The Social Significance of Race: Racism 285
But IQ tests themselves are not a fully valid measure
of inborn intelligence. An IQ test measures performance
(something that the individual does) rather than genetic
disposition (something that the individual was born with).
Performance reflects past experience and present motiva-
tional state, as well as innate ability.
Though IQ tests are not a reliable measure of inborn
intelligence, using them to prove the existence of signifi-
cant differences in intelligence among human populations
has been going on for at least a century. In the United
States systematic comparisons of intelligence between
“whites” and “blacks” began in the early 20th century and
were frequently combined with data gathered by physical
anthropologists about skull shape and size.
During World War I, for example, a series of IQ tests,
known as Alpha and Beta, were regularly given to draft-
ees. The results showed that the average score attained by
Euramericans was higher than that obtained by African
Americans. Even though African Americans from the
urban northern states scored higher than Euramericans
from the rural South, and some African Americans scored
Unfortunately, there is no general agreement as to what
abilities or talents actually make up what we call intel-
ligence, even though some psychologists insist that it is
a single quantifiable thing measured by IQ tests. Many
more psychologists consider intelligence to be the prod-
uct of the interaction of different sorts of cognitive abili-
ties: verbal, mathematical-logical, spatial, linguistic,
musical, bodily kinesthetic, social, and personal.^9 Each
may be thought of as a particular kind of intelligence, un-
related to the others. This being so, these types of intel-
ligence must be independently inherited (to the degree
they are inherited), just as height, blood type, skin color,
and so forth are independently inherited. Thus the vari-
ous abilities that constitute intelligence are independently
distributed like other phenotypic traits such as skin color
and blood type.
PHYSIOGNOMY
HEADS & FACES: HOW TO READ THEM
PHYSIOGNOMY
Prof. George Bush Otho The Great African
General Napier
Emperor Paul of Russia
A. M. Rice
George Eliot
General Wisewell
King Fred’k the Strong
? VAUGHT & POWELL’S VISUAL GUIDE TO?
PRACTICAL CHARACTER READINGPRACTICAL CHARACTER READING
In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, “physiognomists” practiced a pseudo-science in which they
associated particular facial or skull features with criminal behavior or insanity. Though these ideas may seem
humorous and far-fetched to us today, they were only a step away from the racism embedded in the science
of the time. Academic texts regularly use the terms “degraded” and “animalized” when describing the skulls
and skeletons of non-whites. To challenge contemporary people to think about the boundary between sci-
ence and pseudo-science, graphic artist W. David Powell has taken a series of these historical images as the
subject of his artwork. The images and words he presents are taken directly from two books from that time:
Heads and Faces and How to Study Them: A Manual of Phrenology and Physiognomy for the People (1885)
by Nelson Sizer and H. S. Drayton; and Vaught’s Practical Character Reader (1902) by Louis Allen Vaught.
What signs of racism and stereotyping do you see in these images?
© W. David Powell
(^9) Jacoby, R., & Glauberman, N. (Eds.). (1995). The Bell Curve debate (pp. 7,
55–56, 59). New York: Random House.