Frank Miele
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Frank Miele is an American journalist and senior editor at Skeptic best known for his controversial advocacy of hereditarian hypotheses about race, especially race and intelligence.
Miele grew up in New Jersey. He earned a A.B. in psychology in 1970 and an M.S. in 1972 from the University of Georgia, where he studied under R. Travis Osborne. He became a regular contributor to Mankind Quarterly while still an undergraduate and collaborated with Donald Swan and A. James Gregor as well as Osborne. More recently he has worked with Richard Lynn, who secured research assistance funding from the Pioneer Fund for Miele in 1994 and 1995. He made his first contribution to Skeptic in 1994. [1]
[edit] Selected bibliography
- Miele, Frank (2002). The Battlegrounds of Bio-Science. Authorhouse: ISBN 1-4033-6030-8
- Kistler, Walter and Frank Miele (2003). Reflections on Life: Science, Religion, Truth, Ethics, Success, Society. Foundation for the Future: ISBN 0-9677252-8-3
- Miele, Frank (2004). Intelligence, Race, And Genetics: Conversations with Arthur R. Jensen. Westview Press: ISBN 0-8133-4274-0
- Sarich, Vincent and Frank Miele (2005). Race: The Reality of Human Differences. Westview Press: ISBN 0-8133-4322-4
[edit] References
- ^ Miele, Frank. "Giving the Devil His Due: Holocaust Revisionism as a Test Case for Free Speech and the Skeptical Ethic." Skeptic 2 (1994): 58-70.
[edit] External links
- Joseph, Jay (January 1, 2005). The Gene Illusion: A Critique of Frank Miele. Skeptic
- Frank Miele bibliography via Institute for the Study of Academic Racism