• self@awful.systemsM
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    9 months ago

    isn’t psychometrics the part of Talos I where you get the psychoscope?

    the gish gallop that forms the majority of this article looks like an attempt to signal jam the criticisms section (which itself isn’t anywhere near as damning as it should be):

    Research on the G-factor, as well as other psychometric values, has been widely criticized for not properly taking into account the eugenicist background of its research practices.[157] The reductionism of the G-factor has been attributted to having evolved from “pseudoscientific theories” about race and intelligence.[158] Spearman’s g and the concept of inherited, immutable intelligence were a boon for eugenicists and pseudoscientists alike.[159]

    […]

    Some especially harsh critics have called the g factor, and psychometrics, as a form of pseudoscience.[161]

    fascists will do anything to feel superior about a number they made up, and renaming IQ now that it’s got a lot of fash stank on it and pretending it’s different and sophisticated now, you wouldn’t understand is one of the older tricks in the fascist playbook

    • gerikson@awful.systemsOP
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      9 months ago

      Thanks for the link, I figured as much.

      I decided there was no point in engaging the person in polemic on this matter (it’s the kind of forum where that kind of behavior will just get the comment deleted) so decided to just add the person to my (literal) shitlist, only to discover they’re already on it! Correlation or causation something something.

  • Omega_Haxors@lemmy.ml
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    9 months ago

    Asking because someone in another forum basically said that while IQ might be discredited, “g” is valid.

    That’s got huge “it hasn’t been disproven, yet” energy. That’s basically the “it’s not illegal” argument but for ideology.

    • swlabr@awful.systems
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      9 months ago

      IQ might be discredited, “g” is valid.

      It also has “MBTI is pseudoscience, you should take this online Big 5 quiz instead” energy

  • Amoeba_Girl@awful.systems
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    9 months ago

    The vibe I always got is that it’s somewhat more sinister than IQ, in that it’s purported to be an Actually Real Property of humans that’s measured by IQ tests, when IQ tests in themselves don’t necessarily make claims beyond raw statistical variance.

    It’s like talk around IQ got too careful so they made this as a sort of anti-euphemism. Disphemism??

    edit: wow it’s a real word

      • self@awful.systemsM
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        9 months ago

        every fucking time. what’s the Wikipedia term for “this source is barely qualified to touch computers, much less weigh in on this topic?”

      • gerikson@awful.systemsOP
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        9 months ago

        Meta Wiki question, are “bare” citations (no hyperlinks) acceptable in the reference section? It’s not too hard to find this paper just based on author’s last name and year in this case, but in others it might be harder.

        • David Gerard@awful.systemsM
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          9 months ago

          yeah, absolutely. Some editors find it a bit lazy and annoying, but it’s still a vast improvement over no reference. In fact there are bots that will attempt to turn URLs into nicely formatted references.

      • gerikson@awful.systemsOP
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        9 months ago

        JFC the abstract

        Gould has no difficulty in demonstrating the influence of racism; where he goes astray is in his dismissal of such prior work as simply unscientific because the racist conclusions preceded the collection of data. Advancing hypotheses prior to experimentation is how all of science proceeds, and is no mark of inferior work. And no science is immune to influences - racist or otherwise -from the culture in which it is embedded, as Gould elsewhere readily acknowledges.

        I mean, in that case the interest in IQ should have gone the way of phrenology except phrenology is still around.