Publication | Closed Access
Science and Race
38
Citations
26
References
1996
Year
EthnicityCritical Race TheoryPhenotypic VariationIndividual DifferencesEducationSocial CategorizationCognitive AnthropologySocial SciencesRaceScience StudyHistory Of ScienceHuman PhenotypesHuman VariationAfrican American StudiesCultural DiversityRacial GroupHuman Biological VariationEthnic StudiesRacismCognitive ScienceRacialization StudiesScientific StudyEthnic IdentityHuman EvolutionCognitive AbilityCultureRace RelationSocial Diversity
The scientific study of human biological variation has consistently produced knowledge that contradicts widespread popular, or folk, wisdom. Although people and the populations they belong to certainly differ from one another, they do not appear to do so in such a manner that permits the identification of a small number of human subspecies or races. Classification of people into races involves cultural, not biological, knowledge; and race is inherited according to cultural rules that stand in opposition to biology. Thus race is not a useful biological concept. To understand whether differences exist between populations in cognitive ability (or any other inherent “gifts”) requires confronting the limits of scientific knowledge.
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