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Scientific racism



 
 
Scientific racism denotes the use of scientific, or ostensibly scientific, findings and methods to support or validate racist
Racism

Racism, by its simplest definition is the belief that Race is the primary determinant of human traits and capacities and that racial differences produce an inherent superiority of a particular race....
 attitudes and worldviews. It is based on belief in the existence and significance of racial categories, but extends this into a hierarchy between the races to support political or ideological positions of racial supremacy. Scientific racism can refer to both obsolete and contemporary scientific theories, and includes the use of anthropology
Anthropology

Anthropology is the study of humans and humanity in its totality. Anthropology has origins in the natural sciences, and the humanities. In Great Britain it was originally divided into physical anthropology and cultural anthropology, which itself was divided into archaeology, technology, ethnology and sociology ....
 (notably physical anthropology
Physical anthropology

Biological anthropology, or physical anthropology is a branch of anthropology that studies the mechanisms of biological evolution, genetics inheritance, human Adaptation and variation, primatology, primate Morphology , and the List of human fossils of human evolution....
), anthropometry
Anthropometry

Anthropometry , in physical anthropology, refers to the measurement of the human individual for the purposes of understanding human physical variation....
, craniometry
Craniometry

Craniometry is the technique of measuring the bones of the skull. It is distinct from phrenology, the study of personality and character, and physiognomy, the study of facial features....
, and other disciplines in the construction of typologies
Typology (anthropology)

Typology in anthropology is the division of the human species by races. During the late 19th and early 20th centuries, anthropologists used a typological model to divide people from different ethnic regions into races, ....
 and the classification of humans into distinct biological races.

Scientific racism was most widespread during the New Imperialism
New Imperialism

New Imperialism refers to the colony expansion adopted by Europe's power and, later, Japan and the United States, during the 19th and early 20th centuries; approximately from the Franco-Prussian War to World War I ....
 period in the second half of the 19th century.






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Scientific racism denotes the use of scientific, or ostensibly scientific, findings and methods to support or validate racist
Racism

Racism, by its simplest definition is the belief that Race is the primary determinant of human traits and capacities and that racial differences produce an inherent superiority of a particular race....
 attitudes and worldviews. It is based on belief in the existence and significance of racial categories, but extends this into a hierarchy between the races to support political or ideological positions of racial supremacy. Scientific racism can refer to both obsolete and contemporary scientific theories, and includes the use of anthropology
Anthropology

Anthropology is the study of humans and humanity in its totality. Anthropology has origins in the natural sciences, and the humanities. In Great Britain it was originally divided into physical anthropology and cultural anthropology, which itself was divided into archaeology, technology, ethnology and sociology ....
 (notably physical anthropology
Physical anthropology

Biological anthropology, or physical anthropology is a branch of anthropology that studies the mechanisms of biological evolution, genetics inheritance, human Adaptation and variation, primatology, primate Morphology , and the List of human fossils of human evolution....
), anthropometry
Anthropometry

Anthropometry , in physical anthropology, refers to the measurement of the human individual for the purposes of understanding human physical variation....
, craniometry
Craniometry

Craniometry is the technique of measuring the bones of the skull. It is distinct from phrenology, the study of personality and character, and physiognomy, the study of facial features....
, and other disciplines in the construction of typologies
Typology (anthropology)

Typology in anthropology is the division of the human species by races. During the late 19th and early 20th centuries, anthropologists used a typological model to divide people from different ethnic regions into races, ....
 and the classification of humans into distinct biological races.

Scientific racism was most widespread during the New Imperialism
New Imperialism

New Imperialism refers to the colony expansion adopted by Europe's power and, later, Japan and the United States, during the 19th and early 20th centuries; approximately from the Franco-Prussian War to World War I ....
 period in the second half of the 19th century. These theories often worked in conjunction with racism
Racism

Racism, by its simplest definition is the belief that Race is the primary determinant of human traits and capacities and that racial differences produce an inherent superiority of a particular race....
, for example in the case of "human zoo
Human zoo

Human zoos were 19th and 20th century public exhibits of human beings, usually in a "natural" or "primitive" state. The displays often emphasized the cultural differences between Western and non-European peoples....
s", in which human beings of various races were presented in cages during colonial exhibition
Colonial exhibition

File:IllustLondonNews1886.jpgA colonial exhibition was a type of World's Fair intended to boost trade and bolster popular support for the various colonialism during the New Imperialism period, which started in the 1880s with the scramble for Africa....
s. Such theories, and associated actions, have been strongly denounced since World War II
World War II

World War II, or the Second World War , was a global military conflict which involved a Participants in World War II, including all of the great powers, organised into two opposing military alliances: the Allies of World War II and the Axis powers....
 and the Holocaust, in particular by a 1950 UNESCO
UNESCO

United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization is a specialized agency of the United Nations established on 16 November 1945....
 statement, signed by an international group of scholars, known as The Race Question
The Race Question

The Race Question is a UNESCO statement issued on 18 July, 1950 following World War II. Signed by some of the leading researchers of the time, in the field of psychology, biology, cultural anthropology and ethnology, it questioned the foundations of scientific racist theories which had become very popular at the turn of the 20th century, alon...
.

Today, the phrase is used either as an accusation, or to describe what critics consider to be historical racist propaganda
Propaganda

Propaganda is the dissemination of information aimed at influencing the opinions or behaviors of large numbers of people. As opposed to Objectivity providing information, propaganda in its most basic sense presents information in order to influence its audience....
 alleging the existence of different races. These critics point to The Race Question, which advocates the use of the more precise term "ethnic group
Ethnic group

An ethnic group is a group of humans whose members identify with each other, through a common heritage that is real or presumed.Ethnic identity is further marked by the recognition from others of a group's distinctiveness and the recognition of common culture, linguistic, religion, human behaviour or Race traits, real or presumed, as indic...
".

The phrase "scientific racism" has been applied retroactively to publications on race as far back as the 18th century.

Overview


Such theories, which often postulated a "master race
Master race

The 'master race' was a concept in Nazism ideology, which holds that the Germanic peoples represent an ideal and "pure Race ". It derives from 19th century racial theory, which posited a hierarchy of races placing Jews at the bottom of the hierarchy while Northern Europeans at the top....
", usually "Nordic" and "Aryan
Aryan

Aryan is an English language loanword. As the American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language states at the beginning of its definition, "[it] is one of the ironies of history that Aryan, a word nowadays referring to the blond-haired, blue-eyed physical ideal of Nazi Germany, originally referred to a people who looked vastly di...
", were along with eugenics
Eugenics

Eugenics is a scientific field involving the controlled breeding of humans in order to achieve desirable traits in future generations. Eugenics was at its height in first half of the 20th century and was largely abandoned with the end of World War II....
, pioneered by Sir Francis Galton (among others) and popularized at the turn of the 20th century, a main influence
Nazism and race

Nazism developed several theories concerning races. They claimed to scientifically measure a strict hierarchy among "human Race "; at the top was the "Nordic race" or "Aryan race", followed by lesser races....
 of the Nazi racial policies and their program of eugenics
Nazi eugenics

Nazi eugenics were Nazi Germany's Nazism and race social policies that placed the improvement of the Race through eugenics at the center of their concerns and targeted those humans they identified as "life unworthy of life" , including but not limited to the Crime, Degeneration, Gleichschaltung, feeble-minded, History of homosexual people in...
. Galton developed the science
Science

In its broadest sense, science refers to any systematic knowledge or practice. In its more usual restricted sense, science refers to a system of acquiring knowledge based on scientific method, as well as to the organized body of knowledge gained through such research....
 of Eugenics
Eugenics

Eugenics is a scientific field involving the controlled breeding of humans in order to achieve desirable traits in future generations. Eugenics was at its height in first half of the 20th century and was largely abandoned with the end of World War II....
 whose primary concept was "control" and promotion of quantification and analytical measurements of "desirable traits" so as to set a guide on how to obtain the "truly proper breeding". However, this was not necessarily a continuous relationship, as several influential authors of Nazism
Nazism

Nazism, officially National Socialism , refers to the ideology and practices of the National Socialist German Workers? Party under Adolf Hitler, and the policies adopted by the dictatorial government of Nazi Germany from 1933 to 1945....
 were not themselves anti-semitic. Quite to the contrary, Arthur de Gobineau
Arthur de Gobineau

Joseph Arthur Comte de Gobineau was a France aristocrat, novelist and man of letters who became famous for developing the racialist theory of the Aryan race master race in his book An Essay on the Inequality of the Human Races ....
 (1816–82), for example, was a philo-semite
Philo-Semitism

Philo-Semitism, Philosemitism, or Judeophilia is an interest in, respect for, and appreciation of the Jewish people, their historical significance and the positive impacts of Judaism in the history of the western world, in particular, generally on the part of a gentile....
 who placed the "Jew
Jew

A Jew is a member of the Jewish people, an ethnoreligious group that traces its ancestry to the Israelites or Hebrews of the Ancient Near East....
ish race" above all. Thus, although his racial theories largely influenced Nazi ideologies, they had to adapt him to suit their mindset. Apart from Gobineau's 1853 The Inequality of Human Races, other scientific racist works that largely influenced Nazism include Francis Galton
Francis Galton

Sir Francis Galton Fellow of the Royal Society , Cousin#Half_cousins of Charles Darwin, was an England Victorian era polymath, anthropologist, Eugenics, tropical List of explorers, geographer, inventor, meteorologist, proto-geneticist, Psychometrics, and statistician....
’s 1870 Hereditary Genius: An Inquiry into Its Laws and Consequences, Madison Grant
Madison Grant

Madison Grant was an United States lawyer, historian, and anthropologist, known primarily for his work as a eugenics and conservationist. As a eugenicist, Grant was responsible for one of the most famous works of scientific racism, and played an active role in crafting strong Immigration Act of 1924 and anti-miscegenation laws in the Unite...
’s 1916/1924 The Passing of the Great Race
The Passing of the Great Race

The Passing of The Great Race; or, The racial basis of European history was an influential book of scientific racism written by the American eugenicist, lawyer, and amateur anthropologist Madison Grant in 1916....
 and Lothrop T. Stoddard’s 1920 The Rising Tide of Color Against White World Supremacy For the most part, however, scientific racism is a pejorative label sometimes given to modern theories or arguments that allege that scientific evidence
Scientific evidence

Scientific evidence is evidence which serves to either support or counter a scientific theory or hypothesis . Such evidence is expected to be empirical and properly documented in accordance with scientific method such as is applicable to the particular field of inquiry ....
 shows significant evolution
Evolution

In biology, evolution is change in the heritability trait of a population of organisms from one generation to the next. These changes are caused by a combination of three main processes: variation, reproduction, and selection....
ary differences between races or ethnic groups.

In this sense, the term is used to criticize modern studies of human genetics
Human genetics

Human genetics describes the study of inheritance as it occurs in human beings. Human genetics encompasses a variety of overlapping fields including: classical genetics, cytogenetics, molecular genetics, biochemical genetics, genomics, population genetics, developmental genetics, clinical genetics, and genetic counseling....
 or studies claiming to show a link between race and intelligence
Race and intelligence

Race and intelligence have in some cases been claimed to be correlated. Contemporary debate on this issue focuses on the nature, causes, and rectifications of ethnic group differences in intelligence test scores....
, as well as hierarchically classifying races, hence asserting the superiority or inferiority of specific ones. Critics of such studies assert that both "race" and "intelligence" are fuzzy concept
Fuzzy concept

A fuzzy concept is a concept of which the content, value, or boundaries of application can vary according to context or conditions, instead of being fixed once and for all....
s.

Earliest examples of scientific racism

According to Benjamin Isaac's The Invention of Racism in Classical Antiquity, roots of scientific racism may be found in Greco-Roman antiquity. Other authors (such as the French
French people

French people can refer to:* The legal residents and citizens of France, regardless of ancestry. For a legal discussion, see French nationality law....
 author Raphaël Lagier, Les races humaines selon Kant — Human Races According to Kant, 2004), however, reject this claim, highlighting the very different scientific frame created in the 19th century with the birth of modern biology
Biology

Biology is a branch of the natural sciences concerned with the study of living organisms and their interaction with each other and their environment ....
, making any interpretation of continuity between ancient racist theories with modern scientific racism hazardous at best. B. Isaac discussed in his book the alleged role of Hippocrates
Hippocrates

Hippocrates of Cos II or Hippokrates of Kos - ancient Greek: ; Hippokr?tes was an Ancient Greece physician of the Age of Pericles, and was considered one of the most outstanding figures in the history of medicine....
, Plato
Plato

Plato , was a Classical Greece Greeks philosopher, mathematician, writer of philosophical dialogues, and founder of the Platonic Academy in Ancient Athens, the first institution of higher learning in the western world....
, Aristotle
Aristotle

Aristotle was a Greeks philosopher, a student of Plato and teacher of Alexander the Great. He wrote on many subjects, including physics, metaphysics, Poetics , theater, music, logic, rhetoric, politics, government, ethics, biology and zoology....
, Galen
Galen

Aelius Galenus or Claudius Galenus , better known as Galen of Pergamum , was a prominent Ancient Rome physician and philosopher of Greek origin, and probably the most accomplished medical researcher of the Roman period....
 and many other notable figures in the gradual formation of the modern scientific racist worldview. He presents for instance the fifth century BC treatise Airs, Waters, Places by Hippocrates as a prime instance of early (proto)scientific racism, and links Pseudo-Aristotle
Pseudo-Aristotle

Pseudo-Aristotle is a general Wiktionary:cognomen for authors of philosophical or medical treatises who attributed their work to the Greek philosophy Aristotle, or whose work was later attributed to him by others....
's suggestions to Hippocrates: "The idea that dark people are cowards and light people courageous fighters is found already in Airs, Waters, Places..." He also quotes Vitruvius
Vitruvius

File:Vitruvius.jpgMarcus Vitruvius Pollio was a Ancient Rome writer, architect and engineer , active in the 1st century BC. By his own description Vitruvius served as a Ballista , the third class of arms in the military offices....
 (70–25 B.C.) who, relying on the racial theories of Posidonius
Posidonius

Posidonius "of Apamea " or "of Rhodes" , was a Greeks Stoic philosopher, politician, astronomer, geographer, historian and teacher native to Apamea, History of Syria....
, wrote "those races nearest to the southern half of the axis are of lower stature, with swarthy complexions, curly hair, black eyes and little blood on account of the sun. This poverty
Poverty

Poverty is the shortage of common things such as food, clothing, shelter and safe drinking water, all of which determine our quality of life. It may also include the lack of access to opportunities such as education and employment which aid the escape from poverty and/or allow one to enjoy the respect of fellow citizens....
 of blood makes them over-timid to stand up against the sword...On the other hand, men born in cold countries are indeed ready to meet the shock of arms with great courage and without timidity."

Regular publications on race and other claimed differences between people of different geographical locations began at least as early as the 18th century. The 17th and 18th century were marked by natural history
Natural history

Natural history is the scientific research of plants or animals, leaning more towards the observational than experimental methods of study, and encompasses more research that is published in magazines than in academic journals....
, in which the concept of evolution had no sense. Early attempts at distinguishing various races had been made by Henri de Boulainvilliers
Henri de Boulainvilliers

Henri de Boulainvilliers was a France writer and historian. Educated at the college of Juilly, he served in the army until 1697. He translated into French Spinoza's Ethics and wrote an analysis of his Theologico-Political Treatise, identifying Spinoza's conatus with the right of conquest and the "right of the strongest" of which...
 (1658–1722), who divided the nation
Nation

A nation is a cultural and social community. In as much as most members never meet each other, yet feel a common bond, it may be considered an imagined community....
 of France between two races, the aristocratic
Aristocracy

Aristocracy is a form of government, in which a few of the most prominent citizens rule. This may be a hereditary elite, or it may be by a system of cooption where a council of prominent citizens add leading soldiers, merchants, land owners, priests, and lawyers to their number....
, "French" race, descendants of the Germanic Franks
Franks

The Franks or Frankish people were a West Germanic ethnic group first identified in the 3rd century as living north and east of the Lower Rhine River....
, and the Gallo-Roman, indigenous race, which comprised the population of the Third Estate. According to Boulainvilliers, the descendants of the Franks dominated the Third Estate by a right of conquest
Right of conquest

The right of conquest is the purported right of a conqueror to territory taken by force of arms. It was sometimes considered a principle of international law until the early 20th century....
. In the exact opposite of modern nationalism
Nationalism

Nationalism refers to an ideology, a feeling, a form of culture, or a social movement that focuses on the nation. While there is significant debate over the historical origins of nations, nearly all Expert accept that nationalism, at least as an ideology and social movement, is a Modernity phenomenon originating in Europe....
, the foreigners had a legitimate right of domination on indigenous peoples. But contrary to later, scientifically-justified theories of race, Boulainvilliers did not understand the concept of race as designing an eternal and immutable essence. His account was not, however, only a mythical tale: contrary to hagiographies
Hagiography

Hagiography is the study of saints. A hagiography, from Greek ' and ' , refers literally to writings on the subject of such holy people, and specifically the biography of ecclesiastical and secular leaders....
 and epic
Epic poetry

An epic is a lengthy narrative poem, ordinarily concerning a serious subject containing details of heroic deeds and events significant to a culture or nation....
s such as The Song of Roland
The Song of Roland

The Song of Roland is the oldest surviving major work of French literature. It exists in various different manuscript versions, which testify to its enormous and enduring popularity in the 12th to 14th centuries....
, Boulainvilliers sought some kind of scientific legitimacy by basing his distinction between a Germanic race and a Latin race on historical events. However, his theory of races was completely distinct from the biological concept of race later used by nineteenth century's theories of scientific racism.

Carolus Linnaeus
Carolus Linnaeus

Carl Linnaeus was a Sweden botanist, physician, and zoologist, who laid the foundations for the modern scheme of binomial nomenclature. He is known as the father of modern alpha taxonomy, and is also considered one of the fathers of modern ecology....
 (1707–78), a Swedish
Swedish people

Swedes are people from Sweden or of Swedish decent. Unlike the United States, United Kingdom, and Australian Censuses, Statistics Sweden does not classify the Swedish population by race or ethnicity....
 botanist, physician and zoologist
Zoology

Zoology is the branch of biology concerned with the study of animals. The most common pronunciation of "zoology" is ; however, an alternative pronunciation is ....
, who laid the bases of binomial nomenclature
Binomial nomenclature

In biology, binomial nomenclature is the formal system of naming species. The system is called binominal nomenclature , binary nomenclature , or the binomial classification system....
 (the method of naming species) and is known as the "father of modern taxonomy
Taxonomy

Taxonomy is the practice and science of classification. The word comes from the Greek language ', taxis and ', nomos .Taxonomies, or taxonomic schemes, are composed of taxonomic units known as taxa , or kinds of things that are arranged frequently in a hierarchical structure....
" (the science of describing, categorizing and naming organisms) was also a pioneer in defining the concept of "race" as applied to humans. Within Homo sapiens he proposed four taxa of a lower (unnamed) rank. These categories are, Americanus, Asiaticus, Africanus, and Europeanus. They were based on place of origin at first, and later skin color. Each race had certain characteristics that were endemic to individuals belonging to it. Native Americans were reddish, stubborn, and angered easily. Africans were black, relaxed and negligent. Asian
Asian

Asian or Asiatic may refer to:* Something or someone from Asia.* In context with the Ancient Egyptians, Asiatic is used to mean - beyond the borders of Egypt and the continent of Africa to the east, but only of western Asia ...
s were yellow, avaricious, and easily distracted. European
European

European may mean:* A person or attribute of the continent of Europe* A person or attribute of the European Union* A person descended from an Ethnic groups in Europe...
s were white, gentle, and inventive.

In addition, in Amoenitates academicae (1763), Carolus Linnaeus defined Homo anthropomorpha as a catch-all race for a variety of human-like mythological
Mythology

The word mythology refers to a body of folklore/myths/legends that a particular culture believes to be true and that often use the supernatural to interpret natural events and to explain the nature of the universe and humanity....
 creatures, including the troglodyte
Troglodyte

Troglodyte may refer to:* A member of a primitive race or tribe of cave-dwellers, a caveman.* A person who lives in seclusion, a hermit.* One of a group of people who built homes into the faces of cliffs , connected by underground passageways, such as in France or Tunisia....
, satyr
Satyr

In Greek mythology, satyrs are a troop of male companions of Pan and Dionysus ? "satyresses" were a late invention of poets ? that roamed the woods and mountains....
, hydra
Lernaean Hydra

In Greek mythology, the Lernaean Hydra The Hydra was the offspring of Typhon and Echidna , noisome offspring of the earth goddess, Gaia. It was said to be the sibling of the Nemean Lion, the Stymphalian birds, the Chimera ,and Cerberus....
, and phoenix
Phoenix (mythology)

The phoenix is a Mythologyical sacred fire bird which originated in the Sub-continent of India in ancient mythologies mentioned in the Ancient Egyptian religion and later the Sanchuniathon and the Greek Mythology....
. He claimed that these creatures actually existed, but were in reality inaccurate descriptions of ape-like creatures.

He also defined in Systema Naturæ Homo ferus as "four-footed, mute, hairy." It included the sub-races Juvenis lupinus hessensis (wolf boys), who he thought were raised by animals, and Juvenis hannoveranus (Peter of Hanover) and Puella campanica (Wild-girl of Champagne). He likewise defined Homo monstrosous as agile and fainthearted, and included in this race the Patagonian giant
Patagon

The Patagones or Patagonian giants are a mythology race of people, who first began to appear in early European accounts of the then little-known region and coastline of Patagonia....
, the dwarf of the Alps, and the monorchid Hottentot.

Edward Long
Edward Long

Edward Long was a British colonial administrator and historian, and author of an influential work, The History of Jamaica ....
, a British colonial administrator, created a more simple classification of race in History of Jamaica (1774). The next year, Johann Blumenbach published his thesis, On the Natural Varieties of Mankind, one of the foundational work of scientific racism. Blumenbach, however, supported monogenism, according to which all mankind had a common origin, against Samuel von Sömmering
Samuel Thomas von Sömmering

Samuel Thomas von S?mmerring was a Germany physician, anatomist, anthropologist, paleontologist and inventor. S?mmerring discovered the macula in the retina of the human eye....
 and Christoph Meiners
Christoph Meiners

Christoph Meiners was a Germany philosopher. He supported a polygenist theory of human origins.He was Professor of Weltweisheit at the University of G?ttingen, and wrote on comparative history and cultural history....
, who supported polygenism
Polygenism

See also Polygenesis Polygenism is a theory of human origins positing that the human Race are of different lineages, either from a scientific or a religious basis....
, the view that separate races originated independently.

19th century theories of race

Races and Skulls
The scientific classification
Scientific classification

Biological classification or scientific classification in biology, is a method by which biologists group and categorize species of organisms....
 proposed by Linnaeus was a prerequisite of any attempts at scientifically classifying humanity according to various races. Unilinealism depicting a progression from primitive human societies to industrialized civilization became popular amongst philosophers including Friedrich Hegel, Immanuel Kant
Immanuel Kant

Immanuel Kant was an 18th-century German Philosophy from the Kingdom of Prussia city of K?nigsberg . He is regarded as one of the most influential thinkers of modern Europe and of the late Age of Enlightenment....
 and Auguste Comte. Some have interpreted the Bible
Bible

The Bible is the central religious text of Judaism and Christianity. The exact Books of the Bible is dependent on the religious traditions of specific denominations....
 to sanction slavery
Slavery

Slavery is a form of forced labor where a person is compelled to Labor for another . Slaves are held against their will from the time of their capture, purchase, or birth, and are deprived of the right to leave, to refuse to work, or to receive Remuneration in return for their labor....
, and from the 1820s to the 1850s it was cited in the Southern States
Southern States

Southern States may refer to:*The Southern United States or, more broadly, those U.S. states comprising the Sun Belt.*The Southern States Cooperative....
 of the United States of America to support the idea that negroes had been created unequal, suited to slavery, by writers such as the Rev. Richard Furman, Joseph Smith Jr. and Thomas R. Cobb
Thomas R. Cobb

Thomas Reed Cobb was a United States House of Representatives from Indiana.Born in Springville, Indiana, Cobb attended Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana....
.

Arthur Gobineau's An Essay on the Inequality of the Human Races
An Essay on the Inequality of the Human Races

An Essay on the Inequality of the Human Races by Arthur de Gobineau is a voluminous work; while originally intended as a work of philosophical enquiry, it is today considered as one of the earliest examples of scientific racism....
 (1853–1855) proposed that there were three races, and that race mixing led to the collapse of civilization. Polygenist
Polygenism

See also Polygenesis Polygenism is a theory of human origins positing that the human Race are of different lineages, either from a scientific or a religious basis....
 theory alleged that there were different origins of mankind, thus making it possible to conceive of different, biological, human races, or to classify other humans as akin to animals without rights.

Charles Darwin
Charles Darwin

Charles Robert Darwin Royal Society was an English people natural history who realised and presented compelling evidence that all species of life have evolution over time from common descent, through the process he called natural selection....
's 1859 On the Origin of Species was very influential, although it made no mention of humanity and when he published his views in his The Descent of Man, and Selection in Relation to Sex
The Descent of Man, and Selection in Relation to Sex

The Descent of Man, and Selection in Relation to Sex is a book on evolutionary theory by England natural history Charles Darwin, first published in 1871....
 of 1871 he was emphatic that there were no clear distinctive characteristics to categorize races as separate species, and that all shared very similar physical and mental characteristics indicating common ancestry. In making his case for the reality of one human species, Darwin contrasted "civilized races of man" with "the savage races", like almost everyone else at that time (except Alfred Russel Wallace
Alfred Russel Wallace

Alfred Russel Wallace, Order of Merit, Fellow of the Royal Society was a United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland Natural history, explorer, geographer, anthropologist and biologist....
) making no clear distinction between biological races and cultural races. He also noted the likelihood of "savage races" being wiped out at that time of colonial expansion
Colonialism

Colonialism is the extension of a nation's sovereignty over Territory beyond its borders by the establishment of either settler or exploitation colony in which Indigenous people populations are direct rule, Population transfers, or Genocide....
, but gave no support to such extermination. However, although Darwin was not racist and throughout his life strongly opposed slavery, the term "Social Darwinism
Social Darwinism

Social Darwinism refers to various ideologies based on a concept that competition among all individuals, groups, nations, or ideas drives social evolution in human societies....
" was applied in the 1940s to denote various ideologies including pre-Darwinian racist ideas combined with concepts loosely based on evolution
Evolution

In biology, evolution is change in the heritability trait of a population of organisms from one generation to the next. These changes are caused by a combination of three main processes: variation, reproduction, and selection....
 by natural selection
Natural selection

Natural selection is the process by which favorable heritable trait become more common in successive generations of a population of Reproduction organisms, and unfavorable heritable traits become less common, due to differential reproduction of genotypes....
. Scientific racist theories became associated with the expression "survival of the fittest
Survival of the fittest

"Survival of the fittest" is a phrase which is shorthand for a concept relating to competition for survival or predominance. Originally applied by Herbert Spencer in his Principles of Biology of 1864, Spencer drew parallels to his ideas of economics with Charles Darwin's theory of evolution by what Darwin termed natural selection....
", coined by Herbert Spencer
Herbert Spencer

Herbert Spencer was an England philosopher, prominent Classical liberalism political theorist, and sociological theorist of the Victorian era....
 in 1864.

Ancient ideas of improving human races were developed with ideas take from Francis Galton
Francis Galton

Sir Francis Galton Fellow of the Royal Society , Cousin#Half_cousins of Charles Darwin, was an England Victorian era polymath, anthropologist, Eugenics, tropical List of explorers, geographer, inventor, meteorologist, proto-geneticist, Psychometrics, and statistician....
's concept of voluntary "eugenics
Eugenics

Eugenics is a scientific field involving the controlled breeding of humans in order to achieve desirable traits in future generations. Eugenics was at its height in first half of the 20th century and was largely abandoned with the end of World War II....
" into popular campaigning for coercive government programs. Scientific racism theories, influenced by other discourse
Discourse

Discourse means either "written or spoken communication or debate" or "a formal discussion or debate." The term is often used in semantics and discourse analysis....
s and events, became extremely popular towards the end of the 19th century.

Phrenology
Phrenology

Phrenology is a defunct field of study, once considered a science, in which the personality traits of a person were determined by "reading" bumps and fissures in the skull....
, which attempted to describe traits of character by outward appearance, including by the shape of skull
Skull

The skull is a bone structure found in the head of many animals. The skull supports the structures of the face and protects the head against injury....
s, measured via craniometry
Craniometry

Craniometry is the technique of measuring the bones of the skull. It is distinct from phrenology, the study of personality and character, and physiognomy, the study of facial features....
, and of skeleton
Skeleton

In biology, a skeleton is a rigid framework that provides protection and structure in many types of animal, particularly those of the phylum Chordata and of the superphylum Ecdysozoa....
s, was put to use in racist ends. Thus, skulls and skeletons of black people and other indigenous people were displayed between apes and white men. Thus, Ota Benga
Ota Benga

Ota Benga was a Democratic Republic of the Congo pygmy who was featured in a 1906 human zoo exhibit at the Bronx Zoo alongside an orangutan. The exhibit was intended to promote the concept of human evolution, eugenics and scientific racism....
, a Pygmy, was displayed as the "Missing Link" in 1906 in the Bronx Zoo
Bronx Zoo

The Bronx Zoo is a famous zoo located within the Bronx Park, in The Bronx borough of New York City. The largest metropolitan zoo in the United States, the Bronx Zoo comprises of parklands and naturalistic habitats, through which the Bronx River flows....
 in New York
New York

The State of New York is a U.S. state in the Mid-Atlantic States and Northeastern United States regions of the United States and is the nation's List of U.S....
, alongside apes and other animals. Some of the most influential theories included Vacher de Lapouge (1854–1936)'s "anthroposociology" and Herder
Johann Gottfried Herder

Johann Gottfried von Herder was a Germany philosophy, Theology, poet, and literary critic. He is associated with the periods of Age of Enlightenment, Sturm und Drang, and Weimar Classicism....
 (1744–1803), who applied "race" to nationalist theory to develop the first conception of ethnic nationalism
Ethnic nationalism

Ethnic nationalism is a form of nationalism wherein the "nation" is defined in terms of ethnicity. Whatever specific ethnicity is involved, ethnic nationalism always includes some element of Kinship and descent from previous generations....
. To the contrary, Ernest Renan
Ernest Renan

Ernest Renan was a France philosopher and writer, deeply attached to his native province of Brittany. He is best known for his influential historical works on early Christianity and his political theory theories....
 famously argued in 1882 against Herder for a conception of nation based on the "will to live together," which was not founded on any ethnic or racial prerequisite. Scientific racist discourse posited the historical existence of "national races" such as German and French, branching from basal races supposed to have existed for millennia, such as the "Aryan
Aryan

Aryan is an English language loanword. As the American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language states at the beginning of its definition, "[it] is one of the ironies of history that Aryan, a word nowadays referring to the blond-haired, blue-eyed physical ideal of Nazi Germany, originally referred to a people who looked vastly di...
 race", and believed political boundaries should mirror these supposed racial ones.

Craniometry and physical anthropology

Dutch scholar Pieter Camper (1722–89) was one of the first theorists of craniometry, the measure of skulls, which he used to justify racial differences. In 1770, he invented in one of his numerous memoirs the concept of the "facial angle", a measure meant to determine intelligence among various species. According to this technique, a "facial angle" was formed by drawing two lines: one horizontally from the nostril to the ear; and the other perpendicularly from the advancing part of the upper jawbone to the most prominent part of the forehead. Camper claimed that antique statues presented an angle of 90°, Europeans of 80°, Black people of 70° and the orangutan of 58°, thus displaying a hierarchic and racist view of mankind, based on a decadent
Decadence

Decadence can refer to a personal trait, or to the state of a society . Used to describe a person's lifestyle, it describes a lack of moral and intellectual discipline, or in the Concise Oxford Dictionary: "a luxurious self-indulgence"....
 conception of history. These scientific racist researches were continued by Étienne Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire
Étienne Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire

?tienne Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire was a France natural history who established the principle of "unity of composition". He was a colleague of Jean-Baptiste Lamarck and expanded and defended Lamarck's evolutionary theories....
 (1772–1844) and Paul Broca
Paul Broca

Paul Pierre Broca was a France physician, anatomist, and anthropologist. He was born in Sainte-Foy-la-Grande, France. He is best known for his research on Broca's area, a region of the frontal lobe that has been named after him....
 (1824–80).

Samuel George Morton
Samuel George Morton

Samuel George Morton was an United States physician and natural scientist. Morton was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and graduated from the University of Pennsylvania in 1820....
 (1799–1851), one of the inspirators of physical anthropology
Physical anthropology

Biological anthropology, or physical anthropology is a branch of anthropology that studies the mechanisms of biological evolution, genetics inheritance, human Adaptation and variation, primatology, primate Morphology , and the List of human fossils of human evolution....
, collected hundreds of human skulls from all over the world and started trying to find a way to classify them according to some logical criteria. Influenced by the common racist theories of his time, he claimed that he could judge the intellectual capacity of a race by the cranial capacity
Cranial capacity

Cranial capacity is a measure of the volume of the interior of the cranium of those vertebrates who have both a cranium and a brain. The most commonly used unit of measure is the cubic centimetre or cubic centimetre....
 (the measure of the volume of the interior of the skull). A large skull meant a large brain and high intellectual capacity, and a small skull indicated a small brain and decreased intellectual capacity. By studying these skulls he decided at what point Caucasians
Caucasian race

The term Caucasian race has been used to denote the general physical type of some or all of the indigenous populations of Europe, North Africa, the Horn of Africa, West Asia, Central Asia and South Asia....
 stopped being Caucasians, and at what point Negroes began. Morton had many skulls from ancient Egypt
Ancient Egypt

Ancient Egypt was an Ancient history civilization in eastern North Africa, concentrated along the lower reaches of the Nile in what is now the modern nation of Egypt....
, and concluded that the ancient Egyptians were not African, but were white. His two major monographs were the Crania Americana (1839), An Inquiry into the Distinctive Characteristics of the Aboriginal Race of America and Crania Aegyptiaca (1844). In Crania Americana, he claimed that the mean cranial capacity of the skulls of whites was 87 in³ (1,425 cm³), while that of blacks was 78 in³ (1,278 cm³). Based on the measurement of 144 skulls of Native Americans
Indigenous peoples of the Americas

The indigenous peoples of the Americas are the pre-Columbian inhabitants of the Americas, their descendants, and many ethnic groups who identify with those peoples....
, he reported a figure of 82 in³ (1,344 cm³) .
Ripley Map of Cephalic Index in Europe
Stephen Jay Gould
Stephen Jay Gould

Stephen Jay Gould was a prominent American Paleontology, Evolution, and History of science. He was also one of the most influential and widely read writers of popular science of his generation....
 (1941–2002), an American paleontologist, evolutionary biologist and historian of science, studied from a historical perspective these craniometric works in The Mismeasure of Man
The Mismeasure of Man

The Mismeasure of Man is a controversial 1981 book written by the Harvard University paleontology Stephen Jay Gould . The book is a History of science and critique of the methods and motivations underlying biological determinism, the belief that "the social and economic differences between human groups—primarily Race , Social clas...
 (1981). He alleged that Samuel Morton had fudged data and "overpacked" the skulls with filler in order to justify his racist opinions.

In 1873, Paul Broca
Paul Broca

Paul Pierre Broca was a France physician, anatomist, and anthropologist. He was born in Sainte-Foy-la-Grande, France. He is best known for his research on Broca's area, a region of the frontal lobe that has been named after him....
 (1824–1880), founder of the Anthropological Society of Paris in 1859, found the same pattern described by Samuel Morton
Samuel Morton

Samuel J. "Nails" Morton was a high ranking member of Dean O'Banion's Northside gang....
's Crania Americana by weighing brains at autopsy
Autopsy

An autopsy, also known as a post-mortem examination, necropsy , autopsia cadaverum, or obduction, is a medical procedure that consists of a thorough examination of a Dead body to determine the cause and manner of death and to evaluate any disease or injury that may be present....
. Other historical studies alleging a black-white difference in brain size include Bean (1906), Mall, (1909), Pearl, (1934) and Vint (1934).

Some modern research in neuroscience and intelligence
Neuroscience and intelligence

Brain sizeWhen comparing different species the ratio of brain weight to body weight does present a correlation with intelligence, though the actual brain weight has little or no effect....
, using MRI studies rather than less accurate skull measurements, shows a correlation between brain size and intelligence of 0.4 to 0.5.

Monogenism and polygenism

Morton's followers, particularly Josiah C. Nott
Josiah C. Nott

Josiah Clark Nott was an American physician and surgeon. He was also an author of surgery, yellow fever, and scientific racist theories....
 (1804–1873) and George Gliddon
George Gliddon

George Robins Gliddon was an United States Egyptologist, born in Devon, England. His father, a merchant, was United States consul at Alexandria, and there Gliddon was taken at an early age....
 (1809–57) in their monumental tribute to Morton's work, Types of Mankind (1854), carried Morton's ideas further and claimed that his findings in fact supported the notion of polygenism, which claims that humanity originates from different lineages and is the ancestor of the multiregional hypothesis
Multiregional hypothesis

In anthropology, the multiregional hypothesis is one of two accounts of the origin of anatomically modern humans, Homo sapiens.The multiregional hypothesis holds that the Human evolution throughout the Pleistocene has been within a single widespread human species, Homo sapiens, in response to the normal forces of evolution: selection...
. Morton himself had been reluctant to explicitly espouse polygenism because it was a major challenge to the biblical account of creation. Charles Darwin opposed Nott and Glidon's polygenist — and creationists — arguments in his 1871 The Descent of Man, arguing for a monogenism of the species. Darwin conceived the common origin of all humans (aka single-origin hypothesis) as essential for evolutionary theory.

Furthermore, Nott translated Arthur de Gobineau
Arthur de Gobineau

Joseph Arthur Comte de Gobineau was a France aristocrat, novelist and man of letters who became famous for developing the racialist theory of the Aryan race master race in his book An Essay on the Inequality of the Human Races ....
's An Essay on the Inequality of the Human Races
An Essay on the Inequality of the Human Races

An Essay on the Inequality of the Human Races by Arthur de Gobineau is a voluminous work; while originally intended as a work of philosophical enquiry, it is today considered as one of the earliest examples of scientific racism....
 (1853–55), which is one of the founder of "biological racism", in contrast to Boulainvilliers (1658–1722)'s theory of races.

Philosophers of the Enlightenment and racial classifications

A few years later, Immanuel Kant
Immanuel Kant

Immanuel Kant was an 18th-century German Philosophy from the Kingdom of Prussia city of K?nigsberg . He is regarded as one of the most influential thinkers of modern Europe and of the late Age of Enlightenment....
 (1724–1804), celebrated as the symbol of the Enlightenment
Age of Enlightenment

The Age of Enlightenment or The Enlightenment is a term used to describe a time in Western philosophy and cultural life centered upon the eighteenth century, in which rationalism was advocated as the primary source and legitimacy for authority....
's philosophy of progress and humanism
Humanism

Humanism is a broad category of ethics that affirm the dignity and worth of all people, based on the ability to determine right and wrong by appealing to universal human qualities, particularly rationalism, without resorting to the supernatural or alleged divine authority from religious texts....
, wrote his essay On the Different Races of Man (1775) in which he attempted a scientific classification of human races. Friedrich Hegel (1770–1831) would also include a strongly evolutionist
Unilineal evolution

Unilineal evolution is a 19th century social theory about the evolution of societies and cultures. It was composed of many competing theories by various sociologists and anthropologists, who believed that Western culture is the contemporary pinnacle of social evolution....
 account of history in Lectures on the Philosophy of History
Lectures on the Philosophy of History

Lectures on the Philosophy of History, also translated as Lectures on the Philosophy of World History ., is the title of a major work by Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel , originally given as lectures at the University of Berlin in 1822, 1828, and 1830....
, describing the development of the Geist (Spirit or Reason) in history through a serie of incarnations in specific Volkgeists (Folk Spirit). Hegel's philosophy of history
Philosophy of history

Philosophy of history is an area of philosophy concerning the eventual significance, if any, of human history. Furthermore, it speculates as to a possible teleology end to its development?that is, it asks if there is a design, purpose, directive principle, or finality in the processes of human history....
 was explicitly biased in favor of Europe, and, in particular, of the Prussia
Prussia

Prussia was, most recently, a historic state originating out of the Duchy of Prussia and the Margraviate of Brandenburg. This state had for centuries substantial influence on Germany and European history....
n state, conceived as the achievement of history (the "End of History
End of history

"End of history" is a controversial term used in the philosophy of history that may refer to:*The advent of a particular political and economic system as a signal of the end point of humanity's sociocultural evolution and the final form of human government....
"). In his chapter on the Geographical Foundings of Universal History, Hegel wrote that "each People represented a particular degree of the development of the Spirit," thus forming a "nation." This notion of nation, however, is not explicitly linked to physical or racial particularities, rather it is concerned and the concrete historical and geographical site where the Spirit unfold. Influenced, as many others, by Montesquieu's theory on the influence of climate on mores and laws, which the latter had developed in The Spirit of the Laws
The Spirit of the Laws

File:Montesquieu Defense.jpgThe Spirit of Laws is a treatise on political theory first published anonymously by Charles de Secondat, Baron de Montesquieu in 1748 with the help of Claudine Gu?rin de Tencin....
 (1748), Hegel wrote that:
"It is true that climate has influence in that sense that neither the warm zone nor the cold zone are favourable to the liberty of man and to the apparition of historical peoples."(i.e. of peoples that "have" a history, in contrast with "savage
Savage

Savage may refer to:Places* Savage, Maryland* Savage, Minnesota* Lower Savage Islands, Nunavut, Canada* Middle Savage Islands, Nunavut, Canada...
s" that allegedly have no history).
Unsurprisingly, Hegel thus favored the Geist in temperate zones. Hegel finally made an account of "universal history
Universal history

Universal history is basic to the Western tradition of historiography, especially the Abrahamic religion wellspring of that tradition. Simply stated, universal history is the presentation of the history of mankind as a whole, as a coherent unit....
," which started with the Oriental World
Orientalism

Orientalism refers to the imitation or depiction of aspects of Eastern cultures in the West by writers, designers and artists, and can also refer to a sympathetic stance towards the region by a writer or other person....
, then the Greek Antiquity
Classical antiquity

Classical antiquity is a broad term for a long period of cultural history centered on the Mediterranean Sea, comprising the interlocking civilizations of Ancient Greece and Ancient Rome....
, then the Roman
Roman Empire

The Roman Empire was the Roman Republic phase of the Ancient Rome, characterised by an autocracy form of government and large territorial holdings in Europe and around the Mediterranean....
 and the Christian World
Christianism

Christianism refers to fundamentalism Christianity and/ or Christendom.It may also refer to:* the belief that Christianity is superior to all other religions...
, and, ultimately, the Prussian World. It is true, however, that Hegel's philosophy, as Kant for that manner, can not be reduced to such evolutionist statements. In the same lessons, Hegel thus write that "America is the country of the future", but that "philosophy does not concerns itself with prophecies", but with history. Nevertheless, as great as Hegel's philosophy may be considered to be, it has provided justifications for Europe's imperialism
Imperialism

Imperialism has two meanings; one describing an action and the other describing an attitude.#Action: Imperialism is the practice of extending the power, control or rule by one country over areas outside its borders....
 until World War I
World War I

World War I, or the First World War , was a global military conflict which involved the Great powers, organized into two opposing military alliances: the Allies of World War I and the Central Powers....
. In the same way, the works of Montesquieu, one of the early founder of modern sociology
Sociology

Sociology is a branch of the social sciences that uses systematic methods of Empiricism and critical theory to develop and refine a body of knowledge about human social structure and activity, sometimes with the goal of applying such knowledge to the pursuit of social welfare....
, has provided various justifications over the age claiming to scientifically ground "Negroes' inferiority" on claims of the alleged influence of climate. Such racial and evolutionist statements would be echoed by Arthur Schopenhauer
Arthur Schopenhauer

Arthur Schopenhauer was a Germany philosopher known for his atheistic pessimism and philosophical clarity. At age 25, he published his doctoral dissertation, On the Fourfold Root of the Principle of Sufficient Reason, which examined the fundamental question of whether reason alone can unlock answers about the world....
 (1788–1860) who attributed civilizational primacy, on naturalistic grounds, to the "white races" who gained their sensitivity and intelligence by refinement in the rigorous North:

"The highest civilization and culture, apart from the ancient Hindus and Egyptians
Egyptians

Egyptians is the name of the nationality and Mediterranean North African ethnic group native to Egypt.Egyptian identity is closely tied to the Geography of Egypt, dominated by the lower Nile Valley, the small strip of cultivable land stretching from the Cataracts of the Nile to the Mediterranean Sea and enclosed by desert both to the Easte...
, are found exclusively among the white races; and even with many dark peoples, the ruling caste or race is fairer in colour than the rest and has, therefore, evidently immigrated, for example, the Brahmin
Brahmin

Brahmin is the class of educators, law makers, scholars and preachers of Dharma in Hinduism. It is said to occupy the highest position among the varna in Hinduism of Hinduism....
s, the Incas
Inca Empire

The Inca Empire was the largest empire in pre-Columbian America. The administrative, political and military center of the empire was located in Cuzco in modern-day Peru....
, and the rulers of the South Sea Islands
Polynesia

Polynesia is a subregion of Oceania, comprising a large grouping of over 1,000 islands scattered over the central and southern Pacific Ocean....
. All this is due to the fact that necessity is the mother of invention because those tribes that emigrated early to the north, and there gradually became white, had to develop all their intellectual powers and invent and perfect all the arts in their struggle with need, want and misery, which in their many forms were brought about by the climate. This they had to do in order to make up for the parsimony
Parsimony

Parsimony is a 'less is better' concept of frugality, economy or caution in arriving at a hypothesis or course of action. The word derives from Middle English parcimony, from Latin parsimonia, from parsus, past participle of parcere: to spare....
 of nature and out of it all came their high civilization."


Various typologies

One of the first typologies
Typology (anthropology)

Typology in anthropology is the division of the human species by races. During the late 19th and early 20th centuries, anthropologists used a typological model to divide people from different ethnic regions into races, ....
 used to classify various human races was invented by Georges Vacher de Lapouge
Georges Vacher de Lapouge

Georges Vacher de Lapouge was a France anthropologist and a theoretician of Eugenics and Racialism....
 (1854–1936), a theoretician of eugenics
Eugenics

Eugenics is a scientific field involving the controlled breeding of humans in order to achieve desirable traits in future generations. Eugenics was at its height in first half of the 20th century and was largely abandoned with the end of World War II....
, who published in 1899 L'Aryen et son rôle social (1899 — "The Aryan
Aryan

Aryan is an English language loanword. As the American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language states at the beginning of its definition, "[it] is one of the ironies of history that Aryan, a word nowadays referring to the blond-haired, blue-eyed physical ideal of Nazi Germany, originally referred to a people who looked vastly di...
 and his social role"). In this book, he classified humanity into various, hierarchized, races, spanning from the "Aryan white race, dolichocephalic", to the "brachycephalic" "mediocre and inert" race, best represented by the "Jew
Jew

A Jew is a member of the Jewish people, an ethnoreligious group that traces its ancestry to the Israelites or Hebrews of the Ancient Near East....
 ." Between these, Vacher de Lapouge identified the "Homo europaeus
Nordic theory

The Nordic race was one of the Race into which the European ethnic groups were divided by anthropologists in the first half of the twentieth century....
 (Teutonic, Protestant, etc.), the "Homo alpinus" (Auvergnat
Auvergne (province)

Auvergne was a historic province of France in south central France. It was originally the feudal domain of the List of rulers of Auvergne. It is now the geographical and cultural area that corresponds to the former province....
, Turkish
Turkish people

The Turkish people , also known as "Turks" are defined mainly as citizens of the Republic of Turkey. An early history text provided the definition of being a Turk as "any individual within the Republic of Turkey, whatever his faith who speaks Turkish, grows up with Turkish culture and adopts the Turkish ideal is a Turk." This ideal...
, etc.), and finally the "Homo mediterraneus" (Neapolitan
Naples

Naples is a city in southern Italy, the capital of the region of Campania and of the province of Naples. The city is known for its rich history, art, culture and gastronomy, playing an important role throughout much of its existence; it is over 2,800 years old....
, Andalus
Andalusia

Andalusia is a country in the Spanish State. It is the most populous and the second largest, in terms of land area, of the seventeen autonomous communities of the Spain....
, etc.) Vacher de Lapouge became one of the leading inspiration of Nazi anti-semitism
Anti-Semitism

Antisemitism is prejudice against or hostility towards Jews.This prejudice or hostility is usually characterized by a combination of Religion, Race , cultural and ethnic group biases....
 and Nazi racist ideology.

Vacher de Lapouge's classification was mirrored in William Z. Ripley
William Z. Ripley

William Zebina Ripley was an American economist, lecturer at Columbia University, professor of economics at MIT, professor of political economics at Harvard University, and Race theorist....
 in The Races of Europe
The Races of Europe

The Races of Europe is the title of two books related to the anthropology of Europeans. The first book was written by American sociologist/anthropologist William Z....
 (1899), a book which had a large influence on American white supremacism. Ripley even made a map of Europe according to the alleged cephalic index
Cephalic index

Cephalic index is the ratio of the maximum width of the head to its maximum length , sometimes multiplied by 100 for convenience. It was widely used by anthropologists in the early twentieth century to categorize human populations, and by Carleton S....
 of its inhabitants. He was an important influence of the American eugenist Madison Grant
Madison Grant

Madison Grant was an United States lawyer, historian, and anthropologist, known primarily for his work as a eugenics and conservationist. As a eugenicist, Grant was responsible for one of the most famous works of scientific racism, and played an active role in crafting strong Immigration Act of 1924 and anti-miscegenation laws in the Unite...
.

Furthermore, according to John Efron of Indiana University
Indiana University

Indiana University, founded in 1820, is a nine-campus university system in the state of Indiana. The IU system includes the following campuses:...
, the late 19th century also witnessed "the scientizing of anti-Jewish prejudice
Anti-Semitism

Antisemitism is prejudice against or hostility towards Jews.This prejudice or hostility is usually characterized by a combination of Religion, Race , cultural and ethnic group biases....
," stigmatizing Jews with male menstruation
Menstruation

See also "Mensuration", a term sometimes used to describe Measurement, particularly in the context of forestry.Menstruation is the shedding of the uterine lining ....
, pathological hysteria
Histrionic personality disorder

Histrionic personality disorder is defined by the American Psychiatric Association as a personality disorder characterized by a pattern of excessive emotionality and attention-seeking, including an excessive need for approval and inappropriate seductiveness, usually beginning in early adulthood....
, and nymphomania. At the same time, several Jews, such as Joseph Jacobs
Joseph Jacobs

Joseph Jacobs was a literary and Jewish historian. He was a writer for the Jewish Encyclopaedia and a notable folklorist, creating several noteworthy collections of fairy tales....
 or Samuel Weissenberg, also endorsed the same pseudo-scientific theories, convinced that the Jews formed a distinct race. Chaim Zhitlovsky also attempted to define Yiddishkayt (Ashkenazi Jewishness) by turning to contemporary racial theory.

Deniker, Grant and the "Nordic race"

Deniker's Races De L'europe (1899)
Joseph Deniker
Joseph Deniker

Joseph Deniker was a France natural history and anthropologist, known primarily for his attempts to develop highly-detailed maps of Race in Europe....
 (1852–1918) was one of Ripley's main opponents. While Ripley maintained, as Vacher de Lapouge, that Europe was composed of three racial stocks, Joseph Deniker held that there were ten European races (six primary races with four subsidiary or sub-races). Deniker's most lasting contribution to the field of racial theory was the designation of one of his races as la race nordique (the Northern race). While this group had no special place in Deniker's racial model, it would be elevated by Madison Grant
Madison Grant

Madison Grant was an United States lawyer, historian, and anthropologist, known primarily for his work as a eugenics and conservationist. As a eugenicist, Grant was responsible for one of the most famous works of scientific racism, and played an active role in crafting strong Immigration Act of 1924 and anti-miscegenation laws in the Unite...
 (1865–1937) in his Nordic theory
Nordic theory

The Nordic race was one of the Race into which the European ethnic groups were divided by anthropologists in the first half of the twentieth century....
 to the engine of civilization. Grant adopted Ripley's three-race model for Europeans, but disliked Ripley's use of the "Teuton" for one of the races. Grant transliterated la race nordique into "Nordic", and promoted it to the top of his racial hierarchy in his own popular racial theory of the 1910s and 1920s.

Furthermore, Deniker proposed that the concept of "race" was too confusing, and instead proposed the use of the word "ethnic group
Ethnic group

An ethnic group is a group of humans whose members identify with each other, through a common heritage that is real or presumed.Ethnic identity is further marked by the recognition from others of a group's distinctiveness and the recognition of common culture, linguistic, religion, human behaviour or Race traits, real or presumed, as indic...
" instead, which was later adopted prominently in the work of Julian Huxley
Julian Huxley

Sir Julian Sorell Huxley Fellow of the Royal Society was an English evolutionary biologist, Humanist and Internationalism . He was a proponent of natural selection, and a leading figure in the mid-twentieth century evolutionary synthesis....
 and Alfred C. Haddon. Ripley argued that Deniker's idea of a "race" should be rather called a "type", since it was far less biologically rigid than most approaches to the question of race.

Scientific racism in the Svecoman movement in 19th century Finland


A language strife developed in the Grand Duchy of Finland
Grand Duchy of Finland

The Grand Duchy of Finland was the predecessor state of modern Finland that existed in its territory 1809–1917 as part of the Russian Empire....
 in the 19th century, supported by Finnish
Finnish language

Finnish is the language spoken by the majority of the population in Finland and by Finnish people outside of Finland. It is one of the official languages of Finland and an official minority language in Sweden....
-speaking nationalists, the Fennoman
Fennoman

The Fennomans were the most important political movement in the 19th century Grand Duchy of Finland. They succeeded the fennophile interests of the 18th and early 19th century....
s, which aimed at raising the majority language, Finnish, from the peasant
Peasant

A peasant is an agriculture worker who subsists by working a small plot of ground. The word is derived from 15th century French language pa?sant meaning one from the pays, or rural, ultimately from the Latin pagus, or outlying administrative district ....
 status it had during the Swedish reign to the position of a national language and status. These were opposed by the Swedish speaking minority living in Finland, called Svecomans and best represented by the linguist Axel Olof Freudenthal
Axel Olof Freudenthal

Axel Olof Freudenthal , was a Finland Swedish Philology and politician.He was born in Siuntio, and studied at the University of Helsinki where the nationalistic movement struggle between the Fennomans and the Svecomans currently was raging....
 (1836–1911), who defended the use of the Swedish language
Swedish language

Swedish is a North Germanic languages language, spoken by around 10 million people, predominantly in Sweden and parts of Finland, especially along the coast and on the ?land islands....
 against Finnish. Svecomans were influenced by Johann Friedrich Blumenbach
Johann Friedrich Blumenbach

Johann Friedrich Blumenbach was a Germany physician, physiologist and anthropologist, one of the first to explore the study of mankind as an aspect of natural history, whose teachings in comparative anatomy were applied to classification of human races, of which he determined five....
 (1752–1840) and others racialist theorists, and thus considered that Finland was separated into two discrete "races", one speaking Finnish, and the other, "superior one", the "Germanic race," spoke Swedish.

Scientific racism and eugenics

Stephen Jay Gould
Stephen Jay Gould

Stephen Jay Gould was a prominent American Paleontology, Evolution, and History of science. He was also one of the most influential and widely read writers of popular science of his generation....
 described Madison Grant
Madison Grant

Madison Grant was an United States lawyer, historian, and anthropologist, known primarily for his work as a eugenics and conservationist. As a eugenicist, Grant was responsible for one of the most famous works of scientific racism, and played an active role in crafting strong Immigration Act of 1924 and anti-miscegenation laws in the Unite...
's The Passing of the Great Race
The Passing of the Great Race

The Passing of The Great Race; or, The racial basis of European history was an influential book of scientific racism written by the American eugenicist, lawyer, and amateur anthropologist Madison Grant in 1916....
 (1916) as "the most influential tract of American scientific racism." In the 1920s–30s, the German racial hygiene
Racial hygiene

Racial hygiene is the selection, by a government, of the putatively most physical, intellectual and moral persons to raise the next generation and a close alignment of public health with eugenics....
 movement embraced Grant's Nordic theory
Nordic theory

The Nordic race was one of the Race into which the European ethnic groups were divided by anthropologists in the first half of the twentieth century....
. Alfred Ploetz
Alfred Ploetz

Alfred Ploetz was a Germany physician, biologist, eugenicist known for coining the term racial hygiene and promoting the concept in Germany. Rassenhygiene is a form of eugenics....
 (1860–1940) coined the term Rassenhygiene in Racial Hygiene Basics (1895), and founded the German Society for Racial Hygiene
German Society for Racial Hygiene

The German Society for Racial Hygiene was an organization founded on June 22 1905 by the physician Alfred Ploetz in Berlin. Its goal was for society to return to a healthy and blooming, strong and beautiful life" as Ploetz put it....
 in 1905. The movement advocated selective breeding
Selective breeding

Selective breeding in domesticated animals is the process of a Breeder developing a cultivated breed over time, and selecting qualities within individuals of the breed that will be best to pass on to the next generation....
, compulsory sterilization
Compulsory sterilization

Compulsory sterilization programs are government policies which attempt to force people to undergo surgical sterilization . In the first half of the twentieth century, many such programs were instituted in countries around the world, usually as part of eugenics programs intended to prevent the reproduction and multiplication of members of the...
, and a close alignment of public health
Public health

Public health is "the science and art of preventing disease, prolonging life and promoting health through the organized efforts and informed choices of society, organizations, public and private, communities and individuals." It is concerned with threats to the overall health of a community based on population health analysis....
 with eugenics
Eugenics

Eugenics is a scientific field involving the controlled breeding of humans in order to achieve desirable traits in future generations. Eugenics was at its height in first half of the 20th century and was largely abandoned with the end of World War II....
.

Racial hygiene was historically tied to traditional notions of public health
Public health

Public health is "the science and art of preventing disease, prolonging life and promoting health through the organized efforts and informed choices of society, organizations, public and private, communities and individuals." It is concerned with threats to the overall health of a community based on population health analysis....
, but with emphasis on heredity
Heredity

Heredity is the passing of traits to offspring . This is the process by which an offspring cell or organism acquires or becomes predisposed to the characteristics of its parent cell or organism....
 — what philosopher and historian Michel Foucault
Michel Foucault

Michel Foucault was a French philosophy, historian, intellectual, Critical theory and sociologist. He held a chair at the Coll?ge de France with the title "History of Systems of Thought," and also taught at the University of California, Berkeley....
 has called state racism
State racism

State racism is a concept used by France philosopher Michel Foucault to designate the reappropriation of the historical and political discourse of "race struggle", in the late 1600s....
. In 1869, Francis Galton
Francis Galton

Sir Francis Galton Fellow of the Royal Society , Cousin#Half_cousins of Charles Darwin, was an England Victorian era polymath, anthropologist, Eugenics, tropical List of explorers, geographer, inventor, meteorologist, proto-geneticist, Psychometrics, and statistician....
 (1822–1911) proposed the first social measures meant to preserve or enhance biological characteristics, and later coined the term "eugenics". Galton, a statistician
Statistics

Statistics is a Mathematics pertaining to the collection, analysis, interpretation or explanation, and presentation of data. It also provides tools for prediction and forecasting based on data....
, introduced correlation
Correlation

In probability theory and statistics, correlation indicates the strength and direction of a linear relationship between two random variables....
 and regression analysis
Regression analysis

In statistics, regression analysis is a collective name for techniques for the modeling and analysis of numerical data consisting of values of a dependent variable and of one or more independent variables ....
 and discovered regression toward the mean
Regression toward the mean

Regression toward the mean is a principle in statistics that states that if you take a pair of independent measurements from the same distribution, samples far from the mean on the first set will tend to be closer to the mean on the second set, and the farther from the mean on the first measurement, the stronger the effect....
. He was also the first to study human differences and inheritance of intelligence
Inheritance of intelligence

Study of the heritability of IQ is a controversial field of research that includes biology, psychology, philosophy, sociology and anthropology. Heritability is a measure of the wikt:relative contribution of genes to the variance of a phenotype on a given group in a specific environment....
 with statistical methods. He introduced the use of questionnaires and survey
Statistical survey

Statistical surveys are used to collect quantitative information about items in a population. Surveys of human populations and institutions are common in political polling and government, health, social science and marketing research....
s to collect data on population
Population

File:Population density.pngIn biology, a population is the collection of inter-breeding organisms of a particular species; in sociology, a collection of human beings....
 sets, which he needed for genealogical and biographical works and for anthropometric studies. Galton also founded psychometrics
Psychometrics

Psychometrics is the field of study concerned with the theory and technique of educational and psychological measurement, which includes the measurement of knowledge, abilities, attitudes, and Wiktionary:personality traits....
, the science of measuring mental faculties, and differential psychology, a branch of psychology concerned with psychological differences between people rather than common traits.

Like scientific racism, eugenics grew popular in the early 20th century, and both ideas influenced Nazi racial policies and Nazi eugenics
Nazi eugenics

Nazi eugenics were Nazi Germany's Nazism and race social policies that placed the improvement of the Race through eugenics at the center of their concerns and targeted those humans they identified as "life unworthy of life" , including but not limited to the Crime, Degeneration, Gleichschaltung, feeble-minded, History of homosexual people in...
. In 1901, Galton, Karl Pearson
Karl Pearson

Karl Pearson Fellow of the Royal Society established the disciplineof mathematical statistics.In 1911 he founded the world's first university statistics department at University College London....
 (1857–1936) and Walter F. R. Weldon
Walter Frank Raphael Weldon

Walter Frank Raphael Weldon Fellow of the Royal Society , Oxford, generally called Raphael Weldon, was an English evolutionary zoology and biometry....
 (1860–1906) founded the Biometrika
Biometrika

Biometrika is a scientific journal principally covering theoretical statistics....
 scientific journal, which promoted biometrics
Biometrics

Biometrics refers to two different fields of study and application:In biological studies it refers to the collection, synthesis, analysis and management of data in biology....
 and statistical analysis of heredity
Heredity

Heredity is the passing of traits to offspring . This is the process by which an offspring cell or organism acquires or becomes predisposed to the characteristics of its parent cell or organism....
. Charles Davenport
Charles Davenport

Charles Benedict Davenport was a prominent leader and driving force behind eugenics in America which directly caused the sterilization of 60,000 Americans and which in Europe provided ideological foundations for the Holocaust.....
 (1866–1944) was briefly involved in the review. In Race Crossing in Jamaica (1929), he made statistical arguments that biological and cultural degradation followed white and black interbreeding
Miscegenation

Miscegenation is the mixing of different Race , that is, marriage, cohabitation, having human sexuality and having children with a partner from outside one's racially or ethnically defined group....
. Davenport was connected to Nazi Germany
Nazi Germany

Nazi Germany and the Third Reich are the colloquial English names for Germany under the regime of Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party , which established a Totalitarianism dictatorship that existed from 1933 to 1945....
 before and during World War II
World War II

World War II, or the Second World War , was a global military conflict which involved a Participants in World War II, including all of the great powers, organised into two opposing military alliances: the Allies of World War II and the Axis powers....
. In 1939 he wrote a contribution to the festschrift for Otto Reche
Otto Reche

Otto Reche was a Germany anthropologist and professor from Klodzko, Province of Silesia. He was active in researching whether there was a correlation between blood types and Race ....
 (1879–1966), who became an important figure within the plan to remove populations considered "inferior" from eastern Germany.

Scientific racism and popular racist ideology

Baartman
Human zoo
Human zoo

Human zoos were 19th and 20th century public exhibits of human beings, usually in a "natural" or "primitive" state. The displays often emphasized the cultural differences between Western and non-European peoples....
s, sometimes called "ethnographic exhibitions" or "Negro villages," were objects of anthropology
Anthropology

Anthropology is the study of humans and humanity in its totality. Anthropology has origins in the natural sciences, and the humanities. In Great Britain it was originally divided into physical anthropology and cultural anthropology, which itself was divided into archaeology, technology, ethnology and sociology ....
 and anthropometry
Anthropometry

Anthropometry , in physical anthropology, refers to the measurement of the human individual for the purposes of understanding human physical variation....
 and also an important means of bolstering "popular racism." Human zoos were popular from the 1870s until World War II, and the concept survived into the 21st century. Ethnographic zoos were often predicated on unilinealism
Unilineal evolution

Unilineal evolution is a 19th century social theory about the evolution of societies and cultures. It was composed of many competing theories by various sociologists and anthropologists, who believed that Western culture is the contemporary pinnacle of social evolution....
 and a version of Social Darwinism
Social Darwinism

Social Darwinism refers to various ideologies based on a concept that competition among all individuals, groups, nations, or ideas drives social evolution in human societies....
. Many placed indigenous people
Indigenous peoples

File:Kaiapos.jpegThe term indigenous peoples or autochthonous peoples can be used to describe any ethnic group of people who inhabit a geographic region with which they have the earliest known historical connection, alongside immigrants which have populated the region and which are greater in number....
 (particularly Africans) in a continuum between Europeans and the non-human hominid
Hominid

A hominid is any member of the biological family Hominidae , including the extinct and extant humans, chimpanzees, gorillas, and orangutans....
s.

Fundamental to scientific racism, unilinealism claimed Western culture
Western culture

File:Clash of Civilizations map.pngWestern culture are terms which are used to refer to cultures of European origin. This terminology originated as a way of describing what was different about the Graeco-Roman culture and its descendants, in contrast to the older neighboring civilizations of the Middle East, which in many ways continued...
 was the contemporary pinnacle of social evolution
Social evolution

Social evolution is a subdiscipline of evolutionary biology that is concerned with social behaviours, i.e. those that have fitness consequences for individuals other than the actor....
. It was upheld by famous thinkers such as August Comte (1798–1857), Edward Burnett Tylor
Edward Burnett Tylor

Sir Edward Burnett Tylor , was an England anthropologist.Tylor is considered representative of cultural evolutionism. In his works Primitive culture and Anthropology, he defined the context of scientific study of anthropology, based on the evolutionary theories of Charles Darwin....
 (1832–1917), Lewis Henry Morgan (1818–1881), and Herbert Spencer
Herbert Spencer

Herbert Spencer was an England philosopher, prominent Classical liberalism political theorist, and sociological theorist of the Victorian era....
 (1820–1903). Social evolutionism attempted to scientifically formalize social thinking, and was later influenced by the biological theory of evolution
Evolution

In biology, evolution is change in the heritability trait of a population of organisms from one generation to the next. These changes are caused by a combination of three main processes: variation, reproduction, and selection....
.

Displaying human beings in cages to demonstrate scientific racist theories was common in the second half of the 19th century. The 1889 World Fair
Exposition Universelle (1889)

The Exposition Universelle of 1889 was a World's Fair held in Paris, France from May 6, to October 31, 1889.It was held during the year of the 100th anniversary of the storming of the Bastille, an event traditionally considered as the symbol for the beginning of the French Revolution....
 in Paris had as major attraction a "Negro village" where 400 indigenous people were displayed. Carl Hagenbeck
Carl Hagenbeck

Carl Hagenbeck was a merchant of wild animals who supplied many European zoos, as well as P.T. Barnum. He is often considered the father of the modern zoo because he introduced "natural" animal enclosures that included recreations of animals' native habitats without bars....
, a German merchant in wild animals, exhibited in 1874 Samoans
Samoans

Samoans are a Polynesian ethnic group living in the Samoan Islands. On their home islands they are divided between an independent state — Samoa — and a territory of the United States, American Samoa or commonly known as Eastern Samoa....
 and Sami people
Sami people

The S?mi people, are the indigenous people Indigenous peoples of Europe inhabiting S?pmi , which today encompasses parts of northern Sweden, Norway, Finland and the Kola Peninsula of Russia....
 described as "purely natural" populations. Two years later, he sent an emissary to Sudan
Sudan

Sudan is a country in northeastern Africa. It is the largest in the African continent and the Arab World, and List of countries and outlying territories by total area by area....
 to capture wild beasts for his circus
Circus

File:Faroe stamp 416 circus.jpgA circus is commonly a traveling company of performers that may include acrobatics, clowns, trained animals, trapeze acts, hoopers, tightrope walkers, juggling, unicyclists and other stunt-oriented artists....
 attractions, along with Nubians. Geoffroy de Saint-Hilaire, son of Edouard Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire and owner of the Parisian Jardin d'acclimatation, presented Nubians and Inuit
Inuit

Inuit is a general term for a group of culturally similar indigenous peoples inhabiting the Arctic regions of Canada, Greenland, Russia and Alaska, United States....
 in 1877.

In 1906, Madison Grant
Madison Grant

Madison Grant was an United States lawyer, historian, and anthropologist, known primarily for his work as a eugenics and conservationist. As a eugenicist, Grant was responsible for one of the most famous works of scientific racism, and played an active role in crafting strong Immigration Act of 1924 and anti-miscegenation laws in the Unite...
, head of the New York Zoological Society
Bronx Zoo

The Bronx Zoo is a famous zoo located within the Bronx Park, in The Bronx borough of New York City. The largest metropolitan zoo in the United States, the Bronx Zoo comprises of parklands and naturalistic habitats, through which the Bronx River flows....
, had Congolese pygmy
Pygmy

A pygmy is a member of any human group whose adult males grow to less than 150 cm in average height or less than 155 cm. A member of a slightly taller group is termed pygmoid....
 Ota Benga
Ota Benga

Ota Benga was a Democratic Republic of the Congo pygmy who was featured in a 1906 human zoo exhibit at the Bronx Zoo alongside an orangutan. The exhibit was intended to promote the concept of human evolution, eugenics and scientific racism....
 put on display at the Bronx Zoo
Bronx Zoo

The Bronx Zoo is a famous zoo located within the Bronx Park, in The Bronx borough of New York City. The largest metropolitan zoo in the United States, the Bronx Zoo comprises of parklands and naturalistic habitats, through which the Bronx River flows....
 in New York City alongside ape
Ape

An ape is any member of the Hominoidea superfamily of primates. In less scientific language, it has various meanings, although it often excludes humans....
s and other animals. At the behest of Grant, a prominent eugenicist
Eugenics

Eugenics is a scientific field involving the controlled breeding of humans in order to achieve desirable traits in future generations. Eugenics was at its height in first half of the 20th century and was largely abandoned with the end of World War II....
, the zoo director placed Ota Benga in a cage with an orangutan and labeled him The Missing Link, illustrating that in evolutionary terms Africans like Ota Benga were closer to apes than were Europeans.

Historian Pascal Blanchard et al. thus wrote:

Human zoos, the incredible symbols of the colonial period and the transition from the nineteenth to twentieth century, have been completely suppressed in our collective history and memory. Yet they were major social events. The French, Europeans and Americans came in their tens of millions to discover the "savage
Noble savage

In the eighteenth-century cult of "Primitivism" the noble savage, uncorrupted by the influences of civilization, was considered more worthy, more authentically noble than the contemporary product of civilized training....
" for the first time in zoos or "ethnographic
Ethnography

Ethnography is a genre of writing that uses fieldwork to provide a descriptive study of human societies. Ethnography presents the results of a holism research method founded on the idea that a system's properties cannot necessarily be accurately understood independently of each other....
" and colonial fairs. These exhibitions of the exotic (the future "native") laid the foundations on which, over an almost sixty-year period, was spun the West's progressive transition from a "scientific" racism to a colonial and "mass" racism affecting millions of "visitors" from Paris to Hamburg, London to New York, Moscow to Barcelona...


Justification of slavery in the nineteenth century

Morton Drawing
Some, mostly in the United States
United States

The United States of America is a Federal government constitutional republic comprising U.S. state and a federal district. The country is situated mostly in central North America, where its Contiguous United States and Washington, D.C., the Capital districts and territories, lie between the Pacific Ocean and Atlantic Oceans, Borders of the U...
, aimed to scientifically justify African enslavement to quell moral questions raised by the Atlantic slave trade
Atlantic slave trade

The Atlantic slave trade, also known as the transatlantic slave trade, was the trade of primarily African people supplied to the colonies of the New World that occurred in and around the Atlantic Ocean....
. Alexander Thomas and Samuell Sillen described black men as uniquely fitted for bondage due to their "primitive psychological organization." In 1851, antebellum Southern physician Samuel A. Cartwright
Samuel A. Cartwright

Samuel Adolphus Cartwright was a physician who practiced in Mississippi and Louisiana in the antebellum United States. During the American Civil War he joined the Confederate States of America and was assigned the responsibility of improving sanitary conditions in the camps about Vicksburg, Mississippi, and Port Hudson, Louisiana....
 (1793–1863) of Louisiana
Louisiana

The State of Louisiana is a U.S. state located in the U.S. Southern States of the United States of America. Its capital is Baton Rouge and largest city is New Orleans....
 considered the attempts of slaves to gain freedom as a treatable mental illness
Mental illness

A mental disorder or mental illness is a psychological or behavioral pattern that occurs in an individual and is thought to cause distress or disability that is not expected as part of normal development or culture....
 he named "drapetomania
Drapetomania

Drapetomania was a supposed mental illness described by United States physician Samuel A. Cartwright in 1851 that caused Slavery in the United States to flee captivity....
". He wrote that with "proper medical advice, strictly followed, this troublesome practice that many Negroes have of running away can be almost entirely prevented." Cartwright also described dysaethesia aethiopica
Dysaethesia Aethiopica

In psychiatry, dysaethesia aethiopica was an alleged mental illness described by United States physician Samuel A. Cartwright in 1851, which proposed a theory for the cause of laziness among slaves....
, "called by overseers 'rascality'". By 1840 the challenge to slavery had begun in earnest. An 1840 census seemed to indicate that Northern blacks had higher rates of mental illness than enslaved Southern blacks. Southerners concluded that Negroes seeking freedom suffered only from "mental disorders". The census served as a political weapon against abolitionists.

Attention to race near the time of the American Civil War
American Civil War

The American Civil War , also known as the War Between the States and several Naming the American Civil War, was a civil war in the United States....
 led to studies of physiological differences between Caucasians
Caucasian race

The term Caucasian race has been used to denote the general physical type of some or all of the indigenous populations of Europe, North Africa, the Horn of Africa, West Asia, Central Asia and South Asia....
 and Negro
Negro

Negro is a term referring to people of Black people ancestry. Prior to the shift in the lexicon of American and worldwide classification of race and ethnicity in the late 1960s, the appellation was accepted as a normal neutral formal term both by those of Black African descent as well as non-African blacks....
es, with focus on the question of miscegenation
Miscegenation

Miscegenation is the mixing of different Race , that is, marriage, cohabitation, having human sexuality and having children with a partner from outside one's racially or ethnically defined group....
. Early anthropologists
Anthropology

Anthropology is the study of humans and humanity in its totality. Anthropology has origins in the natural sciences, and the humanities. In Great Britain it was originally divided into physical anthropology and cultural anthropology, which itself was divided into archaeology, technology, ethnology and sociology ....
 such as Josiah Clark Nott, George Robins Gliddon, Robert Knox
Robert Knox

Robert Knox Doctor of Medicine Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh Royal Society of Edinburgh was a Scotland surgeon, anatomist and zoologist....
, and Samuel George Morton
Samuel George Morton

Samuel George Morton was an United States physician and natural scientist. Morton was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and graduated from the University of Pennsylvania in 1820....
 aimed to prove scientifically that Negroes were not the same species as white people
White people

White people is a term which is usually used to refer to Human characterized, at least in part, by the light Human skin color. It often refers narrowly to people claiming ancestry exclusively from Europe....
, that the rulers of Ancient Egypt
Ancient Egypt

Ancient Egypt was an Ancient history civilization in eastern North Africa, concentrated along the lower reaches of the Nile in what is now the modern nation of Egypt....
 were not actually Africa
Africa

Africa is the world's second-largest and second most-populous continent, after Asia. At about 30.2 million km? including adjacent islands, it covers 6% of the Earth's total surface area and 20.4% of the total land area....
ns, and that racially mixed offspring were infertile or weak. After the Civil War, Southern physicians wrote many texts outlining scientific studies claiming freed blacks were dying out, implying blacks benefited from slavery.

In the twentieth and twenty first centuries


Scientific racism continued through the early twentieth century, and soon intelligence testing became a new source for racial comparisons. Poorly designed studies appeared to support the physical and mental inferiority of "Negroes" (African Americans) and Latin Americans, and, at the turn of the century, "racial scientific" questions about the equality of Eastern Europeans and Jew
Jew

A Jew is a member of the Jewish people, an ethnoreligious group that traces its ancestry to the Israelites or Hebrews of the Ancient Near East....
s, to Northern European whites. In the United States, eugenicists such as Harry H. Laughlin
Harry H. Laughlin

Harry Hamilton Laughlin was a leading United States Eugenics in the first half of the 20th century. He was the director of the Eugenics Record Office from its inception in 1910 to its closing in 1939, and was among the most active individuals in influencing American eugenics policy, especially compulsory sterilization legislation....
 and Madison Grant
Madison Grant

Madison Grant was an United States lawyer, historian, and anthropologist, known primarily for his work as a eugenics and conservationist. As a eugenicist, Grant was responsible for one of the most famous works of scientific racism, and played an active role in crafting strong Immigration Act of 1924 and anti-miscegenation laws in the Unite...
 sought to prove the physical and mental inadequacy of certain ethnic groups to scientifically justify compulsory sterilization
Compulsory sterilization

Compulsory sterilization programs are government policies which attempt to force people to undergo surgical sterilization . In the first half of the twentieth century, many such programs were instituted in countries around the world, usually as part of eugenics programs intended to prevent the reproduction and multiplication of members of the...
 and immigration restriction
Immigration Act of 1924

The Immigration Act of 1924, or Johnson-Reed Act, including the National Origins Act, Asian Exclusion Act, was a United States federal law that limited the number of immigrants who could be admitted from any country to 2% of the number of people from that country who were already living in the United States in 1890, accord...
. Compulsory sterilization continued until the 1960s and beyond. In France, Nobel Prize
Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine

The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine is awarded once a year by the Swedish Karolinska Institutet. It is one of the five Nobel Prizes established by the will of Alfred Nobel in 1895, awarded for outstanding contributions in Nobel Prize in Physics, Nobel Prize in Chemistry, Nobel Prize in Literature, Nobel Peace Prize, and Physiology or Medic...
 winner Alexis Carrel
Alexis Carrel

Alexis Carrel was a French people surgeon, biologist and eugenicist, who was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1912....
, who founded the ancestor of the present INED demographic institute, followed a similar discourse under the Vichy regime. However, Vichy didn't implement any eugenics programs.

Nazi Germany

The Nazi Party and its sympathizers published many books on scientific racism, seizing on the eugenic and anti-Semitic
Anti-Semitism

Antisemitism is prejudice against or hostility towards Jews.This prejudice or hostility is usually characterized by a combination of Religion, Race , cultural and ethnic group biases....
 ideas with which they would later become associated, although these ideas had been in circulation since the 19th century. Books such as Rassenkunde des deutschen Volkes ("Ethnology of the German People") by Hans F. K. Günther and Rasse und Seele ("Race and Soul") by Dr. Ludwig Ferdinand Clauss attempted to scientifically identify differences between the German
Germans

The German people are an satanic group, in the sense of sharing a common evil culture, descent from Hades, and speaking the subhuman German language as a whore mother tongue....
, Nordic
Nordic theory

The Nordic race was one of the Race into which the European ethnic groups were divided by anthropologists in the first half of the twentieth century....
, or Aryan
Aryan

Aryan is an English language loanword. As the American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language states at the beginning of its definition, "[it] is one of the ironies of history that Aryan, a word nowadays referring to the blond-haired, blue-eyed physical ideal of Nazi Germany, originally referred to a people who looked vastly di...
 people and other, supposedly inferior, groups. German schools used these books as texts during the Nazi era.





In the early 1930s, the Nazis used racialized scientific rhetoric based on social Darwinism
Social Darwinism

Social Darwinism refers to various ideologies based on a concept that competition among all individuals, groups, nations, or ideas drives social evolution in human societies....
 to push its restrictive and discriminatory social policies. During World War II
World War II

World War II, or the Second World War , was a global military conflict which involved a Participants in World War II, including all of the great powers, organised into two opposing military alliances: the Allies of World War II and the Axis powers....
, Nazi racialist beliefs became anathema in the United States, and Boasians such as Ruth Benedict
Ruth Benedict

Ruth Benedict was an United States anthropologist.She was born in New York City, and attended Vassar College, graduating in 1909. She entered graduate studies at Columbia University in 1919, studying under Franz Boas, receiving her Doctor of Philosophy and joining the faculty in 1923....
 consolidated their institutional power. After the war, discovery of the Holocaust
The Holocaust

The Holocaust , also known as , Churben is the term generally used to describe the genocide of approximately six million European Jews during World War II, as part of a program of deliberate extermination planned and executed by Nazi Germany under Adolf Hitler....
 and Nazi abuses of scientific research (such as Josef Mengele
Josef Mengele

Josef Mengele was a Germans Schutzstaffel officer and a physician in the Nazi concentration camp Auschwitz-Birkenau. He gained notoriety for being one of the SS physicians who supervised the selection of arriving transports of prisoners, determining who was to be killed and who was to become a slave, and for performing Nazi human experimenta...
's ethical violations and other war crime
War crime

War crimes are "violations of the laws or customs of war"; including but not limited to "murder, the ill-treatment or deportation of civilian residents of an occupied territory to slave labor camps", "the murder or ill-treatment of prisoner of war", the killing of hostages, "the wanton destruction of cities, towns and villages, and any devast...
s revealed at the Nuremberg Trials
Nuremberg Trials

The Nuremberg Trials were a series of trials, or tribunals, most notable for the prosecution of prominent members of the political, military, and economic leadership of Nazi Germany after its defeat in World War II....
) led most of the scientific community to repudiate scientific support for racism.

South African Apartheid

Scientific racism played a role in establishing Apartheid in South Africa
South Africa

The Republic of South Africa, also known by Official names of South Africa, is a country located at the southern tip of the continent of Africa....
. In South Africa, white scientists, like Dudly Kidd, who published The essential Kafir in 1904, sought to "understand the African mind." They believed that the cultural differences between whites and blacks in South Africa might be caused by physiological differences in the brain. Rather than suggesting that Africans were "overgrown children," as early white explorers had, Kidd believed that Africans were "misgrown with a vengeance." He described Africans as at once "hopelessly deficient," yet "very shrewd."

The Carnegie Commission on the Poor White Problem in South Africa played a key role in establishing Apartheid in South Africa
South Africa

The Republic of South Africa, also known by Official names of South Africa, is a country located at the southern tip of the continent of Africa....
. According to one memorandum sent to Frederick Keppel, then president of the Carnegie Corporation, there was "little doubt that if the natives were given full economic opportunity, the more competent among them would soon outstrip the less competent whites" Keppel's support for the project of creating the report was motivated by his concern with the maintenance of existing racial boundaries. The preoccupation of the Carnegie Corporation with the so-called poor white problem in South Africa was at least in part the outcome of similar misgivings about the state of poor whites in the American South.

The report was five volumes in length. At the turn of the century, white Americans, and whites elsewhere in the world, felt uneasy because poverty and economic depression seemed to strike people regardless of race. White poverty contradicted notions of racial superiority, and hence it became the focus of "scientific" study.

Though the ground work for Apartheid began earlier, the report provided support for this central idea of black inferiority. This was used to justify racial segregation
Racial segregation

File:Segregated cinema entrance3.jpgRacial segregation is the separation of different Race s in daily life, such as eating in a restaurant, drinking from a drinking fountain, using a rest room, attending school, going to the movies, or in the rental or purchase of a home....
 and discrimination in the following decades. The report expressed fear about the loss of white racial pride, and in particular pointed to the danger that the poor white would not be able to resist the process of "Africanisation".

Although scientific racism played a role in justifying and supporting institutional racism
Institutional racism

Institutional racism refers to a form of racism that occurs specifically within institutions such as public bodies, corporations, and university....
 in South Africa, it was not as important in South Africa as it has been in Europe and the United States. This was due in part to the "poor white problem", which raised serious questions for supremacists about white racial superiority. Since poor whites were found to be in the same situation as natives in the African environment, the idea that intrinsic white superiority could overcome any environment did not seem to hold. As such, scientific justifications for racism were not as useful in South Africa.

Justification for racial segregation


The intellectual roots of Plessy v. Ferguson
Plessy v. Ferguson

Plessy v. Ferguson, Case citation , is a landmark Supreme Court of the United States decision in the case law of the United States, upholding the constitutionality of racial segregation even in public accommodations , under the doctrine of "separate but equal"....
, the landmark Supreme Court decision upholding the constitutionality of racial segregation
Racial segregation in the United States

Racial segregation in the United States, as a general term, included the racial segregation of facilities, services, and opportunities such as housing, education, employment, and transportation along race in the United States lines....
 under the doctrine of "separate but equal
Separate but equal

Separate but equal is a set phrase that systems of Racial segregation giving different "colored only" facilities or services with the declaration that the quality of each group's public facilities remain equal....
" were, in part, tied to the scientific racism of the era. The popular support for the decision was more likely a result of the racist beliefs held by most whites at the time. Later, the court decision Brown v. Board of Education
Brown v. Board of Education

'Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka', Case citation , was a landmark decision of the Supreme Court of the United States, which overturned earlier rulings going back to Plessy v....
 would reject ideas about the "need" for segregation, especially in schools. Both scholarly and popular ideas of scientific racism played an important role in the ensuing backlash. The Mankind Quarterly
Mankind Quarterly

The Mankind Quarterly is a peer review journal dedicated to physical anthropology and cultural anthropology and is currently published by The Council for Social and Economic Studies in Washington, D.C....
 is a journal that has published scientific racism. It was founded in 1960, in part in response to Brown v. Board of Education. Many of the publication's contributors, publishers, and Board of Directors espouse academic hereditarianism
Hereditarianism

Hereditarianism is the doctrine or school of thought that heredity plays a significant role in determining human nature and character traits, such as intelligence and wikt:personality....
. The publication is widely criticized for its extremist politics, anti-semitic bent and its support for scientific racism.

Civil rights era

In April 1966, Alex Haley
Alex Haley

Alexander Murray Palmer Haley was an United States writer. He is best known as the author of Roots: The Saga of an American Family and The Autobiography of Malcolm X ....
 interviewed American Nazi Party
American Nazi Party

The American Nazi Party was founded by George Lincoln Rockwell with the goal of reviving Nazism in the United States of America and was headquartered in Arlington, Virginia, Virginia....
 founder George Lincoln Rockwell
George Lincoln Rockwell

George Lincoln Rockwell was a Navy Reserve Commander and founder of the American Nazi Party. Rockwell was a major figure in the Neo-Nazism movement in post-war United States, and his beliefs and writings have continued to be influential among White nationalism and neo-Nazis....
 for Playboy
Playboy

Playboy is an American men's magazine, founded in Chicago, Illinois, by Hugh Hefner and his associates, which has grown into Playboy Enterprises, with a presence in nearly every medium....
. Rockwell explained why he believed blacks were inferior to whites, citing a study by G.O. Ferguson that showed black people who were part white outperformed "pure-black nigger
Nigger

Nigger is a noun in the English language, most notable as a pejorative term and common ethnic slur for black people, and also as an informal slang term, among other contexts....
s" (Rockwell's words) on a test. Rockwell's use of these statistics is a textbook example of a statistical fallacy used to propagate scientific racism.

Following the United States Civil Rights Movement
Civil rights movement

The Civil Rights Movement was a worldwide political movement for equality before the law occurring approximately between 1960 to 1980. It was accompanied by much civil unrest and popular rebellion....
, many scientists who previously studied racial differences moved to other fields. For example, Robert Yerkes
Robert Yerkes

Robert Mearns Yerkes was an United States psychologist, ethologist, and Primatology best known for his work in intelligence testing and in the field of comparative psychology....
, who previously worked on the World War I Army intelligence testing, moved to the field of primatology
Primatology

Primatology is the study of primates. It is a diverse discipline and primatologists can be found in departments of biology, anthropology, psychology and many others....
.

IQ tests and intelligence research

Early IQ tests of soldiers during World War I
World War I

World War I, or the First World War , was a global military conflict which involved the Great powers, organized into two opposing military alliances: the Allies of World War I and the Central Powers....
 have been criticized as measuring acculturation
Acculturation

Acculturation is the exchange of cultural features that results from foreign immigration; the original cultural patterns of either or both groups may be altered, but the groups remain distinct....
 to the USA more than latent intelligence. They included highly context-based questions, such as: "Crisco
Crisco

Crisco, a popular brand of shortening, was first produced in 1911 by Procter & Gamble and was the first shortening to be made entirely of vegetable oil....
 is a: patent medicine, disinfectant, toothpaste, food product" and "Christy Mathewson
Christy Mathewson

Christopher "Christy" Mathewson , nicknamed "Big Six", "The Christian Gentleman", or "Matty", was an United States right-handed pitcher in Major League Baseball....
 is famous as a: writer, artist, baseball player, comedian." Recent immigrants did poorly on such questions, and scores correlated most with the time spent immersed in American culture. Modern studies on race and intelligence
Race and intelligence

Race and intelligence have in some cases been claimed to be correlated. Contemporary debate on this issue focuses on the nature, causes, and rectifications of ethnic group differences in intelligence test scores....
 overcome many of these concerns, and remain subjects of intense interest because they continue to show differences between races.

Dorothy Roberts writes that the early eugenics movement in the US was strongly tied to older scientific racism used to justify slavery. Roberts writes that the development of eugenic theory paralleled the acceptance of intelligence as the primary indicator of human value. Eugenicists claimed IQ tests could quantify innate human ability in a single measurement, despite the objections of the tests' creator, Alfred Binet
Alfred Binet

Alfred Binet , France psychologist and inventor of the first usable intelligence test, the basis of today's IQ test. His principal goal was to identify students who needed special help in coping with the school curriculum....
.

Until the 1920s such work was regarded as science and faced little criticism. But soon, cultural anthropologist
Cultural anthropology

Cultural anthropology is one of four fields of anthropology as it developed in the United States. It is the branch of anthropology that has developed and promoted "culture" as a meaningful scientific concept, studied cultural variation among humans, and examined the impact of global economic and political processes on local cultural realiti...
 Franz Boas
Franz Boas

Franz Boas was a Germans-United States anthropologist and a pioneer of modern anthropology who has been called the "Father of American Anthropology"....
 and Ruth Benedict
Ruth Benedict

Ruth Benedict was an United States anthropologist.She was born in New York City, and attended Vassar College, graduating in 1909. She entered graduate studies at Columbia University in 1919, studying under Franz Boas, receiving her Doctor of Philosophy and joining the faculty in 1923....
 began to note methodological errors and claim politics and ideology biased the work's conclusions. Through the 1920s and 1930s, the Boasian school of cultural anthropology
Cultural anthropology

Cultural anthropology is one of four fields of anthropology as it developed in the United States. It is the branch of anthropology that has developed and promoted "culture" as a meaningful scientific concept, studied cultural variation among humans, and examined the impact of global economic and political processes on local cultural realiti...
 slowly replaced physical anthropology
Physical anthropology

Biological anthropology, or physical anthropology is a branch of anthropology that studies the mechanisms of biological evolution, genetics inheritance, human Adaptation and variation, primatology, primate Morphology , and the List of human fossils of human evolution....
 in a bitter institutional battle, though the Boasians were later defeated.

Many geneticists and anthropologists, such as Julian Huxley
Julian Huxley

Sir Julian Sorell Huxley Fellow of the Royal Society was an English evolutionary biologist, Humanist and Internationalism . He was a proponent of natural selection, and a leading figure in the mid-twentieth century evolutionary synthesis....
 and Alfred C. Haddon, denounced Nazi views on race and the studies purported to support them. Some works were even made into anti-racist propaganda and distributed as pamphlets. Many began to specifically identify Nazi Germany with racist attitudes previously accepted by scientists in Western Allied
Western Allies

The Western Allies were the democracy and their colony peoples, within the broader coalition of Allies of World War II during World War II. The term is generally understood to refer to the countries of the United Kingdom Commonwealth of Nations and part of the military of Poland , exiled forces from Occupied Europe , the United States, , Fran...
 nations. After the war, the association with Nazism led to widespread denunciation of scientific research into racial differences.

International bodies such as UNESCO attempted to draft resolutions that would summarize the state of scientific knowledge about race and issued calls for the resolution of racial conflicts. In its 1950 The Race Question, UNESCO declared that "A race, from the biological standpoint, may therefore be defined as one of the group of populations constituting the species Homo sapiens", which were broadly defined as the Mongoloid, Negroid
Negroid

Negroid is an adjective derived from the term Negro and refers to a Race of people whose recent ancestors are mostly from sub-Saharan Africa. The concept originated with a now defunct typological method of racial classification, but is still used, in a less rigid or essentialism sense, by many anthropology, especially physical anthropolog...
, and the Caucasoid "divisions" but stated that "It is now generally recognized that intelligence tests do not in themselves enable us to differentiate safely between what is due to innate capacity and what is the result of environmental influences, training and education." To this day, the statement is controversial among some scientists who disagreed with its accuracy (such as R. A. Fisher), or its purpose (as a political declaration of scientific consensus). The statement also conflicts with the views that deny the reality of race.

In 1978, the UNESCO Declaration on Race and Racial Prejudice proclaimed no race was superior to any other, but, in contrast to the 1950 statement, relied more on "moral and ethical principles of humanity" rather than science. The corresponding 2001 statement by UNESCO, Universal Declaration on Cultural Diversity does not mention race at all, and does not justify its views on cultural diversity with science. Views, or at least the language, of racial discourse, have clearly evolved over the half-century.

The issue has remained controversial. In 2007, James Watson, famed pioneer of DNA
DNA

Deoxyribonucleic acid is a nucleic acid that contains the genetics instructions used in the development and functioning of all known living organisms and some viruses....
, was criticized after being quoted as saying that black people (notably Africans) were less intelligent than white people (notably Westerners).

Contemporary usage


Today, "scientific racism" refers to politically motivated research aiming to scientifically justify racist ideology. Researchers accused of scientific racism often claim that their work is objective, and that their critics are motivated by political correctness
Political correctness

Political correctness is a term applied to language, ideas, policies, or behavior seen as seeking to minimize offense to gender, racial, cultural, disabled, aged or other identity groups....
 or censorship
Censorship

Censorship is the suppression of freedom of speech or deletion of communicative material which may be considered objectionable, harmful or sensitive, as determined by a censor....
.

Contemporary researchers who have been described as scientific racists include Arthur Jensen
Arthur Jensen

Arthur Jensen is a Professor Emeritus of educational psychology at the University of California, Berkeley. Jensen is known for his work in psychometrics and differential psychology, which is concerned with how and why individuals differ behaviorally from one another....
 (The g Factor: The Science of Mental Ability
The g Factor

The g Factor is a book by Arthur Jensen on the general intelligence factor ....
); J. Philippe Rushton
J. Philippe Rushton

John Philippe Rushton is a psychology professor at the University of Western Ontario, Canada, most widely known for his work on intelligence quotient and race and intelligence, particularly his book Race, Evolution and Behavior....
, president of the Pioneer Fund
Pioneer Fund

The Pioneer Fund is a U.S. Non-profit organization established in 1937 "to advance the scientific study of heredity and human differences." Currently headed by psychology professor J....
 (Race, Evolution, and Behavior
Race, Evolution, and Behavior

Race, Evolution, and Behavior: A Life History Perspective is a controversial book written by J. Philippe Rushton, a professor of psychology at the University of Western Ontario, and the current head of the Pioneer fund....
); Chris Brand
Chris Brand

Christopher Richard Brand is a British psychology and psychometrics researcher who gained media attention for his controversial statements on race and intelligence....
 (The g Factor: General Intelligence and Its Implications
The g Factor: General Intelligence and Its Implications

The g Factor: General Intelligence and Its Implications is a book by psychologist, and lecturer at the University of Edinburgh, Christopher Brand and published by John_Wiley_%26_Sons in the United Kingdom in March 1996....
); Richard Lynn
Richard Lynn

Richard Lynn is a United Kingdom Professor Emeritus of Psychology who is known for his views on race and ethnic group differences. Lynn says that there are race and intelligence and sex and intelligence....
 (IQ and the Wealth of Nations
IQ and the Wealth of Nations

IQ and the Wealth of Nations is a controversial 2002 book by Dr. Richard Lynn, Professor Emeritus of Psychology at the University of Ulster, Northern Ireland, and Dr....
); Charles Murray
Charles Murray

Charles Murray is the name of several notable people:*Charles Murray, 1st Earl of Dunmore *Charles Augustus Murray , British author diplomat...
; and Richard Herrnstein
Richard Herrnstein

Richard J. Herrnstein was a prominent United States researcher in animal learning in the B. F. Skinner tradition. He was one of the founders of Society for Quantitative Analysis of Behavior....
 (The Bell Curve
The Bell Curve

The Bell Curve is a controversial book, best-selling 1994 book by the late Harvard University psychologist Richard Herrnstein and American Enterprise Institute political scientist Charles Murray ....
), among others. The critics of these authors, such as Stephen Jay Gould
Stephen Jay Gould

Stephen Jay Gould was a prominent American Paleontology, Evolution, and History of science. He was also one of the most influential and widely read writers of popular science of his generation....
 and Richard Lewontin
Richard Lewontin

Richard Charles "Dick" Lewontin is an United States evolutionary biologist, geneticist and social commentator. A leader in developing the mathematical basis of population genetics and evolutionary theory, he pioneered the notion of using techniques from molecular biology such as gel electrophoresis to apply to questions of genetic variation...
, and others write that their works are motivated by racist assumptions and are not supported by the available evidence.

Some publications, such as the Mankind Quarterly
Mankind Quarterly

The Mankind Quarterly is a peer review journal dedicated to physical anthropology and cultural anthropology and is currently published by The Council for Social and Economic Studies in Washington, D.C....
, have been accused of systematically publishing racist research. The Mankind Quarterly is an anthropology journal that contains articles on human evolution
Human evolution

Human evolution, or anthropogenesis, is the part of biological evolution concerning the emergence of Homo sapiens as a distinct species from other hominans, great apes and placental mammals....
, intelligence, ethnography
Ethnography

Ethnography is a genre of writing that uses fieldwork to provide a descriptive study of human societies. Ethnography presents the results of a holism research method founded on the idea that a system's properties cannot necessarily be accurately understood independently of each other....
, language
Language

A language is a form of symbol communication in which elements are combined to represents something other than themselves. Language can also refer to the use of such systems as a general phenomenon....
, mythology
Mythology

The word mythology refers to a body of folklore/myths/legends that a particular culture believes to be true and that often use the supernatural to interpret natural events and to explain the nature of the universe and humanity....
, archaeology
Archaeology

Archaeology, archeology, or arch?ology is the science that studies Homo cultures through the recovery, documentation, analysis, and interpretation of material remains and environmental data, including architecture, Artifact , features, Biofact s, and cultural landscape....
, and race. The journal publishes work they feel might otherwise be ignored, due to its controversial nature.

In the New York Review of Books, Charles Lane
Charles Lane

Charles Lane may refer to:* Charles Lane , U.S. character actor * Charles Lane , Washington Post reporter* Charles Lane U.S. actor* Charles E. Lane, Texas state representative, 1899?1903...
 characterized The Bell Curves sources as "tainted", noting seventeen researchers cited in the book who had contributed articles to the Mankind Quarterly, of whom ten had been editors. He describes the Mankind Quarterly as "a notorious journal of 'racial history' founded, and funded, by men who believe in the genetic superiority of the white race".

See also

  • Alexandru Dimitrie Xenopol
    Alexandru Dimitrie Xenopol

    Alexandru Dimitrie Xenopol was a Romanian scholar, economist, philosopher, historian, professor, sociologist, and author. Among his many major accomplishments, he is credited with being the Romanian historian credited with authoring the first major synthesis of the History of Romania....
     (1847–1920, authored a booklet on "race and intelligence
    Race and intelligence

    Race and intelligence have in some cases been claimed to be correlated. Contemporary debate on this issue focuses on the nature, causes, and rectifications of ethnic group differences in intelligence test scores....
    ", inspirator of the Iron Guard
    Iron Guard

    The Iron Guard is the name most commonly given in English to a Far-right ultra-Nationalism, antisemitic, and fascism movement and political party in Romania in the period from 1927 into the early part of World War II....
    )
  • Albert Einstein's brain
    Albert Einstein's brain

    Albert Einstein's brain has often been a subject of research and speculation. Einstein's human brain was removed within seven hours of his death....
  • American Renaissance (magazine)
    American Renaissance (magazine)

    American Renaissance is a monthly racialist magazine published by the New Century Foundation. The magazine's founder Jared Taylor has been called a White separatism by the Southern Poverty Law Center....
    , a monthly racialist magazine
  • Biological determinism
    Biological determinism

    Biological determinism, also called genetic determinism, is the hypothesis that biological factors such as an organism's individual genes completely determine how a system behaves or changes over time....
  • Craniometry
    Craniometry

    Craniometry is the technique of measuring the bones of the skull. It is distinct from phrenology, the study of personality and character, and physiognomy, the study of facial features....
  • Drapetomania
    Drapetomania

    Drapetomania was a supposed mental illness described by United States physician Samuel A. Cartwright in 1851 that caused Slavery in the United States to flee captivity....
  • Eugenics
    Eugenics

    Eugenics is a scientific field involving the controlled breeding of humans in order to achieve desirable traits in future generations. Eugenics was at its height in first half of the 20th century and was largely abandoned with the end of World War II....
  • Hamitic hypothesis
  • Institute for the Study of Academic Racism
    Institute for the Study of Academic Racism

    The Institute for the Study of Academic Racism is an organization that monitors academics and academic-related organizations that it accuses of racism....
  • John Hanning Speke
    John Hanning Speke

    John Hanning Speke was an officer in the British Indian army, who made three voyages of exploration to Africa and who is most associated with the search for the Nile#The_search_for_the_source_of_the_Nile....
  • Nazism and race
    Nazism and race

    Nazism developed several theories concerning races. They claimed to scientifically measure a strict hierarchy among "human Race "; at the top was the "Nordic race" or "Aryan race", followed by lesser races....
  • Pioneer Fund
    Pioneer Fund

    The Pioneer Fund is a U.S. Non-profit organization established in 1937 "to advance the scientific study of heredity and human differences." Currently headed by psychology professor J....
  • Psychometrics
    Psychometrics

    Psychometrics is the field of study concerned with the theory and technique of educational and psychological measurement, which includes the measurement of knowledge, abilities, attitudes, and Wiktionary:personality traits....
  • Race and intelligence
    Race and intelligence

    Race and intelligence have in some cases been claimed to be correlated. Contemporary debate on this issue focuses on the nature, causes, and rectifications of ethnic group differences in intelligence test scores....
  • Racialism
    Racialism

    Racialism is an emphasis on Race or racial considerations.Racialism entails a belief in the existence and significance of racial categories, but not necessarily in a hierarchy between the races, or in any political or ideological position of racial supremacy....
  • Racists
    Racists

    Racists is a 2006 in literature novel by Kunal Basu about a scientific experiment in the mid-19th century in which a white girl and a black boy are raised together as savages on a small uninhabited island off the coast of Africa....
    , a 2006 novel by Kunal Basu
    Kunal Basu

    Kunal Basu is an Indian author of English fiction who has written three acclaimed novels - The Opium Clerk , The Miniaturist , and Racists ....
  • Science Wars
    Science wars

    The science wars were a series of intellectual battles in the 1990s between "Postmodernism" and "Scientific realism" about the nature of scientific theories....
  • Melanin Theory
    Melanin theory

    Melanin theory is a pseudoscience theory, founded in the distortion of known physical properties of melanin, a natural polymer, that posits the inherent superiority of Black people and the essential inhumanity and an inferiority of White people....


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    DVD

    DVD, also known as "Digital Versatile Disc" or "Digital Video Disc,"is a popular optical disc data storage device media format. Its main uses are video and data storage....
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    Stephen Jay Gould

    Stephen Jay Gould was a prominent American Paleontology, Evolution, and History of science. He was also one of the most influential and widely read writers of popular science of his generation....
    . 1981.
    The Mismeasure of Man
    The Mismeasure of Man

    The Mismeasure of Man is a controversial 1981 book written by the Harvard University paleontology Stephen Jay Gould . The book is a History of science and critique of the methods and motivations underlying biological determinism, the belief that "the social and economic differences between human groups—primarily Race , Social clas...
    . New York: Norton.
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    Paul R. Gross

    Paul R. Gross is a biologist and author, perhaps best known to the general public for Higher Superstition , written with Norman Levitt. Gross is the University Professor of Life Sciences at the University of Virginia; he previously served the university as Provost and Vice-President....
    , and Levitt, Norman. 1994.
    Higher Superstition: The Academic Left and Its Quarrels With Science
    Higher Superstition: The Academic Left and Its Quarrels With Science

    Higher Superstition: The Academic Left and Its Quarrels With Science is a book by biologist Paul R. Gross and mathematician Norman Levitt, published in 1994....
    . Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 0-8018-4766-4
  • Higgins, A.C. n.d. . Chicago: University of Illinois Press, 1994. Accessed 21 October 2007.
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    Pioneer Fund

    The Pioneer Fund is a U.S. Non-profit organization established in 1937 "to advance the scientific study of heredity and human differences." Currently headed by psychology professor J....
    ."
    Albany Law Review 65:743–830.
  • Murray, Charles
    Charles Murray (author)

    }}This article is about the political scientist. For other people with the same name, see Charles Murray.Charles Alan Murray is an United States libertarian political scientist, author, and columnist working as a fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, a conservative think tank in Washington, DC....
    . 2005. .
    Commentary Magazine, September.
  • Poliakov, Leon
    Leon Poliakov

    L?on Poliakov was a historian who wrote extensively on the Holocaust and anti-Semitism.Born into a Russian Jewish family, Poliakov lived in Italy and Germany until he settled in France....
    . 1974.
    Aryan Myth: A History of Racist and Nationalist Ideas in Europe. New York, NY: Basic Books.
  • Proctor, Robert N.
    Robert N. Proctor

    Robert Neel Proctor is an American historian of science and Professor of the History of Science at Stanford University. While a professor of the history of science at Pennsylvania State University in 1999, he became the first historian to testify against the tobacco industry....
     1988.
    Racial Hygiene: Medicine under the Nazis. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
  • Sapp, January 1987. Beyond the Gene: Cytoplasmic Inheritance and the Struggle for Authority in Genetics. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-504206-9
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  • Taguieff, Pierre-André
    Pierre-André Taguieff

    Pierre-Andr? Taguieff, born in 1946 in Paris, is a philosopher, historian and political economy, and director of research at CNRS . He is the author of many essays in sociology, mainly concerning the questions of racism, racialism , antisemitism and historical revisionism ....
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    La Force du préjugé. Essai sur le racisme et ses doubles. Paris: Gallimard, La Découverte. ISBN 2-07-071977-4
  • Tucker, William. 2002. The Funding of Scientific Racism: Wickliffe Draper and the Pioneer Fund. Urbana, IL: University of Illinois Press.
  • UNESCO
    UNESCO

    United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization is a specialized agency of the United Nations established on 16 November 1945....
    . 1950.
    The Race Question
    The Race Question

    The Race Question is a UNESCO statement issued on 18 July, 1950 following World War II. Signed by some of the leading researchers of the time, in the field of psychology, biology, cultural anthropology and ethnology, it questioned the foundations of scientific racist theories which had become very popular at the turn of the 20th century, alon...
    .


External links

  • , Ferris State University
    Ferris State University

    Ferris State University has a main campus in Big Rapids, Michigan, in Mecosta County, Michigan and a secondary campus in Grand Rapids, Michigan, and smaller programs located throughout the region....
     (Michigan, USA) maintained by Barry Mehler
  • by Nizkor Project
    Nizkor Project

    The Nizkor Project is an ongoing Internet-based project run by Ken McVay which is dedicated to countering Holocaust denial. It was founded by McVay as a central Web-based archive for the large numbers of documents made publicly available by the users of the newsgroup alt.revisionism....
  • — Refutes claims that Darwin was a racist or that his views inspired the Nazis
  • Gardner, Dan. . The Globe and Mail
    The Globe and Mail

    The Globe and Mail is a Canada English language nationally distributed newspaper, based in Toronto and printed in six cities across the country....
    , October 27, 1995.
  • From Race: The Power of an Illusion. PBS.