The Heredity Hoax - Lerner, Richard M.; Greenberg, Gary; (szerk.) - Prospero Internetes Könyváruház

The Heredity Hoax: Challenging Flawed Genetic Theories of Human Development
 
A termék adatai:

ISBN13:9781032699578
ISBN10:1032699574
Kötéstípus:Puhakötés
Terjedelem:568 oldal
Méret:246x174 mm
Nyelv:angol
Illusztrációk: 29 Illustrations, black & white; 14 Halftones, black & white; 15 Line drawings, black & white; 5 Tables, black & white
700
Témakör:

The Heredity Hoax

Challenging Flawed Genetic Theories of Human Development
 
Kiadás sorszáma: 1
Kiadó: Routledge
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Rövid leírás:

This innovative and thought-provoking book integrates both new, authored material and reprints of existing literature that, together, provide a compelling narrative that reveals the fatally flawed science associated with genetic reductionist accounts of human behaviour and development.

Hosszú leírás:

This innovative and thought-provoking book integrates both new, authored material and reprints of existing literature that, together, provide a compelling narrative that reveals the fatally flawed science associated with genetic reductionist accounts of human behavior and development.


Through an interdisciplinary lens, it illuminates the dynamic nature of human development, empowering readers to question established notions, and embrace the complexity of our potential. Across the book, the work of top-tier scientists, from developmental, comparative, educational, and biological science illuminates theory and research converging on the conclusion that the multiple egregiously flawed work of genetic reductionists should be expunged from research pertinent to human development. The book challenges the prevailing reductionist narratives and their application to social policies, programs, and uses in media. Theoretically based and empirically rigorous, this multidisciplinary approach to human development will shine a light on the inequities in individuals or groups that suggest that specific genes do not enable them to succeed in life.


The Heredity Hoax invites graduate programs and advanced undergraduate courses on human development, human potential, epigenetics, and more to delve into the intricate interplay between genes, environment, and personal growth. This will also serve as an unimpeachable source of evidence for researchers, educators, and social policymakers.



"Genetics enjoy a high profile today in the minds of the intelligentsia and lay public alike. Fresh genetic results are often announced in newspapers with fanfare and draw immediate attention. No doubt they are ?sexy,? and, undeniably, we are in part products of our inheritance ? our nature. However, only in part, and the ultimate story genetic reductionism tells always turns out to be more nuanced and complex than originally touted. Vigilant academics who follow the literature have come to understand that precious few heralded genetic findings survive follow-up scrutiny or replication. Where?s the pushback? Well, here. In The Heredity Hoax, Richard Lerner and Gary Greenberg crystallize conceptual and methodological shortcomings of genetic reductionism in their own words as they expose problematic implications of genetic reductionist ideas for policy, programs, and social justice. Moreover, they skillfully marshal the words of proponents and critics to buttress their contentions. But, you ask, what perspective is left to supplant or, at least, supplement the genetic project? Lerner and Greenberg do not leave you in the lurch, but are persuasive that relational developmental systems ? the coaction of nature and nurture ? offer a more rational, productive, and optimistic framework for understanding human development. Want to be an intelligent consumer of the scientific literature in this grand debate of the 21st century? The Heredity Hoax is where to start."
Marc H. BornsteinPresident Emeritus, Society for Research in Child Development; Editor, Parenting: Science and Practice



"In this magnificent and timely volume Richard Lerner and Gary Greenberg have brought together a collection of chapters by the world?s leading authorities that address the fatal misconceptions of classical genetic accounts of human development. Just as quantum theory has upended our classical view of the physical world, the various chapters in this volume systematically challenge and replace the determinist view of genetic heritability with a dynamic Relational Developmental Systems metatheoretical framework that revolutionizes our understanding of human development and its potential. This reframing of the dynamic nature of the relations between genetics and development has profound and potentially positive implications for our approaches to education, parenting and broader issues of social justice."


Larry Nucci, Professor, Graduate School of Education, University of California Berkeley



"The Heredity Hoax is an important collection that battles genetic determinism on multiple fronts. Curated by two field leaders who have devoted their careers to this fight, this collection dismantles fallacies of simplistic reductionism in ethology, evolutionary biology, behavior genetics, and sociobiology. Not content with critique, Professors Lerner and Greenberg bring together perspectives to build a real and rigorous alternative framework that analyzes behavior as an emergent property of dynamic, relational, bio-social systems of organismal development. Connecting this new paradigm to policy frameworks, they show how bio-social science can take part in the optimistic cultivation of human flourishing and greater equality. This guide will be essential reading for newcomers to this field as well as experienced experts."


Aaron Panofsky, Professor, UCLA Institute for Society and Genetics, Public Policy, and Sociology; Director, Institute for Society and Genetics

Tartalomjegyzék:

Preface  Section 1. Framing the Choice: The Pseudo-evidence and pessimism of genetic reductions vs. the evidence and optimism from research framed by dynamic, relational development systems-based concepts  1.1. Addressing the heredity hoax in science and society 1.2. The fallacies and failures of genetic reductionism  Section 2. Metatheory and theory about the nature-nurture coaction  2.1. Metatheory and the primacy of conceptual analysis in developmental science 2.2. The failure of biogenetic analysis in psychology 2.3. What Galton?s Eugenics Has Wrought  Section 3. The concepts of instinct and critical periods  3.1. Development evolving - The origins and meanings of instinct 3.2. Critical period- A history of the transition from questions of when, to what, to how 3.3 Short arms and talking eggs - Why we should no longer abide the nativist?empiricist debate  Section 4. Evolution  4.1 Toward a new developmental and evolutionary synthesis 4.2. Précis of Evolution in Four Dimensions 4.3. Developmental evolution 4.4. Evolving evolutionary psychology 4.5. Evolution beyond neo-Darwinism  Section 5. Behavior genetics: Heritability, Twin studies, adoption studies, and IQ 5.1. From gene to organism - The developing individual as an emergent, interactional, hierarchical system 5.2 The heritability fallacy 5.3. The 1990 ?Minnesota Study of Twins Reared Apart? IQ Study  Section 6. Sociobiology  6.1 Sociobiology and the theory of natural selection 6.2. Sociobiology and human development  Section 7. Epigenetics  7.1. Social regulation of human gene expression 7.2. Human Social Genomics 7.3. Behavioral epigenetics 7.4. Dynamic heredity  Section 8. Implications for Programs and Policies 8.1. The Bell Curve at 30 - A Closer Look at the Within- and Between-Group IQ Genetic Evidence 8.2. Implications for educational practice of the science of learning and development 8.3. Whole-child development, learning, and thriving in an era of collective adversity, disruptive change, and increasing inequality 8.4. Promoting positive human development through dynamic, relational developmental systems