A Troublesome Inheritance
Page 28
   IQ tests and, 8, 191, 192
   physical characteristics in, 87–91
   society of, 123–24
   transition to modern economy by, 178, 188
   evolution:
   Darwin’s theory of, 22, 26
   pedomorphic, 167
   speciation and, 71–75, 76
   evolution, human, 1–2
   belief in recent suspension of, 5
   genes changed in, 2–3
   history and, 245–49
   of independent populations, 1–2
   natural selection in, see natural selection
   new view of, 2–4
   races and, 71–75
   as recent, copious and regional, 2–4, 6, 7, 10, 242, 243, 251
   social science and, 5, 241
   societies created through, 65–66
   evolutionary perspectives on race, 239–51
   evolutionary stresses, 80–85
   executions, 168–69
   eyes, whites of, 39–40
   face recognition, 52
   Fanconi’s anemia, 208
   Feldman, Marcus, 97–99
   Fengler, Wolfgang, 176
   Ferguson, Niall, 215, 224–25, 246
   feudalism, 145, 146
   Finns, 57, 94
   First Crusade, 204
   fossils, 107, 167
   foxes, 160–61
   founder effect, 206–7
   FOXP2 gene, 110
   Framington Heart Study, 3
   France, 137, 140
   ethnic prejudices and, 17
   Fukuyama, Francis, 136, 137, 139, 142, 144–49, 172–73, 193, 243
   Funnel Beaker Culture, 61, 113
   Galileo, 216, 217
   Galton, Francis, 25–27, 33, 34
   Gama, Vasco da, 233
   Gaucher’s disease, 206, 209
   gene(s), 54, 95, 250–51
   ABCC11, 90–91, 121
   aggression and, 54–57
   alleles of, see alleles
   BRCA1 and BRCA2, 208
   chips, 79
   culture and, 48, 59–61
   DARC, 110–11
   EDAR-V370A, 89–90, 92, 105, 118, 121
   evolutionary changes in, 2–3
   FOXP2, 110
   HTR2B, 57
   KITLG, 111
   lactase, 60–61, 113
   MAO-A, 54–57, 110, 170–71, 243, 244
   MC1R, 87–88
   physical characteristics and, 87–92
   promoters of, 55–57
   race and, 95
   SLC24A5, 88, 111
   social behavior and, 9, 41, 46–47, 50–51, 53, 57–59, 64, 85
   gene-culture evolution, 59–60
   genetic determinism, 221–22
   genetic diversity, species origin and, 102
   genetic drift, 72–75, 76, 78, 102–3, 114, 196
   genetic gradients (clines), 98–99
   genetics:
   language families and, 101
   Mendel’s laws of, 28, 29, 34
   of race, 95–122
   in social institutions, 124–27
   genetic structure of race, 114–17
   genome, human, 1, 2, 14, 68, 251
   association studies and, 114–15
   clusters of variation in, 96–102
   fingerprints of selection in, 102–10
   tandem repeats in, 96, 97, 99, 100
   genomics, racial differences and, 7–9
   genotypes, 75, 109
   geographic determinism, 221–25
   geography, 223
   Germans:
   ethnic prejudices and, 17
   immigrants, 187–88
   Germany, 135, 137, 236–37
   IQ tests in, 192
   Nazi, see Nazi Germany
   Ghana, 183
   Gillham, Nicholas, 26–27
   glaciers, 81
   Glazer, Nathan, 184
   Glorious Revolution, 194–95, 196, 224
   Gobineau, Joseph-Arthur Comte de, 19–20
   Gould, Stephen Jay, 21–22
   government(s), 148, 173
   absolutist, 195, 237
   in Africa, 175–76
   kleptocracies, 175
   in Middle East, 174
   gracilization, 82, 167–68, 170
   Grant, Madison, 31–33
   Greece, ancient, 17, 228, 229
   Gregory VII, Pope, 145–46
   guilt, 50
   Guns, Germs, and Steel (Diamond), 117–18, 221–23
   hair, 88–89, 90, 92, 105, 108, 118, 236, 250
   Haiti, 13, 189, 241
   Hanson, Victor Davis, 215
   HapMap, 103
   Hapsburgs, 234, 247
   Harappan civilization, 134
   Hardy, Jason, 202–5, 207–9, 214
   Hargreaves, James, 158–59
   Harpending, Henry, 202–5, 207–9, 214
   Harriman, E. H., 28
   Harriman, Mary, 28
   Harrison, Lawrence, 185
   Hawaii, 134, 186
   Head Start, 190
   height, 112–13
   Henry IV, King, 146
   Heron, David, 34
   high altitudes, 3, 8, 107, 214
   Himmelfarb, Gertrude, 198
   history:
   evolution and, 245–49
   social behavior and, 9–13, 135–46
   Hitler, Adolf, 16, 19–20, 33, 34–37, 135, 234, 247
   Mein Kampf, 33
   Hofstadter, Richard, 16
   Holmes, Oliver Wendell, 29–30
   Holocaust, 31, 36–37, 69, 198
   homicide, 156, 170, 172
   Homo erectus, 77
   Homo ergaster, 46
   HTR2B, 57
   Huff, Toby, 166, 216, 217, 219, 228, 230–31, 232
   human capital, 191
   human nature, 150–97, 244
   domestication and, 160–61, 167–73
   economics and, 154–58, 160, 161
   and changes in China, 165–66
   see also social behaviors
   Hung-wu, 230
   hunter-gatherer societies, 62, 76–78, 84, 100–101, 136, 178, 197, 223, 242–43
   division of labor in, 129
   egalitarianism in, 63, 128, 129
   and formation of civilizations, 133
   initiation rites in, 130
   institutions of, 128
   kinship in, 44, 130
   punishment in, 49
   religion in, 130–31
   time preferences in, 158
   transition to settled life from, 10–11, 50, 58, 62–63, 82, 85, 110, 127–32, 149, 167, 226
   violence in, 156
   hunting, 62
   Huntington, Samuel, 183
   ice ages, 77, 91, 93
   Pleistocene, 76, 81, 83
   Iceland, 13, 94
   immigrants, immigration, 28, 38, 188
   Chinese, 186–87, 188, 201, 213, 237
   eugenicists and, 31
   German, 187–88
   Japanese, 185–86, 188
   Immigration Act, 31, 33
   Incas, 134, 226
   incest, 237, 250–51
   India, 134, 147, 227, 233, 246
   Brahmanism in, 141
   state achieved in, 137, 141–42
   telescope introduced to, 215–17
   Indian subcontinent, 4, 86, 96
   transition to modern economy in, 178
   Indonesia, 18, 187
   Indo-Europeans (Aryans), 19–20
   Industrial Revolution, 12, 149, 151–52, 154, 158–59, 161–63, 172, 178–79, 185, 188, 193, 203, 222–24, 244
>
   influenza, 116
   Inquisition, 216
   institutional drift, 196
   institutions, see social institutions
   intelligence, 7–8, 111–12, 204, 214, 222–23
   alleles and, 190
   brain size and, 21
   in Jewish populations, 199, 201–5, 207–14
   tests of, see IQ tests
   intentionality, shared, 48, 49
   interbreeding, 17, 19, 23, 71, 75, 78, 84, 116
   interest rates, 157, 158
   IQ and Global Inequality (Lynn and Vanhanen), 191
   IQ and the Wealth of Nations (Lynn and Vanhanen), 191
   IQ tests, 8, 191, 214, 223
   Ashkenazi Jews and, 202, 214
   Chinese and, 166
   debate between hereditarians and environmentalists on, 189–91
   eugenicists and, 30
   wealth and, 189–93
   Iraq, 14, 148, 212, 213, 241
   Isaac, Benjamin, 17–18
   Islam, 229, 230
   Islamic world, 12, 219, 228, 234, 244, 246
   military slavery in, 142–44
   science in, 228–32
   state achieved in, 137
   Jahangir, 216
   James II, King, 146, 194
   Janissaries, 143, 144
   Japan, 13, 88, 90, 172, 193, 196, 220, 236–37, 246, 248
   transition to modern economy in, 178–79
   Japanese, 4, 91, 166
   immigrants, 185–86, 188
   Jennings, Herbert S., 29
   Jensen, Arthur, 190
   Jesuits, 217, 218
   Jews, 94, 187, 197, 198–214, 244, 249
   achievements of, 198–99, 202, 214
   Ashkenazi, 199–209, 214
   Christian conversion among, 211
   discrimination against, 36–37, 198, 213
   expulsions and massacres of, 201, 204–5, 210
   Gobineau’s views on, 19–20
   Hitler and, 19–20
   Holocaust and, 31, 36–37, 69, 198
   intelligence of, 199, 201–5, 207–14
   literacy and, 202, 210–12
   marriage and, 199–200, 204, 205
   Mendelian diseases and, 202, 205–8, 209
   moneylending and, 202–5, 210, 212, 213
   occupations of, 212, 213
   Oriental (Mizrahi), 200–201, 204, 209
   population of, 211, 213
   reproductive success of, 203
   Sephardi, 200–201, 204, 206, 209
   standards of living of, 203
   Talmud and, 205, 211, 212
   Torah and, 210–11
   trade and, 212, 213, 214
   Jones, Eric, 225
   Jordan, Winthrop, 72
   Joshua ben Gamla, 210
   Journal of Biosocial Science, 202
   Judaism, 210–11
   Kamehameha, King, 134
   Kant, Immanuel, 37
   Kapital, Das (Marx), 24
   Kaplan, Hillard, 63
   Kepler, Johannes, 216, 217
   Kevles, Daniel, 29, 30
   Khoisan, 101
   Kim family, 189
   kinship, 136, 143, 178
   chimpanzees and, 43–44
   in hunter-gatherer societies, 44, 130
   KITLG gene, 111
   kleptocracy, 175
   Konner, Melvin, 205
   Korea, Koreans, 4, 90, 166, 179–80, 193, 246
   Korean War, 220
   Kuran, Timur, 230
   lactase gene, 60–61, 113
   lactose tolerance, 60–61
   Landes, David, 235–36
   language(s), 40, 83–84, 92, 98
   cultural component of, 125
   genetics and, 101
   grammar in, 125
   Indo-European, 84
   Khoisan, 101
   in New Guinea, 83, 84
   in United States, 83
   Laos, 187
   Last Glacial Maximum, 81
   law, 58, 124–25, 144–45, 146, 194, 224, 232, 237, 247
   canon, 146
   Justinian code, 146
   Lazarus, Emma, 32
   Lebanon, 182
   Lewontin, Richard, 118–20
   Lewontin’s fallacy, 120
   Li, Jun Z., 99
   lice, 22–23, 108–9
   Lippershey, Hans, 215–16
   L’Isle-aux-Coudres, 3
   literacy, 156–57, 160, 175, 180, 229, 236, 244
   Jews and, 202, 210–12
   Little, Clarence, 29
   Livingstone, Frank, 98
   Lynn, Richard, 191–93
   Lysenko, Trofim, 160
   madrasas, 229
   malaria, 110–11, 116, 117–18, 206
   Malaya, 18
   Malaysia, 186
   Malthus, Thomas, 11, 159, 161, 163–65, 172, 178, 181, 197, 245
   Darwin and, 155
   An Essay on the Principle of Population, 152, 153–54, 155, 162
   Malthusian trap, 149, 152, 153–54, 162, 179, 203, 222
   Mamluks, 143–44
   Man’s Most Dangerous Myth: The Fallacy of Race (Montagu), 69, 119
   MAO-A gene, 54–57, 110, 170–71, 243, 244
   Mao Tse-tung, 135, 145, 189
   marriage, 145, 154, 162–63
   incest and, 237
   intermarriage, 17, 19, 23, 71, 75, 78, 84, 92, 116, 199
   Jews and, 199–200, 204, 205
   local, 80
   Marshall Plan, 183
   marshmallow test, 157–58
   Marx, Karl, 24
   Marxism, 27, 59, 201
   mate guarding, 44–45
   MC1R gene, 87–88
   McNeill, William, 215
   medicine, 221, 224
   Mein Kampf (Hitler), 33
   Mendel, Gregor, 28, 29, 34
   Mendelian diseases, 202, 205–8, 209
   menopause, age at first, 3
   Mental Deficiency Act, 33
   Meredith, Martin, 175–76
   Mesoamerica, 134
   Meso-Industrial Age, 196–97
   Mesolithic Age, 197
   Mesopotamia, 132, 226
   middle-class culture, 160, 161, 171, 172
   Middle East, 86, 96, 137, 177, 197, 230
   transition to modern economy in, 178
   tribalism in, 173, 174–75, 177
   migrations, 72, 75, 76, 185–86
   military, 58, 63, 64, 130, 148, 247
   military power, 220, 234
   military slavery, 142–44
   milk consumption, 60–61
   mind as blank slate, 59, 201, 242
   Mirazón Lahr, Marta, 167
   Mischel, Walter, 157–58
   Mismeasure of Man, The (Gould), 21
   mitochondria, 74, 79
   Mizrahim (Oriental Jews), 200–201, 204, 209
   Moche state, 134
   moneylending, 202–5, 210, 212, 213
   Mongoloid skulls, 91
   Mongols, 136, 141, 246, 247
   monkeys and apes, 39
   chimpanzees, see chimpanzees
   monogamy, 45
   Montagu, Ashley, 69, 70, 119
   moral dilemmas, 52
   morality, 50, 59, 124
   Morton, Samuel, 20–22
   mosaic zones, 83, 84
   mucolipidosis type IV, 206
   Muhammad, 229
   Muller, Jerry Z., 213
   Muslim world, see Islamic world
   mutations, 72, 73, 75, 78
   Myers, Richard M., 99
   Napoleon I, Emperor, 234, 247
   Narmer, 134
>
   national character, 150–51
   National Human Genome Research Institute, 68
   National Institutes of Health, 103
   Native Americans, 18, 20, 88, 91, 93, 94
   Natufian culture, 82
   natural selection, 1, 2–4, 11, 72, 73, 75, 76, 78, 114, 155, 222, 243–44, 245
   diversity reduction and, 102
   fingerprints of, in human genome, 102–10
   human social behavior and, 40, 41, 66
   MAO-A gene and, 55, 56
   neutral variations in, 102
   purifying, 73, 87–88
   trust and, 53
   whites of the eyes and, 40
   nature vs. nurture, 26
   Nazi Germany, 16, 25, 34–35
   eugenics program in, 35–37
   Holocaust and, 31, 36–37, 69, 198
   Neanderthals, 77
   Near East, 4, 85, 182, 227
   Neolithic Age, 197
   nervous system, 109
   neurotransmitters, 54–55
   New Guinea, 83, 84, 93, 94, 222
   Newton, Isaac, 216
   Niemann-Pick disease, 206
   Nigeria, 13, 176
   Noah’s ark, 18
   Nordics, 31, 32, 35, 37
   norepinephrine, 54–55
   North, Douglass, 124, 136, 243
   North Korea, 13, 179–80, 189
   Nuremberg Law, 36
   Ögedei Khan, 234
   Olmec state, 134
   Olympic Games, 8
   On Civility in Children (Erasmus), 168
   On the Natural Variety of Mankind (Blumenbach), 18–19
   On the Origin of Species (Darwin), 16, 22
   Oriental Jews (Mizrahim), 200–201, 204, 209
   Ottomans, 144, 147, 174, 175, 182, 220, 229, 230, 233, 234, 247
   telescope introduced to, 215–16, 217
   oxytocin, 51–53, 243
   ovarian cancer, 208
   pair bonding, 44–45, 46
   Paleolithic Age, 197, 222
   Passing of the Great Race, The (Grant), 31, 33
   pastoralists, 63
   patience and delayed gratification, 157–58, 160, 184–85
   Paul of Tarsus, 211
   Pearl, Raymond, 29
   pedomorphic evolution, 167
   peopling of the world, 76–80, 84
   Persia, 212, 213
   Peru, 186
   Pharisees, 210
   phenotypes, 75, 109
   physical anthropologists, 69–70, 82
   physical characteristics, genes and, 87–92
   Pinker, Steven, 169–72
   plagues, 153
   Pleistocene Ice Age, 76, 81, 83
   Polynesia, 134
   Pomeranz, Kenneth, 154, 179
   population, 11, 245, 246
   budding, 76
   in evolution of societies, 132–34
   increases in, 64, 83, 85
   major splits in, 85–86, 93
   Malthusian trap and, 149, 152, 153–54, 162, 179, 203, 222
   movements of, 80–81
   peopling of the world, 76–80
   and transition to settled life from hunter-gatherer societies, 128–29