JackRiddler wrote:slomo wrote:Not to hijack a thread on the American Civil War, but while while we're on the subject of racism, I just wanted to throw this
little gem into the mix.
In particular, I draw your attention to the alternative title, appearing just beneath the title that is well-known in popular culture.
I've read it cover-to-cover twice, and it uses "race" predominantly in the sense of "species."
Did you know Darwin was a committed abolitionist? That abolitionism so to speak ran in his own family, and was the subject of conflict among them?
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/02/01/books ... wanted=allAdrian Desmond and James Moore published a highly regarded biography of Darwin in 1991. The argument of their new book, “Darwin’s Sacred Cause,” is bluntly stated in its subtitle: “How a Hatred of Slavery Shaped Darwin’s Views on Human Evolution.” They set out to overturn the widespread view that Darwin was a “tough-minded scientist” who unflinchingly followed the trail of empirical research until it led to the stunning and unavoidable theory of evolution. This narrative, they claim, is precisely backward. “Darwin’s starting point,” they write, “was the abolitionist belief in blood kinship, a ‘common descent’ ” of all human beings.
SNIP
For Desmond and Moore, the voyage of the Beagle was less important for the accumulation of finches and barnacles than for giving Darwin an eyewitness experience of slavery, which “put shredded flesh on the Wedgwood cameo.” Particularly poignant was a scream overheard when he was canoeing through the “putrid exhalations” of mangrove swamps in the Brazilian interior. “To this day,” Darwin later wrote in his journal, “if I hear a distant scream, it recalls with painful vividness my feelings, when passing a house near Pernambuco, I heard the most pitiable moans, and could not but suspect that some poor slave was being tortured, yet knew that I was as powerless as a child even to remonstrate.”
There's a great one-hour interview with one of the authors on Against the Grain.
http://www.againstthegrain.org/program/ ... nd-slaveryMake of it whatever you will,
Arguably his work should be noted more for moving away from the racist paradigms of the time than for the ways in which it undoubtedly remained within them. His involvement with those who later became known as Social Darwinists was at a distance. Fundamentally, the idea of a common human ancestry, all of us descended from apes no less, militates against ideas of supremacy for a given human sub-race. Insofar as these even exist. The modern Darwinian synthesis in relation to empirical genetics have done much to undermine the very idea of "race." The eugenics movement of the 20th century with its pseudo-scientific basis can hardly be blamed on him. And today I believe you'll find more racism among those most provoked by the idea of evolution.
but don't forget to remember the most common application of this monumental work, which has actually been in the social sciences, not as much in the biological sciences.
That's an incredible statement to make about the central paradigm of the biological sciences and I doubt you'll let it stand to your own scrutiny.
I am distinguishing it's most applied use - to justify what has become known as "Social Darwinism" - rather than its central position in biology in a theoretical sense. I will point out that natural selection and evolutionary dynamics are routinely ignored in the applied biosciences, notably agriculture, where it should be clear from evolutionary theory that creating monocultures is dangerous, or in medical practice, where profligate antibiotic use only selects for the most virulent strains. The application of what I view as dangerous agricultural practices to "human stock" is one of the most insidious phenomena to grace the 20th Century, eugenics.
To be fair, Darwin was cautious about eugenics, but not his half-cousin,
nor his son:
Of his surviving children, George, Francis and Horace became Fellows of the Royal Society, distinguished as astronomer, botanist and civil engineer, respectively. His son Leonard went on to be a soldier, politician, economist, eugenicist and mentor of the statistician and evolutionary biologist Ronald Fisher.
Darwin was intrigued by his half-cousin Francis Galton's argument, introduced in 1865, that statistical analysis of heredityshowed that moral and mental human traits could be inherited, and principles of animal breeding could apply to humans. InThe Descent of Man Darwin noted that aiding the weak to survive and have families could lose the benefits of natural selection, but cautioned that withholding such aid would endanger the instinct of sympathy, "the noblest part of our nature", and factors such as education could be more important. When Galton suggested that publishing research could encourage intermarriage within a "caste" of "those who are naturally gifted", Darwin foresaw practical difficulties, and thought it "the sole feasible, yet I fear utopian, plan of procedure in improving the human race", preferring to simply publicise the importance of inheritance and leave decisions to individuals.
Galton named the field of study "eugenics" in 1883. In contrast to Darwin's cautious thoughts on voluntary improvement, negative eugenics later developed on a basis of Mendelian genetics and led to compulsory sterilisation laws which brought the field into disrepute.
I don't mean to pick on poor Chuck Darwin, and I certainly believe in the mechanics of natural selection, if not its most facile interpretation by the Dawkins crowd. But I am pointing out that while AD is supplying us with visceral descriptions of the evils of Dixieland, evils of which everybody is already well-aware, I am reading very little in this thread about the institutionalized racism that existed at the higher levels of Anglo-American society in the late 19th and early 20th Century - racism essentially accepted by our scientific luminaries, in varying degrees - and the great damage it has done (not the least of which is providing motivation for Adolph Hitler's program).
Of course I was being provocative and some might say even manipulative, but the larger point still stands.