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Number of results

Journal

2009 | 58 | 3-4 | 273-278

Article title

Darwin jako antropolog ewolucyjny problem ras ludzkich

Authors

Content

Title variants

EN
Darwin as evolutionary anthropologist. The problem of race

Languages of publication

PL EN

Abstracts

EN
In the work ,,Descent of Man and Selection in Relation to Sex", Charles Darwin (1871) devoted one chapter to human morphological diversity. In the 19th century many anthropologists dealt with the problem of human races which were described and treated by them as discrete units - i.e., as essentialistic types, indistinguishable from species. The theory of evolution by means of natural selection, however, could not accommodate the abovementioned discrete view of human variability. Darwin insisted that human races were open (freely intermating) groups and that morphological differences between them reflected locally operating environmental factors - it is well documented that these groups had a common origin as one species. Recently such groups have been described as populations. The great majority of anthropologists now agree that in humans intrapopulational genetic variance amounts to more than 90 percent of all the variance of our species, thus vindicating Darwin: Human races as classificatory typological units do not exist.

Keywords

Journal

Year

Volume

58

Issue

3-4

Pages

273-278

Physical description

Dates

published
2009

Contributors

author
  • Instytut Antropologii, Wydział Biologii, Uniwersytet im. Adama Mickiewicza, Umultowska 89, 61-614 Poznań, Polska

References

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  • Coon C., 1962. The Origin of Races. Knopf, New York.
  • Czekanowski J., 1967. Człowiek w czasie i przestrzeni. PWN, Warszawa.
  • Darwin C., 1859. On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life. John Murray, London.
  • Darwin C., 1871. The Descent of Man and Selection in Relation to Sex. (2 wyd. 1874). John Murray, London.
  • Darwin K., 1929. O pochodzeniu człowieka. Biblioteka Dzieł Naukowych, Warszawa.
  • Darwin K., 1959. O pochodzeniu człowieka, [W:] Karol Darwin, dzieła wybrane. Tom IV. Stołyhwo E. (red.). PWRiL, Warszawa.
  • Dobzhansky T., 1962. Comment. Curr. Anthropol. 3, 280-281.
  • Kaszycka K. A., Strzałko J., 2003, 'Race' - Still an issue for physical anthropology? Results of Polish studies seen in the light of the U.S. findings, Am. Anthropol. 105, 116-124.
  • Kaszycka K. A., Štrkalj G., Strzałko J., 2009. Current Views of European Anthropologists on Race: Influence of Educational and Ideological Background. Am. Anthropol. 111, 43-56.
  • Lewontion R. C., 1972. The apportionment of human diversity. [W:] Evolutionary Biology (tom 6). Dobzhansky T., Hecht M., Steere W. (red.). Plenum, New York, 381-398.
  • Lieberman L., Kirk R. C., Littlefield A., 2003. Perishing Paradigm: Race-1931-99. Am. Anthropol. 105, 110-113.
  • Livingstone F. B., 1962. On the non-existence of human races. Curr. Anthropol. 3, 279-281.
  • Kuttner R. E. (red.), 1967. Race and modern science. Social Science Press, New York.
  • UNESCO, 1961. Race and science. Scientific analysis from UNESCO., Columbia. Univeristy Press, New York.
  • Rosenberg N. A., Pritchard J. K., Weber J. L., Cann H. M., Kidd K. K., Zhivotovsky L. A., Feldman M. W., 2002. Genetic Structure of Human Populations. Science 298, 2381-2385.
  • Templeton A. R., 2002. Out of Africa again and again. Nature 416, 45-51.
  • Wolpoff M. H., Caspari R., 2000. The many species of humanity. Anthropol. Rev. 63, 3-17.

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.bwnjournal-article-ksv58p273kz
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