Race: Is It a Valid Issue?
Biological advancements such as Darwinism and Mendelian genetics had a
profound impact on the study of race in the scientific community.
These new concepts eventually led some scientists to question the
validity of traditional notions about race. The resulting debates
continue even today. The idea of race, especially
in citizens of this country, evokes strong feelings because of the
enormous social implications associated with racial identity. The social
connotations of racial categories have had a profound influence
on the way scientists
understand human variation. Early ideas of race were colored by these
connotations, and they still play a critical role in the way we
understand race today. This paper will explore, with an emphasis on
historical context, the current debates over whether to continue to
inlude race in scientific, and especially medical, studies.
Recently, some scientists have advocated the elimination of race from
scientific studies
altogether. They argue that it is not a useful category for the study of
human subjects. Others argue just as strongly that it is. It
will be helpful to first examine the historical development of the
concept of race before examining the usefulness of race in
scientific
investigations.
Race is a relatively new concept. Ancient civilizations, though they encountered and included people from
many different parts of the world, did not make social distinctions based
on physical appearance. They distinguished people according to customs
and religion; not race. Acclaimed classicist Frank M. Snowden
writes:
The Egyptians, whose contacts with Nubia
dated back
to the Old
Kingdom, did not usually designate Kushites by color terms. Though the
monarchs of the Twenty-fifth Dynasty had their skin painted dark-brown
in reliefs and their Nubian features clearly delineated by the
sculptors, they mentioned neither thier own color nor that of the
lighter-skinned Egyptians. Piye, for example, in his triumphal stele
made no reference to color: he apparently did not regard himself as a
champion of black peoples who had overturned their former white
masters. Egyptians and Nubians
had for centuries been accustomed to
the gradations in skin color among the inhabitants of the Nile Valley
and hence saw nothing unusual in the differences (73-74).
This absence of color-consciousness persisted in the Greco-Roman
tradition, as well:
nothing comparable to the virulent color prejudice of modern times
existed in the ancient world. This is the view of most scholars who
have examined the evidence and who have come to conclusions such as
these: the ancients did not fall into the error of biological racism;
black skin color was not a sign of inferiority; Greeks and Romans did
not establish color as an obstacle to integration in society; and
ancient society was one that "for all its faults and failures never
made color the basis for judging a man." (Snowden 63)
Even in medieval
times, there was no racial
component to social structure. As Montagu states: "A study of the cultures
and literatures of mankind, both
ancient and recent, shows us that the conception of natural
or biological races of mankind differing from one another
mentally as well as physically, is an idea which was not born
until the latter part of the eighteenth century" (10-11). Dante Puzzo,
although he disagrees on the exact time of the appearance of
race consciousness, agrees that it is a modern phenomenon: "Racism . . .
is a modern conception, for prior to the sixteenth century there was
virtually nothing in the life and thought of the West that can be
described as racist" (579).
Some might argue that the ancient wars were, for the most part,
waged over racial differences. They were, however, probably fought for
different reasons. After conducting a historical survey of these
conflicts, Lord Bryce concludes:
down till the days of the French
Revolution there had been
very little in any country, or at any time, of self-conscious
racial feeling . . . however much men of different races may
have striven with one another, it was seldom any sense of
racial opposition that caused their strife. They fought for
land. They plundered one another . . . But strong as
patriotism and national feeling might be, they did not think
of themselves in terms of ethnology, and in making war for
every other sort of reason never made it for the sake of
imposing their own type of civilization . . . In none of such
cases did the thought of racial distinctions come to the
front (25-26).
The distinction between nationalism and racism is an
important one in
these types of historical studies. The latter does not appear until
relatively recently.
Where did it come from? I will attempt to answer this question as
it applies to Blacks and the English in America because great social
disparities between these two groups have been created solely on the
basis of race. Few other groups could illustrate the point as clearly.
From at least the twelfth century AD, the English
have been deeply embroiled in a struggle to dominate Ireland. Even
in the modern period, they have unsuccessfully tried to eradicate Irish culture
so that
Ireland would be completely under their control. This conflict
continues even today.The struggle became so
embittered and lasted so long that the English came to regard Irishmen as
"savages": wild, untamable men who were completely lacking in any sense
of social order. The following description of the Irish ordered by
Henry II should illustrate the contempt involved:
Wherefore this is a race of savages: I say again a race of utter
savages. For not merely are they uncouth of garb, but they also let
their hair and beards grow to outrageous length, something like the
newfangled fashion which has lately come in with us. In short, all
their ways are brutish and unseemly (Barnard's 1910 translation of a
twelfth-century text by Giraldus Cambrensis, quoted in Curtis
124).
This was purely cultural discrimination, but
the intense nationalism it created served as a foundation for later racial
discrimination.
Another component of racism came from Spanish culture. After the
Reconquest, the racially diverse population of Spain
instituted
an extreme form of religious persecution known as the Inquisition. During
the Inquisition, not only were people's habits scrutinized for Jewish or
Moorish taint, but also their genealogies were examined. "A major
contribution to Western thought was the belief engendered by the
Inquisition in the hereditary nature of social status" (Smedley 66). The
cultural exchange between England and Spain during the early centuries of
colonization and exploration brought this notion to the English
people.
When the English encountered the Native Americans, they quickly
associated these people and their strange ways of living with the Irish
savagery with which they were already familiar. Thus, the English came to
regard themselves as superior to a wide variety of other cultures.
When African slaves were imported in the 1630's, the English, most of whom
had never encountered dark-skinned people before this period, quickly
reduced the status of these people to a sub-human level. Their new-found
tendency to associate foreigners with heritable inferiority was used to
create a permanent underclass of slaves from Africa to provide an economic
base for their labor-intensive colonialism. "The rights of the Englishmen
were preserved by destroying the rights of Africans" (Morgan 24). The idea
of the concept of race being invented to serve a certain purpose is not as
far-fetched as it may sound, as evidenced by the words of Adolf Hitler:
The conception of the nation has become meaningless . . . "the nation"
is a political expedient of democracy and liberalism. We have to . . . set
in its place the conception of race. . . . The new order cannot be
conceived in terms of the national boundaries of peoples of the historic
past, but in terms of race that transcends those boundaries. . . . I know
perfectly well . . . that in a scientific sense there is no such thing as
race . . . but I as a politician need a conception which enables the order
which has hitherto existed on historic bases to be abolished and an
entirely new and antihistoric order enforced and given an intellectual
basis. . . . And for this purpose the conception of races serves me well.
. . . With the conception of race, National Socialism will carry its
revolution abroad and recast the world (quoted in Rauschning
231-232).
Modern, scientific racial classification began with Carolus Linnaeus in
1735,
who classified humans into four races, based mostly on continental
separation and, later, on skin color. His four groups were:
- Americanus: reddish, choleric, and erect; hair black, straight,
thick; wide nostrils, scanty beard; obstinate, merry, free; paints himself
with fine red lines; regulated by customs.
- Asiaticus: sallow, melancholy, stiff; hair black; dark eyes;
severe, haughty, avaricious; covered with loose garments; ruled by
opinions.
- Africanus: black, phlegmatic, relaxed; hair black, frizzled;
skin silky; nose flat; lips tumid; women without shame, they lactate
profusely; crafty, indolent, negligent; anoints himself with grease;
governed by caprice.
- Europeaeus: white, sanguine, muscular; hair long, flowing; eyes
blue; gentle, acute, inventive; covers himself with close vestments;
governed by laws (Smedley 164).
He and others both before and after him used features that we would
consider purely cultural today to define races. He held that these races
were mutable varieties of man, not species, and that they reflected
changes due to climate.
Buffon classified humanity into six races. It was he who, in 1745,
introduced the term "race" into natural history. Montagu says, "Buffon
acknowledged the artificiality of his classification, and warned against
it being taken too seriously. But the warning went unheeded" (20).
Toward the end of the eighteenth century, Johann Blumembach divided
humankind into the five categories--Caucasian, Mongolian, Ethiopian,
American, and Malay--that would dominate the educated community
thereafter and are still in use today. Though he and others recognized
the arbitrariness of such classifications, they still conveyed a sense of
permanence and absolute dissimilarity among racial groups that was
fostered by the racist attitudes of the time.
Despite the perhaps less rigid views of these early scientists,
people began to think in terms of "primary races" (Haller 162) whose
ideal forms were immutable and fundamentally different. This conception
of racial differences was attractive to racists and continued for quite a
long time, as evidenced by an article published in 1926 that reads:
If an unbiased zoologist were to descend upon the earth
from Mars and study the races of man with the same
impartiality as the races of fishes, birds, and mammals, he
would undoubtedly divide the existing races of man into
several genera and into a very large number of species and
subspecies (Osborn 129).
This man, more than a century after Blumenbach, saw races as being so
fundamentally different as to warrant classification into different
genera. This, surely, is
an extreme example, but it demonstrates basic qualities of immutability
and profound distinctiveness in the classical notions of race that
persisted well into the twentieth century.
The idea of evolution had little impact on the idea of race. Even
Linnaeus had purported that racial differences were due primarily to the
effects of the environment on a given population. The original creators
of the races did not themselves believe in the fixity of races; only in
the fixity of species.
The discovery of Mendelian genetics and the resulting growth in
knowledge about population genetics finally led to a reexamination of
popular ideas of race. With a few notable exceptions, the popular idea of
pure races went unchallenged until about 1936, when articles began to
appear expressing the belief that "the ideal types of anthropological
classification, if they ever existed at all in any degree of purity, have
become a matter of faith rather than of evidence" ("Delusion" 636). These
challenges sparked a debate over the very existence of race that
continues to this day.
In light of tremendous intra-racial variations that have been
observed and the elucidation of population genetics, modern defenders of
the race concept have abandoned absolutes in defining races. A modern
definition of race would probably be something like "`a population which
differs significantly from other human populations in regard to the
frequency of one or more of the genes it possesses'" (Boyd 25). This new
kind of definition seemingly answered most of the problems raised by the
early opponents of conventional conceptions of race, but now scientists
are pointing out problems with even this new definition.
Professor Geoffrey A. Harrison of Oxford University says, "It is extraordinarily difficult to identify precisely
discrete populations; in most situations they don't exist.
Also, any two populations of the human species one defines
will differ in gene frequency, so there would be as many
races as populations" (Davis 17).
Another problem is that "people who are grouped together on the basis of
one or two genetic traits would have to be grouped very differently for
other traits" (Smedley 288). The genetic frequencies of different genes
do not correspond in any definable way, and this fact "fails to confirm
the expected large differences between populations that have
conventionally been identified as distinct races" (Smedley 288).
Traditional racial categories do not have an origin in science, but in
opinion.
how, in 1993, can it be that so many of us in our research,
writing, and teaching accept in virtually its original form the
four-fold scheme invented over 200 years ago. Linnaeus could not
have understood the range and complexity of biological variation as it
is known today. Not enough was known about the world. Nor could he have
been aware of the complex array of mechanisms that affect biological
variation. Nothing was known about evolutionary theory or genetics. No,
if Linnaeus was correct in his characterization of the varieties of our
species, he must have been incredibly lucky (Sauer 80).
All this
evidence would suggest that "there is no real way
of marking off one population from another" (King 5), which supports "the
concept that races do not exist, only clines" (Coon 210). Even defenders
of the race concept concede "the fact that geographical races are to a
large extent collections of convenience, useful more for pedagogic
purposes than as units for empirical investigation" (Garn 15).
Is it appropriate to use such arbitrary distinctions as race in
scientific, and especially medical, studies? Many would argue yes, "The
collection of race and ethnic information is a critical component of any
public health surveillance system used to address differences in health
status among population subgroups" (Hahn 7). We should realize, however,
that the nature of these differences is almost always
social rather than biological. Although widely shared in our society, the
belief that
races are human populations that differ from each other
primarily in terms of genetics is without scientific basis.
There is more genetic variation within races than among
them, and racial categories do not capture biological
distinctiveness (Williams 27). There is no objective reason to break up
the human species the way we do.
Almost any other division would be just as viable, perhaps more so.
"Racial taxonomies are arbitrary, and race is more of a social category
than a biological one" (Williams 27).
The way races are divided is not generally helpful in determining
risk factors for disease because race is primarily a social construct. We
focus on differences in skin color, not because the genes
linked to skin color have been shown to be critical
determinants of disease patterns, but because in our society
skin color (race), is a centrally determining characteristic
of social identity and obligations (Williams 28). Using race in medical
studies is perfectly justified, but we should
remember that the significance of race lies almost entirely in a social
context. Any attempt to correlate purely biological characteristics with
racial identity could be dangerously misleading and should be avoided,
especially in light of the misuses of perceived racial differences in the
past and even into the present.
At the very least, on a scientific level, it violates the first law
of medicine: Do no harm. For every instance in which knowing race helps
an investigator, there is probably another instance in which it leads
to a missed diagnosis or the premature closing of a police file. At
best, it is a proxy for something else. Why not study that something
else? (Goodman 24)
The concept of race was born out of xenophobia. The
earliest
attempts at objectively describing it were perverted, skewed though they
already were, to fit a racist weltanschauung that persists in all
too
many places even today. This concept was finally challenged with the
advent of population genetics, and the debates which ensued eventually
led to our modern definitions of race. When placed in proper historical
context and examined with the benefit of modern scientific knowledge,
even these new definitions lose their veneer of biological import, and
it becomes clear that the concept of race has no place in serious
medical studies.
Works Cited
Boyd, William C. "Genetics and the Races of Man." Readings on Race.
Ed. Stanley M. Garn. Springfield: Charles C. Thomas 1968. 17-27.
Bryce, Viscount. Race Sentiment as a Factor in History; a Lecture
Delivered before the University of London on February 22, 1915.
Coon, Carleton S. The Living Races of Man. New York: Alfred A.
Knopf, Inc. 1970.
Curtis, L. P., Jr. Anglo-Saxons and Celts: A Study of Anti-Irish
Prejudice in Victorian England. Bridgeport, CT: Conference on British
Studies at the University of Bridgeport 1968.
Eds. Bernard D. Davis and
Patricia Flaherty. Human Diversity: Its
Causes and Social Significance. Cambridge: Ballinger Publishing Co.
1976.
"The Delusion of Race." Nature. April 1936.
Garn, Stanley M. and Carleton S. Coon. "On the Number of Races of
Mankind." Readings on Race. Ed. Stanley M. Garn. Springfield:
Charles C. Thomas 1968. 9-16.
Goodman, Alan H. "Bred in the Bone?" The Sciences. March/April
1997. 20-25.
Hahn, Robert A. and Donna F. Stroup. "Race and Ethnicity in
Public Health
Surveillance: Criteria for the Scientific Use of Social Categories."
Public Health Reports. 109, no. 1 (January/February 1994): 7-14.
Haller, John S., Jr. Outcasts From Evolution: Scientific Attitudes
of Racial Inferiority, 1859-1900. Chicago: U of Illinois P 1971.
King, James C. The Biology of Race. Los Angeles: U of California P
1981.
Montagu, M. F. Ashley. Man's Most Dangerous Myth: The Fallacy of
Race. New York: Columbia UP 1942.
Morgan, Edmund S. "Slavery and Freedom: The American Paradox."
The Journal of American History. 59, no. 1 (1979): 5-29.
Osborn,
Henry Fairfield. "The Evolution
of Human Races." Natural History. January/February 1926.
Puzzo, Dante. "Racism and the Western Tradition." Journal of the
History of Ideas. 25, no. 4 (1964): 579-586.
Rauschning, Hermann. The Voice of Destruction. New York: G.
P. Putnam's 1940.
Sauer, Norman J. "Applied Anthropology and the Concept of Race: A
Legacy of Linnaeus" Race, Ethnicity, and Applied
Bioanthropology. Ed. Claire C. Gordon. Arlington, VA: National
Association for the Practice of Anthropology 1993.
Shanklin, Eugenia. Anthropology and Race. Belmont, CA:
Wadsworth Publishing Company 1994.
Smedley, Audrey.
Race in North America: Origin and
Evolution of a Worldview. San Francisco: Westview Press, Inc. 1993.
Snowden, Frank M., Jr. Before Color Prejudice: The Ancient
View of Blacks. Cambridge, MA: Harvard UP 1983.
Stepan, Nancy. The Idea of Race in Science: Great Britain
1800-1960. Hamden, CT: Archon Books 1982.
Williams, David R.,
Risa Lavizzo-Mourey, and Rueben C. Warren.
"The Concept of Race and Health Status in America." Public Health
Reports. 109, no. 1 (January/February 1994): 26-41.
Jonathan Morrow holds a Bachelor of Sciences degree in Biology from the University of Southern California, and is currently pursuing a PhD in Neuroscience at the University of Michigan as part of a combined MD-PhD program.
Copyright © 2000 Jonathan Morrow and The Abolitionist Examiner. All rights reserved.
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