Form: Outline

  • Jayman’s HBD Reading List

    Start with (key reading):

    Top of the list: Pinker, Steven (2002). The Blank Slate: The Modern Denial of Human Nature. Viking. HarrisJudith Rich (1998). The Nurture Assumption: Why Children Turn Out the Way They DoFree Press. Revised and Updated edition, 2009. Harris, Judith Rich (2006). No Two Alike: Human Nature and Human Individuality. W.W. Norton. Cochran, Gregory & Harpending, Henry (2009). The 10,000 Year Explosion: How Civilization Accelerated Human EvolutionBasic Books. Frost, Peter (2011). Human nature or human natures?Futures43, 740–748. Clark, Gregory (2014). The Son Also Rises: Surnames and the History of Social Mobility. Princeton University Press.

    On biological sex differences:

    A video of a debate between Steven Pinker and Elizabeth Spelke – Edge: THE SCIENCE OF GENDER AND SCIENCE (2005) The video from the above site has been removed, but can be found here. The above text contains a transcript of the debate and each presenter’s slides.

    This discussion/review of sex differences by Larry Cahill (2014): Equal ≠ The Same: Sex Differences in the Human Brain Indeed, see much of the rest of Cahill’s work on this. Ingalhalikar, Madhura, et al. (2013). Sex differences in the structural connectome of the human brainPNAS 2013 Cahill, Larry (2006). Why sex matters for neuroscienceNature Reviews Neuroscience | AOP, published online 10 May 2006. Ruigrok, Amber N.V.; Salimi-Khorshidi, Gholamreza; Lai, Meng-Chuan; Baron-Cohen, Simon; Lombardo, Michael V.; Tait, Roger J.; and Suckling, John (2014). A meta-analysis of sex differences in human brain structureNeuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews, 39, 34-50. Schmitt, David P. (2003). Universal Sex Differences in the Desire for Sexual Variety: Tests From 52 Nations, 6 Continents, and 13 IslandsJournal of Personality and Social Psychology, 85(1), 85–104. Schmitt, David P. et al. (2012). A Reexamination of Sex Differences in Sexuality: New Studies Reveal Old TruthsCurrent Directions in Psychological Science, 21(2), 135–139.
    Schmitt, David P. (2013). When Is a Sex Difference Real? | Psychology Today Browne, Kingsley R. (2013). Biological Sex Differences in the Workplace: Reports of the End of Men are Greatly Exaggerated (As Are Claims of Women’s Continued Inequality)Boston University Law Review, Forthcoming. Wayne State University Law School Research Paper No. 2013-04. Borkenau, P., Hřebíčková, M., Kuppens, P., Realo, A. and Allik, J. (2013), Sex Differences in Variability in Personality: A Study in Four SamplesJournal of Personality, 81, 49–60. This video interview with Kay Hymowitz, The Plight of the Alpha Female: [youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=srikpTc1v6Y?version=3&rel=1&fs=1&autohide=2&showsearch=0&showinfo=1&iv_load_policy=1&wmode=transparent] Also this article by Kay Hymowitz (2013): Think Again: Working Women – By Kay Hymowitz – Foreign Policy Sommers, Christina Hoff (2013). Lessons from a feminist paradise on Equal Pay Day – Society and Culture – AEI Sommers, Christina Hoff (2013). What ‘Lean In’ Misunderstands About Gender Differences – The Atlantic Lemos, Gina C.; Abad, Francisco J.; Almeida, Leandro S.; and Colom, Robert (2013). Sex differences on g and non-g intellectual performance reveal potential sources of STEM discrepanciesIntelligence 41(1), 11-18. (2011) Sex differences in the Brain: Fact or Fiction?: A video lecture by Margaret M. McCarthy that goes into great depth about the evidence for human and non-human animal sex differences in the brain and behavior (see starting at 28:09 for humans). And of course, Harald Eia’s Brainwash episode on gender.

    On the reality of IQ:

    This talk by Steve Hsu: [youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=62jZENi1ed8?version=3&rel=1&fs=1&autohide=2&showsearch=0&showinfo=1&iv_load_policy=1&wmode=transparent] Also see these blog posts by Steve Hsu: Information Processing: Horsepower matters; psychometrics works (2009) Information Processing: Do advanced education and a challenging career make you smarter? (2009) Information Processing: Life impacts of personality and intelligence (2014) More on the predictive validity of IQ, see this essay: Murray, Charles (1997). IQ and economic successThe Public Interest, Summer 1997, 21-35 On the central importance of g to many aspects of life: Gottfredson, Linda S. (1997). “Why g matters: The Complexity of Everyday Life.” Intelligence 24

    On the science of behavioral genetics:

    See these key papers on behavioral genetics:
    Bouchard, Thomas. J. and McGue, Matt (2003), Genetic and environmental influences on human psychological differencesJ. Neurobiol., 54: 4–45.
    Bouchard, Thomas J. (2004),  Genetic Influence on Human Psychological Traits A surveyCurrent Directions in Psychological Science, 13(4): 148-151 Bouchard, Thomas J. (2008). Genes and Human Psychological Traits. In Peter Carruthers, Stephen Laurence, and Stephen Stich (Eds.), The Innate Mind, Volume 3: Foundations and the Future (69-89). Oxford University Press. See this key defense against popular criticisms of behavioral genetics and a review of the evidence underlying the solidity of its methods: Barnes, J.C.; Wright, John Paul; Boutwell, Brian B.; Schwartz, Joseph A.; Connoly, Eric J.; Nedelec, Joseph L.; and Beaver, Kevin M. (2014), Demonstrating the Validity of Twin Research in CriminologyCriminology. Steger, Michael F.; Hicks, Brian M.; Kashdan, Todd B.; Krueger, Robert F.; Bouchard Jr., Thomas J. (2007). Genetic and environmental influences on the positive traits of the values in action classification, and biometric covariance with normal personalityJournal of Research in Personality, 41(3), 524-539. On the impact of genetics on IQ: Plomin, Robert and Deary, Ian J. (2014) Genetics and intelligence differences: five special findingsMolecular Psychiatry advance online publication 16 September 2014 (2013) The Genetics of Intelligence « Meng Hu’s Blog On the genetic contributions to economic success, including the role of IQ, and the lack of effects of the family environment on such (i.e., parents): Essays on genetic variation and economic behavior – Cesarini, D. A. (2010). Essays on genetic variation and economic behavior. (Doctoral dissertation). Retrieved from DSpace@MIT. (http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/57897). Hyytinen, Ari; Ilmakunnas, Pekka; Johansson, Edvard; and Toivanen, Otto (2013). Heritability of Lifetime Income. Helsinki Center of Economic Research Discussion Paper No. 364
    Visscher PM, Medland SE, Ferreira MAR, Morley KI, Zhu G, et al. (2006) Assumption-Free Estimation of Heritability from Genome-Wide Identity-by-Descent Sharing between Full SiblingsPLoS Genet 2(3): e41. Davies, G., Tenesa, A., Payton, A., Yang, J., Harris, S. E., Liewald, D., … Deary, I. J. (2011). Genome-wide association studies establish that human intelligence is highly heritable and polygenicMolecular Psychiatry, 16(10), 996–1005.

    Plomin, Robert et al. (2013). Common DNA Markers Can Account for More Than Half of the Genetic Influence on Cognitive AbilitiesPsychological Science, April 2013, 24(4) 562-568.

    Trzaskowski, Maciej; Harlaar, Nicole; Arden, Rosalind; Krapohl, Eva; Rimfeld, Kaili; McMillan, Andrew; Dale, Philip S.; and Plomin, Robert. (2013) Genetic influence on family socioeconomic status and children’s intelligenceIntelligence, 42, 83-86. Verweij, K. J. H., Yang, J., Lahti, J., Veijola, J., Hintsanen, M., Pulkki-Råback, L., … Zietsch, B. P. (2012). Maintenance of genetic variation in human personality: Testing evolutionary models by estimating heritability due to common causal variants and investigating the effect of distant inbreedingEvolution; International Journal of Organic Evolution, 66(10), 3238–3251. Also see this wonderful and comprehensive review of the heritability of brain structure and the relationship between this structure and IQ: Strike, Lachlan T.; Couvy-Duchesne, Baptiste; Hansell, Narelle K.; Cuellar-Partida, Gabriel; Medland, Sarah E.; and Wright, Margaret J. (2015) Genetics and Brain MorphologyNeuropsychology Review, March, 14, 2015. And of course, my own blog posts on the matter: All Human Behavioral Traits are Heritable Taming the “Tiger Mom” and Tackling the Parenting Myth Environmental Hereditarianism The Son Becomes The Father More Behavioral Genetic Facts As well as Harald Eia’s Brainwash episode “The Parental Effect

    On the reality of race:

    These five key blog posts by Steve Hsu: (2008) Information Processing: “No scientific basis for race” (2008) Information Processing: Human genetic variation, Fst and Lewontin’s fallacy in pictures (2012) Information Processing: Rare variants and human genetic diversity (2013) Information Processing: Learning can hurt (2014) Information Processing: What’s New Since Montagu? These papers describing some of the genetic processes used, particularly principal component analysis (PCA): Price, Alkes L.; Reich, David (2006). Population Structure and EigenanalysisPLOS Genetics. McVean, Gil (2009). A Genealogical Interpretation of Principal Components AnalysisPLOS: Genetics. These blog posts by Peter Frost: (2011) Evo and Proud: Apples, oranges, and genes (2012) Evo and Proud: Trans-species polymorphisms As well as these two by Greg Cochran: (2012) Lewontin’s argument | West Hunter (2014) Phenotypes vs genetic statistics | West Hunter And this post by Razib Khan:

    (2013) Why race as a biological construct matters | Gene Expression

    This video of racial differences in newborn behavior: Cross-Cultural Differences in Newborn Behavior Discussed in Freedman, Daniel G. (1979). Human Sociobiology: A Holistic ApproachFree Press. Also see: Kagan, Jerome, & Snidman, Nancy C. (2004). The long shadow of temperament. Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press. And also see my own blog post: How Much Hard Evidence Do You Need? And of course, Harald Eia’s Brainwash episode on Race.

    On racial differences in IQ and their global impact:

    Rushton, J. Philippe and Jensen, Arthur R. (2010). Race and IQ: A Theory-Based Review of the Research in Richard Nisbett’s Intelligence and How to Get ItThe Open Psychology Journal, 3, 9-35. On the effect of poverty and socioeconomic status on IQ (there isn’t one) and said explanations for racial gaps, this blog post: (2013) The Unsilenced Science: Black Suits, Gowns, & Skin: SAT Scores by Income, Education, & Race Rushton, J. Philippe & Jensen, Arthur R.  (2010). The rise and fall of the Flynn Effect as a reason to expect a narrowing of the Black-White IQ gapIntelligence, 38, 213-219 Nijenhuis, J., & van der Flier, H. (2013). Is the Flynn effect on g?: A meta-analysisIntelligence Nijenhuisa, Jan te; Jongeneel-Grimenb, Birthe; & Armstrong, Elijah L. (2015). Are adoption gains on the g factor? A meta-analysisPersonality and Individual Differences 73, 50-60. Gottfredson, Linda S. (2007). Shattering Logic to Explain the Flynn EffectCato Unbound. Lynn, Richard and Tatu Vanhanen. (2002). IQ and the Wealth of NationsPraeger/Greenwood. Lynn, Richard (2008). The Global Bell Curve: Race, IQ, and Inequality Worldwide. Washington Summit Publishers. Lynn, Richard and Tatu Vanhanen, (2012). Intelligence: A Unifying Construct for the Social Sciences. Also see this blog post by Jason Malloy (2006): Gene Expression: A World of Difference: Richard Lynn Maps World Intelligence Also see the ongoing discussion over at Human Varieties Also these posts by La Griffe du Lion: (2002) The Smart Fraction Theory of IQ and the Wealth of Nations (2004) Smart Fraction Theory II: Why Asians Lag Rindermann, Heiner (2007). The g-factor of international cognitive ability comparisons: the homogeneity of results in PISA, TIMSS, PIRLS and IQ-tests across nationsEuropean Journal of Personality 21, 667-706. Rindermann, Heiner; Sailer, Michael; and Thompson, James (2009). The impact of smart fractions, cognitive ability of politicians and average competences of peoples on social developmentTalent Development & Excellence 1 (1), 3-25. Christainsen, Gregory B (2013). IQ and the wealth of nations: How much reverse causality?Intelligence 41, 688-698.

    On the evolution of modern advanced civilized peoples:

    Clark, Gregory (2007). A Farewell to Alms: A Brief Economic History of the WorldPrinceton University Press. Frost, Peter (2008). Sexual selection and human geographic variation, Special Issue: Proceedings of the 2nd Annual Meeting of the NorthEastern Evolutionary Psychology Society. Journal of Social, Evolutionary, and Cultural Psychology2(4),169-191 Frost, Peter (2010). The Roman State and genetic pacification, Evolutionary Psychology8(3), 376-389. Frost, Peter and Harpending, Henry (2015). Western Europe, State Formation, and Genetic PacificationEvolutionary Psychology13(1), 230-243. Harpending, Henry (2012). Genetics and the Historical Decline of Violence? | West Hunter Frost, Peter (2013). Evo and Proud: Making Europeans kinder, gentler Frost, Peter (2013). Evo and Proud: Where do those tensions come from? Unz, Ron (2013). How Social Darwinism Made Modern China | The American Conservative Cochran, Gregory; Hardy, Jason; & Harpending, Henry (2006). Natural History of Ashkenazi IntelligenceJournal of Biosocial Science 38, 1-35 Also see these blog posts by Peter Frost (2013): East Asia’s Farewell to Alms Does the Clark-Unz model apply to Japan and Korea? Final thoughts on the Clark-Unz model Fischer, David Hackett (1989). Albion’s Seed: Four British Folkways in America. Oxford University Press Woodard, Colin (2011). American Nations: A History of the Eleven Rival Regional Cultures of North AmericaViking Adult. And of course, the work of HBD Chick: start here | hbd* chick clannishness defined | hbd* chick big summary post on the hajnal line | hbd* chick the middle ages « hbd* chick (2011) year-end summary, 2011 | hbd* chick  outbreeding, self-control and lethal violence | hbd* chick 2012 top ten | hbd* chick historic european homicide rates … and the hajnal line | hbd* chick medieval manorialism’s selection pressures | hbd chick In addition to my own summaries of her work: An HBD Summary of the Foundations of Modern Civilization How Inbred are Europeans? And about the regional “cultures” of North America (for example, liberal New England vs. the conservative Deep South), see my series on the matter: A Tentative Ranking of the Clannishness of the “Founding Fathers” Sound Familiar? The Cavaliers Flags of the American Nations Maps of the American Nations Rural White Liberals – a Key to Understanding the Political Divide More Maps of the American Nations

    On genetic load:

    First, be sure to see these blog posts by Greg Cochran on West Hunter (2012): Typos Get Smart More thoughts on genetic load The genetics of stupidity The Golden Age Also: Keller, Matthew C., & Miller, Geoffery (2006). Resolving the paradox of common, harmful, heritable mental disorders: Which evolutionary genetic models work best? Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 28, 285-452.

    On the economic impact of demographic changes (particularly immigration and the Baby Boom in the United States):

    Blog posts by Peter Turchin (2013): The End of Prosperity: Why Did Real Wages Stop Growing in the 1970s? Cutting through the Thicket of Economic Forces (Why Real Wages Stopped Growing II) A Proxy for Non-Market Forces (Why Real Wages Stopped Growing III) Putting It All Together (Why Real Wages Stopped Growing IV) More on Labor Supply (Why Real Wages Stopped Growing V) This post by Dennis Mangan (2012): Spot the Correlation: Wealth vs. Immigration

    On racial and ethnic strife, the pull of genetic similarity, and challenges presented by “diversity”:

    Putnam, Robert D. (2007). E Pluribus Unum: Diversity and Community in the Twenty-first Century — The 2006 Johan Skytte PrizeScandinavian Political Studies, 30(2), 137-174

    Also, on that note, see this ranking of the most peaceful U.S. states, in which, Maine (see HBD Chick here) consistently tops out at #1!

    United States Peace Index « Vision of Humanity

    Krupp, D.B., Debruine, L.M., Jones, B.C., and Lalumiere, M.L. (2012) Kin recognition: evidence that humans can perceive both positive and negative relatedness. Journal of Evolutionary Biology, 25 (8). pp. 1472-1478.

    Also see

    Also see this much more comprehensive list of research supporting human biodiversity here: Human BioDiversity Reading List: http://www.humanbiologicaldiversity.com/
  • Curt Doolittle’s Reading ListReading List “The Great Books Of The Aristocracy: T

    Curt Doolittle’s Reading ListReading List

    “The Great Books Of The Aristocracy: The Evolution of the Nature Law of Sovereigns”

    The ruling class under the monarchies never produced a canon of it’s own: a collection of works whose content is politically scientific and rationally written. The rulers simply did their job with tradition, pragmatism and familial wisdom. So a rich, fully articulated analysis of the western social and political system has been unavailable to us, other than Plato’s – and he was tragically wrong.

    There have been a number of ‘Great Books’ lists, in an effort to develop a western, or even world canon1 . These lists start by sharing a desire for freedom, and at some point for democracy, and finally, evolve to a desire for communism. They are not scientific, but merely moral appeals for power. As such they are sentimental and political propaganda and little more than efforts to seize political power or seize assets from the aristocracy by promoting redistribution, collectivism and democracy, using derivatives of Christian arguments.

    This list is my attempt to cover the body of ‘scientific’ political thought: writing that is based upon the record of what humans actually do, rather than what we fantasize that they should do. I also try to be consistent in avoiding appeals to sentiments, and instead, limit selections to rational or scientific arguments. I’ve tried to select books that the inquiring reader can wade through, and avoided the most abstract texts wherever possible. (The distraction of Bohm Bahwerk for example.) And I have tried to provide selections from a breadth of fields which serves to prevent the errors inherent in selective specialization. And because I believe that practical wisdom is the result of accumulated general knowledge and the further synthesis of common principles regardless of their field of origin.

    Included are: Art, Mythology, History, The Behavior Of Man, Philosophy, Politics, Economics, Law, and War. These are, together, the technologies of cooperation and conflict resolution.

    Jayman’s Human Biodiversity Reading List

    Jayman and HBD Chick’s Recommended Reading list is also here. We really ought to just make a book out of readings from it.

    Our Digital Library Is Huge.

    We capture these works in digital form, as often as possible. If you cannot obtain them from a bookstore or a library you can find them in our digital library. (Which is enormous)

    Visit Our Library

    The Short List: The Current State of Knowledge

    OUR MINDS

    Jeff Hawkins: On Intelligence (The Brain)

    Daniel Kahneman: Thinking, Fast and Slow (The Mind)

    Jonathan Haidt: The Righteous Mind (The Moral Intuition)

    Francis Fukuyama: Trust (The Political Objective)

    MAN

    Matt Ridley: The Red Queen

    Dale Petersen: Demonic Males

    William Tucker: Marriage and Civilization

    Nicholas Wade: A Troublesome Inheritance: Genes, Race and Human History

    Peter Turchin: Ultrasociety: How 10,000 Years of War Made Humans the Greatest Cooperators on Earth

    Garett Jones: Hive Mind: How Your Nation�s IQ Matters So Much More Than Your Own

    THE WEST (Sovereignty)

    Ricardo Duchesne: The Uniqueness of Western Civilization

    JP Mallory: In Search of Indo Europeans

    David W. Anthony: The Horse, the Wheel, and Language

    John Keegan: A History Of Warfare

    Joseph Campbell : The Hero’s Journey

    Karen Armstrong : The Great Transformation

    Eric H. Cline: 1177 B.C.: The Year Civilization Collapsed

    Bryan Ward-Perkins: The Fall of Rome: And the End of Civilization

    Emmet Scott: Mohammed and Charlemagne Revisited.

    Emmanuel Todd: The Explanation of Ideology

    Emmanuel Todd: The Invention of Europe

    THE RIGHTS OF ANGLO SAXONS (Contractualism)

    Edwin Vieira Jr. The Sword and Sovereignty: The Constitutional Principles of “the Militia of the Several States” (multimedia only – Trying to find pdf.)

    Fritz Kern: Kingship and Law in the Middle Ages

    Alan MacFarlane : Origins of English Individualism

    Daniel Hannan: Inventing Freedom

    David Hackett Fischer: Albion‘s Seed: Four British Folkways in America

    Gregory Clark: A Farewell to Alms

    THE NATURAL COMMON LAW (Contractual Constitutionalism)

    Milsom: Natural History of the Common Law.

    Plucknett: A Concise History Of The Common Law.

    Hayek’s: The Constitution of Liberty

    20th CENTURY CONTEXT

    Stephen Hicks : Explaining Postmodernism

    Hans Hoppe: Democracy The God That Failed

    Working Topics

    LIES

    Dallas Denery: The Devil Wins: A History of Lying from the Garden of Eden to the Enlightenment

    Thomas Carson: Lying and Deception: Theory and Practice

    Jennifer Mather Saul: Lying, Misleading, and What is Said

    Clancy Martin: The Philosophy of Deception 1st Edition

    Herbert Fingarette: Self-Deception

    Brooke Harrington: Deception: From Ancient Empires to Internet Dating

    Edward Bernays: Propaganda

    Jason Stanley: How Propaganda Works Hardcover

    Jeremy Elkins: Truth and Democracy

    David Livingstone: Less Than Human: Why We Demean, Enslave, and Exterminate Others

    Daniel Nanavati: A Brief History Of Lies

    DUPLICITY

    (iffy stuff I think is largely nonsense)

    Michael Hoffman: Judaism Discovered

    Removed:

    I am a little iffy on Pinker despite the fact that he fired the first salvo against pseudoscience in the social sciences. I can’t tell where his defense of market for his books begins and his academic honesty ends. Better angels is not true for the reasons he states. And that really troubles me.

    Steven Pinker: The Better Angels of Our Nature

    Steven Pinker : The Blank Slate

    I am a little iffy on harris because I have figured out his biases and errors, and his book on lying is too weak to include versus the alternatives.

    Sam Harris : Lying

    THE CANON

    I. POLITICS

    Aristotle: Ethics, Politics

    Machiavelli: The Prince, Discourses

    Burke: Reflections On The Revolution In France

    Hamilton: The Federalist Papers

    Bastiat: The Law

    Sorel: Reflections On Violence

    Mosca: Ruling Class

    Michels: Political Parties

    Burnham: The Machiavellians

    Hayek: The Road To Serfdom, The Constitution Of Liberty

    Mancur Olson: The Logic Of Collective Action

    Andrew Heywood : Political Ideologies : An Introduction.

    POLITICAL SOCIOLOGY

    David Hume: A Treatise of Human Nature, Essays Moral and Political, An Inquiry Concerning Human Understanding

    Locke: Two Treatise on Government

    Adam Smith: The Theory of Moral Sentiments, The Wealth of Nations

    Alexis de Tocqueville: Democracy in America

    Weber: Economy And Society, Essays in Sociology

    Pareto: Mind And Society

    Hayek: Individualism And Economic Order

    Veblen: The Theory of the Leisure Class

    Schumpeter: Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy

    Durkhiem: Division Of Labor In Society

    Hoppe: The Economics And Ethics Of Private Property, Democracy The God That Failed

    POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY

    Thomas Sowell: A Conflict of Visions: Ideological Origins of Political Struggles

    Thomas Sowell: Intellectuals and Society

    Thomas Sowell: The Vision of the Anointed: Self-Congratulation As a Basis for Social Policy.

    Thomas Sowell: Knowledge and Decisions

    II. THE RECORD OF MAN’S ACTIONS

    HISTORICAL ANALYSIS AND CRITICISMHISTORY

    Gregory Clark: A Farewell to Alms: A Brief Economic History of the World

    Huntington: The Clash of Civilizations and the Remaking of World Order

    Fukuyama: The Origins Of Political Order

    Carroll Quigley: The Evolution Of Civilizations

    Braudel: A History of Civilizations

    Durant: Lessons Of History (Everything really)

    Toynbee: A Study Of History

    BIRTH

    Ricardo Duchesne: The Uniqueness of Western Civilization

    Emmanuel Todd: The Invention Of Europe (French Only)

    Emmanuel Todd: The Causes of Progress

    McNeil: The Rise of the West: A History of the Human Community

    McNeil: Plagues and Peoples

    Diamond: Guns, Germs, and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies

    Pomeranz: The Great Divergence (Anything he has written.)

    DECLINE

    Acemoglu: Why Nations Fail

    Gibbon: The Decline And Fall Of The Roman Empire

    Spengler: The Death Of the West

    Yockey: The enemy Of Europe, The Enemy Of Our Enemies, Imperium

    Burnham: Suicide Of The West

    Buchannan: The Decline Of The West

    Whittaker Chambers: Witness

    CONFLICT

    Keegan: A History Of Warfare (Anything he has written.)

    Victor Davis Hanson’s “The Other Greeks”, Carnage and Culture (Anything he has written)

    Sir Lawrence Freedman: Strategy: A History

    RELIGION

    Karen Armstrong: The Great Transformation

    James C. Russell: The Germanization of Early Medieval Christianity

    MORALITY

    Emmanuel Todd: The Explanation of Ideology

    Robert Nisbet: The Quest for Community

    Jonathan Haidt: The Righteous Mind: Why Good People Are Divided by Politics and Religion

    KNOWLEDGE ECONOMY

    Niall Ferguson: (Everything he has written)

    Murray: Human Accomplishment (Everything he has written)

    Mokyr: The Gifts Of Athena, The Lever Of Riches (Anything he has written)

    CYCLE THEORY – HISTORY REPEATING ITSELF

    Strauss and Howe: Generations, The Fourth Turning

    FUTURE GEOPOLITICS

    Christopher Hayes: Twilight of the Elites: America After Meritocracy

    Fareed Zakaria: The Post-American World: Release 2.0

    Joseph S. Nye Jr.:The Future of Power [Kindle Edition]

    Samuel P. Huntington: The Clash of Civilizations and the Remaking of World Order [Kindle Edition]

    Joseph Tainter), Colin Renfrew:The Collapse of Complex Societies (New Studies in Archaeology)

    Fred Guterl:The Fate of the Species: Why the Human Race May Cause Its Own Extinction and How We Can Stop It

    SOCIOLOGY

    Banfield: The Unheavenly City, The Moral Basis of a Backward Society

    Axelrod: The Evolution Of Cooperation

    Mancur Olson: The Rise and Decline Of Nations

    Edward O. Wilson: The Social Conquest of Earth [Kindle Edition]

    Gregory Cochran, Henry Harpending: The 10,000 Year Explosion: How Civilization Accelerated Human Evolution

    Daron Acemoglu, James Robinson: Why Nations Fail: The Origins of Power, Prosperity, and Poverty [Kindle Edition]

    Peter L. Berger, Thomas Luckmann:The Social Construction of Reality: A Treatise in the Sociology of Knowledge [Paperback]

    Bryan Caplan: The Myth of the Rational Voter: Why Democracies Choose Bad Policies [Hardcover]

    Samuel P. Huntington: Political Order in Changing Societies (The Henry L. Stimson Lectures Series) [Paperback]

    Niall Ferguson: Civilization: The West and the Rest

    Charles Murray: Human Accomplishment: The Pursuit of Excellence in the Arts and Sciences, 800 B.C. to 1950

    Tim Harford:Adapt: Why Success Always Starts with Failure [Kindle Edition]

    III. HUMAN BEINGS

    EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY

    Cavalli-Svorza; The Great Human Diasporas

    Cochran & Harpending: The 10,000 Year Explosion

    Richard Dawkins:The Selfish Gene:30th Anniversary edition

    Jared M. Diamond: The Third Chimpanzee: The Evolution and Future of the Human Animal (P.S.) [Paperback]

    Robert Axelrod: The Evolution of Cooperation: Revised Edition

    Matt Ridley: The Red Queen: Sex and the Evolution of Human Nature [Kindle Edition]

    Christopher Ryan, Cacilda Jetha: Sex at Dawn: The Prehistoric Origins of Modern Sexuality

    Dale Peterson, Richard Wrangham: Demonic Males: Apes and the Origins of Human Violence

    Simon Baron-Cohen : The Essential Difference: Male And Female Brains And The Truth About Autism

    Steven Goldberg : Why Men Rule: A Theory of Male Dominance Paperback

    INTELLIGENCE

    Flynn: What Is Intelligence?

    Sternberg/Kaufman : The Cambridge Handbook of Intelligence

    Earl Hunt: Human Intelligence

    Jeff Hawkins: On Intelligence

    Richard Lynn: The Global Bell Curve: Race, IQ, and Inequality Worldwide [Perfect Paperback]

    Richard Lynn, Tatu Vanhanen:IQ and the Wealth of Nations (Human Evolution, Behavior, and Intelligence)

    Essays:

    The humorous essays of “Le Griffe Du Lion” (Prof Robert Gordon. Some subtle statistical errors, but in general useful. His smart fraction theory is being explored by others at the moment.)

    EVOLUTIONARY MORALITY

    THE MIND

    Daniel Kahneman: Thinking, Fast and Slow

    Steven Pinker: How the Mind Works

    Ramachandran: The Tell-Tale Brain: A Neuroscientist’s Quest for What Makes Us Human

    Steven Pinker: The Language Instinct: How The Mind Creates Language (P.S.) [Kindle Edition]

    Steven Pinker: The Blank Slate: The Modern Denial of Human Nature

    Steven Pinker: The Better Angels of Our Nature: Why Violence Has Declined

    Jonathan Haidt: The Righteous Mind: Why Good People Are Divided by Politics and Religion

    BELIEF

    (From Amazon – I don’t spent time on this subject but others do.)

    “The Belief Instinct: The Psychology of Souls, Destiny, and the Meaning of Life”

    “Subliminal: How Your Unconscious Mind Rules Your Behavior” by Leonard Mlodinow,

    “Society without God: What the Least Religious Nations Can Tell Us About Contentment” by Phil Zuckerman,

    “The Believing Brain: From Ghosts and Gods to Politics and Conspiracies—How We Construct Beliefs and Reinforce Them as Truths” by Michael Shermer,

    “SuperSense: Why We Believe in the Unbelievable” by Bruce M. Hood,

    “The Brain and the Meaning of Life” by Paul Thagard.

    “Incognito: The Secret Lives of the Brain” by David Eagleman

    IV. SOCIAL MAN: COOPERATION AND TRUST

    SOCIAL CLASS

    Paul Fussell: Class: A Guide Through the American Status System

    Richard J. Herrnstein, Charles Murray: Bell Curve: Intelligence and Class Structure in American Life

    Robert Gordon (La Griffe Du Lion): “Smart Fraction Theory” (Methodological flaws aside, the theory is insightful) and Smart Fraction Theory II

    Charles Murray: Coming Apart: The State of White America, 1960-2010 [Hardcover]

    Stanley, DankoThe Millionaire Next Door: The Surprising Secrets of America’s Wealthy

    Stanley: The Millionaire Mind

    Nassim Nicholas Taleb: The Black Swan: Second Edition: The Impact of the Highly Improbable Fragility”

    Mandelbrot, Hudson:The Misbehavior of Markets: A Fractal View of Financial Turbulence

    TRUST

    Harrison, Huntington: Culture Matters: How Values Shape Human Progress

    Francis Fukuyama: Trust: The Social Virtues and The Creation of Prosperity [Paperback]

    Sam Harris: Lying

    Joel Kotkin: Tribes

    Frank Salter: Risky Transactions: Trust, Kinship and Ethnicity; On Genetic Interests

    Huntington: The Clash Of Civilizations

    Becker: The Economic Approach To Human Behavior

    THE HANJAL LINE – MATING PATTERNS (Trying to trim this section down)

    SUMMARY: Kevin MacDonald “What Makes Western Culture Unique?”

    John Hajnal, (1965): European marriage pattern in historical perspective en D.V. Glass and D.E.C. Eversley, (eds.) Population in History, Arnold, Londres

    Ansley J. Coale & Roy Treadway, (1986): The Decline of Fertility in Europe

    David Levine, (1977): Family Formation in an Age of Nascent Capitalism

    Wally Seccombe (1992): A Millennium of Family Change, Feudalism to Capitalism in Northwestern Europe, Verso.

    Göran Therborn, (2004): Between Sex and Power, Family in the World, 1900–2000, Routledge Press (see pp. 144–45).

    Mary S. Hartman (2004): The Household and the Making of History, A Subversive View of the Western Past, Cambridge University Press.

    David I Kertzer and Marzio Barbagli. 2001. The history of the European family. New Haven: Yale University Press. p xiv

    David Levine (1977): Family Formation in an Age of Nascent Capitalism, Academic Press. 152

    Peter Laslett: The World We Have Lost.

    Stephanie Coontz: Marriage, a History: From Obedience to Intimacy, or How Love Conquered Marriage.

    De Moor, Tine and Jan Luiten van Zanden. 2009. Girl power: the European marriage pattern and labour markets in the North Sea region in the late medieval and early modern period.

    MANORIALISM

    Michael Mitterauer: Why Europe?: The Medieval Origins of Its Special Path

    Bloch, Marc (1989-11-16). Feudal Society: Vol 1: The Growth and Ties of Dependence (2 ed.).

    Bloch, Marc (1989-11-16). Feudal Society: Vol 2: Social Classes and Political Organisation (2 ed.). (“Feudal Society”, in its modern sense was coined in Marc Bloch’s 1939-40 books. He emphasized the distinction between economic manorialism which preceded feudalism and survived it, and political and social feudalism, or seigneurialism.)

    Prosper Boissonnade; Eileen Power, Lynn White; Life and work in medieval Europe : the evolution of medieval economy from the fifth to the fifteenth century.

    Henri Pirenne: Economic and Social History of Medieval Europe. Harcourt Brace & Company.

    Articles:

    ^ Peter Sarris, “The Origins of the Manorial Economy: New Insights from Late Antiquity”, The English Historical Review 119 (April 2004:279-311).

    ^ Horn, “On the Origins of the Medieval Cloister” Gesta 12.1/2 (1973:13-52), quote p. 41.

    ^ Andrew Jones, “The Rise and Fall of the Manorial System: A Critical Comment” The Journal of Economic History 32.4 (December 1972:938-944) p. 938; a comment on D. North and R. Thomas, “The rise and fall of the manorial system: a theoretical model”, The Journal of Economic History 31 (December 1971:777-803).

    ^ C.R. Whittaker, “Circe’s pigs: from slavery to serfdom in the later Roman world”, Slavery and Abolition 8 (1987:87-122.

    ^ Averil Cameron, The Mediterranean World in Late Antiquity AD 395-600, 1993:86.

    RACE AND RACISM

    Michael Levin: Why Race Matters:Race Differences and What They Mean

    J. Philippe Rushton: Race, Evolution and Behavior

    Gobineau; The Inequality of Human Races

    V. LAW

    LAW

    Core:

    – Milsom’s Natural History of the Common Law.

    – Plucknett’s A Concise History Of The Common Law.

    – Hayek’s The Constitution of Liberty

    More:

    Bastiat: The Law

    Hayek: Law, Legislation, and Liberty

    Leoni: Freedom and the Law

    Benson: Enterprise of Law

    Randy E. Barnett: The Structure of Liberty: Justice and the Rule of Law

    Richard Epstein: How Progressives Rewrote the Constitution, Simple Rules for a Complex World.

    LEGAL CODES

    The Code Of Hammurabi

    (UNDONE: list the other early laws here)

    The Athenian Constitution

    Roman Law

    The Anglo Saxon Codes

    Magna Carta

    The Articles Of Confederation

    The US Declaration Of Independence, Constitution, and Original Bill of Rights.

    VI. ECONOMICS AND HUMAN COOPERATION

    ENTRY LEVEL ECONOMICS

    Bernard Mandelville: The Fable Of The Bees: Private Vice Public Benefit

    Leonard Read: “I, Pencil”

    Hazlitt: Economics In One Lesson

    Thomas Sowell: Basic Economics

    ECONOMICS AND POLICY

    Aristotle: Topics

    Xenophon: Economics

    Cantillon: Essai Sur la Nature du Commerce en Général.

    David Hume: A Treatise of Human Nature (1739-1740), the Enquiries concerning Human Understanding (1748) and concerning the Principles of Morals (1751)

    Thomas Robert Malthus (1766–1834),An Essay on the Principle of Population.

    David Ricardo (1772–1823),

    Adam Smith (1723–1790).

    Frédéric Bastiat (1801–1850);

    William Stanley Jevons (1835–1882).

    (undone)

    THE KNOWLEDGE AND CALCULATION PROBLEMS

    Popper: Sources of Knowledge And Ignorance

    Popper: The Open Universe

    Taleb: The Black Swan, Fooled By Randomness

    Mandelbrot: ??

    (undone)

    (undone: the essays on the socialist calculation debate, the essay on the incentive priority)

    THE PROBLEM OF ABSTRACTIONS

    Religions:

    States:

    – Nock: Our Enemy, The State

    – Rothbard: Man, Economy and State

    Corporations:

    Abstract Property Types (Options)

    (UNDONE)

    VII. PERSONAL PHILOSOPHY

    PERSONAL PHILOSOPHY

    Montaigne: Essays

    Hazlitt: Foundations Of Morality

    Henry: In Defense Of Elitism

    (undone)

    RELATED

    Robert Greene: The 48 Laws Of Power

    Dale Carnegie: How to Win Friends & Influence People (Mass Market Paperback)

    VIII. EDUCATION

    Inside American Education, Thomas Sowell

    The Conspiracy of Ignorance, Martin Gross

    Real Education, Charles Murray

    The Deliberate Dumbing Down of America, Charlotte Iserbyt

    IX. THE NARRATIVE ARTS

    ART

    Anthony F. Janson: History Of Art

    Paul Johnson: Art: A New History

    Ayn Rand: The Romantic Manifesto

    MYTHOLOGY

    Anon: Gilgamesh

    Euripides:Cyclops, Heracles, Alcestis, Hecuba, Bacchae, Orestes, Andromache, Medea, Ion, Hippolytus, Helen, Iphigenia at Aulis

    Aristophanes : The Birds, The Clouds, The Frogs, Lysistrata, The Knights, The Wasps, The Assemblywomen

    Aesop’s Fables

    Homer: The Illiad and the Odyssey

    Virgil: The Aneid

    Plutarch: Life of Alexander

    Julius Caesar: The Conquest Of Gaul

    Anon: Beowulf

    Mallory: Le Morte De Arthur (England)

    The Carolingian Cycle (The Matter Of France)

    The Nibelungenlied (Germany)

    The Norse Sagas (Norse)

    Grimm: Grimm’s Fairy Tales

    Spenser: Prothalamion; The Faerie Queene

    Scott: Ivanhoe (Scott)

    Tolkein: The Hobbit, The Lord Of The Rings (English)

    Heinlein: Starship Troopers (American)

    Herbert: Dune (American)

    PLAYS

    (Undone)

    NARRATIVE ANALYSIS

    Bullfinch: Mythology

    Campbell: The Hero’s Journey, The Hero With A Thousand Faces

    Frazer: The Golden Bough

    Nietzsche: The Birth Of Tragedy

    HISTORY

    Herodotus

    Livy

    Plutarch

    Tacitus

    Kagan: The Peleponnesian War

    (undone)

    X. WAR

    THE WAR OF STATES

    Sun Tzu: The Art Of War

    The History of the Peloponnesian War: Revised Edition (Penguin Classics)

    Julius Ceasar: Caesar’s Commentaries: On the Gallic War And on the Civil War

    Julius Ceasar: The Conquest of Gaul

    Machiavelli: The Prince

    Machiavelli: The Art Of War

    Carl Van Clausewitz: On War (2G Second Generation Warfare)

    Antoine De Jomini: The Art Of War

    Moltke: The Art Of War

    Mao Tse-Tung: The Art of War (4G Fourth Generation Warfare)

    B. H. Liddell Hart: Strategy: Second Revised Edition (Meridian)

    Michael Handel: Masters of War: Classical Strategic Thought

    Martin van Creveld: Supplying War: Logistics from Wallenstein to Patton (Paperback)

    Robert Leonhard: The Art of Maneuver: Maneuver Warfare Theory and Airland Battle (3G Third Generation Warfare)

    John Keegan: The Price of Admiralty: The Evolution of Naval Warfare

    IDEOLOGICAL GUERILLA WAR

    Martin van Creveld: The Rise and Decline of the State, Transformation of War, The Sling and the Stone: On War in the 21st Century

    ADDITIONAL WORKS OF GENERAL THEORY

    Michael Handel: Masters of War: Classical Strategic Thought

    Bevin Alexander: How Wars Are Won: The 13 Rules of War from Ancient Greece to the War on Terror

    Bevin Alexander: How Great Generals Win (Paperback)

    John Keegan: The Mask of Command

    Martin van Creveld: Command in War (everything he has written)

    John Keegan: The Face of Battle: A Study of Agincourt, Waterloo, and the Somme

    Donald Kagan: On the Origins of War: And the Preservation of Peace (everything he has written)

    WORKS ON REBELLION

    Étienne de La Boétie: The Politics of Obedience: The Discourse of Voluntary Servitude

    The IRA Green Book

    The Marxist Mini Manual

    The Protocols Of Zion

    The Ten Planks Of The Communist Manifesto

    Michael Jacoby Brown: Building Powerful Community Organizations

    Saul Alinsky: Rules for Radicals

    Rinku Sen: Stir It Up (Lessons in Community Organizing & Advocacy)

    Randy Shaw: The Activist’s Handbook

    Joe Szakos and Kristin Layng Szakos: Lessons from the Field: Organizing in Rural Communities

    ADDITIONAL WORKS OF HISTORY3

    Donald W. Engels: Alexander the Great and the Logistics of the Macedonian Army

    The Grand Strategy of the Roman Empire: From the First Century A.D. to the Third

    John Keegan: A History of Warfare (Everything he has written.)

    Archer Jones: The Art of War in Western World

    Makers of Modern Strategy from Machiavelli to the Nuclear Age

    Donald Kagan: (everything he has written)

    ANALYTICAL METHODS

    Two-Person Game Theory

    Differential Games: A Mathematical Theory with Applications to Warfare and Pursuit, Control and Optimization

    Numbers, prediction, and war: Using history to evaluate combat factors and predict the outcome of battles

    Attrition: Forecasting Battle Casualties and Equipment Losses in Modern War


    Source date (UTC): 2018-06-09 17:17:00 UTC

  • Curt Doolittle’s Reading ListReading List “The Great Books Of The Aristocracy: T

    Curt Doolittle’s Reading ListReading List

    “The Great Books Of The Aristocracy: The Evolution of the Nature Law of Sovereigns”

    The ruling class under the monarchies never produced a canon of it’s own: a collection of works whose content is politically scientific and rationally written. The rulers simply did their job with tradition, pragmatism and familial wisdom. So a rich, fully articulated analysis of the western social and political system has been unavailable to us, other than Plato’s – and he was tragically wrong.

    There have been a number of ‘Great Books’ lists, in an effort to develop a western, or even world canon1 . These lists start by sharing a desire for freedom, and at some point for democracy, and finally, evolve to a desire for communism. They are not scientific, but merely moral appeals for power. As such they are sentimental and political propaganda and little more than efforts to seize political power or seize assets from the aristocracy by promoting redistribution, collectivism and democracy, using derivatives of Christian arguments.

    This list is my attempt to cover the body of ‘scientific’ political thought: writing that is based upon the record of what humans actually do, rather than what we fantasize that they should do. I also try to be consistent in avoiding appeals to sentiments, and instead, limit selections to rational or scientific arguments. I’ve tried to select books that the inquiring reader can wade through, and avoided the most abstract texts wherever possible. (The distraction of Bohm Bahwerk for example.) And I have tried to provide selections from a breadth of fields which serves to prevent the errors inherent in selective specialization. And because I believe that practical wisdom is the result of accumulated general knowledge and the further synthesis of common principles regardless of their field of origin.

    Included are: Art, Mythology, History, The Behavior Of Man, Philosophy, Politics, Economics, Law, and War. These are, together, the technologies of cooperation and conflict resolution.

    Jayman’s Human Biodiversity Reading List

    Jayman and HBD Chick’s Recommended Reading list is also here. We really ought to just make a book out of readings from it.

    Our Digital Library Is Huge.

    We capture these works in digital form, as often as possible. If you cannot obtain them from a bookstore or a library you can find them in our digital library. (Which is enormous)

    Visit Our Library

    The Short List: The Current State of Knowledge

    OUR MINDS

    Jeff Hawkins: On Intelligence (The Brain)

    Daniel Kahneman: Thinking, Fast and Slow (The Mind)

    Jonathan Haidt: The Righteous Mind (The Moral Intuition)

    Francis Fukuyama: Trust (The Political Objective)

    MAN

    Matt Ridley: The Red Queen

    Dale Petersen: Demonic Males

    William Tucker: Marriage and Civilization

    Nicholas Wade: A Troublesome Inheritance: Genes, Race and Human History

    Peter Turchin: Ultrasociety: How 10,000 Years of War Made Humans the Greatest Cooperators on Earth

    Garett Jones: Hive Mind: How Your Nation�s IQ Matters So Much More Than Your Own

    THE WEST (Sovereignty)

    Ricardo Duchesne: The Uniqueness of Western Civilization

    JP Mallory: In Search of Indo Europeans

    David W. Anthony: The Horse, the Wheel, and Language

    John Keegan: A History Of Warfare

    Joseph Campbell : The Hero’s Journey

    Karen Armstrong : The Great Transformation

    Eric H. Cline: 1177 B.C.: The Year Civilization Collapsed

    Bryan Ward-Perkins: The Fall of Rome: And the End of Civilization

    Emmet Scott: Mohammed and Charlemagne Revisited.

    Emmanuel Todd: The Explanation of Ideology

    Emmanuel Todd: The Invention of Europe

    THE RIGHTS OF ANGLO SAXONS (Contractualism)

    Edwin Vieira Jr. The Sword and Sovereignty: The Constitutional Principles of “the Militia of the Several States” (multimedia only – Trying to find pdf.)

    Fritz Kern: Kingship and Law in the Middle Ages

    Alan MacFarlane : Origins of English Individualism

    Daniel Hannan: Inventing Freedom

    David Hackett Fischer: Albion‘s Seed: Four British Folkways in America

    Gregory Clark: A Farewell to Alms

    THE NATURAL COMMON LAW (Contractual Constitutionalism)

    Milsom: Natural History of the Common Law.

    Plucknett: A Concise History Of The Common Law.

    Hayek’s: The Constitution of Liberty

    20th CENTURY CONTEXT

    Stephen Hicks : Explaining Postmodernism

    Hans Hoppe: Democracy The God That Failed

    Working Topics

    LIES

    Dallas Denery: The Devil Wins: A History of Lying from the Garden of Eden to the Enlightenment

    Thomas Carson: Lying and Deception: Theory and Practice

    Jennifer Mather Saul: Lying, Misleading, and What is Said

    Clancy Martin: The Philosophy of Deception 1st Edition

    Herbert Fingarette: Self-Deception

    Brooke Harrington: Deception: From Ancient Empires to Internet Dating

    Edward Bernays: Propaganda

    Jason Stanley: How Propaganda Works Hardcover

    Jeremy Elkins: Truth and Democracy

    David Livingstone: Less Than Human: Why We Demean, Enslave, and Exterminate Others

    Daniel Nanavati: A Brief History Of Lies

    DUPLICITY

    (iffy stuff I think is largely nonsense)

    Michael Hoffman: Judaism Discovered

    Removed:

    I am a little iffy on Pinker despite the fact that he fired the first salvo against pseudoscience in the social sciences. I can’t tell where his defense of market for his books begins and his academic honesty ends. Better angels is not true for the reasons he states. And that really troubles me.

    Steven Pinker: The Better Angels of Our Nature

    Steven Pinker : The Blank Slate

    I am a little iffy on harris because I have figured out his biases and errors, and his book on lying is too weak to include versus the alternatives.

    Sam Harris : Lying

    THE CANON

    I. POLITICS

    Aristotle: Ethics, Politics

    Machiavelli: The Prince, Discourses

    Burke: Reflections On The Revolution In France

    Hamilton: The Federalist Papers

    Bastiat: The Law

    Sorel: Reflections On Violence

    Mosca: Ruling Class

    Michels: Political Parties

    Burnham: The Machiavellians

    Hayek: The Road To Serfdom, The Constitution Of Liberty

    Mancur Olson: The Logic Of Collective Action

    Andrew Heywood : Political Ideologies : An Introduction.

    POLITICAL SOCIOLOGY

    David Hume: A Treatise of Human Nature, Essays Moral and Political, An Inquiry Concerning Human Understanding

    Locke: Two Treatise on Government

    Adam Smith: The Theory of Moral Sentiments, The Wealth of Nations

    Alexis de Tocqueville: Democracy in America

    Weber: Economy And Society, Essays in Sociology

    Pareto: Mind And Society

    Hayek: Individualism And Economic Order

    Veblen: The Theory of the Leisure Class

    Schumpeter: Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy

    Durkhiem: Division Of Labor In Society

    Hoppe: The Economics And Ethics Of Private Property, Democracy The God That Failed

    POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY

    Thomas Sowell: A Conflict of Visions: Ideological Origins of Political Struggles

    Thomas Sowell: Intellectuals and Society

    Thomas Sowell: The Vision of the Anointed: Self-Congratulation As a Basis for Social Policy.

    Thomas Sowell: Knowledge and Decisions

    II. THE RECORD OF MAN’S ACTIONS

    HISTORICAL ANALYSIS AND CRITICISMHISTORY

    Gregory Clark: A Farewell to Alms: A Brief Economic History of the World

    Huntington: The Clash of Civilizations and the Remaking of World Order

    Fukuyama: The Origins Of Political Order

    Carroll Quigley: The Evolution Of Civilizations

    Braudel: A History of Civilizations

    Durant: Lessons Of History (Everything really)

    Toynbee: A Study Of History

    BIRTH

    Ricardo Duchesne: The Uniqueness of Western Civilization

    Emmanuel Todd: The Invention Of Europe (French Only)

    Emmanuel Todd: The Causes of Progress

    McNeil: The Rise of the West: A History of the Human Community

    McNeil: Plagues and Peoples

    Diamond: Guns, Germs, and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies

    Pomeranz: The Great Divergence (Anything he has written.)

    DECLINE

    Acemoglu: Why Nations Fail

    Gibbon: The Decline And Fall Of The Roman Empire

    Spengler: The Death Of the West

    Yockey: The enemy Of Europe, The Enemy Of Our Enemies, Imperium

    Burnham: Suicide Of The West

    Buchannan: The Decline Of The West

    Whittaker Chambers: Witness

    CONFLICT

    Keegan: A History Of Warfare (Anything he has written.)

    Victor Davis Hanson’s “The Other Greeks”, Carnage and Culture (Anything he has written)

    Sir Lawrence Freedman: Strategy: A History

    RELIGION

    Karen Armstrong: The Great Transformation

    James C. Russell: The Germanization of Early Medieval Christianity

    MORALITY

    Emmanuel Todd: The Explanation of Ideology

    Robert Nisbet: The Quest for Community

    Jonathan Haidt: The Righteous Mind: Why Good People Are Divided by Politics and Religion

    KNOWLEDGE ECONOMY

    Niall Ferguson: (Everything he has written)

    Murray: Human Accomplishment (Everything he has written)

    Mokyr: The Gifts Of Athena, The Lever Of Riches (Anything he has written)

    CYCLE THEORY – HISTORY REPEATING ITSELF

    Strauss and Howe: Generations, The Fourth Turning

    FUTURE GEOPOLITICS

    Christopher Hayes: Twilight of the Elites: America After Meritocracy

    Fareed Zakaria: The Post-American World: Release 2.0

    Joseph S. Nye Jr.:The Future of Power [Kindle Edition]

    Samuel P. Huntington: The Clash of Civilizations and the Remaking of World Order [Kindle Edition]

    Joseph Tainter), Colin Renfrew:The Collapse of Complex Societies (New Studies in Archaeology)

    Fred Guterl:The Fate of the Species: Why the Human Race May Cause Its Own Extinction and How We Can Stop It

    SOCIOLOGY

    Banfield: The Unheavenly City, The Moral Basis of a Backward Society

    Axelrod: The Evolution Of Cooperation

    Mancur Olson: The Rise and Decline Of Nations

    Edward O. Wilson: The Social Conquest of Earth [Kindle Edition]

    Gregory Cochran, Henry Harpending: The 10,000 Year Explosion: How Civilization Accelerated Human Evolution

    Daron Acemoglu, James Robinson: Why Nations Fail: The Origins of Power, Prosperity, and Poverty [Kindle Edition]

    Peter L. Berger, Thomas Luckmann:The Social Construction of Reality: A Treatise in the Sociology of Knowledge [Paperback]

    Bryan Caplan: The Myth of the Rational Voter: Why Democracies Choose Bad Policies [Hardcover]

    Samuel P. Huntington: Political Order in Changing Societies (The Henry L. Stimson Lectures Series) [Paperback]

    Niall Ferguson: Civilization: The West and the Rest

    Charles Murray: Human Accomplishment: The Pursuit of Excellence in the Arts and Sciences, 800 B.C. to 1950

    Tim Harford:Adapt: Why Success Always Starts with Failure [Kindle Edition]

    III. HUMAN BEINGS

    EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY

    Cavalli-Svorza; The Great Human Diasporas

    Cochran & Harpending: The 10,000 Year Explosion

    Richard Dawkins:The Selfish Gene:30th Anniversary edition

    Jared M. Diamond: The Third Chimpanzee: The Evolution and Future of the Human Animal (P.S.) [Paperback]

    Robert Axelrod: The Evolution of Cooperation: Revised Edition

    Matt Ridley: The Red Queen: Sex and the Evolution of Human Nature [Kindle Edition]

    Christopher Ryan, Cacilda Jetha: Sex at Dawn: The Prehistoric Origins of Modern Sexuality

    Dale Peterson, Richard Wrangham: Demonic Males: Apes and the Origins of Human Violence

    Simon Baron-Cohen : The Essential Difference: Male And Female Brains And The Truth About Autism

    Steven Goldberg : Why Men Rule: A Theory of Male Dominance Paperback

    INTELLIGENCE

    Flynn: What Is Intelligence?

    Sternberg/Kaufman : The Cambridge Handbook of Intelligence

    Earl Hunt: Human Intelligence

    Jeff Hawkins: On Intelligence

    Richard Lynn: The Global Bell Curve: Race, IQ, and Inequality Worldwide [Perfect Paperback]

    Richard Lynn, Tatu Vanhanen:IQ and the Wealth of Nations (Human Evolution, Behavior, and Intelligence)

    Essays:

    The humorous essays of “Le Griffe Du Lion” (Prof Robert Gordon. Some subtle statistical errors, but in general useful. His smart fraction theory is being explored by others at the moment.)

    EVOLUTIONARY MORALITY

    THE MIND

    Daniel Kahneman: Thinking, Fast and Slow

    Steven Pinker: How the Mind Works

    Ramachandran: The Tell-Tale Brain: A Neuroscientist’s Quest for What Makes Us Human

    Steven Pinker: The Language Instinct: How The Mind Creates Language (P.S.) [Kindle Edition]

    Steven Pinker: The Blank Slate: The Modern Denial of Human Nature

    Steven Pinker: The Better Angels of Our Nature: Why Violence Has Declined

    Jonathan Haidt: The Righteous Mind: Why Good People Are Divided by Politics and Religion

    BELIEF

    (From Amazon – I don’t spent time on this subject but others do.)

    “The Belief Instinct: The Psychology of Souls, Destiny, and the Meaning of Life”

    “Subliminal: How Your Unconscious Mind Rules Your Behavior” by Leonard Mlodinow,

    “Society without God: What the Least Religious Nations Can Tell Us About Contentment” by Phil Zuckerman,

    “The Believing Brain: From Ghosts and Gods to Politics and Conspiracies—How We Construct Beliefs and Reinforce Them as Truths” by Michael Shermer,

    “SuperSense: Why We Believe in the Unbelievable” by Bruce M. Hood,

    “The Brain and the Meaning of Life” by Paul Thagard.

    “Incognito: The Secret Lives of the Brain” by David Eagleman

    IV. SOCIAL MAN: COOPERATION AND TRUST

    SOCIAL CLASS

    Paul Fussell: Class: A Guide Through the American Status System

    Richard J. Herrnstein, Charles Murray: Bell Curve: Intelligence and Class Structure in American Life

    Robert Gordon (La Griffe Du Lion): “Smart Fraction Theory” (Methodological flaws aside, the theory is insightful) and Smart Fraction Theory II

    Charles Murray: Coming Apart: The State of White America, 1960-2010 [Hardcover]

    Stanley, DankoThe Millionaire Next Door: The Surprising Secrets of America’s Wealthy

    Stanley: The Millionaire Mind

    Nassim Nicholas Taleb: The Black Swan: Second Edition: The Impact of the Highly Improbable Fragility”

    Mandelbrot, Hudson:The Misbehavior of Markets: A Fractal View of Financial Turbulence

    TRUST

    Harrison, Huntington: Culture Matters: How Values Shape Human Progress

    Francis Fukuyama: Trust: The Social Virtues and The Creation of Prosperity [Paperback]

    Sam Harris: Lying

    Joel Kotkin: Tribes

    Frank Salter: Risky Transactions: Trust, Kinship and Ethnicity; On Genetic Interests

    Huntington: The Clash Of Civilizations

    Becker: The Economic Approach To Human Behavior

    THE HANJAL LINE – MATING PATTERNS (Trying to trim this section down)

    SUMMARY: Kevin MacDonald “What Makes Western Culture Unique?”

    John Hajnal, (1965): European marriage pattern in historical perspective en D.V. Glass and D.E.C. Eversley, (eds.) Population in History, Arnold, Londres

    Ansley J. Coale & Roy Treadway, (1986): The Decline of Fertility in Europe

    David Levine, (1977): Family Formation in an Age of Nascent Capitalism

    Wally Seccombe (1992): A Millennium of Family Change, Feudalism to Capitalism in Northwestern Europe, Verso.

    Göran Therborn, (2004): Between Sex and Power, Family in the World, 1900–2000, Routledge Press (see pp. 144–45).

    Mary S. Hartman (2004): The Household and the Making of History, A Subversive View of the Western Past, Cambridge University Press.

    David I Kertzer and Marzio Barbagli. 2001. The history of the European family. New Haven: Yale University Press. p xiv

    David Levine (1977): Family Formation in an Age of Nascent Capitalism, Academic Press. 152

    Peter Laslett: The World We Have Lost.

    Stephanie Coontz: Marriage, a History: From Obedience to Intimacy, or How Love Conquered Marriage.

    De Moor, Tine and Jan Luiten van Zanden. 2009. Girl power: the European marriage pattern and labour markets in the North Sea region in the late medieval and early modern period.

    MANORIALISM

    Michael Mitterauer: Why Europe?: The Medieval Origins of Its Special Path

    Bloch, Marc (1989-11-16). Feudal Society: Vol 1: The Growth and Ties of Dependence (2 ed.).

    Bloch, Marc (1989-11-16). Feudal Society: Vol 2: Social Classes and Political Organisation (2 ed.). (“Feudal Society”, in its modern sense was coined in Marc Bloch’s 1939-40 books. He emphasized the distinction between economic manorialism which preceded feudalism and survived it, and political and social feudalism, or seigneurialism.)

    Prosper Boissonnade; Eileen Power, Lynn White; Life and work in medieval Europe : the evolution of medieval economy from the fifth to the fifteenth century.

    Henri Pirenne: Economic and Social History of Medieval Europe. Harcourt Brace & Company.

    Articles:

    ^ Peter Sarris, “The Origins of the Manorial Economy: New Insights from Late Antiquity”, The English Historical Review 119 (April 2004:279-311).

    ^ Horn, “On the Origins of the Medieval Cloister” Gesta 12.1/2 (1973:13-52), quote p. 41.

    ^ Andrew Jones, “The Rise and Fall of the Manorial System: A Critical Comment” The Journal of Economic History 32.4 (December 1972:938-944) p. 938; a comment on D. North and R. Thomas, “The rise and fall of the manorial system: a theoretical model”, The Journal of Economic History 31 (December 1971:777-803).

    ^ C.R. Whittaker, “Circe’s pigs: from slavery to serfdom in the later Roman world”, Slavery and Abolition 8 (1987:87-122.

    ^ Averil Cameron, The Mediterranean World in Late Antiquity AD 395-600, 1993:86.

    RACE AND RACISM

    Michael Levin: Why Race Matters:Race Differences and What They Mean

    J. Philippe Rushton: Race, Evolution and Behavior

    Gobineau; The Inequality of Human Races

    V. LAW

    LAW

    Core:

    – Milsom’s Natural History of the Common Law.

    – Plucknett’s A Concise History Of The Common Law.

    – Hayek’s The Constitution of Liberty

    More:

    Bastiat: The Law

    Hayek: Law, Legislation, and Liberty

    Leoni: Freedom and the Law

    Benson: Enterprise of Law

    Randy E. Barnett: The Structure of Liberty: Justice and the Rule of Law

    Richard Epstein: How Progressives Rewrote the Constitution, Simple Rules for a Complex World.

    LEGAL CODES

    The Code Of Hammurabi

    (UNDONE: list the other early laws here)

    The Athenian Constitution

    Roman Law

    The Anglo Saxon Codes

    Magna Carta

    The Articles Of Confederation

    The US Declaration Of Independence, Constitution, and Original Bill of Rights.

    VI. ECONOMICS AND HUMAN COOPERATION

    ENTRY LEVEL ECONOMICS

    Bernard Mandelville: The Fable Of The Bees: Private Vice Public Benefit

    Leonard Read: “I, Pencil”

    Hazlitt: Economics In One Lesson

    Thomas Sowell: Basic Economics

    ECONOMICS AND POLICY

    Aristotle: Topics

    Xenophon: Economics

    Cantillon: Essai Sur la Nature du Commerce en Général.

    David Hume: A Treatise of Human Nature (1739-1740), the Enquiries concerning Human Understanding (1748) and concerning the Principles of Morals (1751)

    Thomas Robert Malthus (1766–1834),An Essay on the Principle of Population.

    David Ricardo (1772–1823),

    Adam Smith (1723–1790).

    Frédéric Bastiat (1801–1850);

    William Stanley Jevons (1835–1882).

    (undone)

    THE KNOWLEDGE AND CALCULATION PROBLEMS

    Popper: Sources of Knowledge And Ignorance

    Popper: The Open Universe

    Taleb: The Black Swan, Fooled By Randomness

    Mandelbrot: ??

    (undone)

    (undone: the essays on the socialist calculation debate, the essay on the incentive priority)

    THE PROBLEM OF ABSTRACTIONS

    Religions:

    States:

    – Nock: Our Enemy, The State

    – Rothbard: Man, Economy and State

    Corporations:

    Abstract Property Types (Options)

    (UNDONE)

    VII. PERSONAL PHILOSOPHY

    PERSONAL PHILOSOPHY

    Montaigne: Essays

    Hazlitt: Foundations Of Morality

    Henry: In Defense Of Elitism

    (undone)

    RELATED

    Robert Greene: The 48 Laws Of Power

    Dale Carnegie: How to Win Friends & Influence People (Mass Market Paperback)

    VIII. EDUCATION

    Inside American Education, Thomas Sowell

    The Conspiracy of Ignorance, Martin Gross

    Real Education, Charles Murray

    The Deliberate Dumbing Down of America, Charlotte Iserbyt

    IX. THE NARRATIVE ARTS

    ART

    Anthony F. Janson: History Of Art

    Paul Johnson: Art: A New History

    Ayn Rand: The Romantic Manifesto

    MYTHOLOGY

    Anon: Gilgamesh

    Euripides:Cyclops, Heracles, Alcestis, Hecuba, Bacchae, Orestes, Andromache, Medea, Ion, Hippolytus, Helen, Iphigenia at Aulis

    Aristophanes : The Birds, The Clouds, The Frogs, Lysistrata, The Knights, The Wasps, The Assemblywomen

    Aesop’s Fables

    Homer: The Illiad and the Odyssey

    Virgil: The Aneid

    Plutarch: Life of Alexander

    Julius Caesar: The Conquest Of Gaul

    Anon: Beowulf

    Mallory: Le Morte De Arthur (England)

    The Carolingian Cycle (The Matter Of France)

    The Nibelungenlied (Germany)

    The Norse Sagas (Norse)

    Grimm: Grimm’s Fairy Tales

    Spenser: Prothalamion; The Faerie Queene

    Scott: Ivanhoe (Scott)

    Tolkein: The Hobbit, The Lord Of The Rings (English)

    Heinlein: Starship Troopers (American)

    Herbert: Dune (American)

    PLAYS

    (Undone)

    NARRATIVE ANALYSIS

    Bullfinch: Mythology

    Campbell: The Hero’s Journey, The Hero With A Thousand Faces

    Frazer: The Golden Bough

    Nietzsche: The Birth Of Tragedy

    HISTORY

    Herodotus

    Livy

    Plutarch

    Tacitus

    Kagan: The Peleponnesian War

    (undone)

    X. WAR

    THE WAR OF STATES

    Sun Tzu: The Art Of War

    The History of the Peloponnesian War: Revised Edition (Penguin Classics)

    Julius Ceasar: Caesar’s Commentaries: On the Gallic War And on the Civil War

    Julius Ceasar: The Conquest of Gaul

    Machiavelli: The Prince

    Machiavelli: The Art Of War

    Carl Van Clausewitz: On War (2G Second Generation Warfare)

    Antoine De Jomini: The Art Of War

    Moltke: The Art Of War

    Mao Tse-Tung: The Art of War (4G Fourth Generation Warfare)

    B. H. Liddell Hart: Strategy: Second Revised Edition (Meridian)

    Michael Handel: Masters of War: Classical Strategic Thought

    Martin van Creveld: Supplying War: Logistics from Wallenstein to Patton (Paperback)

    Robert Leonhard: The Art of Maneuver: Maneuver Warfare Theory and Airland Battle (3G Third Generation Warfare)

    John Keegan: The Price of Admiralty: The Evolution of Naval Warfare

    IDEOLOGICAL GUERILLA WAR

    Martin van Creveld: The Rise and Decline of the State, Transformation of War, The Sling and the Stone: On War in the 21st Century

    ADDITIONAL WORKS OF GENERAL THEORY

    Michael Handel: Masters of War: Classical Strategic Thought

    Bevin Alexander: How Wars Are Won: The 13 Rules of War from Ancient Greece to the War on Terror

    Bevin Alexander: How Great Generals Win (Paperback)

    John Keegan: The Mask of Command

    Martin van Creveld: Command in War (everything he has written)

    John Keegan: The Face of Battle: A Study of Agincourt, Waterloo, and the Somme

    Donald Kagan: On the Origins of War: And the Preservation of Peace (everything he has written)

    WORKS ON REBELLION

    Étienne de La Boétie: The Politics of Obedience: The Discourse of Voluntary Servitude

    The IRA Green Book

    The Marxist Mini Manual

    The Protocols Of Zion

    The Ten Planks Of The Communist Manifesto

    Michael Jacoby Brown: Building Powerful Community Organizations

    Saul Alinsky: Rules for Radicals

    Rinku Sen: Stir It Up (Lessons in Community Organizing & Advocacy)

    Randy Shaw: The Activist’s Handbook

    Joe Szakos and Kristin Layng Szakos: Lessons from the Field: Organizing in Rural Communities

    ADDITIONAL WORKS OF HISTORY3

    Donald W. Engels: Alexander the Great and the Logistics of the Macedonian Army

    The Grand Strategy of the Roman Empire: From the First Century A.D. to the Third

    John Keegan: A History of Warfare (Everything he has written.)

    Archer Jones: The Art of War in Western World

    Makers of Modern Strategy from Machiavelli to the Nuclear Age

    Donald Kagan: (everything he has written)

    ANALYTICAL METHODS

    Two-Person Game Theory

    Differential Games: A Mathematical Theory with Applications to Warfare and Pursuit, Control and Optimization

    Numbers, prediction, and war: Using history to evaluate combat factors and predict the outcome of battles

    Attrition: Forecasting Battle Casualties and Equipment Losses in Modern War


    Source date (UTC): 2018-06-09 17:13:00 UTC

  • Jayman’s HBD Reading ListStart with (key reading): Top of the list: Pinker, Stev

    Jayman’s HBD Reading ListStart with (key reading):

    Top of the list: Pinker, Steven (2002). The Blank Slate: The Modern Denial of Human Nature. Viking.

    Harris, Judith Rich (1998). The Nurture Assumption: Why Children Turn Out the Way They Do. Free Press. Revised and Updated edition, 2009.

    Harris, Judith Rich (2006). No Two Alike: Human Nature and Human Individuality. W.W. Norton.

    Cochran, Gregory & Harpending, Henry (2009). The 10,000 Year Explosion: How Civilization Accelerated Human Evolution. Basic Books.

    Frost, Peter (2011). Human nature or human natures? Futures, 43, 740–748.

    Clark, Gregory (2014). The Son Also Rises: Surnames and the History of Social Mobility. Princeton University Press.

    On biological sex differences:

    A video of a debate between Steven Pinker and Elizabeth Spelke – Edge: THE SCIENCE OF GENDER AND SCIENCE (2005)

    The video from the above site has been removed, but can be found here. The above text contains a transcript of the debate and each presenter’s slides.

    This discussion/review of sex differences by Larry Cahill (2014): Equal ≠ The Same: Sex Differences in the Human Brain

    Indeed, see much of the rest of Cahill’s work on this.

    Ingalhalikar, Madhura, et al. (2013). Sex differences in the structural connectome of the human brain, PNAS 2013

    Cahill, Larry (2006). Why sex matters for neuroscience, Nature Reviews Neuroscience | AOP, published online 10 May 2006.

    Ruigrok, Amber N.V.; Salimi-Khorshidi, Gholamreza; Lai, Meng-Chuan; Baron-Cohen, Simon; Lombardo, Michael V.; Tait, Roger J.; and Suckling, John (2014). A meta-analysis of sex differences in human brain structure, Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews, 39, 34-50.

    Schmitt, David P. (2003). Universal Sex Differences in the Desire for Sexual Variety: Tests From 52 Nations, 6 Continents, and 13 Islands. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 85(1), 85–104.

    Schmitt, David P. et al. (2012). A Reexamination of Sex Differences in Sexuality: New Studies Reveal Old Truths. Current Directions in Psychological Science, 21(2), 135–139.

    Schmitt, David P. (2013). When Is a Sex Difference Real? | Psychology Today

    Browne, Kingsley R. (2013). Biological Sex Differences in the Workplace: Reports of the End of Men are Greatly Exaggerated (As Are Claims of Women’s Continued Inequality). Boston University Law Review, Forthcoming. Wayne State University Law School Research Paper No. 2013-04.

    Borkenau, P., Hřebíčková, M., Kuppens, P., Realo, A. and Allik, J. (2013), Sex Differences in Variability in Personality: A Study in Four Samples. Journal of Personality, 81, 49–60.

    This video interview with Kay Hymowitz, The Plight of the Alpha Female:

    Also this article by Kay Hymowitz (2013):

    Think Again: Working Women – By Kay Hymowitz – Foreign Policy

    Sommers, Christina Hoff (2013). Lessons from a feminist paradise on Equal Pay Day – Society and Culture – AEI

    Sommers, Christina Hoff (2013). What ‘Lean In’ Misunderstands About Gender Differences – The Atlantic

    Lemos, Gina C.; Abad, Francisco J.; Almeida, Leandro S.; and Colom, Robert (2013). Sex differences on g and non-g intellectual performance reveal potential sources of STEM discrepancies. Intelligence 41(1), 11-18.

    (2011) Sex differences in the Brain: Fact or Fiction?: A video lecture by Margaret M. McCarthy that goes into great depth about the evidence for human and non-human animal sex differences in the brain and behavior (see starting at 28:09 for humans).

    And of course, Harald Eia’s Brainwash episode on gender.

    ON THE REALITY OF IQ

    This talk by Steve Hsu:

    Also see these blog posts by Steve Hsu:

    Information Processing: Horsepower matters; psychometrics works (2009)

    Information Processing: Do advanced education and a challenging career make you smarter? (2009)

    Information Processing: Life impacts of personality and intelligence (2014)

    More on the predictive validity of IQ, see this essay:

    Murray, Charles (1997). IQ and economic success. The Public Interest, Summer 1997, 21-35

    On the central importance of g to many aspects of life:

    Gottfredson, Linda S. (1997). “Why g matters: The Complexity of Everyday Life.” Intelligence 24

    On the science of behavioral genetics:

    See these key papers on behavioral genetics:

    Bouchard, Thomas. J. and McGue, Matt (2003), Genetic and environmental influences on human psychological differences. J. Neurobiol., 54: 4–45.

    Bouchard, Thomas J. (2004), Genetic Influence on Human Psychological Traits A survey. Current Directions in Psychological Science, 13(4): 148-151

    Bouchard, Thomas J. (2008). Genes and Human Psychological Traits. In Peter Carruthers, Stephen Laurence, and Stephen Stich (Eds.), The Innate Mind, Volume 3: Foundations and the Future (69-89). Oxford University Press.

    See this key defense against popular criticisms of behavioral genetics and a review of the evidence underlying the solidity of its methods:

    Barnes, J.C.; Wright, John Paul; Boutwell, Brian B.; Schwartz, Joseph A.; Connoly, Eric J.; Nedelec, Joseph L.; and Beaver, Kevin M. (2014), Demonstrating the Validity of Twin Research in Criminology. Criminology.

    Steger, Michael F.; Hicks, Brian M.; Kashdan, Todd B.; Krueger, Robert F.; Bouchard Jr., Thomas J. (2007). Genetic and environmental influences on the positive traits of the values in action classification, and biometric covariance with normal personality. Journal of Research in Personality, 41(3), 524-539.

    On the impact of genetics on IQ:

    Plomin, Robert and Deary, Ian J. (2014) Genetics and intelligence differences: five special findings. Molecular Psychiatry advance online publication 16 September 2014

    (2013) The Genetics of Intelligence « Meng Hu’s Blog

    On the genetic contributions to economic success, including the role of IQ, and the lack of effects of the family environment on such (i.e., parents):

    Essays on genetic variation and economic behavior – Cesarini, D. A. (2010). Essays on genetic variation and economic behavior. (Doctoral dissertation). Retrieved from DSpace@MIT. (http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/57897).

    Hyytinen, Ari; Ilmakunnas, Pekka; Johansson, Edvard; and Toivanen, Otto (2013). Heritability of Lifetime Income. Helsinki Center of Economic Research Discussion Paper No. 364

    Visscher PM, Medland SE, Ferreira MAR, Morley KI, Zhu G, et al. (2006) Assumption-Free Estimation of Heritability from Genome-Wide Identity-by-Descent Sharing between Full Siblings. PLoS Genet 2(3): e41.

    Davies, G., Tenesa, A., Payton, A., Yang, J., Harris, S. E., Liewald, D., … Deary, I. J. (2011). Genome-wide association studies establish that human intelligence is highly heritable and polygenic. Molecular Psychiatry, 16(10), 996–1005.

    Plomin, Robert et al. (2013). Common DNA Markers Can Account for More Than Half of the Genetic Influence on Cognitive Abilities. Psychological Science, April 2013, 24(4) 562-568.

    Trzaskowski, Maciej; Harlaar, Nicole; Arden, Rosalind; Krapohl, Eva; Rimfeld, Kaili; McMillan, Andrew; Dale, Philip S.; and Plomin, Robert. (2013) Genetic influence on family socioeconomic status and children’s intelligence. Intelligence, 42, 83-86.

    Verweij, K. J. H., Yang, J., Lahti, J., Veijola, J., Hintsanen, M., Pulkki-Råback, L., … Zietsch, B. P. (2012). Maintenance of genetic variation in human personality: Testing evolutionary models by estimating heritability due to common causal variants and investigating the effect of distant inbreeding. Evolution; International Journal of Organic Evolution, 66(10), 3238–3251.

    Also see this wonderful and comprehensive review of the heritability of brain structure and the relationship between this structure and IQ:

    Strike, Lachlan T.; Couvy-Duchesne, Baptiste; Hansell, Narelle K.; Cuellar-Partida, Gabriel; Medland, Sarah E.; and Wright, Margaret J. (2015) Genetics and Brain Morphology, Neuropsychology Review, March, 14, 2015.

    And of course, my own blog posts on the matter:

    All Human Behavioral Traits are Heritable

    Taming the “Tiger Mom” and Tackling the Parenting Myth

    Environmental Hereditarianism

    The Son Becomes The Father

    More Behavioral Genetic Facts

    As well as Harald Eia’s Brainwash episode “The Parental Effect”

    On the reality of race:

    These five key blog posts by Steve Hsu:

    (2008) Information Processing: “No scientific basis for race”

    (2008) Information Processing: Human genetic variation, Fst and Lewontin’s fallacy in pictures

    (2012) Information Processing: Rare variants and human genetic diversity

    (2013) Information Processing: Learning can hurt

    (2014) Information Processing: What’s New Since Montagu?

    These papers describing some of the genetic processes used, particularly principal component analysis (PCA):

    Price, Alkes L.; Reich, David (2006). Population Structure and Eigenanalysis. PLOS Genetics.

    McVean, Gil (2009). A Genealogical Interpretation of Principal Components Analysis. PLOS: Genetics.

    These blog posts by Peter Frost:

    (2011) Evo and Proud: Apples, oranges, and genes

    (2012) Evo and Proud: Trans-species polymorphisms

    As well as these two by Greg Cochran:

    (2012) Lewontin’s argument | West Hunter

    (2014) Phenotypes vs genetic statistics | West Hunter

    And this post by Razib Khan:

    (2013) Why race as a biological construct matters | Gene Expression

    This video of racial differences in newborn behavior:

    Cross-Cultural Differences in Newborn Behavior

    Discussed in Freedman, Daniel G. (1979). Human Sociobiology: A Holistic Approach. Free Press.

    Also see: Kagan, Jerome, & Snidman, Nancy C. (2004). The long shadow of temperament. Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press.

    And also see my own blog post:

    How Much Hard Evidence Do You Need?

    And of course, Harald Eia’s Brainwash episode on Race.

    On racial differences in IQ and their global impact:

    Rushton, J. Philippe and Jensen, Arthur R. (2010). Race and IQ: A Theory-Based Review of the Research in Richard Nisbett’s Intelligence and How to Get It. The Open Psychology Journal, 3, 9-35.

    On the effect of poverty and socioeconomic status on IQ (there isn’t one) and said explanations for racial gaps, this blog post:

    (2013) The Unsilenced Science: Black Suits, Gowns, & Skin: SAT Scores by Income, Education, & Race

    Rushton, J. Philippe & Jensen, Arthur R. (2010). The rise and fall of the Flynn Effect as a reason to expect a narrowing of the Black-White IQ gap. Intelligence, 38, 213-219

    Nijenhuis, J., & van der Flier, H. (2013). Is the Flynn effect on g?: A meta-analysis, Intelligence

    Nijenhuisa, Jan te; Jongeneel-Grimenb, Birthe; & Armstrong, Elijah L. (2015). Are adoption gains on the g factor? A meta-analysis, Personality and Individual Differences 73, 50-60.

    Gottfredson, Linda S. (2007). Shattering Logic to Explain the Flynn Effect. Cato Unbound.

    Lynn, Richard and Tatu Vanhanen. (2002). IQ and the Wealth of Nations. Praeger/Greenwood.

    Lynn, Richard (2008). The Global Bell Curve: Race, IQ, and Inequality Worldwide. Washington Summit Publishers.

    Lynn, Richard and Tatu Vanhanen, (2012). Intelligence: A Unifying Construct for the Social Sciences.

    Also see this blog post by Jason Malloy (2006):

    Gene Expression: A World of Difference: Richard Lynn Maps World Intelligence

    Also see the ongoing discussion over at Human Varieties

    Also these posts by La Griffe du Lion:

    (2002) The Smart Fraction Theory of IQ and the Wealth of Nations

    (2004) Smart Fraction Theory II: Why Asians Lag

    Rindermann, Heiner (2007). The g-factor of international cognitive ability comparisons: the homogeneity of results in PISA, TIMSS, PIRLS and IQ-tests across nations. European Journal of Personality 21, 667-706.

    Rindermann, Heiner; Sailer, Michael; and Thompson, James (2009). The impact of smart fractions, cognitive ability of politicians and average competences of peoples on social development. Talent Development & Excellence 1 (1), 3-25.

    Christainsen, Gregory B (2013). IQ and the wealth of nations: How much reverse causality?Intelligence 41, 688-698.

    On the evolution of modern advanced civilized peoples:

    Clark, Gregory (2007). A Farewell to Alms: A Brief Economic History of the World. Princeton University Press.

    Frost, Peter (2008). Sexual selection and human geographic variation, Special Issue: Proceedings of the 2nd Annual Meeting of the NorthEastern Evolutionary Psychology Society. Journal of Social, Evolutionary, and Cultural Psychology, 2(4),169-191

    Frost, Peter (2010). The Roman State and genetic pacification, Evolutionary Psychology, 8(3), 376-389.

    Frost, Peter and Harpending, Henry (2015). Western Europe, State Formation, and Genetic Pacification, Evolutionary Psychology, 13(1), 230-243.

    Harpending, Henry (2012). Genetics and the Historical Decline of Violence? | West Hunter

    Frost, Peter (2013). Evo and Proud: Making Europeans kinder, gentler

    Frost, Peter (2013). Evo and Proud: Where do those tensions come from?

    Unz, Ron (2013). How Social Darwinism Made Modern China | The American Conservative

    Cochran, Gregory; Hardy, Jason; & Harpending, Henry (2006). Natural History of Ashkenazi Intelligence. Journal of Biosocial Science 38, 1-35

    Also see these blog posts by Peter Frost (2013):

    East Asia’s Farewell to Alms

    Does the Clark-Unz model apply to Japan and Korea?

    Final thoughts on the Clark-Unz model

    Fischer, David Hackett (1989). Albion’s Seed: Four British Folkways in America. Oxford University Press

    Woodard, Colin (2011). American Nations: A History of the Eleven Rival Regional Cultures of North America. Viking Adult.

    And of course, the work of HBD Chick:

    start here | hbd* chick

    clannishness defined | hbd* chick

    big summary post on the hajnal line | hbd* chick

    the middle ages « hbd* chick (2011)

    year-end summary, 2011 | hbd* chick

    outbreeding, self-control and lethal violence | hbd* chick

    2012 top ten | hbd* chick

    historic european homicide rates … and the hajnal line | hbd* chick

    medieval manorialism’s selection pressures | hbd chick

    In addition to my own summaries of her work:

    An HBD Summary of the Foundations of Modern Civilization

    How Inbred are Europeans?

    And about the regional “cultures” of North America (for example, liberal New England vs. the conservative Deep South), see my series on the matter:

    A Tentative Ranking of the Clannishness of the “Founding Fathers”

    Sound Familiar?

    The Cavaliers

    Flags of the American Nations

    Maps of the American Nations

    Rural White Liberals – a Key to Understanding the Political Divide

    More Maps of the American Nations

    On genetic load:

    First, be sure to see these blog posts by Greg Cochran on West Hunter (2012):

    Typos

    Get Smart

    More thoughts on genetic load

    The genetics of stupidity

    The Golden Age

    Also:

    Keller, Matthew C., & Miller, Geoffery (2006). Resolving the paradox of common, harmful, heritable mental disorders: Which evolutionary genetic models work best? Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 28, 285-452.

    On the economic impact of demographic changes (particularly immigration and the Baby Boom in the United States):

    Blog posts by Peter Turchin (2013):

    The End of Prosperity: Why Did Real Wages Stop Growing in the 1970s?

    Cutting through the Thicket of Economic Forces (Why Real Wages Stopped Growing II)

    A Proxy for Non-Market Forces (Why Real Wages Stopped Growing III)

    Putting It All Together (Why Real Wages Stopped Growing IV)

    More on Labor Supply (Why Real Wages Stopped Growing V)

    This post by Dennis Mangan (2012):

    Spot the Correlation: Wealth vs. Immigration

    On racial and ethnic strife, the pull of genetic similarity, and challenges presented by “diversity”:

    Putnam, Robert D. (2007). E Pluribus Unum: Diversity and Community in the Twenty-first Century — The 2006 Johan Skytte Prize. Scandinavian Political Studies, 30(2), 137-174

    Also, on that note, see this ranking of the most peaceful U.S. states, in which, Maine (see HBD Chick here) consistently tops out at #1!

    United States Peace Index « Vision of Humanity

    Krupp, D.B., Debruine, L.M., Jones, B.C., and Lalumiere, M.L. (2012) Kin recognition: evidence that humans can perceive both positive and negative relatedness. Journal of Evolutionary Biology, 25 (8). pp. 1472-1478.

    Also see

    Also see this much more comprehensive list of research supporting human biodiversity here:

    Human BioDiversity Reading List: http://www.humanbiologicaldiversity.com/


    Source date (UTC): 2018-06-09 17:03:00 UTC

  • Jayman’s HBD Reading ListStart with (key reading): Top of the list: Pinker, Stev

    Jayman’s HBD Reading ListStart with (key reading):

    Top of the list: Pinker, Steven (2002). The Blank Slate: The Modern Denial of Human Nature. Viking.

    Harris, Judith Rich (1998). The Nurture Assumption: Why Children Turn Out the Way They Do. Free Press. Revised and Updated edition, 2009.

    Harris, Judith Rich (2006). No Two Alike: Human Nature and Human Individuality. W.W. Norton.

    Cochran, Gregory & Harpending, Henry (2009). The 10,000 Year Explosion: How Civilization Accelerated Human Evolution. Basic Books.

    Frost, Peter (2011). Human nature or human natures? Futures, 43, 740–748.

    Clark, Gregory (2014). The Son Also Rises: Surnames and the History of Social Mobility. Princeton University Press.

    On biological sex differences:

    A video of a debate between Steven Pinker and Elizabeth Spelke – Edge: THE SCIENCE OF GENDER AND SCIENCE (2005)

    The video from the above site has been removed, but can be found here. The above text contains a transcript of the debate and each presenter’s slides.

    This discussion/review of sex differences by Larry Cahill (2014): Equal ≠ The Same: Sex Differences in the Human Brain

    Indeed, see much of the rest of Cahill’s work on this.

    Ingalhalikar, Madhura, et al. (2013). Sex differences in the structural connectome of the human brain, PNAS 2013

    Cahill, Larry (2006). Why sex matters for neuroscience, Nature Reviews Neuroscience | AOP, published online 10 May 2006.

    Ruigrok, Amber N.V.; Salimi-Khorshidi, Gholamreza; Lai, Meng-Chuan; Baron-Cohen, Simon; Lombardo, Michael V.; Tait, Roger J.; and Suckling, John (2014). A meta-analysis of sex differences in human brain structure, Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews, 39, 34-50.

    Schmitt, David P. (2003). Universal Sex Differences in the Desire for Sexual Variety: Tests From 52 Nations, 6 Continents, and 13 Islands. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 85(1), 85–104.

    Schmitt, David P. et al. (2012). A Reexamination of Sex Differences in Sexuality: New Studies Reveal Old Truths. Current Directions in Psychological Science, 21(2), 135–139.

    Schmitt, David P. (2013). When Is a Sex Difference Real? | Psychology Today

    Browne, Kingsley R. (2013). Biological Sex Differences in the Workplace: Reports of the End of Men are Greatly Exaggerated (As Are Claims of Women’s Continued Inequality). Boston University Law Review, Forthcoming. Wayne State University Law School Research Paper No. 2013-04.

    Borkenau, P., Hřebíčková, M., Kuppens, P., Realo, A. and Allik, J. (2013), Sex Differences in Variability in Personality: A Study in Four Samples. Journal of Personality, 81, 49–60.

    This video interview with Kay Hymowitz, The Plight of the Alpha Female:

    Also this article by Kay Hymowitz (2013):

    Think Again: Working Women – By Kay Hymowitz – Foreign Policy

    Sommers, Christina Hoff (2013). Lessons from a feminist paradise on Equal Pay Day – Society and Culture – AEI

    Sommers, Christina Hoff (2013). What ‘Lean In’ Misunderstands About Gender Differences – The Atlantic

    Lemos, Gina C.; Abad, Francisco J.; Almeida, Leandro S.; and Colom, Robert (2013). Sex differences on g and non-g intellectual performance reveal potential sources of STEM discrepancies. Intelligence 41(1), 11-18.

    (2011) Sex differences in the Brain: Fact or Fiction?: A video lecture by Margaret M. McCarthy that goes into great depth about the evidence for human and non-human animal sex differences in the brain and behavior (see starting at 28:09 for humans).

    And of course, Harald Eia’s Brainwash episode on gender.

    ON THE REALITY OF IQ

    This talk by Steve Hsu:

    Also see these blog posts by Steve Hsu:

    Information Processing: Horsepower matters; psychometrics works (2009)

    Information Processing: Do advanced education and a challenging career make you smarter? (2009)

    Information Processing: Life impacts of personality and intelligence (2014)

    More on the predictive validity of IQ, see this essay:

    Murray, Charles (1997). IQ and economic success. The Public Interest, Summer 1997, 21-35

    On the central importance of g to many aspects of life:

    Gottfredson, Linda S. (1997). “Why g matters: The Complexity of Everyday Life.” Intelligence 24

    On the science of behavioral genetics:

    See these key papers on behavioral genetics:

    Bouchard, Thomas. J. and McGue, Matt (2003), Genetic and environmental influences on human psychological differences. J. Neurobiol., 54: 4–45.

    Bouchard, Thomas J. (2004), Genetic Influence on Human Psychological Traits A survey. Current Directions in Psychological Science, 13(4): 148-151

    Bouchard, Thomas J. (2008). Genes and Human Psychological Traits. In Peter Carruthers, Stephen Laurence, and Stephen Stich (Eds.), The Innate Mind, Volume 3: Foundations and the Future (69-89). Oxford University Press.

    See this key defense against popular criticisms of behavioral genetics and a review of the evidence underlying the solidity of its methods:

    Barnes, J.C.; Wright, John Paul; Boutwell, Brian B.; Schwartz, Joseph A.; Connoly, Eric J.; Nedelec, Joseph L.; and Beaver, Kevin M. (2014), Demonstrating the Validity of Twin Research in Criminology. Criminology.

    Steger, Michael F.; Hicks, Brian M.; Kashdan, Todd B.; Krueger, Robert F.; Bouchard Jr., Thomas J. (2007). Genetic and environmental influences on the positive traits of the values in action classification, and biometric covariance with normal personality. Journal of Research in Personality, 41(3), 524-539.

    On the impact of genetics on IQ:

    Plomin, Robert and Deary, Ian J. (2014) Genetics and intelligence differences: five special findings. Molecular Psychiatry advance online publication 16 September 2014

    (2013) The Genetics of Intelligence « Meng Hu’s Blog

    On the genetic contributions to economic success, including the role of IQ, and the lack of effects of the family environment on such (i.e., parents):

    Essays on genetic variation and economic behavior – Cesarini, D. A. (2010). Essays on genetic variation and economic behavior. (Doctoral dissertation). Retrieved from DSpace@MIT. (http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/57897).

    Hyytinen, Ari; Ilmakunnas, Pekka; Johansson, Edvard; and Toivanen, Otto (2013). Heritability of Lifetime Income. Helsinki Center of Economic Research Discussion Paper No. 364

    Visscher PM, Medland SE, Ferreira MAR, Morley KI, Zhu G, et al. (2006) Assumption-Free Estimation of Heritability from Genome-Wide Identity-by-Descent Sharing between Full Siblings. PLoS Genet 2(3): e41.

    Davies, G., Tenesa, A., Payton, A., Yang, J., Harris, S. E., Liewald, D., … Deary, I. J. (2011). Genome-wide association studies establish that human intelligence is highly heritable and polygenic. Molecular Psychiatry, 16(10), 996–1005.

    Plomin, Robert et al. (2013). Common DNA Markers Can Account for More Than Half of the Genetic Influence on Cognitive Abilities. Psychological Science, April 2013, 24(4) 562-568.

    Trzaskowski, Maciej; Harlaar, Nicole; Arden, Rosalind; Krapohl, Eva; Rimfeld, Kaili; McMillan, Andrew; Dale, Philip S.; and Plomin, Robert. (2013) Genetic influence on family socioeconomic status and children’s intelligence. Intelligence, 42, 83-86.

    Verweij, K. J. H., Yang, J., Lahti, J., Veijola, J., Hintsanen, M., Pulkki-Råback, L., … Zietsch, B. P. (2012). Maintenance of genetic variation in human personality: Testing evolutionary models by estimating heritability due to common causal variants and investigating the effect of distant inbreeding. Evolution; International Journal of Organic Evolution, 66(10), 3238–3251.

    Also see this wonderful and comprehensive review of the heritability of brain structure and the relationship between this structure and IQ:

    Strike, Lachlan T.; Couvy-Duchesne, Baptiste; Hansell, Narelle K.; Cuellar-Partida, Gabriel; Medland, Sarah E.; and Wright, Margaret J. (2015) Genetics and Brain Morphology, Neuropsychology Review, March, 14, 2015.

    And of course, my own blog posts on the matter:

    All Human Behavioral Traits are Heritable

    Taming the “Tiger Mom” and Tackling the Parenting Myth

    Environmental Hereditarianism

    The Son Becomes The Father

    More Behavioral Genetic Facts

    As well as Harald Eia’s Brainwash episode “The Parental Effect”

    On the reality of race:

    These five key blog posts by Steve Hsu:

    (2008) Information Processing: “No scientific basis for race”

    (2008) Information Processing: Human genetic variation, Fst and Lewontin’s fallacy in pictures

    (2012) Information Processing: Rare variants and human genetic diversity

    (2013) Information Processing: Learning can hurt

    (2014) Information Processing: What’s New Since Montagu?

    These papers describing some of the genetic processes used, particularly principal component analysis (PCA):

    Price, Alkes L.; Reich, David (2006). Population Structure and Eigenanalysis. PLOS Genetics.

    McVean, Gil (2009). A Genealogical Interpretation of Principal Components Analysis. PLOS: Genetics.

    These blog posts by Peter Frost:

    (2011) Evo and Proud: Apples, oranges, and genes

    (2012) Evo and Proud: Trans-species polymorphisms

    As well as these two by Greg Cochran:

    (2012) Lewontin’s argument | West Hunter

    (2014) Phenotypes vs genetic statistics | West Hunter

    And this post by Razib Khan:

    (2013) Why race as a biological construct matters | Gene Expression

    This video of racial differences in newborn behavior:

    Cross-Cultural Differences in Newborn Behavior

    Discussed in Freedman, Daniel G. (1979). Human Sociobiology: A Holistic Approach. Free Press.

    Also see: Kagan, Jerome, & Snidman, Nancy C. (2004). The long shadow of temperament. Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press.

    And also see my own blog post:

    How Much Hard Evidence Do You Need?

    And of course, Harald Eia’s Brainwash episode on Race.

    On racial differences in IQ and their global impact:

    Rushton, J. Philippe and Jensen, Arthur R. (2010). Race and IQ: A Theory-Based Review of the Research in Richard Nisbett’s Intelligence and How to Get It. The Open Psychology Journal, 3, 9-35.

    On the effect of poverty and socioeconomic status on IQ (there isn’t one) and said explanations for racial gaps, this blog post:

    (2013) The Unsilenced Science: Black Suits, Gowns, & Skin: SAT Scores by Income, Education, & Race

    Rushton, J. Philippe & Jensen, Arthur R. (2010). The rise and fall of the Flynn Effect as a reason to expect a narrowing of the Black-White IQ gap. Intelligence, 38, 213-219

    Nijenhuis, J., & van der Flier, H. (2013). Is the Flynn effect on g?: A meta-analysis, Intelligence

    Nijenhuisa, Jan te; Jongeneel-Grimenb, Birthe; & Armstrong, Elijah L. (2015). Are adoption gains on the g factor? A meta-analysis, Personality and Individual Differences 73, 50-60.

    Gottfredson, Linda S. (2007). Shattering Logic to Explain the Flynn Effect. Cato Unbound.

    Lynn, Richard and Tatu Vanhanen. (2002). IQ and the Wealth of Nations. Praeger/Greenwood.

    Lynn, Richard (2008). The Global Bell Curve: Race, IQ, and Inequality Worldwide. Washington Summit Publishers.

    Lynn, Richard and Tatu Vanhanen, (2012). Intelligence: A Unifying Construct for the Social Sciences.

    Also see this blog post by Jason Malloy (2006):

    Gene Expression: A World of Difference: Richard Lynn Maps World Intelligence

    Also see the ongoing discussion over at Human Varieties

    Also these posts by La Griffe du Lion:

    (2002) The Smart Fraction Theory of IQ and the Wealth of Nations

    (2004) Smart Fraction Theory II: Why Asians Lag

    Rindermann, Heiner (2007). The g-factor of international cognitive ability comparisons: the homogeneity of results in PISA, TIMSS, PIRLS and IQ-tests across nations. European Journal of Personality 21, 667-706.

    Rindermann, Heiner; Sailer, Michael; and Thompson, James (2009). The impact of smart fractions, cognitive ability of politicians and average competences of peoples on social development. Talent Development & Excellence 1 (1), 3-25.

    Christainsen, Gregory B (2013). IQ and the wealth of nations: How much reverse causality?Intelligence 41, 688-698.

    On the evolution of modern advanced civilized peoples:

    Clark, Gregory (2007). A Farewell to Alms: A Brief Economic History of the World. Princeton University Press.

    Frost, Peter (2008). Sexual selection and human geographic variation, Special Issue: Proceedings of the 2nd Annual Meeting of the NorthEastern Evolutionary Psychology Society. Journal of Social, Evolutionary, and Cultural Psychology, 2(4),169-191

    Frost, Peter (2010). The Roman State and genetic pacification, Evolutionary Psychology, 8(3), 376-389.

    Frost, Peter and Harpending, Henry (2015). Western Europe, State Formation, and Genetic Pacification, Evolutionary Psychology, 13(1), 230-243.

    Harpending, Henry (2012). Genetics and the Historical Decline of Violence? | West Hunter

    Frost, Peter (2013). Evo and Proud: Making Europeans kinder, gentler

    Frost, Peter (2013). Evo and Proud: Where do those tensions come from?

    Unz, Ron (2013). How Social Darwinism Made Modern China | The American Conservative

    Cochran, Gregory; Hardy, Jason; & Harpending, Henry (2006). Natural History of Ashkenazi Intelligence. Journal of Biosocial Science 38, 1-35

    Also see these blog posts by Peter Frost (2013):

    East Asia’s Farewell to Alms

    Does the Clark-Unz model apply to Japan and Korea?

    Final thoughts on the Clark-Unz model

    Fischer, David Hackett (1989). Albion’s Seed: Four British Folkways in America. Oxford University Press

    Woodard, Colin (2011). American Nations: A History of the Eleven Rival Regional Cultures of North America. Viking Adult.

    And of course, the work of HBD Chick:

    start here | hbd* chick

    clannishness defined | hbd* chick

    big summary post on the hajnal line | hbd* chick

    the middle ages « hbd* chick (2011)

    year-end summary, 2011 | hbd* chick

    outbreeding, self-control and lethal violence | hbd* chick

    2012 top ten | hbd* chick

    historic european homicide rates … and the hajnal line | hbd* chick

    medieval manorialism’s selection pressures | hbd chick

    In addition to my own summaries of her work:

    An HBD Summary of the Foundations of Modern Civilization

    How Inbred are Europeans?

    And about the regional “cultures” of North America (for example, liberal New England vs. the conservative Deep South), see my series on the matter:

    A Tentative Ranking of the Clannishness of the “Founding Fathers”

    Sound Familiar?

    The Cavaliers

    Flags of the American Nations

    Maps of the American Nations

    Rural White Liberals – a Key to Understanding the Political Divide

    More Maps of the American Nations

    On genetic load:

    First, be sure to see these blog posts by Greg Cochran on West Hunter (2012):

    Typos

    Get Smart

    More thoughts on genetic load

    The genetics of stupidity

    The Golden Age

    Also:

    Keller, Matthew C., & Miller, Geoffery (2006). Resolving the paradox of common, harmful, heritable mental disorders: Which evolutionary genetic models work best? Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 28, 285-452.

    On the economic impact of demographic changes (particularly immigration and the Baby Boom in the United States):

    Blog posts by Peter Turchin (2013):

    The End of Prosperity: Why Did Real Wages Stop Growing in the 1970s?

    Cutting through the Thicket of Economic Forces (Why Real Wages Stopped Growing II)

    A Proxy for Non-Market Forces (Why Real Wages Stopped Growing III)

    Putting It All Together (Why Real Wages Stopped Growing IV)

    More on Labor Supply (Why Real Wages Stopped Growing V)

    This post by Dennis Mangan (2012):

    Spot the Correlation: Wealth vs. Immigration

    On racial and ethnic strife, the pull of genetic similarity, and challenges presented by “diversity”:

    Putnam, Robert D. (2007). E Pluribus Unum: Diversity and Community in the Twenty-first Century — The 2006 Johan Skytte Prize. Scandinavian Political Studies, 30(2), 137-174

    Also, on that note, see this ranking of the most peaceful U.S. states, in which, Maine (see HBD Chick here) consistently tops out at #1!

    United States Peace Index « Vision of Humanity

    Krupp, D.B., Debruine, L.M., Jones, B.C., and Lalumiere, M.L. (2012) Kin recognition: evidence that humans can perceive both positive and negative relatedness. Journal of Evolutionary Biology, 25 (8). pp. 1472-1478.

    Also see

    Also see this much more comprehensive list of research supporting human biodiversity here:

    Human BioDiversity Reading List: http://www.humanbiologicaldiversity.com/


    Source date (UTC): 2018-06-09 16:59:00 UTC

  • Two Meanings of Absolutism: One Good, One Bad.

    1) The form of government must be flexible enough to account for ordinary times ( rule of law, judicial monarchy, and markets), endure warfare (fascism), and distribute windfalls ( participatory commons selection ) – although the latter is always questionably necessary unless sufficient to shift classes. 2) When one says “Absolutism” in government, one can refer to total discretion in the administration of state and production of commons but remaining under rule of law. Otherwise it just means ‘dictatorship’. 3) When one says “absolutism” in rule of law, and therefore morality and ethics, this is my position on the natural law of reciprocity. In that it is an exceptionless rule. And therefore a case of “Absolutism”. In other words “Natural Law of Reciprocity = White Sharia = Absolutism”. For reasons that are strange if you think about it, westerners have no concept of absolutism because in the west, truth is always beyond our grasp and markets are our means of decision making between sovereigns. (Assuming you’re from the martial/craftsman/property owner rather than priestly or peasant classes).

  • Two Meanings of Absolutism: One Good, One Bad.

    1) The form of government must be flexible enough to account for ordinary times ( rule of law, judicial monarchy, and markets), endure warfare (fascism), and distribute windfalls ( participatory commons selection ) – although the latter is always questionably necessary unless sufficient to shift classes. 2) When one says “Absolutism” in government, one can refer to total discretion in the administration of state and production of commons but remaining under rule of law. Otherwise it just means ‘dictatorship’. 3) When one says “absolutism” in rule of law, and therefore morality and ethics, this is my position on the natural law of reciprocity. In that it is an exceptionless rule. And therefore a case of “Absolutism”. In other words “Natural Law of Reciprocity = White Sharia = Absolutism”. For reasons that are strange if you think about it, westerners have no concept of absolutism because in the west, truth is always beyond our grasp and markets are our means of decision making between sovereigns. (Assuming you’re from the martial/craftsman/property owner rather than priestly or peasant classes).

  • COSTS OF EUGENIC STRATEGIES VS TIME 1) Hard Eugenics = Culling/Sterilization: Mi

    COSTS OF EUGENIC STRATEGIES VS TIME

    1) Hard Eugenics = Culling/Sterilization: Military/Political : Cheap but Immediate, with no risk.

    2) Soft Eugenics = Reproductive limitation: Institutional: Neutral Cost and Generational – with little risk.

    3) Technological Eugenics = Technological transformation : expensive and very slow, with unknown risk.


    Source date (UTC): 2018-06-06 11:11:00 UTC

  • Overview

    We can sense Perceptions (physical world), intuitions (not open to introspection) and reason (open to introspection) 1 – Physical (Senses) 2 – Intuitionistic (Emotions and Intuitions) 3 – Intellectual (reason) Reality consists of the following actionable and conceivable dimensions: 1 – point, (identity, or correspondence) 2 – line (unit, quantity, set, or scale defined by relation between points) 3 – area (defined by constant relations) 4 – geometry (existence, defied by existentially possible spatial relations) 5 – change (time (memory), defined by state relations) 6 – pure, constant, relations. (forces (ideas)) 7 – externality (lie groups etc) (external consequences of constant relations) 7 – reality (or totality) (full causal density) We can speak in descriptions including (at least): 1 – operational (true) names 2 – mathematics (ratios) 3 – logic (sets) 4 – physics (operations) 5 – Law (reciprocity) 6 – History (memory) 7 – Literature (allegory (possible)) 8 – Literature of pure relations ( impossible ) 8a – Mythology (supernormal allegory) 8b – Moral Literature (philosophy – super rational allegory) 8c – Pseudoscientific Literature (super-scientific / pseudoscience literature) 8c – Religious Literature (conflationary super natural allegory) 8d – Occult Literature (post -rational experiential allegory ) We can testify to the truth of our speech only when we have performed due diligence to remove: 1 – ignorance, 2 – error, 3 – bias, 4 – wishful thinking, 5 – suggestion, 6 – obscurantism, 7 – fictionalism, and 8 – deceit. So of the tests: 1 – categorical consistency (equivalent of point) 2 – internal consistency (equivalent of line) 3 – external correspondence (equivalent shape/object) 4 – operational possibility (what you just described) (equivalent of change [operations]) 6 – limits, parsimony, and full accounting. (equivalent of proof) Those operations existed or can exist. You can imagine a something with the properties of a unicorn, you can speak of the same, draw the same, sculpt the same … but until you can breed one (and even then we must question), and we can test it, the unicorn does not exist ***in any condition that we can test in all dimensions necessary for you to testify it exists*** This is just one of the differences between TRUTH (dimensional consistency (constant relations)), and some subset of the properties of reality (DIMENSIONAL CONSISTENCY). Mathematics allows us to describe constant relations between constant categories (correspondence) by means of self-reference we call ‘ratios’ to some constant unit (one). The more deterministic (constant) the relations the more descriptive mathematics, the higher causal density that influences changes in state, the more information and calculation is necessary for the description of candidate consequences, and eventually we must move from the description of end states to the description of intermediary states that because of causal density place limits on the ranges of possible end states. In other words, in oder to construct theories (descriptions) of general rules of constant relations, we SUBTRACT properties of reality from our descriptions until we include nothing but identity(category), quantity, and ratio, and constrain ourselves to operations that maintain the ratios between the subject (identity). Mathematics has evolved but retained (since the greeks at least) the ‘magical’ (fictional, supernormal fiction, we call platonism) as a means of obscuring a mathematician’s lack of understanding of just why ‘this magic works’. When in reality, mathematics is trivially simple, because it rests on nothing more than correspondence (identity), quantity, ratio, and operations that maintain those ratios, and incrementally adding or removing dimensions, to describe relations across the spectrum between points(identities, objects, categories) and pure relations at scales we do not yet possess the instrumentation or memory or ability to calculate at such vast scales – except through intermediary phenomenon. As such, operationally speaking, the discipline of mathematics consists (Truthfully) of the science (theories of), general rules of constant relations at scale independence, in arbitrarily selected dimensions. In other words. Mathematics consists of the study of measurement. it is understandable why we do not grasp the first principles of the universe – they are unobservable directly except at great cost. It is not understandable why we do not grasp the first principles of mathematics: because measurement is a very simple thing, and dimensions are very simple things. That mathematicians still speak in fictional language, just as do theists and just as do the majority of philosophers (pseudo science, pseudo-rationalism, pseudo-mythology) Ergo, infinities are a fictionalism. Multiple infinities are a fictionalism. Both fictionalism describe conditions where time and actions (operations) have been removed as is common in the discipline of measurement (mathematics). Operationally, numbers (operationally constructed positional names, must be existentially produced as are changes in gears. And as such certain sets of numbers (outputs) are produced faster (like seconds or minutes vs hours) than other sets of numbers (outputs).

  • Overview

    We can sense Perceptions (physical world), intuitions (not open to introspection) and reason (open to introspection) 1 – Physical (Senses) 2 – Intuitionistic (Emotions and Intuitions) 3 – Intellectual (reason) Reality consists of the following actionable and conceivable dimensions: 1 – point, (identity, or correspondence) 2 – line (unit, quantity, set, or scale defined by relation between points) 3 – area (defined by constant relations) 4 – geometry (existence, defied by existentially possible spatial relations) 5 – change (time (memory), defined by state relations) 6 – pure, constant, relations. (forces (ideas)) 7 – externality (lie groups etc) (external consequences of constant relations) 7 – reality (or totality) (full causal density) We can speak in descriptions including (at least): 1 – operational (true) names 2 – mathematics (ratios) 3 – logic (sets) 4 – physics (operations) 5 – Law (reciprocity) 6 – History (memory) 7 – Literature (allegory (possible)) 8 – Literature of pure relations ( impossible ) 8a – Mythology (supernormal allegory) 8b – Moral Literature (philosophy – super rational allegory) 8c – Pseudoscientific Literature (super-scientific / pseudoscience literature) 8c – Religious Literature (conflationary super natural allegory) 8d – Occult Literature (post -rational experiential allegory ) We can testify to the truth of our speech only when we have performed due diligence to remove: 1 – ignorance, 2 – error, 3 – bias, 4 – wishful thinking, 5 – suggestion, 6 – obscurantism, 7 – fictionalism, and 8 – deceit. So of the tests: 1 – categorical consistency (equivalent of point) 2 – internal consistency (equivalent of line) 3 – external correspondence (equivalent shape/object) 4 – operational possibility (what you just described) (equivalent of change [operations]) 6 – limits, parsimony, and full accounting. (equivalent of proof) Those operations existed or can exist. You can imagine a something with the properties of a unicorn, you can speak of the same, draw the same, sculpt the same … but until you can breed one (and even then we must question), and we can test it, the unicorn does not exist ***in any condition that we can test in all dimensions necessary for you to testify it exists*** This is just one of the differences between TRUTH (dimensional consistency (constant relations)), and some subset of the properties of reality (DIMENSIONAL CONSISTENCY). Mathematics allows us to describe constant relations between constant categories (correspondence) by means of self-reference we call ‘ratios’ to some constant unit (one). The more deterministic (constant) the relations the more descriptive mathematics, the higher causal density that influences changes in state, the more information and calculation is necessary for the description of candidate consequences, and eventually we must move from the description of end states to the description of intermediary states that because of causal density place limits on the ranges of possible end states. In other words, in oder to construct theories (descriptions) of general rules of constant relations, we SUBTRACT properties of reality from our descriptions until we include nothing but identity(category), quantity, and ratio, and constrain ourselves to operations that maintain the ratios between the subject (identity). Mathematics has evolved but retained (since the greeks at least) the ‘magical’ (fictional, supernormal fiction, we call platonism) as a means of obscuring a mathematician’s lack of understanding of just why ‘this magic works’. When in reality, mathematics is trivially simple, because it rests on nothing more than correspondence (identity), quantity, ratio, and operations that maintain those ratios, and incrementally adding or removing dimensions, to describe relations across the spectrum between points(identities, objects, categories) and pure relations at scales we do not yet possess the instrumentation or memory or ability to calculate at such vast scales – except through intermediary phenomenon. As such, operationally speaking, the discipline of mathematics consists (Truthfully) of the science (theories of), general rules of constant relations at scale independence, in arbitrarily selected dimensions. In other words. Mathematics consists of the study of measurement. it is understandable why we do not grasp the first principles of the universe – they are unobservable directly except at great cost. It is not understandable why we do not grasp the first principles of mathematics: because measurement is a very simple thing, and dimensions are very simple things. That mathematicians still speak in fictional language, just as do theists and just as do the majority of philosophers (pseudo science, pseudo-rationalism, pseudo-mythology) Ergo, infinities are a fictionalism. Multiple infinities are a fictionalism. Both fictionalism describe conditions where time and actions (operations) have been removed as is common in the discipline of measurement (mathematics). Operationally, numbers (operationally constructed positional names, must be existentially produced as are changes in gears. And as such certain sets of numbers (outputs) are produced faster (like seconds or minutes vs hours) than other sets of numbers (outputs).