Edward M. Miller

For other people named Edward Miller, see Edward Miller (disambiguation).

Edward McCarthy Miller, Jr. (born September 2, 1944) is an American economics professor whose writings on race and intelligence have sparked debates on academic freedom.[1]

Life and career

Miller attended MIT, where he earned bachelor's degrees in mechanical engineering and economics in 1965 before earning a Ph.D. in economics in 1970. While in school, he was an Economist with Abt Associates from 1967 to 1969, and an Economist with the New England Regional Commission from 1969 to 1970. From 1970 to 1972 he was an Economist with the United States Department of Transportation. During the Richard Nixon administration, Miller was an Economist with the United States Department of the Treasury, Office of Tax Analysis, on detail to the White House, from 1972 to 1973. He then served in the Energy Policy Office at the United States Department of Energy from 1973 to 1974. Miller then took a position at the Office of Management and Budget from 1974 to 1976. Miller was then appointed Tsanoff Professor of Public Affairs at Rice University. He was appointed Research Professor of Economics and Finance at the University of New Orleans in 1984.

Miller began writing about the economics of intelligence before expanding to discuss correlations of race and intelligence, sex and intelligence, and topics related to eugenics.[2]

After Miller wrote to local New Orleans paper Gambit Weekly in 1996 to refute an earlier story about race and intelligence, Miller was subjected to discipline for using his university position to lend unwarranted weight to views outside his professional competence.[3] Among those who came to Miller's defense was Robert D. Chatelle at the National Writers Union.[4]

Selected works

  • Miller EM. Homosexuality, Birth Order, and Evolution An interesting new theory. Archives of Sexual Behavior No. 29 (February 2000) No. 5, 1-34.
  • Miller EM. Income, Intelligence and Equality: Review of The g Factor: The Science of Mental Ability. Mankind Quarterly, Vol. 39 (Spring 1999) No. 3, 337-354
  • Miller EM. A Review and Extension of Why Race Matters. Journal of Social, Political, and Economic Studies, Vol. 23 (Fall 1998) No. 3, 360-366.
  • Miller EM. Intelligence and Brain Myelination: A Hypothesis. Personality and Individual Differences, Vol 17, (December 1994) No. 6, 803-833.
  • Miller EM. Race, Socioeconomic Variables, and Intelligence: A Review and Extension of The Bell Curve. Mankind Quarterly, Vol. XXXV, (Spring 1995), No. 3, 267-291.
  • Miller EM. Tracing the Genetic History of Modern Man. Mankind Quarterly, Vol. 35 (Winter 1994) No. 1-2, 71-108.
  • Miller EM. The Evolution of Australian and Amerindian Intelligence. Mankind Quarterly, Vol. 37 (Winter 1996) No. 2, 149-186.
  • Miller EM. A Review of Sexual Strategies: How Females Chose Their Mates. European Sociobiological Society Newsletter, No. 41, April 1996, 11-17.
  • Miller EM. Could NonShared Environmental Variance have Evolved to Assure Diversification Through Randomness? Evolution and Human Behavior, Vol. 18, (May, 1997) No. 3, 195-221.
  • Miller EM. Environmental Variability Selects for Large Families only in Special Circumstances: Another Objection to Differential K Theory. Personality and Individual Differences, Vol. 19 (December 1995), No. 6, 903-918.
  • Miller EM. Reported Myopia in Opposite Sex Twins: A Hormonal Hypothesis. Optometry and Vision Science, Vol. 72, (January 1995) No. 1, 34-36.
  • Miller EM. The Relevance of Group Membership for Personnel Selection: A Demonstration Using Bayes Theorem. Journal of Social, Political, and Economic Studies, Vol. 19 (Fall 1994) No. 3, 323-359.
  • Miller EM. Prenatal Sex Hormone Transfer: A Reason to Study Opposite-sex Twins. Personality and Individual Differences, Vol. 17, October 1994, No. 4, 511-529.
  • Miller EM. Optimal Adjustment of Mating Effort to Environmental Conditions: A Critique of Chisholm's Application of Life History Theory, with Comments on Race Differences in Male Paternal Investment Strategies. Mankind Quarterly, XXXIV (Summer 1994) No. 4, 297-316.
  • Miller EM. Paternal Provisioning versus Mate Seeking in Human Populations. Personality and Individual Differences, Vol. 17, 1994, No. 2, 227-255.
  • Miller EM. Could r Selection Account for the African Personality and Life Cycle? Personality and Individual Differences, Vol 15, (December 1993), No. 6, 665-676.
  • Miller EM. On the Correlation of Myopia and Intelligence. Genetic, Social, and General Psychology Monographs, Vol. 118, (November 1992) No. 4, pp. 363–383.
  • Miller EM. The g Factor: The Book and the Controversy. The Journal of Social, Political, and Economic Studies, Vol. 21, (Summer 1996) No. 2, 221-232.
  • Miller EM. Climate and Intelligence. Mankind Quarterly, Vol. XXXII (Fall/Winter 1991) No. 1-2, pp. 127–132.
  • Miller EM. BackFire: Review and Extension. The Journal of Social, Political, and Economic Studies, Vol. 21, (Winter 1996) No. 4.

References

  1. DelFattore, Joan (2010). Knowledge in the Making: Academic Freedom and Free Speech in America's Schools and Universities. Yale University Press, ISBN 978-0-300-11181-1
  2. Ba-Nikongo, Nikongo (1997). Leading issues in African-American studies. Carolina Academic Press, ISBN 978-0-89089-669-3
  3. Editorial Staff (December 31, 1996). News and Views: Professor Edward M. Miller; The Newest Member of the "Academy of Academic Affronts to Black People." The Journal of Blacks in Higher Education
  4. Kors, Alan Charles; Silverglate, Harvey (1999). The Shadow University: The Betrayal of Liberty on America's Campuses. Simon and Schuster, ISBN 978-0-684-86749-6

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/10/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.