Friday, 28 April 2017

Race: a myth created by ‘white’ supremacists



23854 reads  #44 when compared to articles published by University of Cape Town based authors in The Conversation

The Conversation 20 November 2015 - Race: a myth created by ‘white’ supremacists
Subspecies and race
I am a Ph.D.-trained taxonomist and have acted professionally locally and internationally for 35 years.  Taxonomy is the biological science of classification.  Scientifically, the term subspecies is equivalent to race.  Subspecies are the least inclusive entities that warrant a name.  They are geographically distinct, anatomically and genetically homogenous, populations who interbreed and produce fertile offspring with other subspecies. 
‘Scientific’ racism
The use of race in human ‘taxonomy’ has a long, disgraceful history.  To promote their ‘superiority’, highly respected philosophers, sociologists, biologists, historians, and politicians used race to divide and denigrate,  people from different ‘nations’ (the Irish, British, French, German, Chinese, Japanese)  or continents (Europe, sub-Saharan Africa, Asia, the Americas).  The eminent philosopher Immanuel Kant, the first “scientific racist”, maintained that dark-skinned people from Africa are: vain and stupid; only capable of trifling feelings; resistant to any form of education other than learning how to be enslaved; and lacking in “drive to activity” and “mental capacities to be self-motivated and successful.” With regard to history, they show no talents or produced anything of praiseworthy quality in art or science. Light-skinned Homo sapiens europaeus is active, acute, and adventurous. Sub-Saharan Homo sapiens afer is crafty, lazy, and careless.  Scientific racism played a pivotal role in ‘justifying’ chattel slavery and colonialization of areas occupied by “inferior” races. 

‘Scientific’ racism reached its pinnacle in eugenics, a social philosophy  advocating the improvement of humanity by promoting reproduction between people with desired traits and reducing reproduction between (or sterilizing) people with less-desired traits.  People unfit to reproduce included members of disfavoured racial groups.  Eugenics played an integral part in the race-related laws of Nazi Germany and apartheid South Africa.
Creation(s)
There are two views on the origin(s) of human races.  Polygenism maintains that races were created independently by God or derived from different ape/monkey/baboon-like ancestors.  This view was referenced by some prominent South Africans in the media in response to the announcement of the discovery of Homo neladi.  It persists in Creation ‘Science’ and in anthropologist Carleton Coon’s book The Origin of Races (1962).  The other view is monogenism: that all modern humans have a single, common origin, perhaps even a single mating pair, Adam and Eve In his The Descent of Man, Charles Darwin ended the polygenism vs monogenism debate in favour of mongenism.

Human ‘taxonomists’ have proposed a range of human races with little agreement as to how many and their geographical provenance.  Based on skull anatomy, Johann Blumenbach divided the humans into five races: Caucasians (Europe and western Asia), Mongoloids (eastern Asia), Malays (south-eastern Asia), Negros (sub-Saharan Africa) and Americans (North and South America), but emphasized that "one variety of mankind does so sensibly pass into the other, that you cannot mark out the limits between them".  Skull anatomy was also used to support racism by Samuel Morton, who claimed that inter-racial intellectual variation is reflected by the interior volume of the skull.  These groupings remain used today in anthropology and forensics.  Additional studies including other aspects of skin colour, facial type, texture and colour of hair recognize as many as 12 human races. 


Genetic evidence
A range of genetic studies have examined ‘racial’ variation.  A pioneer in this regard was one of my early mentors, Richard Lewontin.  His research on protein structure suggested that 90% percent of modern human genetic diversity is due to differences between individuals WITHIN populations, and that the tiny balance is due to variation BETWEEN populations.  This view was confirmed by studies based on DNA structure. Indeed, the DNA amongst all human populations is 99.5% similar.  Populations of the geographically much more restricted chimpanzee (our nearest living evolutionary ‘relative’), exhibit more than four times the variation found between human populations.  Furthermore, the geographical distribution of many human anatomical traits reflects that of genetic variation.  For example, about 90% of the variation in human head shape occurs WITHIN continental groups, and 10% BETWEEN groups, with a greater variability of head shape among individuals within Africa.   To summarize, when humans from around the globe are studied from genetic and/or anatomical perspectives, the pattern discovered is not geographically discrete clusters.  The norm is gradual, geographically uncorrelated, variation in traits and genes, even within peoples traditionally thought to be racially homogeneous. Therefore, there is no evidence of evolutionarily significant subspecific/racial variation. 

The exception to the common geographically gradual anatomical among humans is skin colour. Approximately 10% of the variance in skin colour occurs within groups, and about 90% between groups.  People from near the equator have darker, more melanin-rich, skin than those who live at higher latitudes, indicating that it has been under strong selective pressure. Darker skin is strongly selected for in equatorial regions because it is a natural sunscreen that limits harmful effects of high ultraviolet rays.  One of these is the stripping away of folic acid, a nutrient essential to the development of healthy foetuses.  Recent genetic studies indicate that skin colour may change radically due to natural selection in 100 generations (about 2 500 years).

Genetic ‘racism’
Contrary to the message above, some studies based on DNA allele frequencies claim that there is a geographical structuring of human populations which has been used, e.g. by newsman Nicholas Wade in A Troublesome Inheritance: Genes, Race and Human History, to justify the validity of races. Wade then asserts that natural selection between ‘races’ has led to differences in I.Q. test results, efficacy of political institutions and levels of economic development.  These studies are flawed for three reasons.  First, taxonomic studies should be based on CHARACTERS, features that are invariant within populations, rather than TRAITS (e.g. eye colour and gene alleles) that vary within populations and even families.  Second, the DNA samples used in were “cherry picked” geographically to maximize inter-population differentiation.  Third, the evolutionary racial ‘trees’  were generated by a statistical technique (cluster analysis) designed to produce tree-like patterns of “average”, not absolute, differences between sampled items.  This technique formed the basis of an approach to the construction of evolutionary trees called “phenetics” which has long been discredited and thus generally abandoned by evolutionary biologists.

Evolutionary origins
DNA- and anatomy-based findings support the Out of Africa theory that modern humans originated in Africa. This theory states that archaic African Homo (erectus) immigrated into Eurasia 200 000 to 100 000 years ago.  About 60 000 years ago, after it also had evolved in Africa, a second form of humanity, modern H. sapiens, also emigrated out of Africa, replacing populations of Homo erectus and Homo neanderthalensis already in the north.  Some studies support that the second emigration resulted in limited interbreeding between H. sapiens and neanderthalensis, with 1 to 4% of the genes currently within the non-African H. sapiens coming from neanderthalensis.
 ‘White’ people are therefore evolutionary ‘refugees’ from Africa who, after settling in Eurasia, lost much of their epidermal melanin in an evolutionary heartbeat.  

To close, during the turbulent 1980s, my 9 year-old daughter attended a racially mixed school.  Knowing this, when a family friend asked her how many of her classmates were blacks, my daughter’s reply was: “What is a black?” I guess that makes my child a poor human taxonomist.

Emeritus Prof. Tim Crowe – Newlands – tel. 021-674-3835 – e-mail timothy.crowe@uct.ac.za

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