mirror of
https://github.com/nhammer514/textfiles-politics.git
synced 2024-10-01 01:15:38 -04:00
416 lines
23 KiB
XML
416 lines
23 KiB
XML
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
|
|
<xml>
|
|
<div class="article">
|
|
<p>Bewitching Science
|
|
by Val Dusek</p>
|
|
<p> [Note by Brian Siano: This article originally appeared in
|
|
the November/December 1987 issue of _Science for the People_,
|
|
published by the Science Resource Center, 897 Main Street,
|
|
Cambridge, MA 02139. I don't even know if the magazine is still
|
|
being published; it's a shame, because it regularly dealt with
|
|
such topics as toxic wastes, nuclear power, eugenics,
|
|
biotechnology, and the like. I have a few back issues, one of
|
|
which has a dandy article in the psychological experiments of Dr.
|
|
Ewen Cameron conducted in Canada. I wish a local newsstand still
|
|
carried it. (BTW, its editorial advisory board includes Stephen
|
|
Jay Gould and Richard Lewontin.)
|
|
[Since this article appeared, Bouchard _has_ published his
|
|
data, although I don't have the specific references for where he
|
|
published. This article addresses his public statements prior to
|
|
publishing, and raises important questions as to Bouchard's
|
|
impartiality over his thesis.
|
|
[Val Dusek, at the time of publication, taught philosophy at
|
|
the University of New Hampshire.]</p>
|
|
<p> For seven years, popular magazines have regaled us with
|
|
tales of Oskar and Jack, a pair of twins, one raised in Nazi
|
|
Germany, the other raised as a Jew in Trinidad, who both think it
|
|
funny to sneeze in elevators and always flush a toilet before
|
|
using it. We have also been told about Bridget and Dorothy,
|
|
British twins who each wore seven rings.
|
|
These anecdotes issue from scientists undertaking a massive
|
|
study of identical twins. The study, conducted by Thomas Bouchard
|
|
and others at the University of Minnesota, is said to show that
|
|
I.Q., personality traits, and virtually every other mental
|
|
attribute or behavior is heritable, or capable of being
|
|
inherited.
|
|
During the past year, lengthy articles have appeared in U.S.
|
|
News and World Report (a cover story), Discover, and Science.
|
|
Shorter pieces have appeared in Time, U.S. News and World Report,
|
|
the New York Times, and other magazines and newspapers. (1)
|
|
The Minnesota Twins Study's "latest bombshell" (as U.S. News
|
|
calls it) purports to show that traits such as shyness,
|
|
political conservatism, dedication to hard work, orderliness,
|
|
and intimacy are to a great extent heritable, and that
|
|
extraversion, conformity, creativity, optimism, and cautiousness
|
|
are more determined by heredity than by environment.
|
|
Despite all the media coverage, the scientific data and
|
|
methods of analysis upon which these conclusions are based have
|
|
not yet been published in a refereed scientific journal. A
|
|
December 1986 article in the New York Times and one in the
|
|
January 12, 1987 issue of Time referred to results "submitted"
|
|
and "being reviewed" by professional journals. However, in the
|
|
August 7, 1987 issue of Science, no reference is made to any
|
|
article having been submitted; it is said only that "the group
|
|
recently has submitted a paper."
|
|
This seems like a minor anomaly until one realizes that for
|
|
the last seven years, Bouchard has been releasing announcements
|
|
to the media regarding the Minnesota Twins Study and its results.
|
|
The news section of Science has several times enthusiastically
|
|
quoted Bouchard. Also since 1980, articles have appeared in
|
|
Science 80, Newsweek, The New York Times, the New York Times
|
|
Sunday Magazine, People, the New Orleans States-Item, the
|
|
Washington Post, and elsewhere. (2)
|
|
In these articles, traits from political conservatism to
|
|
toilet flushing have been claimed to be heritable. Bouchard has
|
|
declared his results "devastating" to feminists. (3) Opponents
|
|
have been termed "ideological." (4) U.S. News stated, "Unable to
|
|
hold back the swelling tide of evidence for the importance of
|
|
genes, supporters of the nurture side try to fight back with
|
|
words." (5)
|
|
This public trumpeting of 'science' without data is perhaps
|
|
the most extreme recent example of popular media releases without
|
|
scientific publication. Given the popular interest in Bouchard's
|
|
alleged results and their purported policy impact for child
|
|
rearing, social welfare programs, the criminal justice system,
|
|
and the schools, this situation raises questions of ethics and
|
|
responsibility. These questions relate to not only Bouchard and
|
|
the Minnesota Twin Study group in releasing these so-far
|
|
unverifiable claims. They also relate to the journalists who
|
|
uncritically convey the study's claims and the members of the
|
|
relevant subdisciplines within the scientific community who have
|
|
not raised critical notice concerning the twins study and its
|
|
media coverage. </p>
|
|
<p>Persecuted Galileos?
|
|
Doctrines of hereditary I.Q., race differences in I.Q., sex
|
|
differences in math ability, the sociobiology of aggression and
|
|
sex roles, and other aspects of biological determinism have
|
|
flooded the media. In these media presentations, hereditarians
|
|
play a double game. On the one hand, they claim to be 'pure
|
|
scientists,' above the political battle. On the other hand, they
|
|
are not shy in hyping their doctrines to the popular press, and
|
|
have never, to my knowledge, criticized a favorable presentation
|
|
of sociobiological doctrine, no matter how vulgar and distorted
|
|
it may be.
|
|
The biological determinists often present themselves as
|
|
persecuted Galileos of science. But they do not hesitate to make
|
|
policy pronouncements on such topics as the inferiority of black
|
|
intelligence, the inability of women to pursue careers in science
|
|
and the law, the ineffectiveness of attempts to educate the
|
|
disadvantaged, or the 'naturalness' of female depression, rape,
|
|
capitalism, and war. (6) However, biological determinists tend to
|
|
claim that their own views are purely scientific, while their
|
|
opponents' views are purely ideological.
|
|
Bouchard, his co-workers, and supporters follow this
|
|
pattern. According to Science, "Bouchard wants to keep his study
|
|
free from politics." But in the same article, Bouchard is also
|
|
quoted as saying that his German twins are "devastating to the
|
|
feminist contention that children's personalities are shaped
|
|
differently according to the sex of those who rear them, since
|
|
Oskar was raised by women and Jack by men." (3) Thus, in a sample
|
|
of one pair of twins, Bouchard is willing to draw conclusions
|
|
concerning child rearing and sexual politics.
|
|
Many biological determinists portray themselves as liberals
|
|
who were brought by the 'harsh facts' of biology to hold
|
|
conservative doctrines. Sociobiologist E.O. Wilson, psychologist
|
|
of inherited criminality Sanford Mednick, and others have made
|
|
this claim.
|
|
Bouchard is no exception. Despite his discipleship to the
|
|
scientific racist Arthur Jensen at Berkeley, Bouchard claims to
|
|
have been engaged in "political activism in the radical
|
|
sixties." (7) Bouchard also presents himself as having stumbled
|
|
"almost casually" in 1979 into an interest in twins through
|
|
reading about a pair of reunited twins. (8)
|
|
In fact, Bouchard had already published research and review
|
|
articles years before on the heritability of I.Q. From this work
|
|
and that of his mentor, Jensen, Bouchard must have realized the
|
|
centrality of studies of twins reared apart for the I.Q. debate.
|
|
This importance greatly increased after Cyril Burt's data, a
|
|
major basis for Jensen's claims concerning black/white I.Q.
|
|
differences, was discredited as fraudulent. (910) Inferences
|
|
From Coincidences
|
|
Despite the claims concerning hard evidence, large samples,
|
|
and the appeal to the biological sciences, what we find in
|
|
statements by Bouchard and in material released to the media from
|
|
the Minnesota Twin Study are anecdotes and amazing stories. What
|
|
is striking about the anecdotal material is its similarity to the
|
|
sort of evidence often offered as proof for astrology or
|
|
extrasensory perception (ESP).
|
|
Striking coincidences are reported as supposed grounds for
|
|
belief in the phenomenon itself. In literature about astrology
|
|
and ESP, cases where forecasts came true or where thought of a
|
|
friend was immediately followed by a phone call from that friend
|
|
are offered as evidence. The cases where forecasts failed or
|
|
where a thought of someone is not followed by a phone call from
|
|
that person are forgotten or left unmentioned.
|
|
Bouchard's coincidence anecdotes are of a similar nature:
|
|
we are told about the similarities (seven rings on fingers,
|
|
sneezing in elevators) but not about the differences. But some of
|
|
the similarities are physical ones that are to be expected in
|
|
identical twins. Other behavioral similarities are not all that
|
|
amazing.
|
|
Two twins living east and west of the Mississippi turn out
|
|
later to live on opposite sides of the river in Louisiana. Even
|
|
if "the mighty Mississippi divided" the twins, the fact that they
|
|
both wear cowboy hats and like hunting is not that unusual for
|
|
two working-class men in the same region of Louisiana.11
|
|
Oskar and Jack, the Nazi and Jew -- superficially the most
|
|
spectacular case of twins reared apart -- both had less
|
|
isolation from each other and less different environments than
|
|
the media stories reveal. They were raised by their own relatives
|
|
in two German households. One of these households emigrated to
|
|
Trinidad. Bouchard himself admits that their household
|
|
environments were more similar than their Nazi-vs.-Jew image
|
|
suggests. In fact, the two men met briefly during the 1950s in
|
|
Germany, and their wives kept up correspondence since that
|
|
meeting. (11)
|
|
Bouchard notes that one function of the media publicity
|
|
about spectacular coincidences is to recruit more pairs of twins.
|
|
But such pairs may wish to exaggerate similarities of behavior or
|
|
wear identical dress to receive publicity and scientific approval
|
|
for themselves. This sort of recruitment bias has occurred in
|
|
some earlier twin studies.
|
|
Some of the coincidences recalled can have nothing to do
|
|
with the twins' genetics, such as twins being adopted by
|
|
families which had adoptive brothers with the same name or the
|
|
twins themselves being given the same name by their adoptive
|
|
families. (12)
|
|
Even the language of twin study reportage is similar to
|
|
that concerning the occult. One of Bouchard's co-workers says
|
|
that they were still "bewitched by the seven rings." (13)
|
|
Discover magazine's front cover introduces us to "The Eerie World
|
|
of Reunited Twins."
|
|
While admitting that "Genes do not cause fires," one popular
|
|
book entitled Twins: Nature's Amazing Mystery moves easily
|
|
between enthusiastic reports of Bouchard's coincidences and
|
|
discussions of telepathic communication between twins and
|
|
synchronous events such as fires in the lives of distant twins.
|
|
(15) The anecdotes that Bouchard relates would seem more at home
|
|
on the pages of the National Enquirer than in those of Science.
|
|
It is ironic that Bouchard, in his reviews of the critics of
|
|
the twin studies, dismisses their work as ad hoc and
|
|
unscientific. (14) In reviewing Howard Gardner's criticism of
|
|
I.Q. tests, Bouchard says. "This book is primarily an opinion
|
|
piece, a collection of anecdotes... Gardner's scheme is not,
|
|
however, a theory in the rigorous (or even the non-rigorous)
|
|
scientific sense." (14) This remark is particularly ironic since
|
|
all that Bouchard has so far released are anecdotes of strange
|
|
coincidences that "struck" him.
|
|
Given that the largest study of identical twins reared
|
|
apart fraudulent by even Burt's students and admirers, and that
|
|
earlier studies of twins are replete with tester and surveyor
|
|
bias,15 it would seem especially desirable that Bouchard and the
|
|
Minnesota group open to public scientific scrutiny their data and
|
|
experimental design. However, all we have in the popular reports
|
|
are assertions of the heritable nature of various traits and
|
|
anecdotes concerning a few of the twin pairs.
|
|
The only paper in a refereed journal which makes use of the
|
|
Minnesota Twin Study data is a study of homosexuality in twins
|
|
reared apart. (16) This study relies on the huge data base of six
|
|
pairs of twins -- four pairs of females and two pairs of males.
|
|
Both members of one of the male pairs are gay. Only one member of
|
|
the other male pair is gay. Of the four pairs of female twins,
|
|
only one member each is lesbian or bisexual and one member each
|
|
is heterosexual.
|
|
From these results, Bouchard and McGue conclude that male
|
|
homosexuality has a strong heritable component, while lesbianism
|
|
does not. That such a grand conclusion can be drawn from this
|
|
sample of two gay male twins is even more mind-boggling than some
|
|
of the coincidences that Bouchard relates.
|
|
The Science review of earlier I.Q. correlation studies 11
|
|
and the study on the heritability of homosexuality are the only
|
|
articles in peer-reviewed journals closely relevant to or based
|
|
upon the twin study material.
|
|
A central feature of science is its public and critical
|
|
nature. Scientific data, unlike the lore and traditions of some
|
|
religious cults or such esoteric practices as alchemy, are made
|
|
publicly available in journals whose contents are reviewed,
|
|
evaluated, and published by members of the scientific community.
|
|
Peer review is meant to subject articles to critical scrutiny
|
|
prior to being accepted as worthy of publication. Despite the
|
|
fact that peer review does not always function to ideal
|
|
effectiveness, it is better than outright cronyism or nepotism.
|
|
Once the scientific article has been deemed worthy of
|
|
publication by a group of fellow scientists, the publicly
|
|
available account of data and methods is available to the entire
|
|
scientific community for further examination and criticism.
|
|
Methods of data collection, sources of sample populations,
|
|
statistical techniques. and the logic by which conclusions are
|
|
drawn can be carefully analyzed and criticized by other
|
|
scientists.
|
|
The failure of Bouchard and his colleagues in the Minnesota
|
|
Twin Study to participate in the peer review process is an
|
|
extreme example of circumventing the scientific process and using
|
|
the media for public relations. But scientists in competitive
|
|
fields such as high-energy physics, genetic engineering and
|
|
medicine have also announced their discoveries to the press
|
|
before they are published in the organs of the scientific
|
|
community. Editors of the New England Journal of Medicine and
|
|
Physical Review Letters have complained about this practice, (17)
|
|
and have tried to discipline scientists who publish in the
|
|
popular press before their work is refereed by other scientists
|
|
through refusal of publication in their journals.
|
|
For seven years, Bouchard and the Minnesota group have been
|
|
announcing their 'conclusions' concerning the heritable nature of
|
|
personality traits. They have been relating anecdotes of
|
|
coincidences to convince the general public that subtle
|
|
characteristics such as "beringedness" (wearing rings) have
|
|
heritable predispositions and that complex behaviors, such as
|
|
double toilet-flushing, sneezing in elevators, and naming one's
|
|
dog Toy, are relatively independent of upbringing and
|
|
environment.
|
|
Most recently, the Minnesota group has released a list of
|
|
group's representatives have also expounded on such topics as the
|
|
heritable nature of Chuck Yeager's bravery (although Yeager is
|
|
not known to be a subject of their survey). (18)
|
|
It is possible that Bouchard's survey is exhaustive and his
|
|
logic impeccable. But as long as the Minnesota Twin Study does
|
|
not publish its data and the methodological basis for its
|
|
conclusions in a peer review journal, we cannot tell. To
|
|
investigate the background, upbringing, and circumstances of
|
|
recruitment for the twins involved in Bouchard's research, a
|
|
book-length study would first have to be released. The Discover
|
|
article promises such a book by 1989, but by the time critical
|
|
evaluations are published by scientists, a decade of media
|
|
coverage will have made its impression.
|
|
The media anecdotes about "eerie" and "freakish"
|
|
coincidences that "struck" Bouchard must remain on a par with
|
|
tales about astrology and ESP. And Bouchard's data and methods
|
|
must remain in that limbo in which Cyril Burt's imaginary
|
|
assistants and unverifiable data existed.</p>
|
|
<p>Notes</p>
|
|
<p>1. "The Eerie World of Reunited Twins," Discover, September
|
|
1987; "How Genes Shape Personality," U.S. News and World Report,
|
|
April 13, 1987; "The Genetics of Personality," Science, vol. 237,
|
|
1987; "Exploring the Traits of Twins," Time, Jan 12, 1987;
|
|
"Genes: Little Things that Mean a Lot," U.S. News and World
|
|
Report, Dec. 15, 1986; "Major Personality Study Finds that Traits
|
|
Are Mostly Inherited," The New York Times, Dec. 1, 1986.</p>
|
|
<p>2. "Twins Reunited," Science 80, Nov. 1980; "Identical Twins
|
|
Reared Apart," Science, vol. 207, 1980; "Twins, Nazi and Jew,"
|
|
Newsweek, Dec. 3, 1979; "Twins Reared Apart, a Living Lab," New
|
|
York Times Sunday Magazine, Dec. 9, 1979; "Two Ohio Strangers
|
|
Find They're Twins at 39 -- and a boon to Psychologists," People,
|
|
May 7, 1979; "The Twins," States-Item, Feb. 25-29, 1980; "Me,
|
|
Myself, and Us: Twins," Science Digest, Nov./Dec. 1980.</p>
|
|
<p>3. op. cit. Science, vol, 207, 1980.</p>
|
|
<p>4. Bouchard's coworker David Lykken quoted describing Leon
|
|
Kamin as one of the "psychologists who object to genetic research
|
|
on ideological grounds" and "do not understand its true
|
|
implications." U.S. News, Dec. 15, 1986.</p>
|
|
<p>5. op. cit. U.S. News, April 13, 1987.</p>
|
|
<p>6. For a sample of the history and criticism of biological
|
|
determinist doctrines, see: Biology as a Social Weapon, the Ann
|
|
Arbor Science for the People Editorial Collective; The Mismeasure
|
|
of Man by Stephen Jay Gould; Not In Our Genes, by R. C. Lewontin,
|
|
Steven C. Rose, and Leon Kamin; Biology As Destiny, Science for
|
|
the People Sociobiology Study Group.</p>
|
|
<p>7. op. cit Science 80, November 1980.</p>
|
|
<p>8. op. cit Discover, Sept. 1987.</p>
|
|
<p>9. L.S. Hearnshaw, Cyril Burt, Psychologist, 1979. Hearnshaw,
|
|
eulogist at Burt's funeral and "official" biographer of Burt, was
|
|
only reluctantly led to his conclusions that Burt invented both
|
|
data and research assistants. Leon Kamin (The Science and
|
|
Politics of I.Q., 1974) had already raised doubts about Burt's
|
|
data.
|
|
Interestingly, the only person who by 1980 still seemed to
|
|
have doubts that Burt's data were fraudulent was Science
|
|
journalist Constance Holden, author of three articles in praise
|
|
of Bouchard (Science 80, Nov 1980, and Science, vol. 207, 1980,
|
|
to cite two).</p>
|
|
<p>10. A look at Bouchard's previous publications in psychology
|
|
does not increase one's trust in the so-far-unpublished twin
|
|
data. Bouchard and McGue's "Familial Studies of Intelligence: A
|
|
Review," (Science, vol 212, 1981) reviews previous studies of
|
|
correlations of I.Q. among relatives, omitting Burt's discredited
|
|
studies. This article is obviously meant to show that despite the
|
|
loss of Burt's supposed data, there is a large body of work on
|
|
which hereditarians can base their assertions.
|
|
The survey has many faults. One is that Bouchard and McGue
|
|
do not mention or bother to deal with the faults already found
|
|
in the early studies that they resurrect (dating back to the
|
|
1920s, and largely from the 1930s and 40s). Many of these studies
|
|
were biased in their methodology and reported as "separated from
|
|
birth" twins who actually lived next door to one another,
|
|
attended the same school, played together, and had frequent
|
|
social interaction.
|
|
These studies are also vitiated by neglecting to correct for
|
|
the age bias in I.Q. tests. Despite the fact that I.Q. is
|
|
supposedly corrected for age, the I.Q. tests used in these
|
|
studies show I.Q. rising with age. Thus, part of the weaker
|
|
correlation between nontwin siblings than between twins arises
|
|
from the fact that twins are exactly the same age, while other
|
|
siblings may differ in age.
|
|
Finally, Bouchard and McGue simply pooled the samples from
|
|
very different tests and from tests which gave extraordinarily
|
|
divergent results. For instance, one test of siblings gave an
|
|
I.Q. correlation of 10 percent, while another test gave a
|
|
correlation of 90 percent. Bouchard and McGue simply averaged the
|
|
two to give a correlation of 50 percent. Given the radically
|
|
opposite results of the two surveys, it is likely that they were
|
|
performed with radically different biases and methodologies. They
|
|
could not have been randomly sampling two subpopulations of the
|
|
same homogeneous population of data -- a basic requirement for
|
|
drawing valid statistical inference.</p>
|
|
<p>11. Cassil, Kay. Twins: Nature's Amazing Mystery. 1982.</p>
|
|
<p>12. Ibid. p. 180. Also, op. cit Discover, Sept. 1987.</p>
|
|
<p>13. Op. cit. Cassil, p. 134-5, 158-164, 189.</p>
|
|
<p>14. Bouchard, Review of Howard Gardner's "The Intelligence
|
|
Controversy."American Journal of Psychology, Vol. 95, 1987.</p>
|
|
<p>15. Kamin, Leon. The Science and Politics of I.Q. 1974.</p>
|
|
<p>16. Eckert, Bouchard, Bohlen, and Heston, "Homosexuality in
|
|
Monozygotic Twins Reared Apart," British Journal of Psychiatry,
|
|
vol. 148, 1986.</p>
|
|
<p>17. "Gene Cloning by Press Conference," New England Journal of
|
|
Medicine, March 27, 1980: New York Times article, Nov. 18, 1974. </p>
|
|
<p>18. U.S. News, Dec. 15, 1986, and Time, Jan. 12, 1987. David
|
|
Lykken is the source of the claim about Chuck Yeager.</p>
|
|
<p>Sidebar: "Financing Racist Research"</p>
|
|
<p> The first New York Times report about the Minnesota Twin
|
|
study quoted Bouchard as saying, "I'm going to beg, borrow, and
|
|
steal" to pursue the twin study. In fact, Bouchard has solicited
|
|
money from the Pioneer Fund, a foundation with racist and radical
|
|
right-wing connections. the University of Minnesota has received
|
|
grants from the fund for Bouchard's twin study. Butthe Pioneer
|
|
Fund is best known for its support of research purpoting the
|
|
inferiority of blacks.
|
|
Once headed by directors such as the Chairman of the House
|
|
Committee on UnAmerican Activities, Representative Francis E.
|
|
Walter, and Mississippi Senator James O. Eastland, the fund has
|
|
long subsidized research and publication of the works of
|
|
scientific racists, including William Shockley and Arthur Jensen,
|
|
Jensen served on the scientific advisory board of the German Neo-Nazi journal Newe Anthropologie. (SeeBarry Mehler's article "The
|
|
New Eugenics" in the May/June 1983 issue of _Science for the
|
|
People_.)
|
|
The Pioneer Fund financed the work of Roger Pearson, quthor
|
|
of _Eugenics and Race_. Pearson also helped organize the 1978
|
|
World Anti-Communist League meeting in Washington, D.C. The
|
|
League has united old European Nazis with leaders of Third World
|
|
death squads.
|
|
Bouchard, in his grant application to the Pioneer Fund,
|
|
noted that the National Science Foundation has repeatedly refused
|
|
funding for his study and has made numerous criticisms of his
|
|
method. Bouchard has claimed that the NSF and the National
|
|
Institutes of Health are packed with left liberals who deny him
|
|
funds on ideological grounds.</p>
|
|
<p> [Additional Commentary by Brian Siano: In fairness to the
|
|
Pioneer Fund, they also provided some funding for _The Atomic
|
|
Cafe_, a savagely funny documentary about the ridiculous claims
|
|
on the harmlessness of nuclear war circulated in the 1950s. It's
|
|
hard to call this film 'right wing.'
|
|
[As for the comments on the World Anti-Communist League,
|
|
they're certainly true; the WACL was even condemned by the John
|
|
Birch society as being too fanatical. A good resource on this
|
|
organization (which has numbered Roberto D'Aubuisson, Rev. Sun
|
|
Myung Moon, Ferdinand Marcos and John Singlaub as its members) is
|
|
_Inside The League_, by Scott Anderson and Jon Lee Anderson.
|
|
[Roger Pearson deserves a study by himself. Many of his
|
|
books (some still sold my the American Nazi Party) argue classic
|
|
racist themes, mainly against the dilution of the white race's
|
|
genetic stock through intermarriage with blacks and Jews. _Inside
|
|
the League_ provides a quick thumbnail study of Pearson's views
|
|
and activities.]
|
|
|
|
</p>
|
|
</div>
|
|
</xml>
|