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Robert L. Hayman Jr. - The Smart Culture: Society, Intelligence, and Law (Critical America Series)

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What exactly is intelligence? Is it social achievement? Professional success? Is it common sense? Or the number on an IQ test? Interweaving engaging narratives with dramatic case studies, Robert L. Hayman, Jr., has written a history of intelligence that will forever change the way we think about who is smart and who is not. To give weight to his assertion that intelligence is not simply an inherent characteristic but rather one which reflects the interests and predispositions of those doing the measuring, Hayman traces numerous campaigns to classify human intelligence. His tour takes us through the early craniometric movement, eugenics, the development of the IQ, Spearmans general intelligence, and more recent works claiming a genetic basis for intelligence differences. What Hayman uncovers is the maddening irony of intelligence: that scientific efforts to reduce intelligence to a single, ordinal quantity have persisted--and at times captured our cultural imagination--not because of their scientific legitimacy, but because of their longstanding political appeal. The belief in a natural intellectual order was pervasive in scientific and political thought both at the founding of the Republic and throughout its nineteenth-century Reconstruction. And while we are today formally committed to the notion of equality under the law, our culture retains its central belief in the natural inequality of its members. Consequently, Hayman argues, the promise of a genuine equality can be realized only when the mythology of intelligence is debunked--only, that is, when we recognize the decisive role of culture in defining intelligence and creating intelligence differences. Only culture can give meaning to the statement that one person-- or one group--is smarter than another. And only culture can provide our motivation for saying it. With a keen wit and a sharp eye, Hayman highlights the inescapable contradictions that arise in a society committed both to liberty and to equality and traces how the resulting tensions manifest themselves in the ways we conceive of identity, community, and merit.

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title The Smart Culture Society Intelligence and Law Critical America - photo 1

title:The Smart Culture : Society, Intelligence, and Law Critical America
author:Hayman, Robert L.
publisher:New York University Press
isbn10 | asin:0814735339
print isbn13:9780814735336
ebook isbn13:9780585002590
language:English
subjectMental health laws--United States, Mentally handicapped--Civil rights--United States, Equality before the law--United States, Culture and law, Intelligence levels.
publication date:1998
lcc:KF480.H37 1998eb
ddc:323/.0973
subject:Mental health laws--United States, Mentally handicapped--Civil rights--United States, Equality before the law--United States, Culture and law, Intelligence levels.
The Smart Culture
Critical America
General Editors: RICHARD DELGADO and JEAN STEFANCIC
White by Law: The Legal Construction of Race
IAN F. HANEY LPEZ
Cultivating Intelligence:
Power, Law, and the Politics of Teaching
LOUISE HARMON and DEBORAH W. POST
Privilege Revealed:
How Invisible Preference Undermines America
STEPHANIE M. WILDMAN with MARGALYNNE ARMSTRONG,
ADRIENNE D. DAVIS, and TRINA GRILLO
Does the Law Morally Bind the Poor? or What Good's the Constitution
When You Can't Afford a LoafofBread?
R. GEORGE WRIGHT
Hybrid:
Bisexuals, Multiracials, and Other Misfits under American Law
RUTH COLKER
Critical Race Feminism: A Reader
Edited by ADRIEN KATHERINE WING
Immigrants Out! The New Nativism and
the Anti-Immigrant Impulse in the United States
Edited by JUAN F. PEREA
Taxing America
Edited by KAREN B. BROWN and MARY LOUISE FELLOWS
Notes of a Racial Caste Baby:
Color Blindness and the End of Affirmative Action
BRYAN K. FAIR
Please Don't Wish Me a Merry Christmas:
A Critical History of the Separation of Church and State

STEPHEN M. FELDMAN
To Be an American: Cultural Pluralism and the Rhetoric of Assimilation
BILL ONG HING
Negrophobia and Reasonable Racism:
The Hidden Costs of Being Black in America
JODY DAVID ARMOUR
Black and Brown in America: The Casefor Cooperation
BILL PIATT
Black Rage Confronts the Law
PAUL HARRIS
Selling Words: Free Speech in a Commercial Culture
R. GEORGE WRIGHT
The Color of Crime: Racial Hoaxes, White Fear, Black Protectionism,
Police Harassment, and Other Macroaggressions
KATHERYN K. RUSSELL
Was Blind, But Now I See: White Race Consciousness and the Law
BARBARA J. FLAGG
The Smart Culture
Society, Intelligence, and Law
Robert L. Hayman, Jr.
Picture 2
NEW YORK UNIVERSITY PRESS
New York and London
NEW YORK UNIVERSITY PRESS
New York and London
Copyright 1998 by New York University
All rights reserved
Portions of chapter 7 originally appeared as Robert L. Hayman, Jr., and Nancy Levit, The Tales of White Folk: Doctrine, Narrative and the Reconstruction of Racial Reality, 84 CALIFORNIA LAW REVIEW 377 (1996).
Reprinted by permission of California Law Review, Inc.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Hayman, Robert L.
The smart culture: law, society, and intelligence / Robert L. Hayman, Jr.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 0-8147-3533-9 (alk. paper)
1. Mental health lawsUnited States.Picture 32. Mentally handicappedCivil rightsUnited States. 3. Culture and law. I. Title.
KF480.H37 1997
323'.0973dc21
97-29366
CIP
New York University Press books are printed on acid-free paper, and their binding materials are chosen for strength and durability.
Manufactured in the Unites States of America
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
For my family,
who taught me to know better
Picture 4
Do nothing from selfish ambition or conceit, but in humility regard others as better than yourselves. Let each of you look not to your own interests, but to the interests of others.
Picture 5
PHILIPPIANS 2.3-4
Picture 6
But, after all, nothing is true that forces one to exclude. Isolated beauty ends up simpering; solitary justice ends up oppressing. Whoever aims to serve one exclusive of the other serves no one, not even himself, and eventually serves injustice twice. A day comes when, thanks to rigidity, nothing causes wonder any more, everything is known, and life is spent in beginning over again. These are the days of exile, of desiccated life, of dead souls.
Picture 7
Albert Camus, RETURN TO TIPASA
Page xi
Contents
Acknowledgments
xiii
1
Introduction: Smart People
1
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