Synopses & Reviews
Synopsis
Preface.1. Introduction. Robert J. SternbergPart I. Intelligence and cultural evolution2. Intelligence as Ecological and Cultural Adaptation. John W. Berry3. Adaptive Intelligence and Cultural Evolution. Chi-yue Chiu, Hiu-sze Chan, Sau-lai Lee, and Jennifer Yuk-Yue TongPart II. Culture and society in the history of research on human intelligence4. A Brief History of IQ Testing: Fixed vs. Malleable Intelligence. Alan S. Kaufman, Dowon Choi, Hansika Kapoor, James C. Kaufman5. The Idea of a Peculiarly Female Intelligence: A Brief History of Bias Masked as Science. Gerd Gigerenzer6. Intelligence and Wisdom in Chinese Intellectual History and in Modern Day Taiwan. Shih-ying Yang, Kimberly Y. H. Chang, and Shin-yi HuangPart III. Socio-cultural influences in human intelligence7. The Status of Intelligence as a Panhuman Construct in Cross-Cultural Psychology. Johnny R. J. Fontaine and Ype H. Poortinga8. Cultural intelligence: From Intelligence in Context and across Cultures to Intercultural Contexts. Kok Yee Ng, Soon Ang, Thomas Rockstuhl 9. Cultural change in Africa under the Pressure of HIV/AIDS: The Role of Natively Developed Intelligence. Mei Tan, Elena L. GrigorenkoPart IV. Context, assessment, and intellectual performance10. Taking an Intelligence Test: Does the Context Matter? Adrian Furnham11. A Contextual Approach to Research on Intelligence and Complex Task Performance. David Z. HambrickPart V. Social issues and the science of human intelligence12. Mindsets of Intelligence: Their Development, Consequences, and Relation to Group-based Inequality. Lin Bian13. Re-Envisioning Intelligence in Cultural Context. Lisa Suzuki, Taymy Josefa Caso, Aysegul Yucel14. Challenges for Intelligence Today: Combatting Misinformation and Fake News. Stephen J. Ceci, Wendy M. Williams Part VI. The future of the science of human intelligence and its implications for society15. Human intelligence in the Time of the Anthropocene. David D. Preiss16. Time Bomb: How the Western Conception of Intelligence Is Taking Down Humanity. Robert J. SternbergPart VII. Conclusion17. Conclusion: Intelligence Does Not Inhere within the Individual but rather in Person x Task x Situation Interactions. Robert J. Sternberg, David D. Preiss