Between the turn of the previous century and today, questions about human intelligence in Norway have played out in many of the same ways they have in the rest of the world. IQ has been put to use for good and ill, helping children in school and supporting horrific eugenic programs. This book follows the scientific history of Norwegian intelligence testing in fascinating detail. I learned a great deal.
Prof Eric Turkheimer
Univesity of Virginia
Håkon Aamot Caspersen is a social anthropologists and postdoctoral research fellow in the project Historicizing Intelligence: Tests, metrics, and the changing of society, at the Museum of University and Science History, Cultural History Museum, University of Oslo. Research interests revolves around the relationship between individual agency and social structure, education and learning. This includes an interest in processes of institutionalisation, notions of creativity and conceptualisations of intelligence, standardisation, disciplinarity, and socialisation.
Jon Røyne Kyllingstad is a historian and associate professor at the University of Oslo, Museum for University and Science History, where he is the leader of the research project "Historicizing intelligence". He is specialised in the history of science and the history of academic institutions in the period approx. 1870 – 2000. He was previously head conservator at the Norwegian Museum of Technology. His last book Rase: en vitenskapshistorie (Race: a history of a science) sums up two decades of work on changing ideas about race, ethnicity and the nation, within physical anthropology, genetics, and humanities disciplines such as archaeology and history in Norway.