The bell curve of African-American rights rose and fell throughout the history of the United States. The period from before World War II to the end of World War II shows the status and rights of African American at the time. As the civil war gets closer, the status of African Americans is becoming increasingly uneasy among the American public. During the war the watch's curve reached its height. After the end of the civil war, the curve slowly declined and no longer rises after 100 years.
Bell Curve, published by Richard Herrnstein and Charles Murray in 1994, explains the change in American social intelligence, warns of some of the consequences of this change and suggests a social policy to mitigate the worst results . The title of this book comes from the bell type normal distribution of the IQ score in the population. This book first introduces the concept of intelligence from Francis Galton to the present age. Spearman introduced the general factors of intelligence and the early progress of other intellectual research and examined the relationship between intelligence testing and race politics. In the 1960s it was considered an era in which social problems are increasingly attributed to the outside force of individuals in American history. Herrnstein and Murray believe that the spirit of this equalism can not adapt to individual differences based on biology.
The African-American bell-shaped curve - the bell-shaped curve of African-American rights has fluctuated throughout the history of the United States of America. The period from before World War II to the end of World War II shows the status and rights of African American at the time. As the civil war gets closer, the status of African Americans is becoming increasingly uneasy among the American public. During the war the watch's curve reached its height. After the end of the civil war, the curve slowly declined and no longer rises after 100 years.
In 1994, the book, The Bell Curve, believed that genetics was due to the fact that African Americans traditionally had a lower score than Caucasians with intelligence tests. The book insisted that the New York Times columnist Bob Herbert attacked and social factors made a difference, Steven Jay Gould believed that the author's conclusion was not backed up by scientific research . Sadly, racial discrimination still exists in modern society, the most common form of discrimination. A good example: The black's unemployment rate has been decades higher than the white job unemployment rate. On the surface, we are asking the question "Black people take the initiative to white people and look for jobs." When I dug in deeply, I realized that discrimination actually leads to a gap in the black and white unemployment rate.