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Are IQ tests racially and culturally biased? That was the
controversial question in two landmark lawsuits: the California
case of Larry P. v. Riles (1979) and the Chicago case of PASE v.
Hannon (1980). Litigating Intelligence is a detailed analysis and
comparison of these complex cases--the background, evidence,
testimony, arguments, and surprising outcomes. It is also an
important case study of the role of social science testimony in the
courtroom and the role of the courts in setting social policy.
The great French zoologist Lamarck (1744-1829) was best known for
his theory of evolution, called 'soft inheritance', whereby
organisms pass down acquired characteristics to their offspring.
Originally a soldier, Lamarck later studied medicine and biology.
His distinguished career included admission to the French Academy
of Sciences (1779), and appointments as Royal Botanist (1781) and
as professor of zoology at the Musee Nationale d'Histoire Naturelle
in 1793. Acknowledged as the premier authority on invertebrate
zoology, he is credited with coining the term 'invertebrates'. In
this 1809 work, translated into English in 1914, he outlines his
theory that under the pressure of different external circumstances,
species can develop variations, and that new species and genera can
eventually evolve as a result. Darwin paid tribute to Lamarck as
the man who 'first did the eminent service of arousing attention to
the probability of all change ... being the result of law'.
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