A New Perspective on the Race Debate
- 1 June 1998
- journal article
- Published by University of Chicago Press in The British Journal for the Philosophy of Science
- Vol. 49 (2) , 199-225
- https://doi.org/10.1093/bjps/49.2.199
Abstract
In the ongoing debate concerning the nature of human racial categories, there is a trend to reject the biological reality of race in favour of the view that races are social constructs. At work here is the assumption that biological reality and social constructivism are incompatible. I oppose the trend and the assumption by arguing that cladism, in conjunction with current work in human evolution, provides a new way to define race biologically. Defining race in this way makes sense when compared to the developments in other areas of systematic biology, where shared history has largely replaced morphological similarity as the foundation of a natural biological classification. Surprisingly, it turns out that cladistic races and social constructivism are compatible. I discuss a number of lessons about the way human biological races have been conceptualized.Keywords
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