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Should Controversial or Unpopular Ideas Be Held to a Higher Standard of Evidence?

Jul 2, 2025
When scientists investigate matters relevant to immediate social policies, such as studies of group differences, they have a responsibility to maintain elevated standards of scientific rigor in their work. As Hunt and Carlson (2007) noted, handling dynamite requires greater caution than handling potatoes.

While science prioritizes discovery, unchecked pursuit of knowledge can prove harmful. The development of nuclear weapons resulted in over 100,000 deaths in Japan and forced the evacuation of Bikini Atoll inhabitants, devastating their culture. Similarly, atomic testing in the American West spread radioactive material across states, increasing cancer rates among downwind residents. The Tuskegee Syphilis Study, which ran from 1932 to 1972, observed disease progression in 400 infected African American men without fully informing them or offering treatment after one became available. The subsequent outrage led to the 1974 National Research Act, requiring ethical oversight of human subject research.

These examples demonstrate that serious harm occurs when scientists prioritize research goals over participant welfare. There is broad agreement that ethical oversight is essential, guided by principles of respect for persons, beneficence, and justice.



Ethical Principles in Intelligence Research

While the intelligence research community does not endanger physical health as dramatically as past examples, some scholars contend that harm can arise from investigating controversial topics. They worry that research into intelligence and economic success might justify cutting social programs, or that information about group IQ differences could reduce motivation and create negative self-fulfilling prophecies.

The most contentious topic involves research on average IQ differences among racial groups. Some scholars argue this research should be banned entirely, believing harm is inevitable. However, no one has demonstrated actual harm from studying intelligence topics, including racial differences (Carl, 2018). Meanwhile, attempted censorship has caused real harm to researchers through lost employment, damaged reputations, violence, and restricted academic freedom.

A less extreme position holds that controversial research should proceed with exceptional care and meet the highest standards. However, this amounts to a double standard that functions as covert censorship (Cofnas, 2016). Because no social science study is perfect, provocative research can easily be rejected under the pretense of quality concerns while politically acceptable research receives more lenient treatment. The peer review system enables this, allowing editors to select hostile reviewers or reject studies based on ostensible methodological concerns that mask disapproval of conclusions.



Ignorance is Not Bliss

Not conducting research carries consequences. First, controversies remain unresolved without data. Second, avoiding controversial topics creates a vacuum for extremists to fill with inaccurate or racist information. Third, suppressing research infantilizes the public by implying certain groups are too fragile to handle reality. As Gottfredson (2000a) observed, critics who withhold information don't trust people to make ethical decisions, exercising paternalistic censorship under the guise of protection.

Finally, blocking research prevents potentially beneficial discoveries. James Flynn's work documenting the Flynn effect—which provided strong evidence for environmental influences on IQ—emerged from investigating hereditarian arguments about race differences. His research also revealed that outdated tests overestimate IQ, saving lives by identifying intellectual disabilities in death row inmates. Such benefits would never materialize if controversial research were prohibited.



Conclusion

While ethical constraints on science are necessary, no one has proven that drawbacks of intelligence research outweigh benefits. Given the advantages gained from controversial research and the absence of resulting catastrophe, the optimal approach is permitting free, unrestricted inquiry into controversial intelligence-related topics. More knowledge proves superior to less, unless negative consequences demonstrably exceed benefits.




From Chapter 31 of "In the Know: Debunking 35 Myths About Human Intelligence" by Dr. Russell Warne (2020)