I posted a while back on two duelling essays in Nature on the intensely controversial subject of whether scientists should be permitted to study group differences in cognition. Nature now has a series of correspondence on the topic in its latest issue.
Firstly, there are rebuttals from the authors of the two original essays: Steven Rose argues that the debate is dead and that reviving it serves no purpose, while Ceci and Williams argue (substantially more convincingly, in my opinion) that Rose's declaration of these areas of research as invalid is premature.
Some of the other opinions are predictable: two letters, for instance, simply dismiss the use of IQ as a measure of intelligence. A third letter in a similar vein is more subtle and interesting: Kathryn Holt argues that IQ is an overly simplistic measure, but that more detailed analyses of cognitive differences may prove illuminating:
This makes good sense; if human populations have indeed undergone some level of genetic adaptation to meet differing cognitive demands (which seems entirely possible given what we know about recent human evolution), then investigating group differences may provide useful insights into the molecular architecture of cognition.
One of the most well-respected researchers in the field of group differences in cognition, Jim Flynn, weighs in with a careful and measured response:
Finally, Gerhard Meisenberg appears to advocate the widespread use of genetic engineering (or selective breeding?) should any genetic basis for group differences in cognition be uncovered:
This is not a debate that will be resolved any time soon, but it is a credit to Nature that they have permitted such a robust exchange of views on this rather dangerous topic within their pages.