive Variation
152(1)
Individual and Social
153(2)
Class Systems Emerged
155(1)
Top of the Pile
156(1)
The Other End
156(2)
The Missing Environment
158(2)
Genius
160(2)
`Race' and Racism
162(2)
Controversies
164(2)
Human `Races' Don't Exist
166(2)
9 Promoting Intelligence
168(30)
The Intelligence in Education
168(2)
What Does IQ Predict?
170(1)
What Do School Attainments Predict?
171(2)
And in Real Life?
173(2)
Learning Ability Evaporates
175(1)
Testing for Social Class Not Ability
176(2)
What Alternatives?
178(2)
Compensatory Programmes
180(2)
Cognitive Enhancement
182(1)
Artificial Intelligence
183(1)
Intelligence for All
184(4)
Summary of the Book
188(4)
Summary of Common Misunderstandings
192(6)
References 198(13)
Index 211
Ken Richardson is a former senior lecturer at the Open University, UK, and an independent researcher, consultant, and author. After completing a doctorate in brain biochemistry he became interested in cognitive systems, chiefly developmental, and how these areas, as intelligent systems, are inter-related through evolution.