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Raymond B. Cattell obtained his Ph.D. and D.Sc. at London University,
where he worked with Spearman developing the theory of intelligence
measurement. He has since taught at Harvard and has been for 30 years
Distinguished Research Professor at the University of Illinois. His research
publications cover 80 books and over 400 articles. His latest book is The
Inheritance of Personality and Ability, which has been hailed for its
methodological breakthroughs.
The following interview was conducted on May 31, 1984.
Do you know of any studies comparing personality traits of
environmentalists and hereditarians?
CATTELL: I don't know of any reliable study on that question. But I can
tell you my hunch, that Factor I, which we call "premzia," is likely to be
related, since it contrasts wishful thinking with down-to-earth realism. One
would expect hereditarians to be more realistic, and therefore lower on Factor
I. And they are also probably higher on Factor C, ego strength.
What is the best test of creativity?
CATTELL: A test of creativity often used is Guilford's test of flexibility.
However, the results can be completely misleading, in my opinion, because the
test measures only a quite superficial, gamesroom creativity. Creativity is
closely correlated with personality factors of dominance, introversion, and
ego strength. So I wouldn't try to measure creativity by using a test of
creativity per se, but rather by measuring personality factors that correlate
highly with it. It has been shown that intelligence is also a precondition for
creativity in any socially useful sense. So I would test for creativity with
the 16 PF [Personality Factors] Test and a culture-fair intelligence test.
The United States has been characterized as a "nation of strangers." Do you
think our ethnic and racial diversity is in part responsible for our
alienation and rootlessness?
CATTELL: Societies in the past that have become too pluralistic, like
India, and the old Mediterranean countries like the Roman Empire, didn't
perceive the danger to moral standards that arose from having too many
differing moral standards, too many differing religions, too many differing
cultures. On the other hand, there are advantages to a country in having some
diversity, in that each can be used as an experiment to see in which direction
the group as a whole might advantageously go. I think that there's a happy
medium on this matter of diversity, and it has probably been overshot in the
U.S. at the present. Alienation is now quite severe, and it's partly due to
wholesale, unchecked immigration. Few politicians seem willing to confront the
issue. I think it might not be a bad idea to remove the inscription from the
Statue of Liberty which calls for the "wretched refuse" of the other countries
to migrate here. This is not what you want to build a nation of. If we have
immigration, we ought to have it from the best sources. At the moment, the
sociologists have won out on that issue with their claims that there are no
differences among immigrants. But I would maintain that there are most marked
differences, in both innate intelligence and personality, among people who
enter the U.S.
You have written that dominance is negatively correlated with grades in
school, but positively correlated with creativity. In using grades as a major
criterion for graduate admission, doesn't this mean graduate schools are
actually selecting against creativity to some extent?
CATTELL: Yes. Dominance is negatively related to grades in high school and
undergraduate work, but the opposite is true in graduate work--with
dissertations and theses, the better work is done by high-dominance people who
show more creativity and independence of mind. Of course, that dominance isn't
necessarily welcomed, because professors may still find docility in students
to be a desirable trait. Incidentally, creative people have a personality
profile which is not everybody's cup of tea. They are often difficult people.
Their combination of high dominance and introversion is not always easy to
deal with. But there is, as you suggest, a definite difference between
personality traits associated with examination success and those associated
with creative research. I believe all promotions and scholarships should be
based on personality tests, as well as on measures of intellectual ability. If
this were done, selection could be directed toward creative people. The
personality traits associated with creativity have now been worked out quite
well. For example, we've compared administrative academic people to creative
researchers of the same age, and we've compared creative writers and artists
to those who aren't really so creative. There's an amazing similarity--you see
the same high dominance, the same high ego strength, in creative people in all
these fields.
In nearly every interview in The Eugenics Bulletin the same question is
asked: "Specifically, what should people who are concerned about eugenics do?"
How would you answer this question?
CATTELL: I agree with Carl Bajema's suggestions in the Fall '83 issue--the
only way to progress is to enter political controversies, to set up programs
for research in the area, to support the Eugenics Special Interest Group, and
in general to stir up people's thinking by critical observations. Instances of
neglect of eugenics are all around us. I haven't seen a single reference in
all the current discussions on jobs for women to the dysgenic effect of having
more women employed full time so that they can't beget as many children. This
amazes me, this current trend in which women get so involved in their
professions that they cannot take time off to have children. In addition, of
course, there are lots of things in the economy that could be changed. For
example, taxing those of higher social status more tends to be dysgenic, and
this should be changed. One policy I view as eugenic is the rule in the
British civil service which allows a woman to take off at least three months
when she has a child without any effect on her promotional status or income.
There should also be much more emphasis during the last years of schooling
on reminding children that not only their own children, but their own lives,
will be happier if they choose more intelligent and stable individuals as
spouses. It isn't impossible for even average members of the population to
have a certain sense of dynasty. In some parts of the world, notably in Sweden
and Japan, people know their genealogies much further back than most Americans
do. This attention to genealogy would be, I think, a real aid to eugenics.
If society wants to go on at a proper cultural level, it should be handling
these problems by economic means so as to achieve a eugenic balance. There
are, in fact, many other things that could be done in economic terms to aid
eugenics; for example, there could be a far larger child allowance in income
taxes than presently exists. Obviously, a person with eugenic ideals should
have as large a family as health and circumstances permit. Intelligent people,
for example, university graduates, should be thinking in terms of four
children per family, because this is little more than replacement. Nothing
beats a good example.
What would you advocate in place of the present welfare system?
CATTELL: Well, I would advocate some change, because I'm most dissatisfied
with it and its consequences. It appears to act as a stimulant for a higher
birth rate among those who cannot look after their children on their own.
Monetary advantages are given to those who have the most children. That is
what one would like to see at the upper level, but instead it is being brought
about at the lowest level.
I think a single solution is not possible. However, I would advocate that
social workers put as item #1 of their duties the reduction of the birth rate
of their clients by supplying birth control knowledge. After all, poverty is
due either to bad luck, on the one hand, or to systematic defects in
intelligence or personality, on the other. Insofar as poverty arises partly
from heritable defects, we certainly don't want a welfare system that
encourages them to have even more children.
Is it a reasonable assumption that practically all that's considered good
about human nature, such as altruism, has come about as the result of group
selection, and that which is considered bad about human nature, such as
selfishness and insincerity, exists as a result of individual selection?
CATTELL: Yes, there's much truth in that. The psychopath may do very well
for himself as an individual--it's only that a group with too many psychopaths
wouldn't survive. Group selection and individual selection work differently.
Although individual selection may favor selfishness, for example, it's caught
up and corrected by group selection in the long run--one has to stress that. A
society dies if it exceeds a certain degree of individual selfishness.
However, behavioral genetic research doesn't show a lot of genetic influence
on superego strength--it's only about 20 percent. That is enough, of course,
for group selection to act in favor of increased altruism. Today we're up
against the "one-world" enthusiasts, who want all group competition to cease.
Of course, none of us wants war, but it's throwing away the baby with the bath
water to stop group selection because of the risk of war, if group selection
is the only way to advance altruistic traits, as I think one can demonstrate.
The authors of a recent article in a psychology journal voiced concern
about the fact that the mentally retarded don't vote nearly as often as people
of normal intelligence do, and suggested various ways to entice them to the
polls. How do you react to this?
CATTELL: The article you describe strikes me as the highest form of idiocy.
Writers such as Shaw and Wells spoke good sense a generation ago when they
demanded qualifications for voting, such as some knowledge of history and
current events and a certain level of intelligence. This, surely, is needed if
democracy is to work.
One question which arises perennially among social scientists is why the
social sciences haven't progressed at the same rate as the physical sciences.
How would you explain the difference?
CATTELL: To focus on psychology, in which I've been working for the last 50
years, I think the trouble lies in the mediocrity of the researchers and
teachers. The whole subject is a very difficult one. McDougall said that the
trouble with psychology is that it is too difficult for psychologists. Quite
advanced mathematics--actually quite beautiful mathematics, seemingly beyond
the comprehension of most psychologists today--is necessary to solve the next
issues awaiting us. We've got to get more acute selection in psychology, and
take it out of the hands of the do-gooders and the social workers and really
make a science of it.
A related problem is that social scientists confuse their findings with
their values. Policy recommendations must necessarily be a product of the two.
But when social scientists can't separate them, they're merely expressing
their personal opinions with a pseudoscientific patina.
What are some of the major new points you've made about Beyondism- in your
forthcoming book The Beyondist Solution to Contemporary Problems?
CATTELL: It aims to get nearer to contemporary problems than I got in my
first complete statement of Beyondism in 1972. I begin by saying that we have
cut adrift from revealed religions and their morality, and we are seeking a
new morality and a new ethical system. I propose evolution as the basis for
our goals, that selection among nations is vital and necessary. There is a
biological and cultural experiment implicit in each of the 130 or so nations
in the world. We should encourage both genetic and cultural variation, and
permit selection to go on. Just as in nature there have been thousands of
extinct species, so will there be extinct nations. We must allow this to take
place because it is a natural and essential part of evolution.
The spiritual values of Beyondism turn out to be much the same as those of
the big dogmatic religions, up to a certain point. But after that point they
diverge, and I take trouble to define how Beyondism leads to a different and
more adventurous set of values. A general concept that helps our thought on
this question is that of "genetic lag." Societies can progress culturally
beyond the genetic capacities of many or most of the individuals in them.
Eugenics is required to catch up with the cultural demands of society. At
present, we have unemployment on rather a large scale in most industrialized
countries--and in most nonindustrialized countries, for that matter--which can
be eliminated only by elimination of genetic lag on the culture. So there is
an emphasis on genetics in the book, primarily because it needs emphasizing in
a culture which has grossly neglected it.
I conclude with a call for action. We have studied enough to be able to act
with a greater chance of progress than previously. We need huge research
endowments to compare and contrast the 130 or so societal experiments, to
measure, record, and plot, and to give out advice from a central world
research institute. This, I think, is the only way to carry out a process
comparable to variation among nations, and to avoid the all-gray "one world"
which would stop evolution. For evolution to proceed, there must always be
genetic variation followed by natural selection. So I call for a society of
Beyondism to help in years to come the buildup of adequate social research
data--research information on the effects of various experiments.
Many eugenicists feel it's best to be noncommittal on the race question,
since it's not our major concern. What do you think?
CATTELL: I agree that the only reasonable thing is to be noncommittal on
the race question--that's not the central issue, and it would be a great
mistake to be sidetracked into all the emotional upsets that go on in
discussions of racial differences. We should be quite careful to dissociate
eugenics from it--eugenics' real concern should be with individual
differences.
In her article "Test Scores as Measures of Human Capital" in Intelligence
and National Achievement, Barbara Lerner stated: "He sent more of our young
people to school for longer periods of tine than any other nation in the
world, and they emerged with more diplomas than any other people on earth."
But despite all this education, SAT scores in the U.S. have been declining
steadily, our relative economic productivity has dropped, and on tests of math
and science the only students whose average test scores have been lower than
those of Americans have been those in underdeveloped countries. What are the
major causes?
CATTELL: The current decline in educational achievement is, like most
things, multiply determined. The evidence points, first, to about 50-100 years
of genetic decline in ability. It doesn't take much--perhaps a one-point
decline every 30 years--to reduce substantially the percentage in the upper
range of IQ. With our present mean IQ of 100, 1 person in 250 would exceed an
IQ of 140. If, however, the average dropped to 85, you'd have only 1 in 8,000
who would exceed an IQ of 140. We must suppose that academic standards are
much affected by the percentages of high IQ individuals, and that their
becoming more scarce will lower academic performance. So part of the remedy
for this problem definitely lies in eugenic practices.
But there are some environmental factors as well, such as the failure to do
"streaming" in schools, in which children of much the same ability level are
put together. And I think something in the way of general idleness and
slackness has gotten into the system since the 1960's which could account for
a part of the decline, particularly in the more precise subjects like
mathematics.
In your autobiography, you wrote that you have always been intrigued by
great people. What constitutes greatness?
CATTELL: Greatness is something that is surely very different in different
areas such as politics, art, music, and science. What I think is fundamental,
however, is creativity and an ability to break away from conventional views, a
combination of high intelligence with high ego strength. Great people are
largely responsible for whatever progress society makes, yet they actually
take quite a beating in the process. So qualities of endurance are necessary
as well.
What would you consider to be the mean IQ necessary for a country to
support a true democratic system of government?
CATTELL: It depends upon just what you mean by "a true democratic system of
government," but generally I would say that we can not go much below what we
have today and still maintain a real democratic system.
How do you think the irrational opposition to the idea of genetic
influences on human behavior cane into being, and why does it persist?
CATTELL: One might suppose that all one had to do to overcome this
opposition was to point to striking research in behavior genetics. But this
research has been around for some time, and still the opposition persists. For
example, there are five successive studies of criminal behavior cited in my
1982 book. They show that if a man in prison has an identical twin, it's
likely his cotwin will also be in prison. If the twin is fraternal [with 50
percent shared genes, on the average], the likelihood is not nearly as great
that he'll be in prison, too, but it's greater than chance. How could one
possibly account for this difference with environmentalist explanations? The
strong genetic component in criminality has already been proven up to the
hilt.
The role of genetics in personality and intelligence has been extensively
demonstrated in the last 30 or 40 years. The information is available in
numerous textbooks. In almost all traits an appreciable genetic influence
exists, varying from 70-80 percent in the case of intelligence, to about 20
percent in the case of superego.
Now, the question is: why aren't these facts known to the American people?
Why have academe and the media withheld this information? In Britain, when I
was growing up in the '20's, it was common sense to place considerable
importance upon heredity in choosing a person to marry, in choosing the
occupation for which one was suited, and so on. I was astonished when I came
to America to find that eugenics was almost a bad word. One may trace this
situation to the sociologists, to Boas and others, and to pressure from
minority groups who oppose anything aristocratic.
I think there is a problem widespread in certain societies, notably in
America, which consists of the denial, for political or other reasons, of the
influence of genetics on human behavior. Of course, the Declaration of
Independence has written in it Jefferson's and Franklin's statement that "all
men are created equal." Now, neither of those men could possibly have believed
that literally, as their other writings amply attest. But to my amazement, I
find that two out of three people I ask take that statement to mean that
they're genetically equal. The ideal of equality of opportunity has been
distorted to mean biological equality. Roger Williams has written a telling
little book [Free and Unequal, by Roger J. Williams, 1953; Liberty Press,
Indianapolis] about inequality and freedom. He points out that the French
Revolutionary trio of ideals of "Liberty, Equality, Fraternity" is internally
inconsistent--a society can't have both liberty and equality. Given that
people are born unequal in their innate abilities, the only way for a
government to bring about equality is by coercion, but ultimately it's futile.
There may also be deeper, unconscious sources of opposition to any form of
biological determinism. For example, the individual may feel that heredity
somehow restrains him, so he will prefer to deny its influence. But obviously
the only reasonable way to deal with nature is to accommodate to its laws, as
we do to the law of gravity. If one refuses to acknowledge the importance of
gravity and blithely jumps off a cliff, one will find himself in serious
trouble. Our society may be jumping off a cliff, so to speak, with regard to
its denial of the role of genetics in human behavior.
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