
Earlier by Edward Dutton: “Brave And Kind”—Remembering Richard Lynn
Finally ending the Orwellian situation where Wikipedia couldn’t acknowledge evolutionary psychologist Richard Lynn’s passing because it won’t link to Politically Incorrect sources like VDARE.com or American Renaissance, a Main Stream Media outlet has published an obituary, more than a month after he died [Richard Lynn, evolutionary psychologist who declared his belief in the benefits of eugenics—obituary, The Telegraph, August 31, 2023]. But as Danish independent researcher Emil Kirkegaard, who worked with Lynn, has pointed out, the British newspaper’s send-off was quite an astonishing piece.
It's almost Straussian. "Look here's this guy, Richard, he's dead. His research was bad bad bad according to the people who gave us the replication crisis. Also here's literally 4 of his book covers, for work you shouldn't be reading. ;)"
— Emil O W Kirkegaard (@KirkegaardEmil) September 5, 2023
It’s as if the anonymous writer wants the readers to realise that Lynn was logically correct, and wants them to read his research themselves. However, he also understands that he must disguise this desire as a Politically Acceptable condemnation of Lynn, though it is a condemnation that the intelligent reader—or the reader “in the know”—will be able to “see through.”
Kirkegaard’s term “Straussian” refers to German political philosopher Leo Strauss (1899-1973), who taught political philosophy at the University of Chicago. Strauss argued that great thinkers are socially and politically pressured not to openly express radical and original ideas. Accordingly, as one commentator puts it, “what they really think is true is found between the lines and often contradicts what they seem to say in the actual lines” [What is Straussianism (According to Strauss)?, By Peter Augustine Lawler, Society, 2011].
Thus, The Telegraph’s obituary begins with Lynn’s own words:
“Evolutionary progress means the extinction of the less competent,” he said. “To think otherwise is mere sentimentality.”
For all but the most emotional Leftist, the controversial nature of such a view, and that a senior academic held it, is spine-tingling clickbait.
The first paragraph went on to emphasize just what a notorious scientist Lynn was:
[H]is belief in the value of genetic selection to improve the quality of the human population, led to his being described as “one of the most unapologetic and raw ‘scientific’ racists operating today” and as an “unapologetic eugenicist.” [Both descriptions courtesy of the SPLC]
Although “scientific racism”—the idea that there are evolutionary bases for disparities in intelligence between racial and social groups—had been widely debunked by scholarly research, and rendered morally unacceptable following the horrors of the Nazi death camps and programmes of sterilising and killing the unfit and unwell, the publication of The Bell Curve by Charles Murray and Richard Herrnstein in 1994 renewed the debate linking intelligence with ethnicity and social class. [Links in Telegraph quotes added by VDARE.com—the Telegraph version contains no links.]
Now, the alert reader might think that the writer is just playing the game and he knows that his readers are aware of it. Of course, IQ differences run in families and “social groups,” so why isn’t the same true for race? But mentioning “social groups” rather than race makes it superficially appear that the anonymous author holds the Correct views.
Note also the Devil Words: “Debunked” is one of those Point-and-Sputterisms like “racist”: a fallacious insult to shut down debate over that which is ideologically inconvenient. The “lab leak” theory of Covid-19’s origin was “debunked” as a “conspiracy theory,” as we all recall, until it was all but proved.
“Morally unacceptable” is another Devil Word, and so obviously irrelevant when talking about scientific research that it seems most improbable that the writer doesn’t know that.
The Telegraph writer highlights Bell Curve/Lynn-style race realism as being targeted by Stephen Jay Gould:
These ideas were attacked by, among others, the evolutionary biologist Stephen Jay Gould, who criticised the IQ test for its racial and social bias, but they inspired Lynn, a former professor of psychology at Ulster University, to write Dysgenics: Genetic Deterioration of Modern Populations (1996), in which he argued that improvements in health care and welfare allow people of low intelligence to have more children, leading to an overall decline in the quality of civilised life.
But Stephen Jay Gould was a notorious scientific fraudster. For example, he deliberately manipulated data in a failed attempt to prove that head size does not vary by race. It’s as if the Telegraph writer is signalling to those in the know: These are the kinds of scientists—ideologues in disguise—who criticized Lynn.
The writer also misrepresented the late James Flynn and the “Flynn Effect” (rising IQ scores across the 20th century), implying that it refers to a genuine rise in intelligence (it doesn’t) and undermines Lynn’s views. For the record, even the BBC has admitted that intelligence has been declining in developed countries since the 1970s.
Beyond that, though, the Telegraph writer implied that Lynn proved Flynn wrong because of advancing genetics and reproductive biotechnology. “Lynn was further inspired by advances in the science of genetics to revisit the issue of eugenics … which fell out of favour after the Second World War,” the obituary continued.
The writer did permit Lynn to make his case:
In Eugenics: A Reassessment (2001) Lynn argued that the condemnation of eugenics had gone too far and that the new techniques of biotechnology—prenatal diagnosis of embryos with genetic diseases, embryo selection and cloning—offered a way forward. “The new medical technology of eugenics is going to take off, because it satisfies the needs of individuals, both for themselves and as parents,” Lynn told the BBC. “Parents would like to have children who are free of genetic diseases, and potentially in the future they will want to have children who are intelligent. This is serving people’s needs and wishes.”
In future it would be possible to use in vitro fertilisation to grow many embryos in glass dishes and evaluate their genetic make-up: “The information would cover those conditions—intelligence, personality, personal health, maybe personal appearance, height, sporting and musical abilities— the genetic potential of these embryos would be printed out and the woman or couple would choose which one to implant.
“People use the phrase ‘back-door eugenics’. They say this biotechnology is eugenics coming in through the back door. No one calls it eugenics, but let’s face it, it is eugenics,” he said. “A lot of people think this is eugenics and think it is a good idea.”
The obit very reasonably summarized Lynn’s views on eugenics, dysgenics and Cold Winters Theory (that they generally select for intelligence), and even included eye-catching covers of Lynn’s books, specifically Race Differences in Intelligence and IQ and Global Inequality, which he wrote with Finnish political scientist Tatu Vanhanen. Again, this enticed the curious reader to at least peek at the “forbidden literature.”
As we would expect, the obit included an anonymous critic’s attempt to refute Cold Winters Theory:
Lynn argued that when white Europeans’ Cro-Magnon ancestors arrived on the continent 45,000 years ago, they faced more difficult conditions than in Africa. Greater environmental challenges led to the evolution of higher intelligence. Faced with the icy climate of the north “less intelligent individuals and tribes would have died out, leaving as survivors the more intelligent.”
This, one critic noted, ignored the fact that agriculture, towns and alphabets first emerged in Mesopotamia, a region not known for its cold spells; moreover, it was inconsistent with the present global distribution of IQ scores. If his theory were correct, the people of Singapore, who originated primarily from China’s southern Guangdong province, would possess a lower average IQ than the people of mainland China. Yet the reverse is true.
But even this is followed by another book cover, The Global Bell Curve: Race, IQ, and Inequality Worldwide, as if to say, “Look! Here is where the counter-argument probably lies!” The author also summarized Lynn’s research on sex differences in IQ, but of course included Nature’s claim that it is “utter hogwash.”
Only after all that do we get the rendition of Lynn’s life, which is typical of MSM obituaries about “controversial” people who must be anathematized. The obituary is behind a paywall (we linked above to an archive.org version) so you can’t see that the comments below the article are overwhelmingly pro-Lynn, as Kirkegaard noted:
Comments be like. Disabled when? pic.twitter.com/d4BC8RNuUp
— Emil O W Kirkegaard (@KirkegaardEmil) September 6, 2023
So, what are we to make of this obituary? An optimistic conclusion: that there are people who work for the Telegraph, an extremely influential and mainstream centre-right newspaper, who sympathize with Lynn and other controversial scientists, knows they are right, and wants their work to be known. But they also know that in our Woke 1984 World, they must carefully “play the game” and let readers read between the lines and be gradually persuaded the public.
Result: “The Straussian Obituary Of Richard Lynn.”
Edward Dutton (email him | Tweet him) is Professor of Evolutionary Psychology at Asbiro University, Łódź, Poland. You can see him on his Jolly Heretic video channels on YouTube and Bitchute. His books are available on his home page here.
My grandmother said about the Nazi era in Austria: “You had to read the papers between the lines.” Are we already in a similar situation in the “Free West”?
The BBC clip is just another bit of gynocentric claptrap, painting men as broken women and asserting that the way to a perfect society is to feminise boys, well and truly larded and barded with what should be frightening transhumanist fantasies. Anyone who has ever been part of a creatively productive team of men knows well how disruptive a single female can be and how catastrophically destructive a gaggle of females is to the output of the group.
Humanity has made the great advances it has because men excluded women from the creative process. Is it just coincidence that western society is collapsing, with far worse to come, as women are allowed more and more involvement in decision making?
Thank you for bringing that insane BBC piece to our attention.
” “You had to read the papers between the lines.” Are we already in a similar situation in the “Free West”?”
Yes, there’s also a parallel with the Soviet Union, where you looked for a subtext rather than the main statements in a news item.
“the Telegraph, an extremely influential and mainstream centre-right newspaper”
Sorry, Ed Dutton, the Telegraph is a lot more woke than it used to be, much more. They get their journalists from the same universities and schools as the Guardian and BBC.
There’s no mineshaft that you can shout down to find a young right-winger, indeed any would be purged from the Tory Party.
Today’s Telegraph staff would probably consider the 1970s Telegraph to be “far-right”.
Making your babies in Petri dishes and then discarding the ones you don’t think measure up? No thanks. If this is a sample of Mr. Lynn’s thought, then it is best he has gone on to his eternal reward.
You have the brain of a true Luddite. No babies are discarded; they are embryos. Your stand supports the birth of children with life-threatening defects.
I’m sure that never happened. Did she play hopscotch with Anne Frank too?
Ask an Austrian today if Moustache Man had some good ideas.
Very ingeniously reasoned; indeed, the expression that hovers unobtrusively about the fringes of one’s awareness is “wishful thinking”.
If the perfect society feminizes boys, it will be vulnerable to conquest by those societies that don’t do so.
Well, I’m not too interested in the intelligence levels of the different races. Rather, I want to see our society encourage blacks to study hard. Blacks don’t do this now because they have this belief that studying hard is “acting white” (though acting Asian would be more accurate). And anyone who suggests that they should study hard is denounced as a racist for implying that blacks are lazy (or whatever). This has been going on for about fifty years, and it seems we would need a cultural revolution to change it.
How about a true human being? Anybody who thinks this process will merely eliminate children with life-threatening genetic defects is terminally naive. It will of course be used to eliminate “the unfit” according to the values of the eugenicists, genetic defects or not.
That is nonsensical…the process is optional.
Though those who won’t participate will have their children fall behind.
Yes, that is their choice…that’s what optional means.
Liberals will eventually switch to the position of “let’s engineer away the reality we have been lying about” and conservatives will probably go along with it. Conservatives didn’t stop gay marriage so it would be very unlikely that they would stop CRISPR EQUALITY RIGHTS.
Neither side will have the wisdom to realize that a society of genetically engineered geniuses would be a disaster.
Hopefully some type of compromise between reality and egalitarian fantasy will be reached before then.
If any of them answered yes, they would be in prison for the rest of their lives. The ones who protest about the migrant infestation of today are as much at risk for being labelled “Nazi”.
Referring to Strauss as a “German political philosopher” is like saying Yitzhak Shamir was a Polish politician.
If you want to improve the population, outlaw seatbelts and airbags.
Slightly off topic, but I followed the link to the essay “What is Straussianism?” It wasn’t very helpful. I suspect this is because I know nothing of Heidegger, but almost every sentence beyond the first two paragraphs made me want to scream for clarification. The word “nature,” for example, is sometimes used to mean what natural scientists would mean by it, and sometimes something more than that. I think. The term Platonism was also very confusing to me, even though I am a Platonic scholar. And of course, Being (with a capital B). And the “crisis of our time.” Which crisis? This is not explained, despite the fact that the left and the right have widely differing views of, say, the crisis of democracy, so one needs to be explicit about which crisis one means and how it is being interpreted.
I was trained in the analytic tradition, and the whole analytic approach was summed up quite entertainingly by the writer Nikhil Krishnan in his recent book A Terribly Serious Adventure (p. xv). As a student at Oxford, he had written an essay full of vague assertions which his tutor attacked mercilessly. “Now what exactly do you mean by …?” the tutor asked. Krishnan answered with something equally vague, which the tutor didn’t like, either. Then Krishnan said that these things were essentially ineffable, and his tutor replied, “On the contrary, these sorts of things are entirely and eminently effable. And I should be very grateful if you’d try to eff a few of them for your essay next week.”
Can we get this guy writing on Strauss to eff a few of the concepts he’s talking about?
As far as Plato is concerned, forget about Strauss. Here is a better interpretation. Plato went through three phases, all of them concerned with the existence of true moral experts. In his earliest phase, he was searching for, but not finding any such experts. Euthyphro, for example, claimed to be an expert in piety, but is shown very quickly not to know what he is talking about.
In his middle phase, Plato had hit upon a way to produce moral experts. They are the ones who can contemplate the forms, and through such contemplation they gain perfect knowledge of piety and goodness and justice. And if we want a truly just society, we should let these experts rule as philosopher kings.
In his late phase, he suffered a big disappointment when his colleagues (in particular, his own nephew Speusippus) all decided that forms do not exist. This late phase has a character that is not as obvious as the first two phases, and it would take too much time to explain it. Suffice it to say that at the very end of his life, Plato had reverted to a second-best system for justice: the rule of law. This was partly because no philosopher could become a philosopher king if they didn’t believe in the forms, and none of his colleagues believed in them anymore.
All of this can be summed up in a simple formula: paradise sought, paradise gained, paradise lost. “Paradise” here means the existence of true moral experts, and this formula should be helpful to both beginning and advanced students alike.