What It Means To Be 98% Chimpanzee by Jonathan Marks
What It Means To Be 98% Chimpanzee by Jonathan Marks
What It Means To Be 98% Chimpanzee by Jonathan Marks
J O N AT H A N M A R K S
What It Means to Be
98% Chimpanzee
Apes, People, and Their Genes
los angeles
london
09 08 07 06 05 04 03
9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
02
contents
List of Illustrations
xi
Acknowledgments
xiii
Introduction
1
one
molecular anthropology
7
two
four
behavioral genetics
100
six
folk heredity
128
seven
human nature
159
eight
Index
303
illustrations
xi
16
18
38
39
46
71
201
acknowledgments
xiii
introduction
other hand, the scientists themselves have often employed that information to prop up dubious political assertions; or else they have
interpreted the information through cultural lenses of various tints,
and often with striking navetethats the anthropology.
Technical sophistication and intellectual navete have been the twin
hallmarks of human genetics since its origins as a science in the early
part of the twentieth century. The way genetics was practiced and
preached in the 1920s exploited the cachet of modern science to justify
blatant racism and xenophobia.
Times have changed, and technologies have certainly changed. But
many of our cultural ideas have remained strikingly unaltered across
the generations. We have a strong faith in the power of heredity to
shape destiny, in the ability of modern science to arrive at truths about
nature, in our identity as a deeply inscribed property, in the constitution of scientic facts to be neither good nor bad (but just authoritative), and in the ability of those scientic facts to speak for themselves.
Each of those propositions is true only to a very limited extent.
What is needed in human genetics is a mediation of its fundamentally
scientic and humanistic elements.
Anthropology has always been a eld of mediation. Classically (in
the 1920s), it involved juxtaposing the exotic and the mundane
showing that your way of seeing and interpreting the world is only
one of many possible and valid ways, but at the same time showing
that what New Guinea tribesmen do is only supercially different
from what you do.
In more recent decades, anthropology has assumed the political role
of mediator for aboriginal populations (usually the objects of anthropological study, of course) and colonial powers (usually the ones sending the anthropologist out). On the biological end, anthropology
emphasizes, on the one hand, the continuity of humans with other
primates, but, on the other, the uniqueness of humans among the
primates. And in a more general sense, anthropology mediates between professional scholarly knowledge about the world (science)
and popular or cultural wisdom about it (folk knowledge).
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Molecular anthropology necessarily adopts the crucial role of mediator as well. Genetics advertises a classically modern scientic analysis of the human condition, and thus molecular anthropology examines both human populations with respect to one another and our
species with respect to other species. At the same time, however, we
are forced to ask what meaning to attach to such studies and what
value they have. Where human lives, welfare, and rights are concerned, genetics has historically provided excuses for those who wish
to make other peoples lives miserable, to justify their subjugation, or
to curry favor with the wealthy and powerful by scapegoating the
poor and voiceless. It is therefore now obliged to endure considerably
higher levels of scrutiny than other, more benign and less corruptible,
kinds of scientic pronouncements might.
Rather than simply avowing to study our hereditary constitution
objectively, dispassionately, and benignlyand being proved wrong
time and againthis book is about the way a genetic science of
humanity can confront issues. Some of these issues are political, such
as animal rights and colonialism; others lie in the domain of folk
wisdom, such as ethnocentrism and racism; and still others lie in
simply the way science represents itself to the public.
Molecular anthropology is a term paradoxically coined by a biochemist in 1962 to designate the study of human evolution by recourse to the differences in the structure of biomolecules. The paradox is that although it sounds like a kind of anthropology, a molecular
kind of anthropology, it was really the technology of biochemistry
merely being applied to classically anthropological questions. And
since technology drove this new eld, anybody could do molecular
anthropology, regardless of how much anthropology they really
knew.
While that may sound harmless enough, consider the opposite case.
What would constitute an anthropological biochemistry if you
didnt need to know any biochemistry to do it?
What I will show in this book is that when the cutting-edge technology of molecular genetics has been wed to a folk knowledge of
anthropology, the results have invariably been of exceedingly limited
introduction
value. This was true in the 1920s, when geneticists sought to rewrite
our understanding of social issues by blaming poverty on the genes
of the poor. The stock market crash and Depression had a sobering
effect on the geneticists.
It was also true in the 1960s, when genetics became molecular and
its practitioners began to make observations of seeming profundity,
such as from the standpoint of hemoglobin, man is just an abnormal
gorilla. It seems not to have occurred to the sanguine speaker that
the standpoint of hemoglobin might just be a poor one for the problem at hand: from the top of the Empire State Building, Chicago and
Los Angeles appear to be in the same place over the horizon. But not
from the Golden Gate Bridge.
Thats a classic anthropological questionwhose standpoint is superior? An anthropological approach would be to inquire what it is
that each standpoint allows you to see that the others conceal.
The standpoint of science is widely held to be superior to all rivals.
Especially by scientists. But once again, it is useful to acknowledge
that there may be more than one scientic standpoint, and that the
meaning of any particular scientic pronouncement may not be selfevident. And thus in the 1990s, we routinely heard that we are just 1
or 2% different from chimpanzees genetically, and therefore . . .
what?
Should we accord the chimpanzees human rights, as some activists
have suggested?
Should we acknowledge and accept as natural the promiscuity and
genocidal violence that lurks just underneath the veneer of humanity
and occasionally surfaces, as some biologists have implied?
Or should we perhaps all simply go naked and sleep in trees as the
chimpanzees do?
None of these suggestions, of course, necessarily follows from the
genetic similarity of humans to apes, although the rst two have been
proposed within the academic community and promoted in the popular media over the past few years. (Mercifully, the third has not.)
But all of them sound as though they might well proceed from that
genetic similarity.
introduction
introduction
and the Human Genome Diversity Project, which has advocated the
establishment of a genetic museum of the isolated and endangered
peoples of the world. Both of these proposals can be illuminated by
bringing together the scientic and humanistic elements that bear
upon them.
Finally, I explore more generally the ways in which technical and
cultural knowledge intersect in the classic conict between science
and religion. This broadens our scope from a humanistic study of
heredity to a culturally informed and socially relevant study of the
role of science.
Ultimately, that is what molecular anthropology is all about: the
intersection of chemical bodies, human bodies, and bodies of knowledge; and their mutual illumination. Molecular anthropology acts as
mediator between reductive genetics and holistic anthropology; between formal knowledge and ideology; between facts of nature and
facts produced by authorities; between what science can do and what
scientists ought to do; and most fundamentally, between human and
animal. All of these terms are, of course, laden with meanings, and
none of them can be taken at face value.
Thats the fun of it.
introduction
One
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You know them. youve seen them, perhaps in the zoo, perhaps in
the movies or on television. Youve looked deep into their dark, soulful eyes, pondered their hairy faces, and recognized a mind behind
those eyes. A mind like a childs perhaps, but a mind akin to your
own. Youve seen their sinewy arms, their long ngers clasping somethinga twig to use as a tool? Or perhaps a Raggedy-Ann doll?
And you know about those resemblances. That chimpanzee, says
the narrator, is more than 98% genetically identical to us. That similarity, he says, blurs the line between us. We are chimpanzees, and
they are us.
But take another look. Those deep eyeswithout whites, which
those chimpanzee eyes really do lackthey look more like a dogs
dark eyes than like your own, dont they? And those sinewy arms are
rather hairy, arent they? They arent human arms at allthey are like
human arms. The chimpanzees themselves could not really be confused with people. Their heads are smaller. Their eyeteeth are bigger.
They have neither noses nor foreheads to speak of. Their legs are
short, their ears are huge, and they use their hands in walking. They
have thumbs on their feet. They have knees pointing ridiculously far
outward.
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enous peoples didnt need science to tell them of that creatures general similarities to them.
The general estimate, which there is no good reason to doubt at
present, is that about seven million years ago Homo, Pan, and Gorilla
all comprised a single species. That species lived in Africa (which is,
after all, where its descendants live), and probably resembled the
chimpanzee. One group evolved a larger body size and ultimately
became gorillas, and another group began to walk upright and ultimately became humans. And it is certainly possible that there were
several other branches of that family tree that ourished, say, three
million years ago, but whose remains have not yet been unearthed.
Obviously, a lot can happen in seven million yearsa creature
resembling a chimpanzee can evolve into a creature resembling a human being, for example. But it is also paradoxically little more than
a ash in biological time. It all depends upon ones perspective. The
average species of clam, for example, remains largely unchanged for
as much as ten million years.
Fifteen million years ago, there were many diverse species of apes,
thriving in the pristine and abundant woodlands of Africa, Asia, and
Europe. The Miocene epoch, which lasted from about twenty-ve to
ve million years ago, encompasses the orescence of the apes. They
ranged in size from the diminutive Micropithecus to the aptly named
Gigantopithecus, whose jaw dwarfs that of a modern gorilla. All looked
diagnosably different from one another and from modern apes, but
all would be recognizable as apes; none would be readily mistaken
for a raccoon or a billy goat.
Modern apes thus constitute in the present day but a minuscule
relic of the ecological space once occupied by their mighty group.
And this shift from diverse and prolic to nearly extinct, from masters
of the primate world to its tattered and pathetic remnants, has occurred within an evolutionary lament of the billions of years of life
on earth, the single thread that subsumes the emergence and development of the human line from that ape radiation.
Seven million years ago, toward the end of the Miocene, the ancestors of living humans, gorillas and chimps went their separate evolutionary ways. Possibly the proto-chimpanzees were spread widely
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human line, because there had been no human line that early; fourteen million years ago, humans and modern apes had necessarily
constituted the same evolutionary lineage. Even allowing for a bit
of sloppiness in their calibration, Sarich famously wrote in 1970,
one no longer has the option of considering a fossil specimen
older than about 8 million years as a hominid no matter what it
looks like.
Looks, as we all know, can be deceiving, and Ramapithecus has since
been shown not to have been a human ancestor. Details of its face
show it to have been more closely related to the orangutan.
But it would be wrong to read this as a victory of genetics over
anatomy. It was, rather, the a triumph of one carefully interpreted
corpus of data over another body of data, interpreted more freely. In
this case, the superior scholarship and science lay with the biochemists. Under slightly different circumstances, it could just as easily have
been the other way around.
And often it issurprisingly often, in fact. We routinely now hear,
however, of the reassessment of phylogenies based on molecular
datathat no matter what it looks like, cockeyed genetic evidence
shows that guinea pigs arent really rodents, that dogs were domesticated ten times earlier than had been thought, that humans diverged
from Neandertals ve times earlier than had been thought, that rabbits are more closely related to people than to mice, that frogs are
more closely related to sh than to lizards, and that the groups of
modern mammals diverged from one another far earlier than everyone thinks.
Even Vince Sarich, the doyen of iconoclastic molecular evolutionary studies, takes a jaundiced view today from retirement. Small miscalculations can have huge effects, he notes.
Then toss in a bit of molecular omnipotence, mix in a disdain for
the paleontologists, and youve got me some 25 years agoand
other researchers today. How did I escape? Well, mostly by reading,
listening, and thinking. Having been down the very seductive
molecules are everything; fossils are nothing road, and through
the lengthy and painful process of weaning myself off it, it hurts
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The fact that we are biologically similar to the apes was known long
before there were geneticists. For eighteenth-century scholars, apes
had roughly the same status as Bigfoot does today: they lived in
remote areas and were seen only by untrained observers. Consequently, reports about them differed widely in quality and reliability.
One famous and inuential story was that of a sixteenth-century
sailor named Andrew Battell, who survived a shipwreck and lived in
West Africa for several years before returning to Europe. His story
was related in a popular collection of travel narratives published by
Samuel Purchas in the early 1600s. Purchas wrote of two kinds of
Monsters, which are common in these Woods, and very dangerous,
known in the native tongue as the Pongo and the Engeco. Battell
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had nothing to say about the Engeco, but the Pongos highth was
like a mans, but their bignesse twice as great.
Could he have been describing a gorilla?
This Pongo is in all proportion like a man, but that he is more
like a Giant in stature, then a man: for he is very tall, and hath a
mans face, hollow eyed, with long haire upon his browes. His
face and eares are without haire, and his hands also. His bodie is
full of haire, but not very thicke, and it is of a dunnish colour. He
differeth not from a man, but in his legs, for they have no calfe.
Hee goeth alwaies upon his legs, and carrieth his hands clasped on
the nape of his necke, when he goeth upon the ground. They
sleepe in the trees, and build shelters for the raine. They feed upon
Fruit that they nd in the Woods, and upon Nuts, for they eate
no kind of esh. They cannot speake, and have no understanding
more then a beast. The People of the Countrie, when they
travaile in the Woods, make res where they sleepe in the night;
and in the morning, when they are gone, the Pongoes will come
and sit about the re, til it goeth out: for they have no understanding
to lay the wood together. They goe many together, and kill many
Negroes that travaile in the Woods. Many times they fall upon
the Elephants, which come to feed where they be, and so beate
them with their clubbed sts, and pieces of wood, that they will
runne roaring away from them. Those Pongoes are never taken
alive, because they are so strong, that ten men cannot hold one of
them: but yet they take many of their young ones with poisoned
Arrowes. The young Pongo hangeth on his mothers bellie, with
his hands fast clasped about her: so that, when the Countrie people
kill any of the femals, they take the young one, which hangeth
fast upon his mother. When they die among themselves, they cover
the dead with great heapes of boughs and wood, which is commonly
found in the Forrests.
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sleep in trees, eat no meat, and do not speak. However, unless gorillas
have changed a lot in the past four hundred years, we also know that
they are not bipedal, and practice no funerary rites. Was this Pongo,
then, more like the well-known baboon or the well-known centaur?
The fact is, however, that the narrator identies the Pongo and the
Engeco as Monsters and distinguishes them from Baboones, Monkies, Apes, and Parrotsrendering the identication of the creature
even more ambiguous and attesting at very least to the unfamiliar
manner in which scholars of that era thought about the animal kingdom.
These monsters were situated on the boundary between personhood and animalhood. Consequently, they were immensely interesting. That boundary is the domain of powerful mythological motifs
in all cultures, for the distinction between person and animal allows
us to situate ourselves in the natural order, to make some sense of
our place in it. And the mythology is just as powerful in the scientic
culture, as the scientic literature will easily attest: these creatures are
both us and not-us, and we need to know what they really are.
When European sailors traveled to Africa and Asia, they often tried
to retrieve these creatures, but unfortunately the journey was long
and hard, and a baby chimpanzee could probably not be expected to
thrive on a seafaring diet of biscuits and salt pork. An ape of some
sort was described briey by a Dutch anatomist named Nicolaas Tulp
in 1641, but the terse description of the animal is so confusing that
it is hard to know whether Tulp had been brought a chimpanzee or
an orangutan. Tulps satyr (g. 1) looks more like an orangutan
than like anything else, and he tells us that it is called by the Indians
orang-outang, but he also says his specimen didnt come from the
Indies, but from Angola, and it had black hair.
The face, Tulp relates, counterfeits man: but the nostrils are at
and bent inwards, like a wrinkled and toothless old woman. But the
ears, breast, abdomen and limbs were so like ours that he considered
them as similar as two eggs in a basket. The satyr walked upright and
had prodigious strength; yet it drank with great delicacy and afterward wiped away the moisture on its lips not less suitably and less
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the question of what the creature was like when it was alivehow it
lived, how it moved, what it ate. For this, Europeans were still obliged
to rely on the accounts of sailors, travelers, or merchants. A contemporary of Tysons, Willem Bosman, wrote a popular Dutch account
of his travels in West Africa, translated into English in 1705. He relates
that there are so many various species of apes that he cant possibly
describe them all, but begins with apes he calls Smitten, which are
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19
20
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lack the claws that other arboreal mammals use. Humans, of course,
retain this heritage in their hands, but not in their feet; we are not
gracefully four-handed but pitiably two-handed. This classication
would acknowledge the unique aspects of human feet, which are
specialized unlike those of any other primate and have lost the ability
to grasp, except in a very rudimentary manner. It wouldnt deny the
common ancestry of humans and apes, but would merely highlight
the divergence of humans from their ape ancestry.
We could even separate humans from other multicellular life altogether, placing humans in the subkingdom Psychozoamental
lifeas Julian Huxley proposed half a century ago. A species that
lives by its wits, that is to say, that relies entirely on the technological
products of its societies for individual survival, is quite different from
other life on earth. Perhaps indeed that might be worth acknowledging zoologically.
Humans are marked by a large number of physical, ecological,
mental, and social distinctions from other life. Not improvements,
of coursewe have no objective way to evaluate improvement in
the natural worldbut merely differences. Other primate species
spend time on two legs, and other vertebrate species are bipedal
(birds and kangaroos come readily to mind), but not in the same
manner as humans. Other species communicate, but not via the
absurdly arbitrary and symbolic media we call language. Other species modify natural objects and use them to aid in feeding (as
noted in Jane Goodalls classic observations of chimpanzees stripping twigs and using them to sh for termites), but none rely on
their technology to survive as humans do. And in no other species
does technology take on an evolutionary trajectory of its own, a
result of the social cycle of invention, adoption, spread, and modication. Other species appear to grieve, but none weep as humans
doand certainly not over imaginary events like those in Les Miserables or Love Story.
What does genetics have to say about all this?
Nothing.
Sameness/otherness is a philosophical paradox that is resolved by
argument, not by data. Genetic data tell us precisely what we already
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knew, that humans are both very similar to and different from the
great apes.
But genetics is able to place a number on that similarity. It is not
uncommon to encounter the statement that we are something like
99.44% genetically identical to chimpanzees. (Actually that number
is the fabled degree of purity of Ivory Soap, but it serves the purpose.)
You can literally count the number of base differences among the
same regions of DNA in humans and chimpanzees and gorillas and
add them up. Or you can do the same thing to the products of the
DNA, protein structures. All such comparisons invariably yield the
result that humans and chimpanzees (and gorillas) are extraordinarily
similar. But that was known to Linnaeus without the aid of molecular
genetics.
So whats new?
Just the number.
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23
24
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But if you look more carefully, you might observe that the general
gestalt of the sequences is roughly the same. If there is one C too
many in the middle of the top sequence, or one two few in the
bottom, the match becomes far more complete. (Since DNA sequences are immensely long, the presence of extra bases at the beginning or end of an arbitrary sequence is trivial. The ones in the middle
of sequences are interesting.) If we look at it again, inserting a small
gap for one base too many or too few, we see the similarity that was
previously hidden from view.
. . . CCTTGGGCCTCCCGCCAGGC . . .
. . . CCTTGGGC TCCCGCCAGGCC . . .
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do to our number, our precise estimate of the degree of genetic difference? First, it inserts an element of subjectivity masked by the
number itself; and second, it sums together DNA base substitutions
and DNA base deletions, as if they were biochemically identical and
quantitatively equivalent. In fact they are neither; this is a classic
apples and oranges case.
And that was an easy one.
In fact, the molecular apparatus has complex ways of generating
insertions and deletions in DNA, which we are only beginning to
understand. From a more poorly understood genetic region (the genes
for ribosomal RNA), here is a DNA sequence from human and orangutan, aligned three different ways:
Human
Orangutan
CCTCCGCCGCGCCG
CTCCGC GCCGCCGGGCA
CGGCC
CCGC
CC
GTCGCCTCCGCCACGCCGCGCCACCGGGCCGGGCCGGCCCGGCCCGCCCCGC
Human
Orangutan
CCTCCGCCGCGCCGCT
CCGCGCCGCCGGGCACGGCCCCGC
CCGTCGCCTCCGCCACGCCGCGCCACCGGGCCGGGCCGGCCCGGCCCGCCCCGC
Human
Orangutan
CCTCCGCCGCGCCG
CTCCGCGCCGCCGGG CAC GGCC
CCGC
CCGTCGCCTCCGCCACGCCGCGCCACCGGGCCGGGCCGGCCCGGCCCGCCCCGC
These are precisely the same sequences, reconstructed and presented three different ways. Tabulate the differences. The top one
invokes ve gaps and six base substitutions; the middle has only two
gaps but nine base substitutions. And the bottom one has ve gaps
and only three base substitutions. The three pairs of sequences differ
in the assumptions about which base in one species corresponds to
which base in the other. While we might, by Occams Razor, choose
the alignment that invokes the fewest inferred hypothetical evolutionary events, we still have to decide whether a gap equals a substitution. Does the bottom one win because it has a total of only
eight differences? Or might the middle one win because a gap should
be considered rare and thereby worth, say, ve base substitutions?
The problem is that we cannot know which is right, and the one
we choose will contain implicit information about what evolutionary
events have occurred, which will in turn affect the amount of similarity we tally. How similar is this stretch of DNA between human
26
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27
28
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In the context of a 35% similarity to a daffodil, the 99.44% similarity of the DNA of human to chimp doesnt seem so remarkable.
After all, humans are obviously a heck of a lot more similar to chimpanzees than to daffodils.
More than that, to say that humans are over one-third daffodil is
more ludicrous than profound. There are hardly any comparisons
you can make to a daffodil in which humans are 33% similar. DNA
comparisons thus overestimate similarity at the low end of the scale
(because 25% is actually the zero-mark of a DNA comparison) and
underestimate comparisons at the high end. At least snails, in the
earlier anatomical comparison, move around and eat; they cant photosynthesize. So from the standpoint of a daffodil, humans and chimpanzees arent even 99.44% identical, theyre 100% identical. The
only difference between them is that the chimpanzee would probably
be the one eating the daffodil.
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vices. Here, we are generally expected to infer that genetic comparisons reect deep biological structure, and that 98% is an
overwhelming amount of similarity. Thus the DNA of a human is
98% identical to the DNA of a chimpanzee becomes casually interpreted as deep down inside, humans are overwhelmingly chimpanzee. Like 98% chimpanzee.
The important question that lurks behind this trivial disagreement
is, What constitutes a scientic statement about genetic similarity?
The estimates of genetic difference between human and chimpanzee
given in that book are precise, but not accurate. In other words, they
have a decimal point and are written out to a tenth of a percent, but
the numbers given are wrongyou dont have to be Aristotle to see
that it cant be both 1.6% and within 1% at the same time. The fact
that either or both are inaccurate doesnt seem to make them less
scientic.
The cachet of science resides here in both the DNA and the tenthsof-percentiles. DNA is now the stuff of bad direct-to-video movie
plots and a sweet-smelling cologne from Bijan of Beverly Hills, which
even comes in a helical bottle. (The fact that the helical bottle is
composed of three strands, rather than two, earned the company the
IgNobel prize for chemistry in 1996, presented at Harvard by the
Annals of Improbable Research. The spectacular, hilarious award ceremony has achieved cult status in the academic community.) And the
allure of tenths-of-percentiles is surely what Mark Twain had in mind
when he grouped statistics along with lies and damn lies.
Geneticists have occasionally fallen headlong into this trap of taking
precision in lieu of accuracy. For example, in the 1920s, it was not
known how many chromosomes a human being had in each cell.
Most counts were in the twenties (by American scientists), some were
as high as the forties (by European scientists), and some geneticists
reconciled the discrepancy by arguing that since the Americans were
studying the chromosomes of black people and the Europeans were
studying those of white people, perhaps whites had more chromosomes than blacks. In 1927, however, the leading cell biologist of the
era pronounced denitively on the human chromosome number,
forty-eight. The count of forty-eight entered the textbooks and re-
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Two
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Wilson estimate of 99.3% is an overestimate of the similarity of human and chimpanzee DNA, being derived from a skewed sample of
the DNA, reecting only protein-coding regions.
The second class of data was made available in the mid-1980s with
the development of direct DNA sequencing technology. DNA is a
long linear molecule, again composed of simple subunits that can be
compared. Bits and pieces of it have been compared between human
and chimpanzee, amounting to less than 100,000 DNA bases in
length. But there are 3.2 billion bases in the human genome, so obviously we have here a very minuscule proportion, and again there is
a bias toward regions that contain functional unitsgeneswhich
tend to be where geneticists look for DNA to sequence.
The most comprehensive comparison we have is actually innitesimal in scope, about 40,000 bases of the region of the hemoglobin
genes on chromosome 11. And we nd human and chimpanzee, base
for base, to be about 1.9% different. The difference between the 0.7%
estimate and the 1.9% estimate is a consequence of the fact that this
DNA comparison includes much more nongenic DNA than genic
DNA (which is the only class that would be translated into protein
differences). Indeed, the DNA sequences of genes included in that
region are virtually identical between the two species.
But again, that is a high estimate, because it focuses on a region
known to contain genes and hence is more conservative than the
overall DNA would be expected to be. Genes are rare in the genome.
Not only that, but we know that the evolution of human hemoglobin
has been sensitive to specic environmental problemssuch as malariaso it may have its own evolutionary idiosyncrasies.
Another piece of DNA that has been well studied is the mitochondrial DNA, or mtDNA. Where 3.2 billion nucleotides comprise the
twenty-three chromosomes of a human nuclear genome (the DNA
of a human gamete, half that of an ordinary cell), there is a tiny
fraction located outside the nucleus. The mitochondrion, a subcellular organelle universally known in biology textbooks as the powerhouse of the cell, generates metabolic energy for the physiological
processes of life. It also has 16,500 nucleotides of DNA, which code
for some of the molecules used by the mitochondrion. This mito-
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chondrial DNA is much more famous for two reasonsit has suggested a primordial symbiotic relationship between free-living protomitochondria and free-living proto-cells at the dawn of life; and it is
also the source of revolutionary inferences about modern human origins in a mitochondrial Eve (see chapter 4).
Less spectacularly, this DNA has also been compared across the
great apes.
The mitochondrial DNA, however, is not 1% different among humans, chimpanzees, and gorillas. It is about 10% different. Why?
Because mtDNA mutates at a much higher rate than nuclear DNA.
The mutations have little or no effect on the life of the organism,
and so the differences simply accumulate. Two organisms will
therefore be far more similar in their nuclear DNA than in their
mtDNA. For example, the mitochondrial Eve work was based on
tabulating the differences detectable among human beings (0.2% difference), whose nuclear DNAs are so similar as to preclude that kind
of study generally.
The point is an important one: different bits of DNA evolve at
their own rates, and therefore in the six or seven million years of
evolutionary time separating humans, chimps, and gorillas, some bits
are 10% different, some are not comparable because they are different
in kind rather than amount, and most are less than 3% different.
Another technique in the 1980s permitted a much broader estimate
of DNA differencea technique called DNA hybridization. Here, a
pair of biologists from Yale adopted a technique that was recognized
a decade earlier to be effective, if crude. They began by analytically
dividing the DNA into two halves: repetitive DNA (redundant sequences of DNA, inferred to be meaningless) and unique-sequence
DNA. Presumably, the latter contained the genes, so they discarded
the former. Then, since DNA is a two-stranded molecule, the classic
double helix, they separated the strands of human DNA (by heating
it) and fooled the strands into rebonding with strands of chimpanzee
DNA. Human DNA is easy to foolif you simply give it a thousand
times more chimpanzee DNA, it wont be able to nd its perfect
human match and will bond instead to whatevers around. The bond-
34
ing to another species DNA must be imperfect, however, since mutations have accumulated to distinguish them genetically as species.
They then heated the hybrid DNA molecules. It takes less heat to
make these strands come apart, because they are imperfectly
bondedthere are fewer molecular bonds holding them together.
The difference between the temperature at which DNA strands from
the same species come apart and those at which hybrid DNA strands
come apart is thus a gross measure of how many mutations have
occurred during the divergent evolutionary histories of those species.
The Yale biologists made two major claims. The rst was that hybrid molecules of human and chimpanzee DNA dissociated from one
another at a temperature 1.8 degrees lower than did pure human
DNA. Assuming (conveniently) that 1 degree equals 1% genetic difference, they concluded that humans and chimpanzees are 1.8% genetically different. But there were two difculties with this claim.
First, others have calculated the conversion ratio at 1 degree equals
1.7% difference, which would make humans and chimps over 3%
different, rather than 1.8%. And, second, the experiment only examined half of the total DNA in the rst place. So it actually boils
down to a demonstration that half the DNA of humans is either
98.2% or 97% identical to that of chimpanzees.
The Yale biologists second claim was actually far more controversial. Not only were humans, chimpanzees, and gorillas genetically
very, very similar (as was already well known), they asserted with great
fanfare, but they could detect that humans and chimpanzees were
actually more genetically similar to each other than either was to a
gorilla. If true, this would be very signicant.
They said that they had done the experiments over and over again
and had always gotten values between 1.2 and 2.3 degrees for the
human-chimp comparison and 1.6 to 2.8 for the chimp-gorilla comparison. Thus the genomes of human and chimps were only about
1.8% different (plus or minus a little), while each of them differed
from the genome of a gorilla by about 2.3%. Unfortunately, however,
when other scientists got to examine just one-eighth of these data,
they found values for human-chimp ranging from -0.2 to 2.7 de-
35
36
37
38
if you nd chromosome 2 in it, its from a human. No in a functional sensethe fusion isnt what gives us language, or bipedalism,
or a big brain, or art, or sugarless bubble gum. Its just one of those
neutral changes, lacking outward expression and neither good nor
bad.
The human and chimpanzee chromosomes also differ in a subtle
but reliable way under a slightly more complex treatment known as
C-banding. C-banding doesnt tell you much, for only a few small
regions are stained under this procedure, so most chromosomes look
pretty much the same. C-banding seems to mark specically a few
chromosomal zones containing highly redundant junk DNA sequences, and in the human the characteristic zones are at the middle
or centromere of each chromosome; slightly below the centromere
on chromosomes 1, 9, and 16; and along most of the Y chromosome.
And we are the only species with such a pattern. If you look at the
chimpanzees cells using the identical procedure, you nd the centromeric bands readily enough, but the regions of chromosomes 1, 9,
16, and Y are simply not there. Not only that, but you will see something entirely unfamiliarbands at the tips of nearly every chromosome (g. 4). That is something youll see in the gorilla as well;
39
40
little knowledge on how a body is put together from genetic instructions. We construct genetic maps principally of its breakdown productsdiseaseswhich are important, but which comprise a very different kind of genetic knowledge. We refer to the gene for cystic
brosis, the gene for Huntingtons chorea, the gene for Duchenne
muscular dystrophy, but those identications are misleading. There
are no genes whose function is to give us diseases, there only genes
that can be most easily identied by what happens to an unfortunate
person who lacks a fully functional copy. This becomes the target of
the search (and often the raison detre for the funding of the research
program), but leaves us little knowledge in two crucial areas: rst, the
genetics of normalcy; and, second, the physiology of anatomical
development and how it varies among species.
One hypothesis advanced in the 1970s is that there are two kinds
of genes, those that code for the biochemical minutiae we are able to
study genetically, and those that code for our bodies. The apparent
paradox of genetic near-identity, coupled with physical dissimilarity,
would seem to be resolved if we postulate that small changes in the
rst class of genes lead us to the Ivory Soap conclusion, while small
changes in the second class of genes lead to major physical changes,
the kind that enable you to tell Jane Goodall the person from Flo
the chimpanzee at fty paces.
Once we recognize, however, that both the genetic similarity and
the physical difference are somewhat overstated (consider how much
easier it is to tell Jane Goodall from Elsie the cow, Charlie the tuna,
and Rikki-Tikki-Tavi the mongoose!), there seems to be little reason
to imagine two kinds of genes in there. We learn that we are similar
to, but invariably distinguishable from, our closest relatives. It
couldnt really be any other way, given the fact of evolution.
The argument I am criticizing here is the one that begins with our
unimpeachable genetic similarity to chimpanzees and concludes that
we are therefore nothing but chimpanzees genetically. In fact, the
data have been around for a surprisingly long time, and the fact that
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42
hes a man. And gorillas and humans do not form a single population,
any more than gorillas and daffodils do. And furthermore, if hemoglobin seems to be telling you anything else, its lying.
When I met Simpson, the patriarch of mammalian evolution studies, toward the end of his life in the early 1980s, he was still mystied
by the combination he saw of ignorance and arrogance on the part
of students of molecular evolution. He had led a fuller and more
prolic life than mosthe told me he had been in the army hospital
the day General Patton famously slapped the soldier; he had survived
a tree crushing his legs while on a fossil expedition in Brazil in 1956
and now continued to write books about evolution while in retirement in Tucson. His stature in the eld was such that, as a graduate
student, I developed a stutter whenever I spoke to him on the phone,
but in person, he was a reserved and humble old man. He still wore
the neatly trimmed beard he had always worn, now white with age.
Sipping the two martinis that constituted his lunch, he pronounced
with a shrug on deducing the sameness of humans and gorillas from
the sameness of their hemoglobin: Its just plain dumb!
And that from the man who had been preeminently responsible
for integrating modern genetics into evolutionary theory at midcentury.
Hemoglobin, of course, doesnt tell lies or truths. It indicates simply a set of data and interpretations. And in this case the interpretation was a facile one. Why on earth should hemoglobin be a microcosm for the relations of humans and gorillas? Surely we are not
strictly reducible to our blood, any more than we are reducible to
our arm, our toenails, or our phlegm. If we are similar but distinguishable from a gorilla ecologically, demographically, anatomically,
mentallyindeed, every way except geneticallydoes it follow that
all the other standards of comparison are irrelevant, and the genetic
comparison is transcendent? More likely, it should imply that the
genetic comparison is exceptional, and that it is interesting for that
very reason.
Suggesting that the relationships of our blood are the relations of
us, that we are our blood, is simply a metaphoric statement, technically
called metonymy, the substitution of a part for the thing itself. Per-
43
haps it is resonant with us because our brains evolved to make metaphoric connections, and because blood is such a symbolically powerful substance. Blood is, after all, a metaphor for heredity itself.
But this metaphor is not literally true; and science is supposed to
be about literal truths, not literary ones.
There is one sense in which we can acknowledge that we are apes
phylogenetically. We fall phylogenetically within the group constituted by the great apesthose large-bodied, tailless, exibleshouldered, slow-maturing primateswhich also includes chimpanzees, gorillas, and orangutans. And indeed, we are more closely related
to the chimpanzee and gorilla than they are to the orangutan. This
implies that that category of great ape is articial, for it comprises
species that are not one anothers closest relatives; or rather, it excludes
a member of the group of relativesnamely, us.
We are excluded by virtue of the fact that we have diverged relatively rapidly from the classic ape form and mode of life and have
evolved to ll a different niche, that of an ape that is bipedal and
culture-reliant. So although we fall within the great apes genetically
and are recently descended from them biohistorically, we are nevertheless different from them by virtue of having evolved a very large
number of readily observable specializations or novelties. We have left
them in our wake, so to speak, and the apes seem to resemble one
another more than they resemble us, because they didnt develop the
things we did.
But does this mean that we are apes, as Oxford professor and genetic enthusiast Richard Dawkins has argued?
Consider a different group of animals: say, sparrows, crocodiles, or
turtles. Two are crawling, green-scaled reptiles, and one is a bird. As
it happens (like humans and gorillas relative to orangutans), the
sparrow and crocodile are more closely related to each other than either is to the turtle. The two reptiles are more similar physically to
one another, but they are similar simply because the birds, which
originated from a group of reptiles, developed a set of specializations
and ew away, leaving the green scaly creatures behind. Since the
kind of reptile from which the birds originated was related to the
crocodile, it happens that the sparrow and crocodile, a few hundred
44
million years later, are more closely related than either is to the
turtle.
But does that mean that the sparrow is a reptile? No, it means it
is closely related to reptiles; its group is subsumed by the reptiles
but if the word bird is to have any meaning, it must be a different
meaning from the word reptile. Birds are birds; reptiles are a different kind of group, unied by not having evolved the specializations
of birds.
Closer to home, my family is distinct from me, although it subsumes me. In one sense, I am a part of my own family. But in a more
immediate sense, my love of my family does not necessarily imply a
narcissistic love of myself, for it refers to my family, excluding me.
Sometimes the exclusion is what makes a statement sensible.
We can go even further back in biohistory. Several hundred million
years ago, a group of sh developed specializations of their limbs that
enabled some of their descendants to venture out of the sea and on
to land. A living representative of that group of sh is the famous
living fossil, the coelacanth. Since all living land vertebrates (or
tetrapods) are descended from that particular group of sh, it follows
that if you compare a coelacanth, a human, and a tuna, the closest
relatives are the coelacanth and the human, not the two sh.
Lets return to the apes. The argument is that humans are apes,
because we belong to the group that produced chimpanzees and
orangutans; and because we are more closely related to some apes
than those apes are to other apes, we fall within that category. That
argument is structurally identical to the argument that humans are
sh, because we belong to the group that produced coelacanths and
tuna, and because we are more closely related to some sh (coelacanths) than those sh are to other sh (tuna). We fall (by virtue of
being tetrapods) within that category as well.
In other words, we are apes, but only in precisely the same way
that we are sh (g. 5).
Doesnt seem quite so profound now, does it?
Thats because this is not so much a revelation about our basic
natures as about how we name zoological groups. As constituted by
a group of related species that a subset has evolved away from, the
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Orangutan
Human
Chimpanzee
Tuna
Tetrapods
(including humans)
Coelacanth
species that remain unchanged will constitute a paraphyletic category. They may look similar, but they are dened on the basis of
lacking the specializations of the other grouptetrapods in the case
of paraphyletic sh, birds in the case of paraphyletic reptiles, and
humans in the case of paraphyletic great apes.
What appeared at rst to be a revelation about our animal nature
is instead a revelation about how we box up nature to make sense of
it. Making sense of the world through classication is a fundamentally
human act, and each human group does it in its own way, and thus
imposes structure upon the world for itself.
Modern science classies animals by two criteria, descent and divergence. This creates confusions such as the occasional paraphyletic
category, in which divergence takes precedence over proximity of descent. Some biologists prefer to classify by descent only and would
thus recognize only closest relatives, burying the categories great
apes, reptiles, and sh. Ultimately, this is a philosophical decision, is unresolvable by recourse to data, and displays the variation
of ideas about classifying among scientists. They are a human society,
and like other human societies, they make sense of their world by
organizing it into groups.
The ancient Hebrews classied for a different reason and used different criteria. Their goal was to distinguish symbolically clean from
unclean, and their criteria were where the animal lived, and how it
moved. For this reason, shellsh and pigs were prohibited but chick46
One of the most widely studied classication systems crossculturally is that of kin. We give the same name, aunt, to four very
different relatives, for example: our mothers sister, our fathers sister,
our fathers brothers wife, and our mothers brothers wife. The latter
the ape in you
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two are not even genetic relatives, and of those, at least the rst shares
our family name. There is no necessary reason to call them all aunt.
The fact that we call such different people the same thing is not
rooted in nature or genetics, but rather in an attempt by our ancestors
to make sense of the complex social relations they had to deal with,
by giving names to classes of people. As a result of the conventions
of categorization and language, we draw a distinction, for example,
between uncles and aunts, but in English we do not draw the
same distinction (by sex) for cousins. In fact, we dont even have a
word by which to designate our cousins spouse.
cl a s s i f i ca ti on a s a cultural act
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49
50
Three
how people differ from one another
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ra ce a s a s ci e n t i f i c organizing p ri ncip le
The ancients knew a rather limited world, but they were certainly
impressed by the ways in which people from different places looked
different from one another. Writing in the fth century b.c., for
example, Herodotus noted that the people of Colchis and Egypt had
dark skin and wooly hair, and that the people of Ethiopia were said
to be the tallest and handsomest in the world. To Herodotus each
land had its own characteristic peoples. But there was no hint of the
existence of any small fundamental number of natural human kinds.
The ensuing centuries saw little change in this unsystematic conception of human differences. Science itself perceived little unity in
the natural world until the seventeenth century, beginning with Galileo and ending with Newton, identied the unifying physical principles governing matter and motion.
This engendered a profound change in the approaches of scholars
to the natural world. Where once they had seen only individual phenomena and interpreted them as evidence of Gods bounty, they now
began to see general principles at work and interpreted them as evidence of Gods parsimony. Chaos would be replaced by order, disarray
by system. To understand the system was to know Gods plan.
Thus it was that a French physician and traveler named Francois
Bernier contributed something novel and original to the study of
human differencesthe idea that humans could be grouped systematically into a relatively small number of classes. Proclaimed Bernier,
there are four or ve species or races of men in particular whose
difference is so remarkable that it may be properly made use of as the
foundation for a new division of the earth.
Berniers rst group encompassed Europe, North Africa, the Near
East, and India. His second was sub-Saharan Africa, characterized by
people with thick lips and at noses, dark skin, scanty beards, and
noteworthy aspects of their hair (which is not properly hair, but
rather a species of wool, which comes near the hairs of some of our
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dogs) and mouth (teeth whiter than the nest ivory . . . their
tongue and all the interior of their mouth and their lips as red as
coral). The third encompassed the Asians, who were truly white;
but they have broad shoulders, a small [at] nose, little pigs-eyes long
and deep-set, and a scanty beard as well. His fourth comprised the
Lapps of Norway, little stunted creatures with thick legs, large shoulders, short neck, and a face elongated immensely . . . , they are
wretched animals, and somewhat bearlike as well. As to the native
Americans, Bernier did not nd the difference sufciently great to
make of them a peculiar species different from ours. And nally,
the blacks of the Cape of Good Hope seem to be of a different
species to those from the rest of Africa. They are small, thin, dry,
ugly, quick in running, passionately fond of carrion which they eat
quite raw, and whose entrails they twine round their arms and neck
. . . ; drinking sea-water . . . , and speaking a language altogether
strange, and almost inimitable by Europeans.
Where formerly there had been diversity of form, Bernier now
found unity. No longer was local variation signicant, rather, there
were just a few basic formsspecies, or races.
Of course, the terms then did not have the same formal denitions
as they do now. Thus, when Bernier calls the Khoisan a different
species, he is not working with the biological denition we now
employ. He means merely a population that looks different (really
different).
Perhaps these differences reected different originsseparate creations, as a later school, known as polygenists, would come to argue.
Not surprisingly, this academic position reached its zenith during the
American Civil War. Or perhaps the races represented the different
offspring of the biblical patriarch Noah. The Bible sort of suggests
this in Genesis 10, giving a list of descendants of Noahs sons, which
are also the names of cities and peoples.
And by the rst century a.d., that had indeed become a widespread
interpretation. Noahs son Ham was the father of the Africans, Shem
was the father of the Asians, and Japheth the father of the Europeans.
The gloss was put on the story in an inuential popular work, Antiquities of the Jews, by Flavius Josephusa renegade from the Judean
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army crushed by Rome in the year a.d. 71. Josephus was concerned
to explain away the Jewish War, in which Gods chosen people were
soundly thrashed, and to recount the ancient history and customs of
his people to their conquerors. Thus, he summarizes the Jewish Bible,
including not simply the literal stories but the general extracanonical
understandings of them as well.
In this account, after Noahs death, God tells his three sons to
send colonies abroad, for the thorough peopling of the earth. But
they disobey and hang together, under the suspicion that they were
therefore ordered to send out separate colonies, that, being divided
asunder, they might the more easily be oppressed. Two generations
later, Hams grandson Nimrod builds the Tower of Babel, which God
not only destroys, but also curses the builders by giving them different
languages. Now, says Josephus, they were dispersed abroad, on account of their languages, and went out by colonies everywhere; and
each colony took possession of that land which they light upon, and
unto which God led them; so that the whole continent was lled
with them, both the inland and the maritime countries.
The geographical details in Josephus are sometimes a bit obscure,
but it is not difcult to see how easy it was to equate Europeans with
Japheth, Asians with Shem, and Africans with Ham. Of course, Josephus and other ancient writers were not familiar with southern
Africa or east Asia, not to mention America or Australia.
But by the seventeenth century, European scholars were not only
aware of the diverse peoples of the most remote regions of the world,
they appreciated that humans everywhere could hybridize freely. (Sailors had proved that, not scientists.) Given, then, that we all constituted a single biological entity, what were that entitys basic components?
Europeans freely speculated on the divisions; thus a tract from 1721
nds
ve sorts of men: the white men, which are Europeans that have
beards; and a sort of white men in America (as I am told) that
only differ from us in having no beards; the third sort are the
Malatoes, which have their skins almost of a copper colour,
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small eyes, and straight black hair; the fourth kind are the Blacks,
which have straight black hair; and the fth are the Blacks of
Guiney, whose hair is curled, like the wool of a sheep. . . .
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56
European
Asian
African
Color
Temperament
red
irascible,
impassive
white
vigorous,
muscular
black
sluggish, lazy
Face
thick,
straight,
black hair;
broad nose;
harsh appearance;
chin
beardless
stubborn,
happy, free
long
blond
hair, blue
eyes
yellow
melancholy,
stern
black hair,
dark eyes
Personality
Covered by
Ruled by
ne red
lines
custom
sensitive,
very
smart,
creative
tight
clothing
law
black kinky
hair, silky
skin, short
nose, thick
lips, females
with genital
ap, elongated breasts
sly, slow,
strict,
contemptu- careless
ous,
greedy
loose gargrease
ments
opinion
caprice
or more of the four humors. Each humor was in turn associated with
specic body organs: the gall bladder, heart, spleen, and pituitary.
And of course, with the continentsAmerica, Europe, Asia, and
Africa. What Linnaeus thus seems to have done here is to have encoded the peoples of the earth as the parts of a macrocosm of a
contemporary human body, each subspecies from each continent governed by one of the four humors and organs.
This simply shows that Linnaeus was interpreting human diversity
as well as he could scientically with the conceptual apparatus of his
training in the culture of eighteenth-century Europe. His subspecies
are idealizationsdenining Europeans zoologically as having long
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his Primates and Ferae (or what we would now call Carnivora) do
into Mammalia, and Mammalia and Aves do into the kingdom Animalia. What this represents is of course the patterns of evolutionary
descent, with lower-level categories sharing more recent ancestry with
one anotherat least to a rst approximation.
Linnaeus did not know the explanation for the pattern. All he knew
was that the pattern was there, and it became obvious to the rest of
the scientic community overnight, so that Linnaeuss classication
became the way to do biology. He supervised 186 doctoral theses, an
output so prodigious as to be difcult to believe nowadays (to put
this into context, Sherwood Washburn, arguably the leading American biological anthropologist of the latter half of the twentieth century, told me he supervised about 40 doctoral theses in the course of
a full and distinguished career at Columbia, Chicago, and Berkeley).
Linnaean biology, briey put, became biology. To study nature was
to study it his way, to classify it; to identify or infer the genera within
each family (the family as a classicatory level was introduced by his
successors), the species within each genus, and (at least in the case of
humans), the subspecies within each species.
A contrary view, however, was offered by the comte de Buffon, an
erudite French philosophe, in his widely read Natural History, General
and Specic, also published during the middle of the eighteenth century. Buffon famously rejected the entire Linnaean classicatory system, for an historically curious reason. According to Buffon, these
nested categories directly implied a common ancestry for the species
contained within them, and he knew that could not be true! As he
wrote with extraordinary insight, The naturalists who establish the
families of plants and animals so casually do not seem to have grasped
sufciently the full scope of these consequences, which would reduce
the immediate products of creation to as small a number of individuals as one might wish.
He was absolutely right; they did not fully grasp the consequences
of what they were doing, not until Darwin explained it a century
later. Buffon in any case deantly rejected Linnaeuss classicatory
system, and his work was inuential with the public (although less
so with the academics; Linnaeus was, after all, right).
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In his survey of the varieties of the human species, Buffon consequently takes a very different approach from that of Linnaeus, not
carving the species into subspecies, but simply surveying the diversity
of form and behavior out there. His descriptions are often quaint
and ethnocentric, but they are quite different in structure from those
of Linneaus. Most importantly, however, Buffon recognized a pattern
of variation in the human species quite different from that promoted
by Linnaeus: namely, continuity, the absence of discrete boundaries
between any distinct formal categories of humans. On close examination of the peoples who compose the black races, says Buffon,
we will nd as many varieties as in the white races, and we will nd
all the shades from brown to black, as we have found in the white
races all the shades from brown to white.
The two naturalists hated each other. Although both were ennobled
late in life, Linnaeus had come from far humbler origins and had
known poverty. He was an academic and wrote in scholarly Latin;
Buffon was a wealthy landowner who wrote for the educated masses
in eminently readable French. Linnaeus found Buffons writing uffy
and disorganized; Buffon found Linnaeus philosophically unsophisticated and sterilewhat good was classifying without comprehending? The misunderstanding between these two able Naturalists is
most injurious to science, their English contemporary Thomas Pennant complained. The French Philosopher scarce mentions the
Suede, but to treat him with contempt; Linnaeus in return, never
deigns even to quote M. de Buffon, notwithstanding he must know
what ample lights he might have drawn from him. Linnaeus eventually acknowledged Buffon by naming a foul-smelling plant after
him.
A curiously relevant paradox arises in the general conict between
these two savants of the Enlightenment era. Linnaeus formalizes the
divisions among humans, but does not call them racesthey are,
for him, varieties or subspecies. Buffon, on the other hand, denies
the value of classication, denies there exist formal subspecies of humans, yet talks at length about racesin a very loose and colloquial
manner, akin to stocks. The next generation of scholars would take
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Physical anthropology became the scientic study of racial differencesassuming, of course, that there were indeed races, and that
they were formally different. To deny this was, however, to undermine
the raison detre of the eld, especially as it developed in American
academia in the early twentieth century under the inuence of the
organizational skills of a Bohemian physician-cum-anthropologist
named Ales Hrdlicka, and the pedagogical skills of a classicist-cumanthropologist from Wisconsin named Earnest Hooton. In laying
claim to the scientic study of race as their turf, Hrdlicka (at the
Smithsonian) and Hooton (at Harvard) became the authorities on
what was and wasnt really a race.
The two men could hardly have been more different. Hrdlicka, a
haughty Central European immigrant, had had a classical medical
training and studied with the French physical anthropologist Leonce
Manouvrier before settling at the Smithsonian and becoming the
expert on the origins of Native Americans. The good-natured Hooton, who came from old Anglo-Saxon stock, breezed into physical
anthropology while on a Rhodes Scholarship at Oxford. Appointed
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tions embody principles which genetic science has proven to be correct. Politicians believe that their prejudices have the sanction of genetic laws and the ndings of physical anthropology to sustain them.
Enter genetics.
The earliest genetic analysis of the human species was based on the
ABO blood group, discovered just after 1900 and surveyed during
World War I. Somehow it managed to divide the peoples of the world
into European, Intermediate, and Asio-African; or, essentially,
white and other. The curious fact is that if you look at any contemporary textbook today, you will discover that the ABO blood
group is now invoked as a demonstration of precisely the opposite
pointthat there are no discrete divisions of our species possible on
this basis.
How could the same genetic data have yielded a division of the human species into distinct genetic races at one point in time and demonstrate that there are no such distinct races at another point in time?
Obviously, the answer lies with what the geneticists expected to nd
at different times. When they expected to nd discrete divisions, their
data yielded them; and when they expected not to nd discrete divisions, their data did not yield them.
Race, it seems, is underdetermined by genetic data.
A more sophisticated analysis of the ABO blood group in 1926 divided the world into seven blood-group racial types on the basis of
their proportions of each of the ABO variants: European, Intermediate, Hunan, Indo-Manchurian, Africo-Malaysian, Pacic-American,
and Australian. The problem was that the classication was exceedingly unnatural. Since the Poles and the Chinese had the same frequencies of the blood-group genes, they were classied together as belonging to the Hunan type; but if there were anything at all to the
concept of race, the people of Poland and the people of China more
or less had to be in different ones. Likewise, the diverse peoples of
Senegal, Vietnam, and New Guinea ended up together as AfricoMalaysian.
Earnest Hooton at Harvard was dismayed. On the one hand, this
was authoritative genetic work. On the other hand, it produced
meaningless clusters of people, basically scientic gibberish. Once
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ical categories such as Jew, Russian, and Pole were the constructions of human history and simply couldnt be distinguishable by the
properties of blood. He dismissed the Manoilov blood test in a single
sentence in his 1931 text Up from the Ape, and the test disappeared
from the anthropological literature.
It had a different fate in the genetics literature, however. Thomas
Hunt Morgan had a Russian visitor to his laboratory at Columbia
translate Manoilovs work and look into it. Charles Davenport, the
leading human geneticist in America, put some of his junior colleagues on the sex determination test, and they published preliminary results in major journals. Davenport also enlisted a biochemist
named K. George Falk to study the Manoilov blood test, and after
some encouraging preliminary results, Falk found to his surprise that
the blood test also worked on urine. He couldnt explain it, and they
abandoned the Manoilov blood test shortly thereafter.
To this day we dont know what the Manoilov blood test, which
mysteriously required no blood, was actually testing. But even as it
was disappearing from the anthropology literature, it was being uncritically cited in mainstream genetics textbooks. Said one major 1931
college textbook, According to Manoiloff, the oxidizing process in a
certain blood reaction occurs more quickly in Jewish blood than in
Russian blood; tests of race based on this difference proved correct in
91.7% of cases.
Technology, blood, and percentagesall sounding very much like
science is supposed to. And presented for the consumption of genetics
students without so much as a skeptical glance at the test itself. This
only goes to show, however, how easy it is to nd what youre looking
for. Where the researchers expected to nd essentialized differences
marked in the blood of different peoples, they easily found them.
All of which returns us to the question of whats really out there
when we examine the human species biologically.
And the answer was known two centuries ago to Buffon and Blumenbach.
Whether we examine peoples bodies or sample their genes, the pattern that we encounter is very concordant. People are similar to those
geographically nearby and different from those far away. Dividing hu-
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man populations into a small number of discrete groups results in associations of populations and divisions between populations that are
arbitrary, not natural. Africa, for example, is home to tall, thin people
in Kenya (Nilotic), short people in central Africa (Pygmies), and
peoples in southern Africa who are sufciently different from our
physical stereotypes of Africans (i.e., West Africans) as to have caused
an earlier generation to speculate on whether they had some southeast
Asian ancestry. As far as we know, all are biologically different, all are
indigenously African, and establishing a single category (African/
black/Negroid) to encompass them all reects an arbitrary decision
about human diversity, one that is not at all dictated by nature.
Furthermore, grouping the peoples of Africa together as a single entity and dividing them from the peoples of Europe and the Near East
(European/white/Caucasoid) imposes an exceedingly unnatural distinction at the boundary between the two groups. In fact, the African peoples of Somalia are far more similar to the peoples of, say,
Saudi Arabia or Iranwhich are relatively closer to Somaliathan
they are to the Ghanaians on the western side of Africa. And the Iranis
and Saudis are themselves more similar to the Somalis than to Norwegians. Thus associating the Ghanaians and Somalis on the one
hand (as Negroids), and Saudis and Norwegians on the other (as
Caucasoids), generates an articial pattern that is contradicted by
empirical studies of human biology.
Immigrants to America have come mostly from ports where seafaring vessels in earlier centuries could pick them uphence our notion
of African is actually West African; and our notion of Asian is actually East Asian. When we realize that people originating from very different parts of the world are likely to look very different, and combine
that with the fact that most European immigrants came from northcentral Europe, it is not hard to see why we might perceive three types
of people. If there were a larger immigrant presence in America representing the rest of the worldwestern Asia, Oceania, eastern or
southern Africa, the Arcticwe would be more struck by our inability to classify them easily as representatives of three groups. Perhaps
the most obvious example would be South Asians from India and
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ch i m pa n z e e a s a raci al i nsult
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Figure 6. Drawing by the Swiss anatomist Adolph Schultz illustrating the relative
body proportions of a gorilla and a man. From A. H. Schultz, Die Korperproportionen der erwachsenen catarrhinen Primaten, mit spezieller Berucksichtigung
der Menschenaffen, Anthropologischer Anzeiger 10 (1933): 15485.
The illustration was widely reprinted, but there was one problem.
Schultzs human subject was an excellent representation of a corpse
he had dissected, which he identied as adult Negro. It was simply
a depiction of the human specimen he had most readily available,
but of course it fed into a number of archaic ideologies, within which
the highest ape would be contrasted with the lowest human. An
indignant article in the American Anthropologist in 1965 observed that
Schultzs drawings commonly compared blacks with apes, suggesting
(sometimes explicitly) that whites were less apelike, and called the
practice mischievous and incendiary. Thus, when reprinted by anthropologists, the illustration has often been altered to show the four
subjects merely in silhouette.
Consequently, it was a bit jarring to see the original gure not only
on the cover of a 1996 book but specically cropped to emphasize
the comparison between the gorilla and the black man.
The Origins of Human Violence, it said.
What could the publishers have been thinking?
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Four
the meaning of human variation
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which point the geneticist circled around to the front of his desk,
grabbed Washburns hand, and shook it vigorously.
Washburn and Dobzhansky organized a major convocation of geneticists and anthropologists in 1950 to discuss the integration of the
two elds. Of the eighteen anthropologists who spoke, eleven had
studied under Earnest Hooton at Harvard. Montagu was one of the
other seven. The meetings theme was the shift away from studying
nebulous abstract races and toward the analysis of real populations
and their adaptations and differences; and the goal was reiterated time
and again. Hooton himself was in attendance, and Washburn recalled
his old professor taking him aside during the conference and telling
him, Sherry, I hope I never hear the word population again!
The professional outputs of Washburn and Montagu suddenly
dovetailed in 1962, however. Postwar anthropology had not fully
come to grips with prewar anthropology, because Nazi racial anthropology was actually not that different from American racial anthropology. Hooton had consistently ridiculed the German anthropologists work, but many of the differences were actually subtle, and the
criticisms directed at the German scientists could hardly be evaded
by American scientists, including Hooton himself. Hooton, after all,
freely speculated that the technologically backward cultures of Africa
were what comes of inferior brains, and inferior brains were the natural products of inferior genes. Wasnt that pretty much what the
Germans thought too?
By the early 1960s, however, Nazi racial anthropology had been
appropriately demonized; American racial anthropology was nally
disintegrating; and the civil rights movement was crystallizing. But
the changes did not come without a struggle.
on th e ori g i n o f races
Carleton Stevens Coon was a New England Yankee and had been
one of Hootons rst students. A great bear of a man, he recounted
his exploits in the eld with bravado and could drink hard and cuss
with the most macho in any party. Coon taught at Harvard and Penn
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and was recognized for his research and publications by his election
as president of the American Association of Physical Anthropologists
in 1961. At the time, he was writing his magnum opus, tentatively
titled On the Origin of Races, to invoke Darwin.
The book was published the following year, having dropped the
rst word of the title. The Origin of Races was both engaging and
authoritative. It was also provocative, in a time and place struggling
to slough off the premodern science that had kept the nation divided
and much of it oppressed. Coon presented four major theses in the
book: (1) that the human species was divisible into ve races, or
subspeciesCaucasoids, Negroids, Mongoloids, Australoids, and
Capoids (southern Africans, from the Cape of Good Hope); (2) that
these ve races were recognizable in the Pleistocene fossil record and
had evolved largely independently of one another for the past halfmillion years; (3) that they had evolved into Homo sapiens in a specic
sequencenamely, Caucasoids, then Mongoloids, then Negroids,
and last, Capoids and Australoids; and (4) that the length of time a
subspecies has been in the sapiens state was the cause of the levels
of civilization attained by some of its populations.
In other words, Coon sought to explain civilization as a product of
nature, not as a product of human agency. And, more important, he
sought to explain political and economic dominance in the same way.
This of course revisited the most odious of archaic racist ideologies,
implying that slavery and oppression were good and necessary, because the enslaved and oppressed were constitutionally inferior to the
enslavers and oppressors.
By 1962, however, pretty much all anthropologists recognized that
levels of civilization were the results of social history, not of biological endowments. Anybody could have built the pyramids, but the
Egyptians did. And so did the Mayans. And so did other peoples.
But how could you hold the history of all the peoples who did not
build the pyramids against them? Peoples have their own histories,
and its nobodys fault that Indonesia didnt ght in the Punic Wars,
or that Eskimos didnt invent refrigerators. You cant really hold the
fact that they didnt have someone elses history against them. Coons
division of the human species was coupled with a scientic scenario
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for the biological origin of the species, which in turn formed the basis
of a theory that purported to explain the social, political, and economic subjugation of the dark-skinned indigenous peoples of the
earth by recourse to their biological natures.
And the message was not lost on political activists of the era, in
particular the opponents of civil rights and supporters of segregation.
As one segregationist propagandist, a sometime airline president and
historian named Carleton Putnam, would argue, based on the work
of his cousin, Professor Coon: How can you put black and white
children together, when the latest scientic research shows that blacks
are 200,000 years of evolution behind whites?
Coons book was reviewed everywhere, from the New York Times
to the Harvard Crimson (by an undergraduate pre-med anthropology
major and aspiring novelist who signed his review J. Michael Crichton). It was discussed on television and radio, in editorials and in
barber shops. It was physical anthropology, the science of human
classication, made relevant to the social issues of the day.
Ashley Montagu and Sherwood Washburn thus ended up on the
same side, working to purge anthropology once and for all of the
classicatory fallacy that had blinded it since the time of Linnaeus.
Montagu attacked the book in professional and public forums; Washburn used his bully pulpit as president of the American Anthropological Association to denounce the old, essentialized studies of human variation represented by The Origin of Races. And although
Washburn made only a single oblique reference to Coons book,
everyone knew what he was talking about (indeed, as a graduate
student at Harvard in the 1930s, he had once been assigned as a
teaching assistant to Coons course). Coon died in 1979, an embittered and largely forgotten gure, done in, he supposed, by the forces
of political correctness, and more darkly (he allowed in personal correspondence) by a conspiracy of communists and Jews as well.
In fact, Carleton Coon was a tragic anachronism, a throwback to
an era and literature whose claims to science and scholarship had long
been exposed as pretenses. There is always a purpose for comparing
peoplesif you nd their feet to be bigger, it explains why they run
faster or slower, depending upon whether you are intrigued by how
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fast or slow they run. If their heads differ, that explains why they are
smarter or dumber; if their eyes differ, that is why they see more or
less distinctly.
Can we contrast different populations of the world? Of course. But
thats not the important question. The important question is the one
that lurks underneath: Why do we want to contrast different populations? Science begins with the framing of an issue, a reason to collect
and examine data. Without that frame, without a reason to collect
data, data are meaningless and the endeavor begins and ends as futile
pseudoscience.
Populations differ in many ways. In fact, if you compare two groups
of people, any two groups of peoplepainters versus chemists, Yale
freshmen versus UCLA freshmen, the New York Yankees and the
Boston Red Soxyou are very likely to nd some differences between them. What makes this endeavor scholarly or scienticwhat
transforms it from information into knowledgeis the interpretation
you give to the results, how you impart meaning to the data. And
this is determined by the question you have in mind when you actually do the comparison.
Consider a classic comparison, brain size, across the classic three
racesblack, yellow, and whiteas was carried out in the mid nineteenth century by a premodern physical anthropologist, Samuel
George Morton. Assuming there are such discrete groups, and that
one can make do with samples from anywhere as representative of
those groups, Morton amassed an unparalleled collection of skulls
from around the world, stuffed them with mustard seed or lead shot,
and measured how much each skull could hold. On average, his ftytwo Caucasian skulls held 87 cubic inches of stufng, or about 1426
cubic centimeters; his ten Mongolian skulls, 83 cubic inches, or
1360 cc; and his twenty-nine Ethiopian skulls, 78 cubic inches, or
1278 cc.
What hypothesis guided Morton? Why did he bother to do this?
To see whetherto show thathis intuitive ranking of the intelligence of the races could be also read from their physical properties.
And indeed it couldwhites were bigger-headed (and smarter); and
blacks smaller-headed (and dumber). But what twenty-nine skulls
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Groves, an anthropologist at the Australian National University. Recognizing that human biological variation is local, not continental,
Groves looked at skulls that wayand he found exceedingly large
brains among some aboriginal populations of Hawaii, Mongolia,
France, South Africa, and Tierra del Fuego; middling brains among
some aboriginal inhabitants of Korea, Norway, Hawaii, and East Africa; and small brains among some populations of Sicily, Peru, India,
and West Africa. Indeed, skulls do vary, and they do so like everything
elselocally. The causes of such variation are complex, but there
seems no obvious justication for grouping them into a racial average. If this tells us anything at all about the relative brains of the
races, it must be information of an exceedingly occult nature, except
perhaps to someone with an invidious motive.
And that is the problem with comparative racial studies. It is easy
to get misinformation, or poor interpretation of data, into the record,
and hard to get it back out again. Racial comparisons are invariably
shot through with culturally loaded assumptions, and once populations become the level of analysis, the racial generalizations quickly
break down.
Consider another classic issue of racial comparisons: are blacks better athletes than whites? We will explore other aspects of this loaded
question later, but here is one way in which it has been approached
scientically. A group of Scandinavian marathon runners was compared to a group of Kenyan marathon runners and surveyed for enzyme concentrations and other biochemical minutiae.
Differences were found.
Of course differences were found. But are they racial differences?
Are they populational differences? Are the differences due to the divergent life histories of the Kenyans and the Swedes? And do these
differences have anything at all to do with black-white differences in
American athletics, given that American whites generally do not have
ancestry from Scandinavia and American blacks generally do not have
ancestry from East Africa? To give racial signicance to the result
involves rooting it in the symbolic representation of Swedish runners
as whites and Kenyan runners as blacks. It has little to do with
the empirical nature of the results.
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represented in the gene pool. This is true for Rh, for ABO, and for
nearly all human genes.
And that was Lewontins discovery. The overwhelming bulk of detectable genetic variation in the human species is between individuals
in the same population. About 85% of it, in fact. Another 9% of the
detectable variation is between populations assigned to the same
race; while interracial differences constitute only about 6% of the
genetic variation in the human species.
The implication of the new genetic analysis is that so-called racial
variation is a tiny issue to someone interested in the study of general
human variation. Its components, its patterns, are almost negligible
racially. Race is thus a very small, and therefore trivial, corner of the
picture. The argument could of course be made that the 6% of genetic
variation that is racial is necessarily the most important 6%. But that
would be idle speculation or simple prejudice. Racial variation has
now been shown to be scientically, mathematically trivial.
It does need to be recalled here that population geneticists are nevertheless still practicing the old bait-and-switch, analyzing data on
variation in blood-group genes and enzymes and not analyzing data
on variation in genes for skin color, hair form, or nose shape. The
fact is that we do not have any data on those genes, nor any information on where they are, how many there are, what they actually
do physiologically, or how they differ. The assumption is that the
genes we can study follow the same pattern as the genes we are interested in.
And there is every reason to think they do. All populations have
people who are taller and shorter, fatter and thinner, braver and more
timid, introverted and extroverted, more decisive and more dithering.
There is no continent of uniformly brunet people to contrast with
one of uniformly blond people, or of uniformly tall people to contrast
with one of uniformly short people. The traits that differentiate
Swedes and Kenyans at the racial level are actually a very small
proportion of the differences detectable, which are distributed primarily among members of the same population and between populations on the same continent.
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A study that captured the publics imagination was the Mitochondrial Eve report published at the beginning of 1987 by Rebecca
Cann, Mark Stoneking, and Allan Wilson at Berkeley. Mitochondria
are, as noted earlier, the powerhouses of the cell, containing their
own 16,500 bases of DNA, distinct from the 3.2 billion bases of the
chromosomes. Moreover, at fertilization, a human egg retains the
maternal cellular mitochondria, and sloughs off the sperms mitochondria. This DNA is thus inherited directly through the mothers
lineage and is not subject to the vagaries of Mendelian assortment
and recombination. A child is a mitochondrial clone of its mother
and unrelated to its father.
For Canns doctoral thesis, she undertook the rst direct survey of
nucleotide variation in the human species. She sampled a restricted
range of bases of the mitochondrial genome (approximately 10% of
it) across nearly 150 people, drawn from diverse populations. She then
took the resulting diversity and asked her computer to produce a tree
linking the various individuals together by virtue of the similarity of
their mitochondrial genomes (or mtDNAsometimes rendered as
empty DNA by skeptics). The tree was constructed from the 140odd individuals studied, not from any a priori groupings. When the
geographic origin of the samples was imposed on the result, it was
found that Africa (represented by African Americans, on the assumption that any admixture was from white males and therefore not
passed on in mitochondria) constituted the most genetically diverse
continent. The origin of variation in mitochondrial DNA diversity
was thus located in Africa, and since mtDNA is passed on only
through the mothers lineage, the mtDNA of interest would necessarily have belonged to a female. This African progenitrix was given
the biblically inspired name Mitochondrial Eve.
Most aspects of the study and of the evolutionary model that accompanied it have been effectively criticized in the past decade, but
the basic ndings seem solid: that racial clusters are not inherent in
genetic comparisons of humans but must be imposed by the investigator; that Africans are more genetically diverse than Europeans and
Asians, and that they indeed subsume the genetic diversity found in
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the rest of the world. Why should this be the case? Presumably because modern humans evolved in Africa and some only subsequently
emigrated to the rest of the world.
This carries a number of implications for the study of the human
gene pool. It means, most signicantly, that Africans must be considered paraphyletic; that Africans are an ancestral diverse group and some
Africans are more closely related to some Europeans and Asians than
to other Africans. Africans, Europeans, and Asians therefore do not
constitute comparable groups, even though they may make their
homes on different continents. Rather, although Europeans and Asians
have, of course, evolved some of their own specializations over the millennia, they are genetically subsumed by the gene pool of Africans.
Comparing Europeans, Asians, and Africans is thus something like
comparing dogs, cows, and mammals. Such a comparison is meaningless, because the third category incorporates the rst two.
Comparable data were slow to arrive for the DNA of the nucleus,
because it evolves more slowly (and thus there arent many differences
among people to tabulate), and because nuclear DNA comes in two
different copies per person, as opposed to the uniformity of the
mtDNA sequence in a single individual. A few years later, however,
in 1996, another young female graduate researcher, Sarah Tishkoff,
devised a clever DNA comparison of her own at Yale.
Tishkoff (now at the University of Maryland) took advantage of
the major difference between mitochondrial and nuclear DNA, which
is usually perceived as a liability in studying nuclear DNAnamely,
that different variants of the same gene occasionally trade positions
with one another. In other words, if one chromosome 8 in your cells
has genes A and B, and the other chromosome 8 has genes a and b,
most of your reproductive cells will have AB and ab, as you do, but
a small percentage will have gene A and gene b together, and reciprocally the other chromosome will have aB. This is known as recombination, and it permitsindeed, mandateslinked combinations
of genes to be broken up and brought into new combinations.
At the level of populations, and over the span of evolutionary time,
all genetic variants ultimately recombine and thus can be found in
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all possible combinations. But this requires enough time for these
recombination events to occur. Recombinations are individually rare,
but summed over all reproductive cells for all people over many generations, they always happen. Thus, particular genetic variations that
are always found together simply havent had enough time to come
apart.
So Tishkoff chose to look at the linkage relationships of two genes
over the worlds populations. The rst gene came in two forms; well
call them A1 and A2. The second came in twelve different forms, B1
through B12. She found the fullest array of diversity in her ten subSaharan populations; A1 was found coupled with B1 through 12 in
someone or another, and A2 was found coupled with all the Bs except
B1 and B7, in varying frequencies. By contrast, in her European sample of seven populations, she found A1 joined to B2 and B7 frequently,
and to B3, B4, B6, B8, and B9 rarely; and A2 joined to B3 frequently,
and rarely to B2, B4, and B7. The rest of the combinations didnt
exist at all in Europeans.
Tishkoff s interpretation was properly the simplest. The populations of sub-Saharan Africa were the oldest; eons of recombination
had yielded many different combinations of these genes. But a small
group of emigrants out of Africa had carried a restricted set of these
genetic combinations. And they had not had sufcient time to regenerate the full scope of variation by recombination.
As if that were not enough, the three populations she examined
from the northern and eastern parts of Africa had patterns and levels
of diversity intermediate between the high sub-Saharan African and
low EurAsian levels. Thus the nuclear DNA survey parallels the ndings of mitochondrial DNA.
Another signicant conclusion of the genetic research study bears
noting as well. How genetically different are two random humans
from each other? Being good primates, we tend to put a lot of signicance on obvious, visible features of the face. But that, as Lewontins study suggests, might not reect much of the underlying genome; we could be facially different as a result of very few genetic
differences and genetically nearly identical otherwise.
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g e n e t i c v a ri a t i on i n ap es and p eop le
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Cultural variations are very stable (they persist for longer than individual lifespans) and very structuring (the knowledge they impart
seems so obvious that it is difcult to imagine ever calling it into
question). Yet this was precisely the contribution of anthropology in
the twentieth centuryto show that the way we often think the
world is may not be the way the world comes to us naturally at all.
It may be an artifact of the cultural glasses we wear. The fact that
populations seem so different from one anotherin the way they
dress, speak, act, think, eat, move, and livetempts us to think that
those differences must have some sort of basis in their natures, their
core beings, their genomes.
Which brings us to the next question.
If I study 1000 Ibos from Nigeria and 1000 Danes from Denmark, I
can observe any number of differences between the two groups. One
group, for example, is darkly complected; the other is lightly complected. This difference would probably be the same whether I selected my sample in the year 1900, 2000, or 2100, and is presumably
genetic in etiology.
On the other hand, one group speaks Ibo and the other speaks
Danish. That difference would also be there if I selected my sample
in 1900, 2000, or 2100, but is presumably not genetic. At least, generations of immigrants attest to the unlikelihood of a genetic component to it.
How, then, can we know from the observation of a difference
whether it is biologically based or not?
European explorers were well aware that the people who looked
the most different from them also acted the most differently. Linnaeus
invoked broad suites of personality (impassive, lazy) and culture
traits (wears loose-tting clothes) in his diagnosis of four geographical subspecies of humans in 1758. The next generation of researchers
recognized that these traits were both overgeneralized (if not outright
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just plain stupid and theres nothing anyone can do about it) was
cognitive ability. Eluding a scientically rigorous denition, the
phrase is left to be explained by a commonsense or folk denition
cognitive ability presumably means the mental development possible for a person under optimal circumstances. But it would take an
extraordinarily nave or evil scientist to suggest seriously that such
circumstances are in fact broadly optimized across social groups in
our society. Consequently, not only can we not establish that abilities
are different, we have no reliable way even to measure such an innate
property in the rst place. What we have is performanceon tests
or just in lifewhich is measurable, but which is the result of many
things, only one of which is unmeasurable innate ability.
On the one hand, it is not at all unreasonable to suggest that different people have different individual giftswe all possess unique
genetic constellations, after all. On the other hand, those gifts are
not amenable to scientic study, for they are only detectable by virtue
of having been developed or cultivated. Thus no scientic statements
can be responsibly made about such genetic gifts in the absence of
the life history of the person to whom they belong.
In other words, ability is a concept that is generally easy to see only
in the past tense. I know I had the ability to be a college professor,
because I am one; but how can I know in any scientically valid sense
whether I could have been a major-league third baseman? I cant, so
it is simply vain for me to speculate on it. A life is lived but once,
and what it could have beenwhile fascinating to contemplateis
not a scientic issue.
There is also an important asymmetry about the concept of ability.
A good performance indicates a good ability; but a poor performance
need not indicate poor ability. As noted above, many factors go into
a performance, only one of which is ability. Thus, when we encounter
the question of whether poor performanceeven over the long
termis an indication of the lack of cognitive ability, the only defensible position from the standpoint of biology is agnosticism. We
do not know whether humans or human groups differ in their potentials in any signicant way. More than that, we cannot know, and
that is a crucial distinction. There is no experiment you can devise
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that will distinguish what one normal child at birth could optimally
accomplish as opposed to another normal child. Once again, it may
sound like genetics, but it isnt genetics.
Science is not about what is known, but about what is knowable.
That is why atoms are within the domain of science and angels are
not. It is also why individual potentials, like angels, lie outside the
domain of scientic discourse and within the domain of folk knowledge.
Folk knowledge is not necessarily bad. It is simply different from
scientic knowledge. It is also not necessarily wrong. Folk knowledge
is the commonsense comprehension of things and processes that science often challenges. But science makes a crucial distinction between
the knowable and unknowable, while folk knowledge does not. It
doesnt need to. The realm of the unknowable is often much more
interesting than the realm of the knowable. How many angels, after
all, really could dance on the head of a pin? Will people of the future
have brains the size of Volvos? Could Muhammad Ali really have
beaten Rocky Marciano? If they had really, really, really tried, could
Beethoven have played for the Chicago Bulls and Michael Jordan
have written the Ninth?
Think about it. Over a drink, perhaps.
The important thing to bear in mind, though, is that its not science, and its denitely not genetics. Its a folk gloss on issues about
natures and innate constitutions and potentialsbut these are
all ideas that long predate the science of genetics. They have an independent history. They actually have nothing to do with the science
of genetics.
Furthermore, this raises a darker question: What are we to make
of scientists who assert the existence of real constitutional differences
in ability? If we cannot gauge differences in ability in any reliable
manner, if ability is not a scientic concept, it is a corruption of
science to assert in its name that one group indeed has less ability
than another. From the mouth or pen of a politician, the assertion
might reect ignorance or demagoguery; from that of a scientist, it
reects incompetence or irresponsibility. Scientists are subject to the
cultural values of their time, place, and class, and historically have
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found it difcult to disentangle those values from their pronouncements as scientists. We now recognize the need to dene the boundaries of science in order to distinguish the authoritative voice of scientists speaking as scientists from the voice of scientists speaking as
citizens. This distinction is vital to keeping science from being tarnished by those few scientists who have chosen to invoke it as a
validation of odious social and political doctrines.
Racial classications represent a form of folk heredity, wherein subjects are compelled to identify with one of a small number of designated human groups. Where parents are members of different designated groups, offspring are generally expected to choose one, in
deance of their biological relationships.
Differing patterns of migration, and the intermixture that accompanies increasing urbanization, are ultimately proving the biological
uselessness of racial classications. Identication with a group is probably a fundamental feature of human existence. Such groups, however, are genetically uid, and to the extent that they may sometimes
reect biological populations, they are dened locally. Races do not
reect large fundamental biological divisions of the human species,
for the species does not, and probably never has, come packaged that
way.
Merely calling racial issues racial may serve to load the discussion
with reied patterns of biological variation, and to focus on biology
rather than on the social inequities at the heart of the problem. Racism is most fundamentally the assessment of individual worth on
the basis of real or imputed group characteristics. Its evil lies in the
denial of peoples right to be judged as individuals rather than as
group members, and in the truncation of opportunities or rights on
that basis. But this is true of other ismssexism, anti-Semitism,
and prejudices against other groupsand points toward the most
important conclusion about human biology: racial problems are not
racial. If biologically diverse peoples had no biological differences,
but were marked simply on the basis of language, religion, or behavior, the same problems would still exist. How do we know this? Because they do exist, for other groups. The problems of race are social
problems, not biological ones; and the focus on race (i.e., seemingly
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n e a n d e rt a l m a n : a rca ne y e t relevant
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have interbred with us. We just dont know how reproductive incompatibilities evolvesometimes genetically similar animals cant interbreed, and sometimes genetically different ones can. Often, of course,
there is some degree of correspondence between anatomical difference, genetical difference, and reproductive capacitiesbut it cannot
be taken for granted.
Calling the Neandertals a subspecies of Homo sapiens is a judgment
call about their level of sameness and otherness. But it has a salubrious
side effect. If Neandertals are a subspecies of Homo sapiens, in contrast
to all modern humans, then the question of the subspecies of living
humans is rendered moot. The question that had guided physical
anthropology since LinnaeusWhat are the divisions of modern
people?now has no possible answer, for the simple reason that subspecies are as low as you can go in the formal taxonomic hierarchy.
For us to recognize all living people as one subspecies and juxtapose
them at the subspecies level against extinct forms means that we
cannot formally name subgroups of living humans, because there is
simply nothing left to call them.
Thats good. If theres one thing we dont need, its a free taxonomic
niche that would permit the social differences that envelop us to be
formalized biologically once again. We have enough difculty equalizing opportunities among blacks and whites; we dont need new ways
for ideologues to divide us and make it look as though it is science
that is actually doing it.
But in the paleoanthropology community, a debate has resurfaced
in the past decade that has deep ramications of an unscientic nature: Should we give Neandertals their own species?
This would, of course, be a judgment call highlighting the otherness of Neandertals. They were, after all, different. Maybe they
were different enough to be called a species. Among the evidence
adduced in support of this was the sequencing in 1997 of a short
stretch of Neandertal mitochondrial DNA, amounting to 379 bases,
which differed somewhat from those of modern humans; where modern humans were found to vary from one another by up to twentyfour differences, the Neandertal sequence averaged twenty-seven differences, depending upon which human sequence you compared it
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to. The authors then calculated that the DNA sequences of Neandertals and modern people began to diverge about 600,000 years ago,
which suggested to them a different species.
Or maybe not, given that theres no rule of equivalence between
divergence of DNA and specieshood. Still a judgment call. Its not
exactly a scientic datum, its a parascientic one, which borders on
science but is actually in the realm of the unknowable. Could an
extinct form of near-human have interbred with us? Not only dont
we know, but we cannot know. Things we cannot know are outside
the domain of science. Of course, those are often the most interesting
issues to speculate about.
Heres the problem. If we elevate the Neandertals to the species
level, we create a vacuum at the subspecies level, one that our folk
ideologies about races and racial differences will all too readily ll.
Is it worth it? Is the judgment call on the taxonomic status of
Neandertals, an esoteric problem at best, worth the price of creating
a scientic loophole for overstating and naturalizing the social divisions in our world?
It is not as if we have positive knowledge about the species status
of Neandertals and would therefore be compromising our scientic
integrity in striving to be politically correct. It is, rather, that there
are drastic social consequences to this parascientic judgment call
about the reproductive capabilities of fossils, which need to be
weighed carefully. The status of Neandertals is not an isolated paleontological problem, nor is it a soluble scientic problem; it is a
subjective assessment that reverberates into our formal recognition of
modern people as well. And it would easily seem to harmonize with
archaic, folk ideologies about the living members of our own species,
making it easy for narrowly trained scientists to bring back the Caucasoids and Negroids as if they had validity beyond the colloquial
usages.
If you think that this scenario is far-fetched, consider the pronouncements by a couple of geneticists in a major journal, Molecular
Biology and Evolution, in 1993: [H]uman populations can be subdivided into ve major groups: (A) negroid . . . , (B) caucasoid . . . ,
(C) mongoloid . . . , (D) Amerindian . . . , and (E) australoid. . . .
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many specimens are sequenced, but the way the dates were being
calibrated?
Yes, it could. A few weeks after the initial report, it was discovered
that mitochondrial DNA accumulates mutations up to twenty times
faster than had previously been thought. That means either that a lot
more change should accumulate in the same amount of time or that
the same amount of change should accumulate in a lot less time.
If the mutation rate used to calculate the divergence date was too
low, then the date of divergence obtained was too distantmore
changes were occurring in less time than the calculations allowed.
Just how far off the numbers were is unclear. But given the tabulated
amounts of difference in the 379 bases of Neandertal DNA, it now
appears that 600,000 years of divergence may well have been a considerably inated estimate. Along with the 120,000-year estimate for
the domestication of the dog. And as for the species status of Neandertals following from their DNA divergence, it is no greater than
the divergence of subspecies of chimpanzees from one another.
Anthropology may have got it right after all.
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Rich people tend to have rich children. Syphilitics tend to have syphilitic children. How do we make genetic sense of this?
There is an easy answer. Do classical genetic experiments. Isolate
the individuals with the properties of interest. Mate them carefully
to specic partners. Make sure they have plenty of offspring. Study
the offspring carefully, mate them to specic partners, and study the
distribution of the traits of their children. Under the appropriately
controlled conditions, you will be able to distinguish which traits are
genetic and even how many genes are involved.
It worked with fruit ies.
Of course, fruit ies have a decided advantage over humans as
genetic subjects. In the rst place, you can mate them to each other
with godlike impunity. They dont seem to care much. And if they
did care, it wouldnt matter. Its your experiment. They dont whine,
and they have no rights.
In the second place, they breed like, well, ies. Having lots of
offspring is a very favorable trait for a genetic subject to have, since
genetic inferences are principally statistical. Mendel, after all, began
by counting up the hundreds of pea plants with the features he was
interested in. If his plants had had only three offspring apiece, he
wouldnt have gotten very far.
In the third place, fruit y generations are only a couple of weeks
long. You can study many generations during the term of a single
research grant.
And thats why fruit y genetics is so far ahead of human genetics.
One solution is to analogize directly from fruit y genetics to human genetics. After all, were both animals and share a basic biology.
But just how basic? A fruit y and a human male both have an XY
chromosome conguration; the females have XX. That would suggest
that sex determination is similar in both species. But it isnt, actually.
The similarity is supercial, for an XXY human is an abnormal male
(with a constellation of features comprising Kleinfelters Syndrome),
while an XXY fruit y is a less abnormal female. That suggests instead
that something very different is going on in the two species.
Studying behavior adds a further difculty, namely, identifying the
trait in question. Physical traits are there to be studied, measured,
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Unfortunately, that was not the lesson learned by the scientist. Nor
was it the lesson appreciated by several zealous students of sociobiology, which studies the biological roots of human behavior, whether
or not they exist.
of worm s a n d men
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senior author of the MAOA study, made his thoughts very explicit
in print: Although genetic studies cannot explain why impulsive aggression occurs, they may help to improve our understanding of how
impulsive behavior happens.
Fair enough.
Lesch-Nyhan syndrome and monoamine oxidase deciency produce abnormal violent behavior. Violent behavior in normal people
in ordinary or extraordinary contexts (sports, crime, discipline, politics, etc.) is untouched by the genetic knowledge about those conditions. But its the normal violent behavior that were interested
in when we hear about genes for behavior. Why, then, was his work
reported as an aggression gene? Why does it get trotted out, for
example by sociobiologist E. O. Wilson, in his recent book Consilience, as an example of the inuence of genes on behaviorwhen
even the geneticist who did the work doesnt interpret it that way?
What on earth is going on here?
Welcome to behavioral genetics, where the social and natural sciences square off and we learn that nature really does beat nurture. At
least, if you believe behavioral geneticists. But then, of course theyd
say that; theyre behavioral geneticists, after all. And their work, however tentative or irrelevant, can then be uncritically invoked by people
who hold concordant social and political beliefs about the innateness
of social problems because it appears to support them scientically.
Its thus in the interests of both groups to get you thinking that
behavior is genetic. Just as it is in the interests of a Buick salesman
to convince you that Buicks are the best cars on the road. And maybe
theyre right. But on the other hand, would they tell you if they
werent?
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One could search for the genes for left-handedness, and maybe
some exist. But they would not explain the meaning of lefthandedness, the signicance of the biological fact. More likely than
not, much left-handedness is developmental, not genetic at all, since
identical twins are commonly discordantin spite of its obvious innateness and the subtle differences in brain structure that accompany
left-handedness. Of course, handedness can be taught, and there are
degrees of it, in spite of the cultural dichotomy we impose.
Studying the genetics of left-handedness probably wouldnt tell
us much about its etiology, simply from what we already know;
it certainly wouldnt tell us anything about the signicance of the
phenomenon; nor would it tell us what to do about it, if anything.
Left-handedness is either something you accept culturally as aberrant, dangerous, and requiring corrective measures; or something
you live with. And after living with it for a while, you dont even
notice it.
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exceptionalvirtually all other primates are sexually active principally as a reproductive activity.
The human difference is the extent to which we have differentiated
sexuality from reproduction. When you consider the range of human
sexual experiencespostmenopausal, during menstruation, during
pregnancy, oral, masturbatory, et ceterait becomes clear that a surprisingly small proportion of human sexual activity is in fact the result
of the conjunction of a fertile mans penis and a fertile womans
vagina. In this light, homosexual activity seems hardly in need of
explanation. It may be viewed as simply another item in the long list
of nonreproductive human sexual experience. Presumably, it is inscribed in our genes to the extent that lots of nonreproductive sex
distinguishes us biologically from our close relatives.
It may be somewhat surprising to hear that it is only in the past
few centuries that homosexual began to be applied to people rather
than to sexual acts. In ancient Greece, as is well known, a relation of
apprenticeship often entailed sexual activity. In many cultures, homosexual acts take place willingly, and happily, between partners who
are not homosexuals, and who are expecting thereby neither to
reproduce nor to marry. They are relevant as examples of the multiple
meaning of sexual activity among humans, and as a demonstration
of the cultural construction of the homosexual.
Certainly human sexuality is far more complex than a division into
two wordshomo- and heterosexualwould suggest.
Of course, there is also a signicant cultural matrix into which the
genetic basis of human sexuality is cast. Germany in the 1930s strove
to deal with the problem of homosexuality by locating it to defects
in the constitutions of individuals and exterminating those with the
defect. This created strong pressure, in reaction, to consider homosexuality a learned behavior, for this understanding would render the
extermination program ineffectualone could kill homosexuals, but
homosexuality would continually arise. By the early 1960s, the conventional wisdom was that homosexuality was learned, which raised
the question of whether homosexuals should be allowed to teach, on
the presumption that they might be teaching buggery. This created
pressure to see the phenomenon the other waystraight parents
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cause, suggesting that the hypothalamic segment could be responsible for inspiring males to seek females.
A Newsweek cover story, Is This Child Gay? also featured LeVays
work and characterized him as a champion for the genetic side.
But wheres the genetics?
LeVay studied brains, and the key assumption promoted in the
public arena is that brain structure is a direct result of genetic instructions. But it isnt. The brain grows and develops interactively with
the experiences of the person; brains are not reliable surrogates for
studying genes.
Unfortunately, LeVay never followed up this study, and other brain
analyses have found his results to be very equivocal.
The most interesting aspect of the study is that, aside from the
technology, it is conceptually very unmodern. The logic is that the
brain is a surrogate for the genes, and that a consistent difference in
brain structure implies an innate basis for the thoughts associated
with the brain. Thats entirely wrong, virtually out of a different
century, and affords an excellent illustration of a simple rule of modern molecular anthropology: Genetic conclusions require genetic data.
The second line of evidence for the genetic basis of homosexuality
was a study of twins, showing a high concordance for sexual orientation between identical twins. Twin studies have a long and rather
sordid history as surrogates for genetic studies. The most notorious
were those of Sir Cyril Burt, who found identical twins raised apart
to be incredibly similar in IQ scoresso similar, in fact, that the
statistics describing their similarities didnt change even when his
sample of twins tripled. His power in the English psychology community was so great that nobody dared to challenge him, but upon
his death in the 1970s, it was found that he had invented collaborators, ghostwritten book reviews under their names, and generally
transgressed virtually every boundary separating the credible scientist
from the wacko mad scientist.
Twins are, of course, very powerful cultural gures, the subjects of
old mythologies and many hokey novels. In theory, they should be
good genetic guinea pigs for nature-nurture experiments, but they
arent in practice. For example, the homosexuality twin study found
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trait. But this study didnt. It found that brothers who were gay
tended to match at this genetic region.
But what is a match? Crucially, the scientists isolated no gene there,
and no physiological product affecting sexual orientation is known
to be made there. The claim made by Hamer and his colleagues is
simply that they found this region to be grossly more similar (83%
matching of small genetic marker regions) in a specic sample of gay
brothers than at random (50% matching). The result hinged not on
a mechanistic analysis but on the statistical difference between the
frequency of gay brothers with similar genetic markers in a specic
chromosomal region and the random expectation.
The cultural meaning they imparted to the result they reported was
that chromosomal region implied functioning gene, which in
turn implied control of trait.
Assuming, of course, that the association was real to begin with.
The tricky design of the study makes it very sensitive to a few families
matching or not, because the key scientic question is not Do we
have a gene for homosexuality? but a surrogate question: Is our 83%
result sufciently different from 50% to be meaningful? A followup study by a different group found no such difference at all. Another
follow-up by the original researchers found the difference now to be
67%, rather than 83%, quite a bit closer to the 50% expected at
random.
Nevertheless, best-sellers were written; careers and fortunes were
made. Born Gay? Time asked on July 26, 1993. And the gay
genewhich has never subsequently been foundentered the popular mind as a fact of science.
For me, however, the most interesting aspect of the study was the
scope of the actual claim. How much homosexuality did these researchers believe they had actually explained with their study? From
the publicity, you might expect the gure to be 90%. Or perhaps a
more conservative 70%perhaps they had explained over two-thirds
of the homosexuality in our species, which would certainly merit
headlines.
In fact, however, when I posed that very question at a conference
in 1996, the answer was very different. It came in two parts. First,
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the result, according to the researchers, was ostensibly only about male
homosexuality and had no relevance at all for female homosexuality;
and, second, they believed they had explained about 5% of male
homosexuality.
Five percent.
If we make a simplifying assumption that male and female homosexuality exist in the universe in equal proportions, then at best
assuming that homosexuality is a property of a person, not of an act,
and assuming all the statistical issues raised are invalid, and assuming
there is actually a gene therethey would have accounted for 2.5%
of homosexuality in our species.
The third rule of molecular anthropology: There is no science other
than behavioral genetics in which you can leave 97.5% of a phenomenon
unexplained and get headlines.
That is the most obvious indicator of the cultural power and meaning of this work, and why it needs to be considered very carefully
and regarded very skeptically. Virtually any claim, no matter how
ridiculously small, can grab headlines. The question is not, Do you
believe homosexuality is genetic? After all, the Constitution of the
United States guarantees you the right to believe anything you want.
The question is, What have we actually shown scientically about
it?
And the answer is, almost nothing.
The fact is, we already know a great deal about behavioral variation
in the human species. We know that virtually all the detectable behavioral variation between groups of people is the result of cultural
history. Why? Studies of immigrants, acculturation. The fact that
most of your ancestors three, four, or ve generations ago spoke different languages, ate different foods, had different aspirations, led
lives entirely different from yours today.
Odd as this may sound, Americans today are very behaviorally
homogeneous. In the kinds of foods we regard as edible, the sounds
and gestures we regard as meaningful, in terms of making some sense
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Do todays geneticists bear a burden of responsibility for their predecessors wrongness? If so, what is it?
I think the answer is yes, and here is what I think it is: the responsibility to understand what the errors were, to ensure that they dont
happen again. In science, after all, you dont have the right to make
the same mistakes over and overyou only have the right to make
new and creative mistakes.
On the one hand, of course, nobody is seriously talking nowadays
about breeding a better form of citizen. But, on the other hand, we
also know that crime and poverty are not biomedical problems.
Crimes are dened by social convention, and poverty is the result of
social, not biological, forces. The act of taking a human life may be
justied if it is done in time of war, or in self-defense, or to appease
the gods, or in some other context. It is the context, not the mere
action, that denes it as a crime. The crime is specically taking a
human life in the wrong context. Thus, genetics is an inappropriate
arena for contemporary efforts to deal with crime.
That is what brings us back to behavioral genetics.
When the National Institutes of Health decided to sponsor a symposium exploring the genetic basis of crime in 1993, it encountered
an extraordinary backlash. Some trivialized this backlash as political
correctness, suggesting that it was mindless anti-modern, antiscience emotionalism, but others appreciated that critics of the eugenics movementunfortunately largely unheeded until it was too
latehad met with a similar reaction. The fact is, whether crime has
a genetic basis is not a soluble genetic problem, but the idea that it
does have such a basis can easily give rise to extraordinary claims,
which may enter the public consciousness and even shape public
policy.
So we had better be damn sure about them.
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component to behavioras if they were the ones who had introduced social politics into science.
The problem was that the original scientists were insufciently attuned to the social/political consequences of what they were doing.
On the scientic side, the male attributes provided by the additional
Y chromosome appear to be limited to height and acne. The greater
likelihood of incarceration for aggressive behavior may, moreover, be
a simple consequence of something well known in genetics, that adding extra chromosomal material generally reduces intelligence and
survival. The Y chromosome, being very small and having few genes,
permits a higher survival rate and compromises intelligence less than
other extra chromosomes do. Thus, most XYYs tend to be ordinary
people, unaware of their genotype and with no reason to suspect that
it might be anything other than normal.
Much later, oddly enough, both Hooton and the XYY work were
cited favorably in an overtly political 1985 book advancing the genetic
basis of crime by Richard Herrnstein, a decade before his book The
Bell Curve.
The problem seems to be that saying crime is genetic is newsworthy,
when proving it is what ought to be newsworthy. In human behavioral
genetics we nd an extraordinary pattern in which claims for genetic
associations to behaviors are made, along with a self-serving plea for
more funding and studies to corroborate this preliminary result,
and then a less widely reported failure to corroborate it. The examples
are legion: alcoholism, depression, novelty-seeking, schizophrenia,
homosexuality. . . . When Dean Hamers group reported nding a
genetic link to homosexuality in 1993, the news made page 1 of the
New York Times; but when another group a few years later looked for
that same genetic link using the same methods, and failed to nd it,
they only made page 17.
The question for behavioral genetics is: What do we know now
that makes this modern science? What have we gained from Davenport, or Hootons study of criminals, or the XYY syndrome, that
makes us believe that there is a biological basis of crime, and that we
can study it scientically? What do we know that they didnt? Can
we show that we are not just committing the same intellectual mis-
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takes over and over againonly now aided by different and newerfangled technologies?
The tragedy is that usually we cant. Between the self-interested
pronouncements of behavioral genetics and the conservative social
and political interests who recognize that an innate basis for behavioral deviance complements their agendas, we really have little to
guide us in locating the ostensible scientic basis for understanding
human behavior.
One often hears the challenge to nd something wrong with the
studyto shoot it down. You have criticized it, youve raised questions, so the challenge goes, but you havent refuted it. The answer
is simple: I dont have to.
The burden of proof in science always falls on the claimant, not
on the critic. The challenge prove me wrong is the classic signature
of the quack and the charlatanthe one who wants you to believe
that Martians built the pyramids, or that they are communicating
with the dead, or that their body encases the reincarnated spirit of
the Queen of Atlantis. Scientic credence requires high standards of
evidence. Speculations are cheap, and youre entitled to believe whatever the hell you want, and even to make a buck off it, but if you lay
claim to the authority of science for your beliefs, you must expect to
be subjected to extraordinary demands.
And quit whining about it.
Sometimes we cant even identify the fallacy. Recall the Manoilov
blood test of the 1920s, which could distinguish the sex, race, and
sexual orientation of a person. You simply added a few chemicals,
shook the sample, waited, and watched. In itself, not that incredible,
although it was before the discovery of the human sex chromosomes
or any way to examine them reliably. Perhaps Manoilov had unknowingly developed a crude assay for hormone concentrations?
The interesting thing is that it engendered much interest and little
criticism in the scientic literature.
Hooton, the leading American student of race, would have welcomed such a test, but couldnt accept Manoilovs. It was not so much
that he knew Manoilovs results to be wrong; he knew them to be
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impossible. They were so weird from the standpoint of critical anthropological thought that right and wrong didnt even seem to
apply.
Manoilovs blood test seemed to make a lot of cultural sense, however. After all, blood is a powerful metaphor for heredity. We quite
commonly talk about traits being in the blood. But being a Russian
or a Jew (tellingly, Manoilov assumed that you couldnt be both!) was
a fact of social history, not a literal question of blood. Being a Latvian
or a Pole was political history, not natural history. As Hooton summarized it in his 1931 text Up from the Ape: The results of the Manoiloff test do not inspire condence. . . . It is inconceivable that all
nationalities, which are principally linguistic and political groups,
should be racially and physiologically distinct.
Hooton, it should be noted, never identied a technical, methodological aw in the blood test. To this day we dont know what
that curious test was actually testing. Most likely it was simply verifying the investigators expectations.
Another anthropological generalization about science: its very easy
to come up with results you already believe.
Manoilovs work was still being cited in genetics textbooks into the
1940s, however. And why not? It was technological, it was statistical,
it was quantitative, and it was methodologically explicit. But it was
nonsense.
Its a fools errand to try and identify a methodological problem
with every study making a claim about biological differences among
people. What we can do, however, is integrate scientic and humanistic knowledge about our species to identify the major cultural fallacies associated with these studies, and help point usby counterexamplein more fruitful scientic directions.
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to distinguish formally between heredity (as in biological transmission) and inheritance (as in social transmission).
A scientic theory of heredity, of course, nds it necessary to make
precisely that distinction, and to make certain that the transmission
of sickle-cell anemia is differentiated conceptually from the transmission of Aunt Minnies silverwarealthough both may run in the
family. Failure to do so might suggest to someone born with one of
Aunt Minnies silver spoons in their mouth that their advantages in
life were simply natural, a part of their biological endowment. Or
conversely, that someone born without such advantages in life deserves no more.
This was the core of the nineteenth-century philosophy called social Darwinism. By confusing the biological fact that people arent
identical with the social observation that people arent equal, social
Darwinism developed a conservative political philosophy that justied existing social hierarchies as natural facts. The wealthy and powerful were in their rightful place by virtue of the survival of the
ttest, a phrase Darwin had not coined but had ultimately come to
accept as synonymous with his own natural selection. The political
implication was that the existing social hierarchy was natural, and
consequently that any attempt to alter it would represent a subversion
of nature. The people on top were there for a reasonthey were
simply better, and deserved their position; the cream had risen to the
top. Thus, ideas like welfare, labor laws, and other social programs
geared toward promoting social mobility were bad and should be
abandoned, because ultimately they would only y in the face of the
way things had evolved to be.
The power of this view, both as a genetic-sounding theory and as
scientic justication for a political movement, is evident in the popularity of 1994s The Bell Curve, which made headlines, magazine
covers, and talk shows because of its thesis that (as evidenced by
pencil-and-paper tests) the lower classes were innately intellectually
inferior to the upper classes, and that consequently nothing can be
done about it. And therefore nothing should be done about it.
New factoids and new ethnic groups are plugged into the holes,
but the theory is over a century old. And its fallacy is as simple today
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ta x on om i sm
We saw earlier how the idea that there is a small number of basic
kinds of people, equivalent to subspecies, accounts poorly for the
patterns of biological variation we actually nd in our species and is
actually a construction of social history. Humans differ from one
another, but the difference is patterned locally, not continentally.
Nevertheless, it is human nature to construct difference and impose
meaning on it (that is largely what we mean by culture), and since
the eighteenth century it has become the dominant cultural view that
the peoples of Africa are categorically equivalent to one another, the
peoples of Asia are categorically equivalent to one another, the peoples
of Europe are categorically equivalent to one another, and each is
categorically distinct from the other two. This isnt false simply because of the interbreeding that has occurred between members of the
different races, or simply because of the large migrations that have
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taken place over the millennia. Its false because of the assignment of
meaning: it makes differences among Africans meaningless and differences between any African and any European meaningful. More
than that, it makes anyone with any known African ancestry meaningfully different from anyone with no known African ancestry.
And those are not biological patterns.
So we can call the anthropological fallacy of treating human biological variation as if it were actually partitioned into natural subspecies taxonomism. Taxonomism imposes qualitative distinctions between people where none exist in nature.
Geneticists have been particularly susceptible to taxonomism because the presumptive differences among groups being highlighted
are supposed to be genetic. Given (1) the knowledge that races must
be found in the human species and (2) the idea that they are supposed
to be genetically bounded entities, it is not surprising to nd that
geneticists have maintained some authority in race classication for
much of this century.
Perhaps the most illustrative example can be taken as the swan song
of this line of argument, a 1963 review article in the journal Science
by the distinguished biochemical geneticist William C. Boyd. Boyd
begins by telling the reader, Racial differentiation is the end result
of natural selection . . . in a population sufciently isolated genetically. But he crucially fails to distinguish here between populations
(which are local) and races (which are presumably larger). If a population is all that a race is, then there are many, many human races,
and the word loses its meaning. A race is supposed to be a megapopulation, of which there are few.
In fact, Boyd came to the conclusion that there were thirteen of
them. But an examination of his races shows them to be repositories
of cultural knowledge rather than objective tallyings of biological
patterns. For example, Boyd names ve races from Europe, but only
one from Africa. Thus, he formally differentiates the Basques of the
Pyrenees from Mediterraneans, and Northwest Europeans. But
the tall, thin Nilotics of East Africa, the pygmies of Central Africa,
and the small-jawed and at-faced Khoisan of southern Africa merit
no such distinction.
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races are black, white, and yellow, or Negroid, Caucasoid, and Mongoloid, or African, European, and Asian, depending upon your lexical
fancy.
Two papers published by distinguished geneticists in 1974 show the
taxonomic fallacy at is rawest. Stanford geneticist Luca Cavalli-Sforza
showed in the Scientic American that genetically Europeans and Africans were most closely related and had diverged from Asians about
35,00040,000 years ago. But using the same class of data and similar
taxonomical assumptions, but different statistical tests, Masatoshi
Nei of the University of Texas showed in the American Journal of
Human Genetics that genetically Caucasoids and Mongoloids were
most closely related and had diverged from Negroids about 115,000
120,000 years ago.
Obviously, the two sets of conclusions are incompatible. You dont
have to be Aristotle to see that. Both scholars were and are competent,
indeed brilliant, population geneticists. But actually, more likely than
not, both were wrong.
What they lacked was a grasp of the underlying anthropology. They
assumed that the familiar racial groupings had real, biological significance and used those groupings to structure their scientic questions.
As the saying goes, Garbage in, garbage out.
In fact, as noted earlier, the three categories are not even equivalent
to one another. Africans comprise a diverse paraphyletic group, subsuming the ancestral gene pools of Europeans and Asians. This makes
such a three-way comparison scientically meaningless.
But even more signicantly, Cavalli-Sforza and Nei were working
within a framework that assumed divergence as the principal microevolutionary process. In other words, they assumed that programming a computer to show a branching tree representing differences
among races would necessarily imply a literal branching divergence
of those races. But in fact the history of the world has been far more
complex, for the history of human populations is reticulated, like the
capillaries of the circulatory system, diverging and fusing. The computer program wasnt representing the process accurately and it was
too easy to misread the output. One of the papers even used black
Americans as stand-ins for Africansboth, after all, are Negroids.
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It is not, of course, reasonable at all to suppose that group antagonisms occur only between genetically or biologically different peoples. Were the Hatelds and the McCoys biologically distinct from
each other? Or the Viet Cong and the South Vietnamese? Or the
Bloods and the Crips? And thats precisely the central point: xenophobia, whatever it may beor more to the point, the perception of
otherness, of aliennessis not based on natural differences. Its
based on language, the deity worshipped, traditions, diet, activities,
beliefsthings that are learned, not things that are innate.
Alienness is thus a construction, not a fact of nature. Whom you
perceive as foreign, or who is to be suspected or hated or even worthy
of death, is generally based on cultural traits and on cultural histories.
The greatest genocidal hatreds are between peoples who are biologically very similar: Hutu and Tutsi, Bosnians and Serbs, Israelis and
Palestinians, Huron and Iroquois, Germans and Jews, English and
Irish.
That is why I think the argument for the potential universality,
and hence the genetic basis, of genocide is a biologically trivial one,
because it presupposes a natural difference between the two groups,
the oppressors and the victims, which often does not exist. How, then,
can it possibly be important in explaining or understanding the meaning of genocide?
Whom your group hates is dened culturally. Why your group
hates them is dened culturally. What youre expected to do about
it is dened culturally. There is no merit that I can see in talking
about any biological basis for genocide, because such a basis, if it even
existed in the rst place, accounts for nothing.
The lesson of the Holocaust, therefore, lies not so much in the
attempt on the part of one group to destroy another, which is indeed
a recurrent tragic theme of human global history, but rather in the
recognition that it was carried out by Europeans against themselves,
and that it took place in an age in which some form of enlightenment
was thought to have existed.
What we gain from presupposing genes for genocide is unclear. All
this serves to do is to absolve the guilty of responsibility, because It
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wasnt our fault, it was just human nature, which is certainly a perverse use of genetics.
So to the extent that we can establish that racism is not biologically
signicant, the genetic basis for it is meaningless.
More to the point, it is folk heredity.
But the fallacy of racism does not only make itself felt in the form
of genocide. The central fallacy lies in dehumanizing a person because
you perceive them as a member of a group and not as an individual.
This cuts both ways.
I was recently asked to review a book about an issue the author
melodramatically regards as the subject of a conspiracy of silence, for
it is apparently taboothe genetic superiority of blacks in sports.
Now, everybody knows that blacks are prominent in major sports.
Look at basketball, look at defensive secondaries and running backs
in football, look at boxing. But how do you get from prominent
to racially superior? There are three major sets of variables at work
in making someone prominent in athletics: individual aptitudes
(whatever they might be), social and cultural setting (including expectations, opportunities, what is considered a respectable occupation, and the like), and any group endowments. With three causes
and one effect, you cant reasonably draw a conclusion about the
origin of black superiority in sports.
Thus, there are rather few possibilities for someone to conclude
that racial superiorities are at the heart of the observed prominence
of blacks in sports. Either the speaker is incapable of rigorously drawing conclusions from data or else the racist conclusion preceded, and
is independent of, the data.
The author indignantly denies being either illogical or a racist. He
insists he wasnt saying blacks are innately worse than whites, as for
example Herrnstein and Murray did for intelligence in The Bell Curve
(which he took pains to repudiate), but rather, that theyre innately
better.
But whether you think they are better or worse is a trivial difference, for the fallacy lies in attributing any innate property at all to
them in the absence of genetic evidence.
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wise, you present a lot of interesting uff that doesnt prove anything
about anybodys innate abilities, much less about racial differences.
It would require acknowledging that black athletes are physically
quite diverse; certainly, a black interior lineman in football is physically very different from a black point guard in basketball. Thus, the
innate gifts they each possess that enable them to earn a living at
professional sports are probably not the same onesand are probably
more likely explicable as individual, not racial, gifts. The racial issue
is more likely why a black person is more apt to see the exceedingly
high-risk world of athletics as a reasonable venue for earning a livelihood than a white person is.
Darwins Athletes by John Hoberman eloquently presents the case
for disbelieving that black predomination in sports is caused by constitutional factors of the race. Its not that we can say specically why
one person becomes better at something than another personthats
fodder for astrologers, not scientistsbut rather that there are simply
a lot of forces at work besides imagined racial propensities.
Here the fallacy of racism has been inverted, but it is a fallacy nonetheless. Its not whether blacks are innately better than, or worse than,
whites at something. Rather, its that there is no reason at all to assume
that any observation of difference is due to a trait that is either innate
or racial. How easily, for example, Muhammad Ali and Michael Jordan can be made to slide from being extraordinary, well-trained black
men to being representative black men.
And thats precisely the problem. Athletes are elite performers and
arent representative of anyone but themselves, except symbolically.
So what can it mean about black people if the ten fastest known
sprinters are all black? In the rst place, it is a gross perversion of
statistical sensibilities to characterize a population by its ten most
extreme members. And in the second place, the fastest white and
yellow people are not too far behind anywaywere only talking
about the twinkling of an eye here, after all. And how do you know
you havent missed some really fast white guy somewhere?
Finally, those who laud the innate aptitudes of blacks for basketball
frequently need to be reminded of the push a decade ago to allow
American professionals to play in the Olympics. The rest of the world,
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h e re d i t a ri ani sm
The Bell Curve began with a premise that is not racist: that in general,
differences in IQ, or in performance of some surrogate pencil-andpaper test, are constitutional, or innate.
This does not presuppose the existence of races or of group-level
differences (although its authors assume those too). To the authors
of The Bell Curve, being a doctor or a lawyer or a professor means
that you are simply likely to be smarter than a carpenter, reman, or
television repairman. Its an assertion as much about innate intellectual differences within groups as between them.
Although the distinction between differences that may exist within
groups and those that may exist between groups may sound trivial, it
isnt. As already noted, most behavioral variation in the human species
is between groups, yet most genetic variation is within groups. That
makes it exceedingly unlikely that the latter can be a major cause of
the former.
Perhaps the weirdest weapon in the hereditarian arsenal is the concept of heritability, borrowed from animal and plant husbandry.
Technically dened as the ratio of genetic variation associated with a
particular feature to the total observable variation in that feature, and
varying from 0 to 1, heritability is hard to measure in people. Consequently, we rely on a number of shortcuts. The problem with heritability is that it sounds like a property of the feature itself, when in fact
it is merely a description of the population in which the trait appears.
The classic example is to envision two plots of soil, in each of which
a handful of seed is planted. The plot on the left receives ample water
and fertilizer; the plot on the right doesnt. Plants in the left plot
grow to be tall and vigorous; since they are not all identical, but their
environment is largely homogeneous, most of the variation in height
is due to the genetic differences among the seeds originally planted.
Thus the heritability of plant height here is quite high. Plants in the
right plot are small and stunted; but likewise the environment is
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homogeneous, so differences in height are largely due to genetic differences, and heritability of height is high. But the large difference in
average height between the two populations is due entirely to the environmental difference imposed upon them.
Thus, heritability is a description of a population, not a property
of the trait. From our experiment in heritability above, we learn little
about height; rather, we learn something specic about each particular plot of plants.
When you hear someone say that the heritability of intelligence is
0.4, for example, the correct question to ask is, In whom? This is
a statement about a particular group of people, not about intelligence.
Moreover, however genetic it sounds, it is culturally loaded, and its
meanings and usages arent derived from the technical sense it has in
the science of genetics.
Hard as it may be to believe, we have actually learned something
about human heredity and human nonheredity in the past hundred
years. Most important, we have come to realize that when we ask, Is
a feature genetic? we are really asking, Is the detectable variation
[in the feature] due to genetic causes or to other causes?
We have learned that a consistent observation of difference between
two groups does not necessarily imply a genetic basis for that difference.
A glance through any of the major science journals will sufce to
show that contemporary genetics is characterized by a particular language, mode of argumentation, and evidentiary standard. The simple
belief that crude hereditary factors are important in human life certainly long antedates the science of genetics and is therefore independent of it, but it often piggybacks on the credibility of genetics. Such
beliefs are cultural, and therefore widely pervasive, even among geneticists, but they are different from scientic inferences about genetics; that is, hereditarian beliefs are distinct from science. The failure to make this distinction is retrospectively a crucial error of the
1920sgeneticists at that time widely felt that being a geneticist
implied a commitment to constitutional, hereditary explanations for
human social differences, even when they lacked valid evidence for
such explanations.
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The curious reader might be led to inquire just what the Pioneer
Fund sees in it.
But still no red ags go up. There has simply been nothing on
the environmental side, the journalist observes, to counter the
power of twin and adoption studies.
But what power? Lets think about this. A committed ideologue
scientist, with funding from a radical organization (which would
achieve greater notoriety for their funding of much of the racist work
cited in The Bell Curve), builds a research program on patently idiotic
stories of reunited twins, which should be of greater interest to mythologists than to geneticists. And then he promotes it to the media
as evidence for Nature 1, Nurture 0and the journalist doesnt nd
a reason to be skeptical?
A bit of reection permits the realization that the Jim twins are
quite hard to explain scientically. There are in fact only a small
number of possibilities available to explain the story. What are they?
First, perhaps its just an odd coincidence, like the list of amazing,
dopey similarities between presidents Lincoln and Kennedyassassinated 100 years apart, one in Fords Theater, the other in a Lincoln
Ford, both succeeded by Johnsons, and so on. In which case, it isnt
worth mentioning. Coincidences are of no interest to science. On
the one hand, any two people at random looking for similarities
between themselves will inevitably nd them. On the other hand, it
does boggle the mind that two men married to two identically named
women, with identically named sons and dogs, and with the same
name themselvesan extraordinary set of occurrences in and of itselfwould then turn out to be identical twins separated at birth!
The mere fact that it is invoked in print implies it is not intended to
be regarded as a coincidence.
So lets move on to the second possibility. Maybe these amazing
similarities indeed attest to the genetic unity of identical twins. In
fact, I raised that question during a plenary talk I gave in 1996 to the
International Congress of Human Genetics. I said, You people are
an audience of human geneticists, and I would like to know, How
many of you think that the name you give your dog is under some
kindany kindof genetic inuence? I can happily report that not
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a single hand went up. The blunt fact is, there isnt a competent
geneticist in the civilized world who will look you in the eye and tell
you that the name you give your dog is under any form, however
cryptic, of genetic inuence.
That, of course, doesnt prove that there is no genetic cause. But it
does show that the people who understand the most about genetic
evidence, and are the most critical thinkers about genetic issues in
the human species, do not agree with the weird psychologists who
present the Jim twins as presumptive evidence of genetic control. The
anecdote about the Jim twins actually demonstrates nothing whatsoever about the genetic unity of identical twins.
Third, then perhaps it demonstrates the psychic ESP bond of twins.
Even our wide-eyed reporter, Lawrence Wright, hesitates here: Clairvoyance is a part of twin lore; . . . [t]hese suggestive psychic connections between identical twins could explain some of the mysterious
synchronicities, but they have been rarely tested and never conrmed.
But this actually was a straightforward subheading in Newsweeks cover
story of November 23, 1987, on the amazing separated-twin research,
which included the Jim twins. (And why not? Most readers of Newsweek believe as strongly in ESP as in geneticstwin studies are a strong
site of convergence between folk knowledge and science.)
But wait a minutethese people are not being studied for psychic
powers; theyre being studied for genetics and personality. We are
being asked to judge this as scientically competent data. How on
earth did the dubious end of behavioral genetics come to be supported by the pseudoscience of parapsychology?
After all, if the twins are in psychic contact, then there is an immediately detectable aw in the majority of the data Bouchards study
collected, which are the results of pencil-and-paper tests, responses to
the same questions about personality and mental processes, which
were subsequently compared for concordances.
It is a fundamental assumption of any such situation that the people
writing down their answers are not in psychic contact with each other.
Those test concordances are now invalid because they are subject to
an uncontrolled variableif there is a real possibility that the twins
may be trading answers psychically.
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Imagine the chaos that would ensue if it were known that identical
twins taking the SATs were cheating by using ESP!
But of course, there is no ESP. These twins dont have it, nor does
anyone else. ESP isnt science, and therefore doesnt constitute a reasonable scientic explanation for anything, because it lies outside the
domain of science. As an explanation for similarities of twins, it is
useless and inane. Worse, the more closely behavioral genetics is
linked to ESP, the less credible it necessarily becomes.
The process of elimination brings us to the fourth possible explanation.
There is just simply something screwy with these stories.
And this is explained by another simple conict of interest: identical twins without amazing coincidences and psychic bonds dont get
written up. (As one of my undergraduate students, who is an identical
twin and not in psychic contact with her sister, said to me: I guess
well never be on Oprah.) What we encounter here is generally a
strange brew of science and pseudoscience; of rigor and pop fantasy.
Unlike scientic data, such gee-whiz stories are often told, but
rarely rigorously analyzed, and never conrmed.
Here is an explanation for the similarities of identical twins. They
are similar because they are genetically identical. They are also similar
because they are usually raised to emphasize their similarities. When
raised apart, they are often placed in similar homesadoptive families, regretfully from the standpoint of experimental design, are very
homogeneous. And the most bizarre stories are just not true, exaggerating either their concordances, or their separateness, or both.
Opposing the amazing twin anecdotes, there is a community of
counteranecdotes developing. The journalist Lawrence Wright reports that the Jim twins had known of each other and had met each
other on many occasions prior to their reunion. (Oddly, he nds
that less credible than their amazing coincidences!)
Another amazing set of twins are Jack and Oskar, born in 1933 and
separated in the divorce of their parents; one grew up Jewish in Trinidad and the other in a Nazi home in Munich. They both, Constance
Holden writes in Science, think its funny to sneeze in a crowd of
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strangers, ush the toilet before using it, store rubber bands on their
wrists, read magazines from back to front, dip buttered toast in their
coffee. But they each knew of the other and had met several times
as adults, and their families had kept up a correspondence. And the
counteranecdote is that the Jewish twin, who now lives in California,
appeared on talk shows on diverse topics with such frequency that he
joined the actors union, and that the twins were attempting to sell
their life stories to Hollywood.
Hardly the stuff of innocent birth-separation-reunion scenarios.
Much less of scientic inferences about genetics.
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tal repertoire; (2) establishing their evolutionary histories; or (3) proving that their inferences reect an underlying human nature, rather
than being simply the projection of contemporary social values.
Take a well-publicized example: the waist-to-hips ratio of women.
If you draw silhouettes of womens gures and ask American college
students which ones they think are most attractive, they will invariably go for someone shaped like Marilyn Monroe. In fact, if you ask
the same question of many men around the world, they will generally
also go for Marilyn Monroe. Aha, say the evolutionary psychologists,
a clear indicator of a fundamental property of the human mind,
which has evolved over the eons.
But is it? Are American college students valid representatives of the
primordial human mind, or are their beliefs, thoughts and preferences
molded by both their humanness and their twentieth-century Americanness? Does the fact that other men around the world nd Marilyn
Monroes gure attractive mean that they are expressing a basic human propensity or merely that their sexual preferences have been
inuenced by the American entertainment media?
After all, American tastes and preferences have been globalized. The
worlds cultural diversity is constantly shrinking as a result of the
relentless economic and social pressure of the United States. Not that
its necessarily a bad thing; only that with increasing uniformity of
thought, it becomes ever more difcult to distinguish the properties
of the human mind from the consequences of human social history.
It is an old anthropological saw that what you do seems natural; how
much more natural it is to see the whole world do it! But what is
widespread is not necessarily innatethats the fallacy of essentialism.
There is a simple test one could perform to try to judge whether
the widespread attraction for men specically of Marilyn Monroes
shape is an evolved, innate propensity or an artifact of twentiethcentury American taste disseminated to the rest of the world. You
could test a remote group of people unfamiliar with Marilyn Monroe,
or American movie stars and pinups generally, and see what womens
gures they prefer. The problem is, of course, that there is hardly
anyone these days who falls into that categoryyou can see the latest
Julia Roberts movie in Nairobi.
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nature; or (2) an ancient element of human nature now lost by humans; or (3) an evolved element of chimpanzee nature, never possessed by human ancestors.
The opposite idea, that what an ape does is illuminating for human
nature, has come to be known as the naturalistic fallacy. Let us say,
along with the nineteenth-century mutton-chopped English polymath Herbert Spencer, that the natural world is governed by unfettered competition. Does it not follow that competition, unrestrained
by governmental intervention in the form of poor laws, or welfare,
or social safety nets, is the most appropriate and natural form of
human society?
On the contrary, argued Spencers friend, the great biologist Thomas Huxley, who had actually published the rst book on human
evolution, Mans Place in Nature, in 1863. Thirty years later, Huxley
had come to realize the philosophical abuse that biology could wreak
on society. And in an essay called Evolution and Ethics, he challenged Spencers worldview: Let us understand, once and for all,
he avowed, that the ethical progress of society depends, not on imitating the cosmic process, still less in running away from it, but in
combating it. Humans do not live in a state of nature, they have
risen from it. What goes on out there among the birds and the beasts
may have no bearing at all on what is natural, much less on what is
appropriate, for humans.
Apes go around naked and sleep in the trees, and yet humans do
not. Which condition should be considered more natural for humanswhat apes do and humans do not (thats a perverse conception
of human nature!); or what humans do and apes do not (in which
case, why bring up the apes in the rst place?)?
What bearing, then, do any data from apes have on our understanding of humans? Obviously, we must look for commonalities
between apes and humans.
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baboons? Their closest relatives, the vervet monkeys, are all highly
arboreal, but baboons have descended to the ground for most of their
daily routine.
Rather like humans.
Moreover, the males vie with one another rather conspicuously.
They grunt, posture, bark, chase, and nipall with the obvious goal
of intimidating and displacing or overcoming all rivals. That seems
to be the core of their society.
Also rather like their human counterparts.
But in one key way, it was believed, they were not like humans.
They didnt hunt.
So hunting must have made all the difference in human evolution.
Here you had a species not terribly distantly related from us, with
similar hands, feet, teeth, and brains; recently descended from the
trees, like us; socially rather like us; and had they only, perhaps, developed the ability to huntwhat we might call the skill to kill
they might have been us.
And yet, since the 1960s, that interpretation of baboon society and
its relationship to human nature has fallen out of favor. First, baboons
do indeed hunt, it turns out. Theyve been observed to chase down
and eat several different kinds of animalssmall monkeys, bush pigs,
gazelles. Hunting doesnt contribute a major component of their diet,
but it has been observed regularly enough to now be accepted as a
facet of baboon life. So the big difference between us and them turns
out not to be as profound as the theory requires it to be. If they hunt,
after all, then they should be usbut they arent.
Moreover, the male interactionsso conspicuous, so dangerous
turn out to be largely ephemeral. Long-term studies of the course of
a baboons life have revealed that baboon females grow, mature, and
remain in their social group. Males, on the other hand, transfer into
a new group as they mature. As a result, the composition of a baboon
troop consists of related females who grew up together and know
one another and males who did not grow up together. It shouldnt
be a surprise, then, that the males ght and jockey conspicuously for
social position, while the female interactions are more subtle. But the
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female bonds are also more pervasive and longer-lasting than the male
bonds.
What seemed at rst to be a reiteration of dominant themes of
American societymale competition and aggression, female passivitywere more the projections of the primatologists than expressions
of baboon nature. Whats more, it had been assumed that all that
conspicuous ghting that male baboons do could only be over one
thingfemale baboons. After all, what do men ght about, if not
women?
But again, eldwork in more recent years has shown that the connection between sex and aggressive competition in baboons is fairly
weak. Baboon females have many strategies for choosing mates, and
the biggest and strongest male isnt necessarily the one they pick.
Baboon males, for one thing, are smart enough to form coalitions to
ward off attacks fromand sometimes to deposethe single biggest
male. So the boys dont really seem to be ghting just to show off for
the girls, like American high school studentsonce again, a cultural
projection onto the animals.
Baboon nature, it seems, has precious little to tell us about human
nature; for what we derive from baboons turns out to be largely a
function of what we project onto them. Baboons are interesting because theyre baboons and fairly close relatives of ours. But their
utility as models for understanding human biology hardly outlasted
the Beatles.
Chimpanzees, however, are far more closely related to us than baboons. Their DNA is really, really similar to our own. Perhaps the
key to human nature lies in them. And thats what modern students
of chimpanzees say in their grant proposals: You should fund my research because it will reveal secrets of human nature.
But it wont, any more than baboon studies did.
The best evidence in support of that assertion comes from looking
at the oeuvre of the foremost student of chimpanzeesone of the
worlds best-known scientists, Jane Goodall.
Goodall began studying chimpanzees in the wild at the Gombe
Stream Reserve in Tanganyika (now Tanzania) in 1960, under the
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And thus Native Americans came to represent for European philosophers the idea of man in a state of pure naturethe beastly
other against whom the civilized state would form a contrast. Or
more to the point, a development, a risean evolution.
Hobbess argument was immensely inuential in European political
philosophy. The concept of the uncivilized, purely biological person
was also invoked by the generations that followed Hobbes. And their
favorite empirical grounding for this argument, the place where natural man could actually be found, and whose data could be invoked
for the purposes of polemic, was America.
John Locke, for example, challenged Hobbess most basic point
about human nature being a state of perpetual war, yet supported his
own ideas in the same manner as Hobbesby recourse to the lives
of savages living in a state of nature. He asks, for example, why money
would be necessary if the earth were bountiful and land were readily
available. Thus, wrote Locke in his Second Treatise on Civil Government (1690), in the beginning all the world was America, and
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more so than that is now; for no such thing as money was any where
known.
But the question of human nature, and the Indian as a means of
revealing it, were nowhere more forcefully or clearly articulated than
in the work of Jean-Jacques Rousseau. He asks at the beginning of
his Discourse on the Origin of Inequality (1754):
And how shall man hope to see himself as nature has made him,
across all the changes which the succession of place and time must
have produced in his original constitution? How can he distinguish
what is fundamental in his nature from the changes and additions
which his circumstances and the advancements he has made
have introduced to modify his primitive condition?
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And thus the study of human nature became the study of the
Indians. And through the nineteenth century, students of Indian
languages would imagine they were studying something primitive
and similar to the primordial or natural language of man; and
students of Indian society would imagine they were studying the
basic, and most rudimentary, manifestations of the social instinct
in humans. To some extent this reinforced the idea that Indians
should be assimilatedin other words, that layers of civilization
could be imparted to themand this affected federal policy toward
the Indians.
From the standpoint of social science, however, the nineteenthcentury Native American ethnology of Americans was invariably entangled with revelations of basic human nature.
That is, until the rst studies of Australians.
Inuenced by the renowned researches of Lewis Henry Morgan on
the Iroquois, and more generally on the evolution of society, Lorimer
Fison and A. L. Howitt published the rst ethnographic monograph
on the Kamileroi and Kurnai of Australia in 1880. Shortly thereafter,
Baldwin Spencer and F. J. Gillen published their rst monograph on
the Australian Arunta.
In short measure, the Australian aborigines came to replace the
Indians as the embodiment of natural manhuman life at its simplest. Thus the French anthropologist Emile Durkheim would write
his groundbreaking synthesis on The Elementary Forms of the Religious
Life (1912) based on the knowledge that the most elementary forms
of religion were those practiced by Australian aborigineshuman
religion at its most natural.
The years immediately after World War II saw an attempt by
UNESCO to universalize humanity in the wake of the overzealous
racialism of the Nazi era. Anthropologists had begun to conceptualize
human history in terms of revolutions in subsistencefrom hunting
and gathering, to agriculture, to industry. And the group that
emerged as the quintessential remaining hunter-gatherers were the
!Kung San of the Kalahari Desert in southern Africa. From 196374,
they were the subject of an intense interdisciplinary study organized
through Harvard University. With the emergence of sociobiology at
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olence was sufciently subtle as to have been missed for the rst few
decades of chimpanzee research, in which conict was noted, but not
more than in other primate species. In the 1970s, at Gombe, however,
the males of the Kasakela community killed off the Kahama communityfor reasons unknown, but fundamentally and meaningfully
similar, according to Demonic Males, to human doings at Gaugamela,
Actium, Agincourt, Balaklava, Vicksburg, Ypres, Nagasaki, and
Sharpeville.
And were not merely a projection of human cultural values onto
another animal, like Aesops Fables or Dogs Playing Poker.
And although he neglects to mention Thomas Hobbes, who started
it all, Hobbes permeates this view of the chimpanzee as natural human: [M]odern chimpanzees are not merely fellow time-travelers
and evolutionary relatives, but surprisingly excellent models of our
direct ancestors. . . . [C]himpanzee-like violence preceded and paved
the way for human war, making modern humans the dazed survivors
of a continuous, 5-million-year habit of lethal aggression (p. 63).
And so we come full circle. Humans again live naturally in a state of
Warre, but 350 years after Hobbes, that state is proved by recourse
to evolutionary biology, and specically by recourse to the behavior
of the most natural man, the chimpanzee.
And yet, is there a biological evolutionary argument here? Even if
we were to concede the (inaccurate) point that chimpanzees are genetically our sole closest relatives; the (contestable) point that the
extinction of the Kahama community in the mid-1970s was a normal facet of chimpanzee behavior, although nothing like it had ever
before been noted; and the (equally contestable) point that this implies that chimpanzees are naturally violent, what might that imply
for humans biologically?
As is obvious from the foregoing discussion, exceedingly little. It
might indeed be a facet of human nature; or alternatively an element
of specically chimpanzee nature and never even present in a human
ancestor; it might have been present in a human-chimp ancestor and
lost in humans. You could study chimpanzee behavior until the Second Coming, and never be able to differentiate among these alternatives.
human nature
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And that is a crucial point. The ability to distinguish between alternatives is testability, and it is a dening property of science. Without it, youre not talking science.
As a result, the discussion of human nature based on the properties
of the chimpanzee lies in the realm not of scientic discourse but of
metaphysics. Its equivalent to asking about Mozarts baseball talent
you cannot tell from the data available. A scientist might have an
opinion about it, just as a scientist might have an opinion about
whether Mike Tyson could have beaten Rocky Marciano, whether
there is intelligent life in outer space, or how many angels can sit on
the head of pin. But the basic inability to differentiate among the
possibilities with real-world evidence makes this a nonscientic issue.
Wars tend to be rooted in competition for status, Demonic Males
is reduced to arguing. We could well substitute for Sparta and Athens
the names of two male chimpanzees in the same community, one
rising in power, the other anxious to keep his higher status (p. 192).
I suppose we could. But that would have no biological meaning.
Who is competing for statusthe generals? The grunts? The politicians back home? The sociopolitical entities they represent? And what
is the biological connection between a chimpanzee and Greek citystate, anyway? A polis isnt a biological entity; it shares no common
ancestry with a chimpanzee; it is an artice of human social history.
The argument is simply an analogy. Maybe a chimpanzee is sort of
like a Greek city-state. Maybe an aphid is like Microsoft. Maybe a
kangaroo is like Gone with the Wind. Maybe a gopher is like a microwave oven. There may be arguments to be made in each case, but
they are literary, not biological.
The most interesting feature of the argument for using the chimpanzee as a surrogate for natural man is the way in which the same
animals are used to argue for very different qualities of human nature.
Sociobiologist Frans de Waal argues from the bonobo, or pygmy
chimpanzee, that humans are naturally good-natured. The fact
that bonobos and common chimpanzees are each others closest relatives should attest to the breadth of inferred natures possible in these
animals and the speciousness of taking any one of them as natural
for humans.
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human nature
n a tura l s e x
The show was ABCs Nightline. Ted Koppel was off, and Forrest
Sawyer was substituting. It was August 3, 1992, and the subject was
the bonobo, in particular its extraordinary sex life. Extraordinary, that
is, for an ape: female bonobos rub their genitalia together, stimulating
one another, and they use sex in socially instrumental waysand,
more important, in nonreproductive ways. What might that tell us
about human nature?
Professor Frans de Waal, a distinguished primatologist from Emory
University, spoke quietly and candidly, in a mild Dutch accent, and
explained how the meaning of what was being discussed in bonobos
meant that things that we still have today, such as pedophilia and
homosexuality and a lot of other sexual orientations, that they are
sort of leftovers of that earlier period, in which sex was more widely
and publicly used in the society.
Now theres a thought that needs to be, as they say, unpacked.
Ignoring the gratuitous association of sexual preference and pedophilia, a sex crime, lets just focus on the last clause. The observations
in the bonobos are rst made relevant to humans by representing
them as equivalent to their human manifestations. This in itself may
be no more than a word game, for the equivalence of homosexuality
in humans and chimpanzees might be like that of slavery in humans
and ants, or ight in ducks, dragonies, and airplane pilotswhich
have, genetically, developmentally, and evolutionarily, nothing to do
with one another. Secondly, these bonobo and human attributes are
both equated with an attribute of human ancestors, by denition
unobservable. In this quite static evolutionary view, the attribute thus
human nature
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becomes an unchanged survival from ancient times, a chunk of human nature made manifest.
That is simply pre-evolutionary philosophical thought clothed in
evolutionary terms.
We see this reasoning likewise in The Hunting Apes by sociobiologist Craig Stanford. [C]himpanzees, ancestral hominids, and modern foraging people such as the !Kung or Acheprovide a frame of
reference of our evolutionary history and therefore the roots of human
behavior, Stanford says. Thus we are presented with another species,
our own ancestors, and some modern humans as all being sufciently
equivalent as to be effectively interchangeable. To study one is to
study the others; to study chimps is to access human nature.
a d u ck wi t h lip s?
human nature
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human nature
man being that has ever lived has been born into a culture. Culture
preceded our speciesour ancestor Homo erectus certainly was a cultural species. In other words, culture is part of our nature; you cant
strip it away, scrape it off, pretend it doesnt exist, or look for it in
simpler forms. It is ubiquitous in human life; it is programmed into
human life.
You cant derive human nature from the Indians, the Australians,
the !Kung San, or the Yanomamo. Each is merely a variation on the
human themea theme as broad as the diversity of human societies,
languages, and activities over the span of the globe and the millennia
(and which, as it is reduced through the penetration of genocide,
colonialism, the media, and the market, reinforces the illusion of
uniformity). But none of them reveals human nature any more clearly
than a Harvard faculty meeting does. As Thomas Hobbes realized
when he invented this line of reasoning, its simply a series of political
inferences invoking the authority of science.
More than that, you cant get at human nature from chimpanzees.
Theyre not human.
human nature
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Eight
human rights . . . for apes?
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cul ture
In the previous chapter we saw how the 98% genetic similarity is used
to construct chimpanzees as the simplest humansa role no longer
lled by humans of any sort. Now the argument can be extended to
argue that the chimpanzees actually do possess in some rudimentary
state the quintessentially human attributeculture. If they have that,
which is supposed to be the thing that distinguishes humans from
other creatures, then they could really be considered simple people,
in a way.
Now, culture is a very tricky concept. It was invented by German
anthropologists in the nineteenth century and introduced independently to the American anthropological community by the Englishman Edward Burnett Tylor and the German American Franz Boas.
Tylor used the term in 1871 as synonymous with civilization and to
mean the things that arent inborn and of which all peoples partake
to a greater or lesser extent: the capabilities and habits acquired by
man as a member of society.
Boas, for his part, democratized culture and broadened it beyond
civilization, but never got around to trying to dene it until very
late in life. When he nally did, it came out a bit less felicitously than
Tylors denition: the totality of the mental and physical reactions
and activities that characterize the behavior of the individuals com-
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This is not at all to disparage the value of that research. Given the
genetic and evolutionary proximity of the apes to us, it would be
somewhat surprising if they did not show any similarity to human
cognitive skills. But the studies were disappointing, for the apes never
said anything like, Would you like to know about our social system?
Well, the big guy, whom you call the alpha male, stomps around and
the offspring, who may or may not be his, get out of his way, unless
their mother is around.
Instead, they said, Come, tickle now. Gimme sweet.
Its also pretty clear that apes are very smart and can indeed make
and use toolscruddy tools to be sure, but tools by anyones denitionand that they can communicate coarsely in a human venue.
But thats not what anthropologists mean by culture.
Nor is the recognitionthe subject of an editorial in the New York
Times!that chimpanzees have local traditions, the ability to pass
on the results of observation and learning. No sane modern scholar
would deny that animals observe and learn. Culture is learned, but
it doesnt follow that everything learned is cultural. The fact that
humans have hair does not imply that all things with hair are human.
Thats from Philosophy of Logic 1A. But it comprises the core of this
odd argument: since culture is learned behavior, and chimps learn
behavior, it follows that chimps have culturein spite of what anthropologists have thought about it for decades.
And in spite of Boass own words decades ago.
What this revelation now shows, according to the Timess editorial,
is that chimps are more like us than we care to believe, and we are
more like them than we like to let on.
Well, of course, thats true whether or not they are cultural. But
whats the point of asserting that they are? Especially if it means
redening culture so as to make the demonstration that chimpanzees have it trivial?
Three separate questions must be answered to make sense of all
this:
What do humans have?
What do chimps have?
Whats their relationship?
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who published the paper in Nature that got the attention of the New
York Times meant something very specic. To them, culture is a set
of learned behaviors or traditions, which vary from group to group.
And they showed that chimps have that.
Not that it would have come as much of a surprise to Darwin or
Boas. Id venture to guess that populations of many animals have
learned behaviors that are different from those of other populations.
So why all the fuss?
Humanizing African apesjust like dehumanizing African people
has political weight. It might serve to make people aware of the abuses
chimpanzees sometimes suffer in captivity; it might arouse sympathies
for the animal rights movement; or it might just serve as yet another
rhetorical weapon against the fundamentalist Christians still trying
to subvert science education in America.
t h e g re a t a pe proj ect
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look and act like us, and they certainly have nervous systems, reactions, and behaviors like our own. So to the extent that animals are
persons deserving of rights, these are the animals most deserving of
all.
The Great Ape Project proposes that the great apes are entitled to
life, liberty, and not to be torturedin other words, to the rights of
humans, with whom they form a community of equals. Fair
enough; after all, who these days would stand up in favor of death,
enslavement, and torture? In the early 1990s, a book called The Great
Ape Project adduced no fewer than thirty essays in support of the idea
of human rights for the great apes. But in its way stand two simple
facts, which I tried to articulate for the British television audience.
First, the apes arent human.
And, second, we cant even guarantee human rights to humans.
Apes, being endangered, are no longer imported from the wild for
scientic research in America. We can readily acknowledge that they
deserve humane treatment in captivity. But human treatment? To
whom are they equal, anyway, and on what basis can we say so?
The fundamental basis, once again, was asserted to be their genetic
similarity to humans. This point was authoritatively asserted by the
biologists Jared Diamond and Richard Dawkins in their contributions and echoed by several others. It was also the very rst point
addressed in the lming of the television show. The molecular factoid
thus became the basis for a push for social legislation and moral
reform.
But we need to start out by remembering that we just do not accord
rights in modern society on the basis of genetic distance. The English
do not accord greater rights to Iraqis than to Japanese. The category
human is neither fuzzy nor dened by genetic closeness. In principle the category should be dened (as any animal species should
be) in terms of reproductive compatibility and ecological nichenot
in terms of how genetically similar or dissimilar two individuals may
be.
More to the point, the tenets of liberal democracy since the Enlightenment hold that citizens should be entitled to equal rights. Of
course, as philosopher Hannah Arendt noted, the Enlightenment had
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Apes deserve protection, even rights, but not human rights. Confusing humans and nonhumans has never advanced anyones lot. And
certainly genetics is not going to clarify it much.
By the genetic criterion, the cutoff (at orangutans) is quite arbitrary
anyway. Indeed the ape-rights movement is aimed specically at the
great apes (chimpanzee, gorilla, orangutan), and leaves the graceful
and endangered lesser apes, the gibbons of southeast Asia, to their
own devices.
But this is where the alliance between the animal-rights activists
and the ape-conservation activists beaks down. The former group sees
the ape-rights movement as a Trojan horse, a foot in the door toward
the liberation of all animals; apes just happen to be among the cutest
and most resonant, and thereby the ones for which they can drum
up support most easily. Some of these supporters of the ape-rights
movement dont even seem to know much about apes; one essay in
their agship document actually begins, Chimpanzees make love
rather like humans do. . . .
Of course, it is not clear that chimpanzees make love at all. But
more important, the average copulatory bout in chimpanzees lasts
between ten and fteen seconds and involves a female whose genitalia
are swollen and purple (a prominent visual display of fertility, unique
among apes to the chimpanzees), and often a succession of males who
are otherwise generally not very interested in sex; and no tactile exploration or erogeny at all. In ten to fteen seconds, after all, you
cant expect much. Doesnt sound the least bit like love-making in
humans, at least the way most of us been fortunate enough to experience it, and it quite possibly says more about the author than it
does about chimpanzees.
But for the extreme animal-rights activists, genetic distance doesnt
much matter to begin with; it is simply a rhetorical device. If all
animals (or at least, mammals; or at least, cute mammals) are equivalent, then the apes hold no special place for them, and the evolutionary relationships between us and them are entirely irrelevant. The
conjunction of animal-rights activists and sincere primate conservationists is thus a marriage of convenience. If the justication for ape
rights is phylogenetic proximity, then the justication for animal
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rights is creationist, for it ignores evolutionary relationships and implies that all animals are equidistant from humans.
As the editors of The Great Ape Project write, the most important
contribution of the political push will be its symbolic value as a
concrete representation of the rst breach in the species barrier. This
sounds like an exploitation of the living apes and of their difcult
status as callous as any circus act is.
a re a pe s m e re l y d i s able d p eop le ?
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was a social hierarchy that placed them and kept them there by exploiting and subjugating other people. The problem was the agency
by which inequality came to be regarded as acceptable, and even
naturalnot the qualities of the incomplete people of the world.
This was not a natural hierarchy, expressing the superior qualities of
those people at the top; that view was a classic case of blaming the
victim.
Curiously, we see that hierarchy rediscovered in the Great Ape Project. A British zoologist was asked on our television show, as a supporter of human rights for apes, whether he would allow his daughter
to marry one. He replied, I dont think she would want to marry
one. . . . Would you let your daughter marry, say, a mentally retarded
individual?
Other members of the discussion gasped. Did he really think that
there was some kind of equivalence between a mentally handicapped
person and a chimpanzee? Is marrying outside your species really
equivalent to marrying outside your IQ cohort?
It was a chilling equivalence, made very casually.
Not only are apes not at all like mentally handicapped humans,
but more important, mentally handicapped humans are not like apes.
Nor are blacks, Jews, hunter-gatherers, or New York cabbies. All people are perfectly human, and all apes are not at all human. Thats the
simple biology.
And yet there is a seductive ring to the comparison. As a legal
advocate for the movement said on the television show:
We give human rights to children, to the aged and to the mentally
inrm, to the autistic, to the deaf and to the dumb. . . . [T]he
facts we recognize in common humanity compel us to recognize
the humanity in the great apes; . . . they can reason and communicate
at least as well as some of the children and disabled humans to
whom we accord human rights.
Humanity here seems to be something a bit unfamiliar, something other than merely the state of being human, which the apes
clearly are not and disabled people clearly are. It seems to be no longer
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th e b a n g kok si x
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about it. Indonesia is one of the worst places in the world for enforcing human rights for humans. On the island of East Timor,
hundreds of thousands of people have been the victims of genocide
in recent years. Indonesian attitudes toward orangutans are also
tragic, but the simple fact is that state-mandated policies toward
the apes simply do not constitute the biggest problem of rights
there.
One occasionally encounters a curious response to this argument.
As a noted British zoologist once told me superciliously, Think percentages, not numbers. In other words, the Earth can spare a few
hundred thousand East Asian people, because there are lots of us, but
there are only a few orangutans, so each ape life is that much more
valuable.
It is an odious comparison, weighing the value of human life against
the value of orangutan life. But thats ultimately what this is about.
A British professor thinks there are too many Asians and not enough
orangutans.
Maybe, on the other hand, there are too many British professors.
This patently misanthropic ethic undermines any claim that aperights advocates might assert to the moral high ground. The value we
place on a human life cannot be a function of how many others there
are in that particular category. If you really believe there are too many
people and not enough orangutans, and you value their lives accordingly, you are obliged to decide which people are superuous.
Is your own life superuous? Or just the lives of little dark people
somewhere else whom you dont know?
Thats often the way it is, of course. It is easy to condemn the poor
of other nations, or even of our own, for being prolic, all the while
knowing smugly that the world will always be big enough for one
more Harvard man. That is in fact the fallacy promoted by Thomas
Malthus at the end of the eighteenth century. He projected too many
people and not enough resources and concluded we needed to take
a heartless approach to the poor because they were the problem. The
social forces that created the poor and kept them poor were invisible
to him. Nowadays we know that education, upward economic mobility, and economic modernization all work to drive reproductive
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rates down; giving women choices in their lives invariably has them
bear, on the average, fewer children.
It is far too easy to assert that theres too many of those other people;
they can tolerate some losses. Not only is that callous, it is the very
antithesis of morality in our civilization, and has been (at least normatively) for a very long time. Recall by way of mythic example the
Pharaoh in the rst chapter of Exodus, who decided there were too
many Hebrews, and acted accordingly. A concern for animal welfare
must come out of a concern for human welfare. It must emerge from
a concern for human rights, not supplant it. For once we begin to
devalue human lives, we lose a standard by which to value any other
kind of lives. And it just doesnt work the other way around.
It is importantvery importantto protect and defend the lives
of nonhuman primates. But our concern for them cant come at the
expense of our concern for human misery and make us numb to it.
Baby orangutans in boxes should make you sad, but human misery
should make you sadder. An abused chimpanzee may be genetically
98% human, but an abused person is 100% human.
The people who maintained overtly that most human life was cheap
were the ones who lost World War II.
They were also the ones who thought that genetic distances constituted a sound basis on which to accord human rights.
re a d i n g th e m i n ds of ap e s
The most resonant argument for human rights for apes is based on
their mental capacities, which are notoriously difcult to infer. Many
of the data, and especially the emotionally compelling data, are anecdotal or based on a combination of projection and dubious inferences.
Just look at them! Just be with themand you will experience the
empathy that links your mind to theirs!
And yet, where clever, controlled experimentation has been possible, it has tended strongly to show that in specic ways, ape minds
work quite differently from human minds. Which is, of course, what
we would expect, given that they are different species.
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Thus, argues Daniel Povinelli, you can watch chimps and imagine
you know what theyre thinking, but what you think theyre thinking
may not be a reliable guide at all to what theyre actually thinking.
Is a chimpanzee able to put itself in anothers place, as it casually
seems to human observers accustomed to imagining themselves in
someone elses place, or is a chimpanzees behavior guided by a less
complex, less human mental program? Povinelli nds that whenever
he can devise an experiment to distinguish between whether a chimpanzee is having a high-level thought or a low-level thought, the
chimps invariably are having the simple, unimpressive thoughtif
thought is even the right word.
The data invoked for ape rights on the basis of their minds and
behavior are invariably the ufest and least scientically compelling
data; where data are collected most rigorously, they point to the mental differences between us. Having three times as much brain does,
it seems, make a difference.
None of which is to say that chimpanzees dont merit protection
in captivity and preservation in the wildbut simply that it has
nothing to do with human rights.
t a ki n g i t t o t h e streets
In early 1999, the legislature of New Zealand debated the rst aperights bill. There are no apes indigenous to New Zealand, and no
research was being performed on apes in New Zealand. In fact, there
were at the time twenty-eight chimpanzees and six orangutans in the
entire country, and no one was suggesting that they were being in
any way mistreated, so the proposed legislation was almost entirely
symbolic. Appropriately, its major scientic proponent was a theoretical biologist.
Although largely ignored in the United States, the New Zealand
debate was watched carefully in England, particularly by the scientic
community. The weekly science magazine New Scientist weighed in
strongly in their issue of February 13, reminding the reader that folk
genetics lies just behind the legislation:
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And of the notion of human rights for the apes generally, New Scientist had only sarcasm:
[I]f animals have rights which protect them against humans, it is
only logical that they should have rights that protect them from
each other. If a chimp kills another chimp in the wild, or a human,
do we really want to hire a eet of lawyers? And if we extended
honorary personhood to all animals, would the gazelle be entitled
to rights against the lion?
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Nine
a human gene museum?
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Africans
Europeans
Asians
Asians
Europeans
Africans
Figure 7. Are the most closely related races Europeans and Asians or Europeans
and Africans? In fact, neither alternative is correct, for the African gene pool
subsumes those of Asians and Europeans and therefore cannot be contrasted with
them.
Even so, the model was predicated on two odd assumptions: that
the human species is naturally partitioned into three equivalent
unitsAfricans, Asians, and Europeansand that human history
can be interpreted sensibly as a series of bifurcations, as the populations come printed out of the computer. Neither assumption is valid.
Furthermore, the mitochondrial Eve research of the 1980s showed
a pattern different from that of Cavalli-Sforzas genetic work from
the 1960s. As we saw in chapter 4, African, European, and Asian are
not equivalent biological categories at all, it seems, because the rst
subsumes the other two genetically (g. 7).
That is a very important conclusion, because it means that asking
about the relationships among the three groups is a nonsense question. As noted in chapter 4, its like asking which two are most closely
related among cows, dogs, and mammals. Since the category mammals includes cows and dogs, it cannot be contrasted with them.
The answer you get will simply depend upon what you choose to
represent your group mammals.
Of course, those cultural categories of race are so powerful that the
point has proven elusive to many geneticists. And in fact by the late
1980s, it was still eluding these geneticists as they mobilized their
resources to push for the construction of a human genome diversity
project (or HGDP). When the same kinds of old models (bifurcating
relationships among historically constructed human groups) were
used, Africans now appeared to be more different genetically from
Europeans and Asians than originally thought. By 1988, Cavalli-
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expected to look people in the eye and tell them that their DNA was
more valuable than their customs, their land, their traditions, and
their lives. Imagine the scientists surprise when those people failed
to share their priorities!
And why is the uidity of human populations (merg[ing] with
their neighbors) such a bad thing? Did they think it has only just
begun? In fact, many of the vanishing populations were only vanishing in a peculiarly narrow, genetical sense. Many were actually
bouncing back demographically and culturally, through a revival of
traditions, immigration, and the general ux of population histories.
Their genetics were changing, but why would geneticists demand
them to be frozen in time?
Worse still, when they were approached by geneticists interested in
studying the gene pool of African Americans and Latinos, the leaders
of the HGDP demurred. Those were admixed populations and thus
not interesting to them. The goal of the project was apparently to
reconstruct an imaginary human gene pool of the year 1500, not to
study the real human gene pool of the year 2000.
Objections to the project were slow to be voiced because the geneticists had succeeded in building up a favorable publicity machine
in the science media. Not only was this a big anthropology project
conceived and designed without input from anthropologists, but neither was there input from, or contact with, the people they hoped to
study. It thus appeared to be a classically colonialist undertaking.
Geneticists regarded the indigenous peoples as objects of analysis; the
scientists were talking about them, but not to them. From a standpoint of unequal power relations, they would coax them to provide
some of their blood (or perhaps get someone else to do the dirty
work), and then nd out who they were closely related to, back home
comfortably in Palo Alto.
It was a throwback to the anthropology of a much earlier generation.
With nancial assistance from major scientic organizations, the
geneticists began to hold formal meetings to discuss the scientic
issues. In July 1992, they convened at Stanford to debate the issues
of theoretical population genetics that would be central to the proj-
205
ects aims. Later that year, they convened again at Penn State to decide
which populations should be targeted, and came up with a list of
about 500, which ultimately became an ofcial list of 722 populations.
A third news feature in Science again reported the projects two articulated goals: how populations are related and to probe human
evolutionary history. Anthropologists were now being invited to
help, but it was clear that their participation was not for the projects
design, but simply to help operationalize it.
ob je cti on s t o t h e p roj e ct
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ra ce a n d th e p roj e ct
The year 1995 began auspiciously for the HGDP. Cavalli-Sforza had
just published a magnum opus called The History and Geography of
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Human Genes, and Time ran a feature on him, on the book, and, of
course, on the HGDP. Once again, though, things began to backre
on them. Taking another tackthat the HGDP would combat racism (and who could object to that?)Time represented the HGDP
as a counterblast to The Bell Curve.
But that was the equivalent of calling Gone With the Wind a refutation of Moby-Dick. The HGDP simply had nothing to do with
the thesis of The Bell Curve.
However, the leading proponents of the HGDP all had impeccably
liberal credentials dating from the 1970s, when the psychologist Arthur Jensen and the physicist William Shockley were reinventing the
inherent inferiority of the American lower classes. Luca Cavalli-Sforza
and his colleague Marcus Feldman had both been strident opponents
of the folk heredity of that era.
So this became a new selling-point for the HGDP. It was now going
to make the world a better place, because it was going to show that
there are no discrete races and thereby undermine racism. But, of
course, we already knew that there are no discrete races (Ashley Montagu had said that in the Journal of Heredity as early as 1941), and
there doesnt seem to be much sense in undertaking a big scientic
project to nd out something we already know.
Moreover, that goal assumes that the problem of racism lies in
animosities between distinct natural groups, so that denying the existence of such natural groups would implicitly deny racism a basis.
But, again, we already know that races are cultural constructions and
that racism exists independently of the naturalness of races. The people who hate one another the most are generally very similar biologically: think of the Irish and English, Hutu and Tutsi, Huron and
Iroquois.
Racism is thus independent of the existence of large natural groups
of people, or races. What could the Human Genome Diversity Project tell Bosnian Serbs and Muslims about each other that they dont
already know, or that they would care about?
Once again, the HGDP was talking through its hat. It had nothing
to contribute to contemporary discourse on racism. And nothing
revolutionary to tell us about the major features of human variation.
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But things quickly worsened, for Time ran a color gure from The
History and Geography of Human Genes, in which each of the nonexistent human races actually came color-coded: Africans yellow,
Mongoloids blue, Caucasoids green, and Australians red.
Quite literally!
It was the old essentialist fallacy of Linnaeus, except now with
different colors and computerized.
And just for good measure, Time told its readers, All Europeans
are thought to be a hybrid population, with 65% Asian and 35%
African genes.
To say that statement was wrong would imply that we really know
the proportion to be, say, 80:20, rather than 65:35. To call it wrong
would be a massive understatement. It is less than wrong; it is not
even wrong.
There is no reason at all to think that there was ever a time when
there were only Africans and Asians who interbred to create Europeans. There is no reason to think that Africans and Asians are purer
or more homogeneous than Europeans, or even that all three of these
geographical categories are equivalent biologically (in fact, as we have
noted, Asians and Europeans appear to constitute genetic subsets of
Africans). So that statement reects a great deal of misconception
about human biology, diversity, and history. Was it a misquotation?
Did Time just make it up? Nothe HGDPs advocates had published a scientic paper in 1991 purporting to show it. [A]ncestral
Europeans are estimated to be an admixture of 65% ancestral Chinese
and 35% ancestral Africans, they wrote in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
That kind of thinking has a venerable history in Western thought.
To an earlier generation, dividing humans into three continental types
harmonized well with a mythic history that saw humans as descended
from Noahs three sons. Although the far reaches of the continents
were unknown to them, by fanciful extrapolation from the Book of
Genesis it was argued that the ancient Hebrews had ascribed North
Africans to the lineage of Ham, central and southern Europeans to
the lineage of Japheth, and West Asians (including themselves) to the
lineage of Shem, after their families, after their tongues, in their
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lands, in their nations (Gen. 10:20). And this origin myth ultimately
became the framework used by early nineteenth-century anthropologists to understand racial variation: the most divergent peoples became the purest, most primordial peoples, and they could be found
in West Africa, East Asia, and northern Europe. But serious scientists
had abandoned that kind of thinking decades earlier, until the new
genetic work reimposed it on their data.
In fact, the geneticists Asians were just a small sample of people
from China, now living in the San Francisco Bay Area, and their
Africans were two populations of Pygmies. This was some of the
most crude, culturally loaded, pseudoscientic prattle imaginable in
the contemporary genetics literature, and it was now exposed at the
very intellectual core of the HGDP.
Nevertheless, the HGDP had managed to get a seed grant of
$500,000 from the National Science Foundation, as well as sevengure grants from other private foundations. However bizarre the
research seemed to be, it was making an impression.
By years end, however, there was yet another scandal brewing.
t h e cu tti n g e d g e of bi oe thi cs
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th e h g d ps d e a t h throe s
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re qui e s ca t in p ace
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If the Navajos themselves had any input in determining the priorities for research, or access to the resources, they might well choose
to develop programs that would approach the problem differently
and get at its nongenetic root causes. In fact, if you bothered to
explain to them how small a component of alcoholism genes really
account for, its conceivable that the Navajos might not consider genetic research into the subject important enough for them to participate in.
Rather, they might insist that you take your syringes instead to
Boston on St. Patricks Day.
But that is the crux of the issue for geneticists at the millennium:
Who decides what genetic problems are important? Traditionally, it
has been the scientists dening the research questions, with indigenous peoples as passive pincushions. With the empowerment of
indigenous peoples over the past few decades, that is no longer tenable.
Indigenous peoples are increasingly weighing the merits of scientic
questions themselves and making scientists justify themselves to a
much greater extentand the less scientists acknowledge that, the
less science they will be permitted to do. This is a global political
reality in the twenty-rst century, and the fact that the HGDPs leaders did not recognize it is another testimony to their navete or insensitivity.
The issue is not the study of human genetic diversity per se but
the ancillary questions of bioethics, nance, discrimination, condentiality, essentialism, and choice. The ones the HGDP refused to
address.
Decentralized, unregulated collection of genetic materials from the
peoples of the world is still going on. There ought to be some kind
of centralized human population genetics project, a fusion of anthropological problems and genetic technologies. But it will have to use
the conceptual apparatus of modern anthropology. It will have to deal
with the fact that the scientic study of people is invariably political;
its just not like the scientic study of clams. It will have to address
a broader suite of questions than just microphylogenetic inferences
from trees based on genetic distance. And it will have to address
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bioethical issues proactively and not merely deal with them as they
happen to come upby which time it will be too late.
I started out skeptical of the HGDP and evolved into an enemy.
The scientists in charge had no interest in acknowledging errors, in
revising their public positions, or in even learning about the relevant
cognate material. For them, it was a simple matter of getting lots of
money, getting blood, and nding out who was related to whom. It
was never clear they could do the third; they belatedly and grudgingly
acknowledged the limitations of the second; and, as a consequence,
they are being denied the rst.
If there is a special section of hell where scientists spend eternity
after ruining a good idea and leaving others to mop up the mess
theyve made, thats where youll nd the stalwarts of the Human
Genome Diversity Project. Perhaps theyll be plotting to study the
genetic diversity of the Damned.
Now that might be interesting.
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Ten
identity and descent
There is a question that I am frequently asked, usually by wideeyed students who have already taken their science requirements, often in preparation for medical school, and who are now settling in
for a semester of biological anthropology, an elective that looks at
least relevant to their scientic interests. It comes up when I arrive
at the topic of molecular anthropology, and of the genetic similarities
between apes and humans.
Given the genetic similarities between chimp and human, begins
the student, could they interbreed? Could we make a human-chimp
hybrid?
Now, there are a lot of self-defeating ways to deal with that question. One of them is to take the attitude that there are things we are
not meant to know. But such arguments will carry little weight,
since the source of their moral authority is not clear. Who says we
arent meant to know? Who is the custodian of what we are and arent
meant to know? Werent we meant to know about the immune system, so that we could be spared smallpox and polio? Werent we
meant to know about the internal combustion engine, laser beams,
and radio waves?
How, then, can we say that we arent meant to know about chimps
and humans?
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Are you going to raise him/her/it in isolation from the rest of the
world, which would be psychologically destructive to an ape or a
human; or announce it to the world, and allow People Magazine in
to lm the offsprings life? What kind of an identity will you help
him/her/it achieve? Bi-racial children have a hard enough time.
Assuming you have produced a sentient articulate being, how will
you answer the questions: What am I? Why dont I t in? Why is no
one else like me?
Budding geneticists learn to think technologically. The current generation are also being forced to think about their responsibilities and
obligations to their subjects and about accountability. That is the
heart of molecular anthropology.
Could it be done is not simply a biochemical question, it is a
social and ethical question. And let me make it clear that by ethical,
I dont mean to suggest that there are some things we shouldnt know,
because I think we should strive to know everything. By ethical I
mean its a question that involves acknowledging responsibilities on
the part of the researcher to the objects of analysis. Doing research
on humans may be technological, but doing it right is a social and
ethical matter.
In other words, the technical aspects of that experiment are the
easiest. What to do with the child once youve created it is a much
harder question.
That hybrid infant would be in a perpetual state of intermediacy,
only half-person.
What would it be? Its human part would certainly want to know,
because one of the most quintessentially human attributes is the desire
to situate ourselves in the social universe. We establish our identity
through systems of kinship; we decide who we are by learning what
we are.
wh o a n d what
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cl on i n g
Perhaps the best contemporary example of science impinging on kinship is in the cloning controversy. It surfaced briey in 1978, when a
writer named David Rorvick published a book entitled In His Image:
The Cloning of a Man, about a reclusive millionaire who buys himself
some geneticists and reproductive biologists and contrives to have
himself cloned. It was a novel, but Rorvick misrepresented the story
as nonction, setting off a ferocious controversy about whether or
not it could be true.
Much of contemporary thought about cloning was shaped by popular ction, notably Woody Allens movie Sleeper and Ira Levins
novel The Boys from Brazil (and the lm based on it), both of which
date from the mid-1970s. Each centers on a plot to clone an evil
dictator, linking cloning technology to its application.
But the debates over cloning died down with the discovery that
Rorvicks story was ction, as were all the other cloning scenarios.
Scientists vowed it couldnt happen, and so there was no need to
worry about it.
Then came Dolly, the cloned ewe, in 1998. Dolly suddenly ushered
in a new wave of millennial technophobia, calling forth scenarios in
which father and grandfather could be the same person, in which
fatherhood per se might not even exist, in which generations would
be blurred, in which the wealthy would clone themselves to perpetuate the exploitation of the poor, and tycoons would keep twins or
triplets of themselves on ice to use for spare parts.
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And therein lies the paradoxical beginning of modern physical anthropology in the nineteenth century, with the collection and study
of the bones of dead Indians. Thousands of bones of Indians from
all ages, the results of controlled archaeological excavations and of
simple grave-robbing, have formed the basis of much of our knowledge of human skeletal variation, and they sit now in the dank recesses
of museums.
One of the major roles of cultural relativism is as a conscience of
the industrial world. Not merely pointing out the diversity of behavioral traditions for the sake of the titillation of exoticism, but compelling students, or just thoughtful citizens, to appreciate the precariousness of history in light of the privileges of power. You might pause
to think about how the course of your life would run if indigenous
Americans had conquered and colonized Europe, rather than vice
versa, and what you might then hope for in the way of toleration or
respect for your beliefs and behavioral traditions. (It could never
have happened that way is the classic response, based on the insecurities evoked by the thought of being unprivileged oneself, but we
know of no innate aw in the colonized peoples that would make
this scenario impossible.)
A product of the consciousnesses raised by a century of anthropology in America is the legislation known as NAGPRA, the Native
American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (25 U.S.C. 3001
3013), introduced by Congressman Mo Udall (D-Ariz.) and ratied
in 1990. NAGPRA has two major injunctions: rst, Native American
cultural or biological materials stored in museums must be catalogued, appropriate tribal representatives must be contacted, and the
materials must be surrendered if the tribes want them; and second,
any artifacts or remains found on federal lands must now be treated
as if owned by the Indians, and you have to get their permission to
study them.
Its critics called NAGPRA anti-science, but it isnt science legislation, its human rights legislation. Its about setting limits on scientists, who can no longer do just anything they damn please. NAGPRA is as anti-science as the Nuremberg Code. Sure, it might be
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ke n n e - h yp e
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it was clearly a kind only in use thousands of years before any European (Lewis and Clark were the rst) had ever set foot in the region.
According to Chatters, We either had an ancient individual
with physical characteristics unlike later native peoples, or a trapper/
explorer whod had difculties with stone age peoples during his
travels. To resolve this ambiguity, therefore, he sent part of the bone
just below the left pinkie to a radiocarbon-dating laboratory on
August 5.
The preliminary result came in on August 23, saying the skeleton
was over 9,000 years old. The Army Corps of Engineers, custodians
of the site, followed NAGPRA by contacting the relevant tribes (in
this case, the Umatilla, Nez Perce, and Yakama; Chatters separately
notied the Colville) on August 27.
And then the anthropologists held a press conference.
On August 28, the Tri-City Herald reported that while initial indications were that the skeleton may ha[ve] been of European descent, it was obviously very old and indigenous. There was no indication of the bizarre racial furor the scientists would soon set off.
But the story ended by quoting Jerry Meninick of the Yakama tribe
compellingly about the sacred nature of the remains: If Christians
found a skeleton of someone who lived during the biblical book of
Genesis, those remains would be revered.
Another slant to the story was, however, beginning to emerge.
The following day, the Seattle Times ran a story with a very different theme. Ancient Bones, Old DisputesIs Kennewick Skeleton
Asian or European? it asked. This story contrasted the narrow,
European-shaped skull with the more rounded, Mongolian-type
of skull. It added rather anachronistically, Scientists determine race
by mathematically comparing measurements on several different
points of the skull. The model now involved two migrations of
different-headed peoples, an early one of people with more Caucasian featureswho today extend from Europe to Indiaand a
later one with rounder skulls typical of contemporary northern
Asians.
Chatters then contacted Rika Kaestle, then a graduate student at
UCDavis, and asked her to study Kennewick Mans DNA.
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The last days of August were fateful for Kennewick Man. Seeing
that a potentially intellectually valuable specimen might be rendered
unavailable for study under NAGPRA, a leading anthropologist at
the Smithsonian Institution invited Chatters to bring the skeleton
east, away from the local Indians and the Army Corps of Engineers,
and offered Dr. Chatters airline accommodations in order to afford
. . . an opportunity to conduct an extensive evaluation of the skeleton, according to court documents.
On learning of these plans, the Army Corps recalled the bones from
the anthropologists, pending a decision about whose bones they were
and whether the bones should be given to one of the local tribes
under the federal law mandating a return of Indian bones to their
descendants. Chatters was instructed to lock the bones in the county
sheriff s evidence locker and go on with his life. When I heard this,
I panicked, he later recalled. I was the only one whod recorded
any information on it. There were all these things I should have done.
I didnt even have photographs of the post-cranial skeleton. I thought,
Am I going to be the last scientist to see these bones?
Chatterss panic over his failure to document the nd adequately
is what set off the chain of events that became the Kennewick Man
controversy. He had already consulted another physical anthropologist about the bones, and they had come to identical conclusions: the
skeleton was similar to that of a Caucasian male.
Of course, no Caucasiansthat is to say, people from Europe or
western Asiaare known to have been in the state of Washington
thousands of years ago. But regardless of how interesting the skeleton
might be, the anthropologists were about to lose it to a bunch of
people who didnt care about science and who just wanted to subject
it to some superstitious mumbo-jumbo and destroy it.
So the anthropologists devised a way to make Kennewick Man very
important. They cast him as the centerpiece in a literally earthshaking theorynamely, that there were Caucasians in the New
World thousands of years ago. And the carbon-14 date implied something even more earth-shaking: that Caucasians had been there rst.
And they clothed themselves in the mantle of science and began
to speak for it.
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Thus, when the Umatillas led formally on September 9 for repatriation of the Kennewick Man skeleton, they were greeted with
an extraordinary challenge to the legality of their claim. Kennewick
Man, argued the scientists, did not fall under NAGPRA, because he
wasnt an Indian ancestor. He was a Caucasoid, and thus the Indian
tribes had no right to claim him under the law.
The most immediate requirement is satisfying the tribes desires
to honor their ancestors and see those remains re-interred, a spokesman for the Army Corps of Engineers said, but the anthropologist
responded that the bones have more European-like features, not
characteristics often associated with early American Indians.
According to one scientist, the Caucasian-like people represented
by the skeleton died out in a severe Western drought about 9,000
years ago and were replaced a few thousand years later by the ancestors
of todays Indians. According to another, the earlier group intermarried with later arrivals more similar in appearance to todays
northern Asians. Yet another speculated that the New World was
prehistorically colonized by populations hopping from England to
Iceland to Greenland to Canada, which might explain the Caucasian appearance of the early skeletons and . . . similarities between
European and American stone tools.
On September 22, the Seattle Times mentioned the existence of
non-Caucasoid features observed in Kennewick Mans remains, but
they quickly vanished from the discussion.
On Monday, September 30, the stakes were permanently raised
when the New York Times ran a story under the title Tribe Stops
Study of Bones That Challenge History and brought the developing
conict over Kennewick Man to national attention. But what conict
was there? Under the relevant federal law, the bones belonged to the
Indians, and that was that. Or it should have been.
The conict, such as it was, had been manufactured by the scientists. They wanted the skeleton but didnt have rights to it. Suddenly,
the skeleton became crucial, because it adds credence to theories that
some early inhabitants of North America came from European stock.
But what theories were those? Where had they come from? What had
they been based on?
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the association between the Harrison Ford Fan Club in Omaha and
the one in Yokohama. The two fan clubs are afliated, and the identities of both are rooted in their admiration for Harrison Ford. Is
there an objective basis on which to decide that the bond between
two groups of Jews is valid and that between two groups of Harrison
Fords fans is not?
NAGPRA leaves the decision as to whether the bond claimed between Indians and specic remains is real or spurious to a committee.
Meanwhile the anti-NAGPRA anthropologists began to spin new
origin myths for Native Americans. Robson Bonnichsen of Oregon
State had already been quoted in the Seattle Times for his pet theory
that some of the rst Americans came by skin boat from Europe by
hopping from England to Iceland to Greenland to Canada, which,
the newspaper was quick to add, was entirely unsupported by any
anthropological evidence whatsoever. But it could explain both the
Caucasian appearance of the early skeletons and similarities between European and American stone tools.
Dennis Stanford, head of the Smithsonians anthropology division,
elaborated in March 1997. Based on supercial resemblances between
early stone tools in America (Clovis points) and older ones from
France (Solutrean laurel-leaf blades), Stanford suggested that the Indians came from France. Now this is really an off the wall kind of
idea right now, he added, but its one that I dont think we should
ignore.
And as much as it should have been, it couldnt be ignored after
Douglas Preston wrote it up in the New Yorker in June 1997. The
original inhabitants of the New World came from France with their
Solutrean tools across the Atlantic, and the Asian ancestors of the
Indians came thousands of years later. Their skulls and their tools
showed it.
The anthropology community was dumbfounded. Most students
of stone tools found little similarity between Solutrean and Clovis
points. For one thing, they were differently shaped; for another, they
were of different sizes. For a third, they were made quite differently.
The only similarity appeared to be that they both came to a point.
The French-Clovis tool connection had not been published in peer-
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reviewed scientic forums, it had simply been put out in the New
Yorker.
In fact, inferring cultural contact on the basis of a supercial similarity of technologies has a long history in anthropology. In the nineteenth century, it served to deny the creative abilities of indigenous
peoples. There were pyramids in Mexico and pyramids in Egypt; the
Mexicans couldnt possibly have built them themselves; so they must
have gotten the idea from the Egyptians. Or perhaps from Atlantis.
(Later, space aliens would ll the role.)
But there is, in fact, no basis for thinking that the Central American
pyramids were conceived and erected by anyone but the indigenous
inhabitants of the region, and likewise for the Egyptian pyramids.
Similarly, there is no reason to think that Great Zimbabwe was built
by anyone other than indigenous Africans, although colonial Europeans struggled mightily to resist that conclusion.
An even more insidious undertone of the Smithsonian antiNAGPRA hypothesis is the linkage of biologies and technologies.
Not only were the anthropologists dubiously inferring European peoples, but they were also dubiously inferring European tools, and mapping them on to one another, thus denying aboriginal Americans both
a biological and a cultural identity!
Meanwhile, the Army Corps of Engineers had ordered all DNA
work to cease on Kennewick Man and placed a gag order on the
progress of the work to date. Kennewick Man did not appear to be
the property of science, and the people he appeared to belong to
didnt want scientists working on him.
But the scientists did have a cast of the skull and wished to make
it known that the Indians were impeding the march of science. One
widely repeated story in the newspapers and magazines involved trying to justify the racial propaganda for Kennewick Man by speculating on who he looked like, based on his skull. According to the New
Yorker, Jim Chatters was watching Star Trek: The Next Generation and
had an epiphany about Patrick Stewart, the actor who played Captain
Jean-Luc Picard: My God, there he is! Kennewick Man! Unsurprisingly, then, when Chatters collaborated with a local sculptor a
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few months later to lay some esh on the old bones, the result was a
dead ringer for the English actor, as Chatters predicted months ago,
said the local newspaper on February 10, 1998.
This would serve to preempt debate over the race of the skull, by
presenting a Caucasoid face rather than race-less bones. But again,
there was exceedingly little science at work; an impressionistic description of Kennewick Man as resembling Captain Picard became a
self-fullling prophecy. Not only did the earliest American tools come
from France, but so did their users faces!
From the bones, however, there is no greater resemblance to Patrick
Stewart than there is to Patrick Ewing. In fact, the jaw, cheekbones,
and eye sockets probably resemble those of the basketball star at least
as much as they do those of the Star Trek actor. It wasnt widely
publicized, but one physical anthropologist consulted by Chatters
prior to the reclamation of the bones was reported as noting that the
shape of the skeletons upper eye sockets . . . resembled the shape
common to Negroid people.
The decision by a small group of anthropologists to challenge Kennewick Mans repatriation on the basis of its racial afliation was very
unfortunate. From a diverse assortment of characteristics, Kennewick
Man was assigned to a single racial category. This is the philosophical
problem of essentialism, in which you become dened by one or a
few key parts, ostensibly representing your essence, and the rest of
you, the motley reality, is ignored. The essentialism underlying both
racial categories and the assessment of racial afnity on the basis of
skull form belongs to an earlier era, which anthropologists recall regretfully. Today, the anthropology community en masse rejects as
pseudoscientic the notion of race as a natural category, and as equally
bogus the assignment of individuals to such transcendent categories
on the basis of their skulls. What exist are features and populations;
sometimes one can map them onto one another, and sometimes one
cannot.
As they tried to explain themselves to the anthropology community,
the anti-NAGPRA team ran in circles. [I]t was the very question of
racial identity that drove the work, Jim Chatters informed the aca-
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g i v e u p ke n n e wi ck man
I see three reasons to give Kennewick Man to the Indians and for the
scientic community to forget about him.
First, he belongs to the Indians, not to science. That is the law. It
is up to them to decide whether they want scientists to study him.
Perhaps the law is a ass, but whining about it will probably not be
as efcacious as working to rebuild some condence between the
Indian and scientic communities.
Second, the scientists had their chance and muffed it badly. Not
only did they trample callously and cavalierly on Native American
beliefs and historythat is to say, not only were the scientists bad at
the humanistic end of thingsbut their pronouncements were exceedingly speculative and poorly conceived. The irresponsibility of
challenging the priority of Native Americans in America on such
imsy evidence harks back to the authoritarian nonsense espoused by
geneticists of the 1920s. It was never an issue of Indian beliefs versus
science, but of Indian beliefs versus pseudoscience. Perhaps the next
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lived in the area continuously for 9,000 years; or because his people
died out and were replaced by other physically different groups of
indigenous Americans. Its that all claims of ancestry and descent from
Kennewick Man are nonliteral and nonscientic; they are metaphorical.
And we have no objective, scientic basis on which to judge one
metaphors validity as against anothers. The question of descent from
Kennewick Man thus falls outside the domain of science.
Kennewick Man has different signicance for the two groups that
want his remains, and his importance as a symbol to Native Americans, I would argue, outweighs his importance to the scientists as a
basis for thoughtless and irresponsible speculation. It has never been
good for science to trample callously on peoples views of themselves
and their place in the universe. All that does is make people angry,
resentful, and disoriented. And science was always supposed to improve peoples lives, not make them worse.
Kennewick Man lay at the crossroads of the sciences and the humanities. He represented a confrontation between the politics of
identity and human rights, on the one hand, and an archaic and
transgressive science, on the other.
cod a
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Eleven
is blood really so damn thick?
While kennewick mans skeleton may seem to be a subject remote from the 98% genetic equivalence of humans and apes, it really isnt. Its all fundamentally about descent and relatednesshow
I identify my relatives and what their relationship to me means. In
many cultures, this is usually expressed through the medium of
blood.
Blood is one of the most powerful substances the human mind has
ever invented.
I dont mean that, of course, literally. People didnt invent blood.
It existed as a biological substance before people did.
But as such it has no meaning. People gave it meaning. It became
the emblem of a warriors prowess, the wondrous life force of a god,
the taboo monthly ow of a woman, and the link between the generations. It became the Eucharist of Jesus, the hallucination of Lady
Macbeth, and lunch for Dracula.
That is what we mean when we say that blood is a construction.
It has importance or signicance that is not a direct consequence of
its biological natureof the mixture of plasma, erythrocytes, basophils, neutrophils, lymphocytes, and the rest.
Blood, rather, is a highly sacred substance.
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e s s e n ti a l i z i n g blood
Essentialism is such an ingrained cultural value that it surfaces surprisingly and unfortunately often in population genetics, where it is
paradoxically most fundamentally undermined.
A widely publicized study in early 1997 tracked the Y chromosomes
of Jews to examine the hereditary priesthood that most people dont
even know Jews have. According to the Bible, Mosess brother Aaron
became the progenitor of a lineage, the Cohanim, entrusted with
special duties in the Temple in Jerusalem. With the destruction of
the Second Temple by the Romans in the rst century, the formal
functions of the priestly lineage came to an end, although some duties
and privileges remain in local synagogues for people with the surname
Cohen or its cognates.
A group of geneticistsIm not sure whether more pious than
credulous, or vice versaexamined the conguration of two genes
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involving samples comparably overrepresenting Horowitzes or Bernsteins, we have no way to know just what the Cohanim pattern does
represent. And in the absence of comparative knowledge of the frequency of these arrays in non-Jews, the information is decontextualized and largely meaningless.
It is thus certainly gratuitous to assume, along with the reverent
geneticists, that the biblical narrative of the founding of the priesthood is literally true and has now been validated genetically. It is
conceivable alternatively that the Cohanim are of heterogeneous origin; that they comprise a population and not a single genetic form
with a lot of pretenders; that the genetic similarity within the group
may be a simple function of recent historical relatedness in the construction of the sample; and that there might be no single primordial
priestly conguration, even though this methodology combined with
essentialist assumptions will invariably identify one.
More important, the authors of the report nd themselves in the
middle of an identity controversy, as people want to know authoritatively if they are really Hebrew priests or not. Well, of course,
nobodys a Hebrew priest; there hasnt been a priesthood for centuries.
Nevertheless, in spite of how shaky the inference is, these genetic data
are culturally invested with religious authority.
The construction of identity is a political arena in which genetic
data should be regarded with considerable caution! Perhaps the most
bizarre aspect of this particular story is that the New York Times reported further on May 9, 1999, that the Cohanim Y chromosome
is also found among the Lemba, a South African group with an origin
myth associating them with the Jews.
And therefore, they are genetic crypto-Jews.
Perhaps so, but since the story and the data had not yet been
published, reviewed, submitted, or even written up for a scientic
audience, perhaps it would be wise to suspend judgment. Those who
are forced to trumpet their research in the press, rather than in a
scientic forum, usually have a good reason for doing so. (Such as,
they cant really prove their point because they havent done the appropriate controls or ancillary studies.) In this case, it would be nice
to know how prevalent the Cohanim Y chromosome is among
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wh a t i s a re l ative ?
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a l a s t l ook a t ke n n e wi ck man
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Now, lets say youre lucky and skillful enough to get some usable
DNA. It would have to be mitochondrial DNA, which exists in many
copies per cell and evolves rapidly. What can you do with it?
Well, there are only two questions you could conceivably ask with
Kennewick Mans DNA. First, is it Native American DNA? It turns
out that ve clusters of mutations in the mtDNA of Native Americans
tend to dene populations of the New World. I say tend to dene
because those ve clusters are neither exclusive to Native Americans
nor 100% characteristic of Native Americans. So nding that Kennewick Man has one of the ve mtDNA clusters doesnt actually tell
you hes Native American, and not nding it doesnt tell you he isnt
Native American. In any event, that question has already been decided, so this seems hardly worth the effort.
On the other hand, doing a DNA test, argue some of its proponents, might allow you to tell what tribe he belongs to and therefore
who should receive his remains.
On the other hand, if the tribes in question dont allow you to do
DNA tests on them, then you cant possibly say anything about Kennewick Mans afliation to them. More the point, though, is that the
tribes themselves are historically and politically constituted entities.
Their boundaries are porous and their durations ephemeral over the
scope of human history and prehistory. Consequently, closely related
tribes dont differ genetically from each other in any but the most
exceedingly subtle fashions. To try and allocate Kennewick Man to
one of them on the basis of his DNA would be a fools errand.
So why not just let him rest in peace?
But they wouldnt. Federal authorities decided in early 2000 to go
ahead with genetic tests on Kennewick Man in spite of the likelihood
of nding nothing interesting and desecrating a sacred relic to accomplish it. Rika Kaestle would get her chance to study Kennewick
Mans DNA after all; now the government was asking her to do it.
And when the smoke cleared in the autumn of 2000, they didnt
nd any DNA after all, and Secretary of the Interior Bruce Babbitt
nally recommended that Kennewick Man be given to the Indians.
Those scientists are still protesting.
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ki n s h i p a n d chimp shi p
Species, on the other hand, are not constructed entities: they are
natural lineages bounded in time and space by participation in a
common gene pool. Humans constitute one, chimpanzees another.
And they appear to have had separate biological histories for about
seven million years.
That recognition is the culmination of Darwins revolution, the
acknowledgment that species have histories, and their patterns of
resemblance indicate aspects of their relatedness to one another. That,
in turn, was the culmination of an earlier revolution, the acknowledgment that observation and experimentationthe empirical core
of scienceconstituted a powerful manner of understanding the universe. Such an understanding would comprise a more fundamental
reality than had ever been previously apprehended; and that apprehension was fundamentally good, because it would afford a means of
improving the quality of life for all, by the application of this knowledge of reality via technology. And moreover, it is therefore desirable
to promote science and scientic understandings as widely as possible.
This was the mandate promoted in the sixteenth and seventeenth
centuries by the likes of Francis Bacon in response to the defensive
position of the clergy and the conservative position of the common
folk. Science as a way to new knowledge was appropriately perceived
as threatening by the custodians of the old ways of knowledge
revelation and at.
But now we know that living and extinct species are genealogically
connected, and that our history is intimately bound up with that of
the apes.
Ive never quite understood what is so threatening about that, in
and of itself. Aside from the fact that it seems to go against biblical
narrativebut so do a lot of things. After all, we know that English
and Spanish werent spoken at the foot of the Tower of Babelthey
evolved in historical times from Germanic and Latin, respectively. We
know that Jesus didnt survive Herod the Greats order to massacre
the innocents (as St. Matthew says) if he was born in Bethlehem
during the census of Quirinius (as St. Luke says), because the census
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occurred in 6 a.d., when Herod the Great was already ten years in
his grave (as historical records say).
So whats threatening to religion about chimpanzees?
As with other forms of kinship, the common ancestry of humans
and apes constitutes an historical and social narrative, a story about
where you came from and ultimately about what and who you are.
Like other kinship narratives, it locates you within a social universe
of others, and identies a certain class as meaningfully similar to you
and the rest as meaningfully dissimilar from you.
Quite a responsibility for science to assume. And it is the core of
the paradox of the ongoing creation-evolution war: science doesnt
care about the risk of alienating people from the belief systems that
orient them in life. It cares simply to describe what isthe descent
of our species from an ape stock, and our intimate kinship to living
apes.
People, on the other hand, do care about their orientations. Learning, for example, that you were adopted, and that your parents arent
your biological parents, and that you dont have the nexus of kinship
to your relatives that you thought you had, would be highly disorienting. The scientic origin narrative is simply the opposite, from
which we learn that we indeed have parents and relatives, and do not
stand isolated from rest of the species on earth.
But it is no less disorienting.
Consequently, I think that creationists are entitled to a degree of
sympathy they dont often encounter in the scientic community.
255
mals), and although he successfully appealed and got off on a technicality in a higher court, they made their point. Evolution was a
distasteful philosophy that went counter to the teachings of the Bible
and needed to be fought.
And for the next thirty-ve years, their point was acknowledged in
high school biology textbooks, which generally ignored the subject
of evolution. It wasnt until the shock of the Soviet satellite Sputnik
stimulated a heavy investment in science education that evolution
made a big comeback in the curriculum.
By the mid-1970s, fundamentalist Christians had a series of loosely
afliated organizations in place, most notably the California-based
Institute for Creation Research, which actively sponsored undermining the teaching of the theory of evolution. Local university chapters
of fundamentalist student groups freely distributed literature and
were able to choose from a stable of speakers. Prominent among
these was the diminutive biochemist Duane Gish, author of a series
of polemics against evolution and a very competent orator, who
toured college campuses with a slide show, occasionally debating
(and usually trouncing) his opponents. Gish would show a picture of
a half-whale, half-cow and demand to know where this transitional
form could be found; hed talk about the fraudulent fossil Piltdown
Man, and about Nebraska Man, an obscure, transient misinterpretation of a peccary tooth for an early human tooth. And he would
invoke bizarre and seemingly random data to prove his pointfootprints of humans and dinosaurs in a Texas riverbed; the atomic
structure of the element polonium; the anti-predation defenses of
the bombardier beetle.
The grass-roots campaign to call evolution into question was so
successful that by the late 1970s, Arkansas passed a bill mandating
equal time for evolution and creationism. Creationist logic was
inconsistent heresometimes they should be given equal time because both were religious, and sometimes they should be given equal
time because both were scientic. Nevertheless, the law was overturned as unconstitutional in federal court in 1978, as Judge William
R. Overton concluded that evolution was science and creationism
was religion.
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how long ago life came here, I want them to be nearer, to come
nearer together, before they demand of me to give up my belief in
the Bible.
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a pe s a n d pe o p le
Ultimately, there is no self-evident meaning in the structural similarity of chimp and human DNA, any more than there is in the structural similarity of our phlegm or our little toes. We know that we are
similar to chimpanzees and yet distinguished from them.
Our place in nature is thus underdetermined by genetic data. To
make sense of the data requires a biological eye and an anthropological mind, for its meaninglike the meaning of evolution a hundred
years agois technologically constructed and ideologically situated.
Consequently, it should be no surprise that the collection of sophisticated genetic data today unfortunately all too frequently lends
itself to remarkably unsophisticated interpretations. The divergence
between the approaches of two of the founding fathers of molecular
anthropology in the 1960sVince Sarich and Morris Goodman
illustrates this glaringly.
Both have demonstrated the genetic similarity of humans to chimpanzees and gorillas. Both have inferred the close relationship among
these three creatures. But they differ on what that means.
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oh , n o n ot a n ot he r p roj ect!
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265
Twelve
science, religion, and worldview
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t h e e u g e n i cs move ment
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Roosevelt (with whom Grant had helped found the New York Zoological Society) and Grants admirer from afar, Adolf Hitler. (Hitler
read the German translation of 1925. Id like to think there were rather
few other things he and Teddy Roosevelt agreed on.)
More than that, the book was reviewed and praised in the leading
scientic journals. While popularized from outside the scientic community, eugenics was also very rmly rooted within it.
The eugenics movement spearheaded the drive to restrict immigration (enacted by Congress in 1924) and to sterilize the poor involuntarily (upheld by the Supreme Court in 1927, and likened to
vaccination with the famous injunction that three generations of
imbeciles is enough).
The government believed it was acting according to the best modern scientic principles. And it was. The problem was, few people
asked, Who the devil are these scientists to be appropriating to themselves the decisions about whose stock is benecialwho shall live,
who shall die, who shall procreate? To ask that question was to set
yourself up as being anti-science, anti-modern, indeed, as antievolutionfor eugenics donned the mantles of both Darwin and
Mendel.
Consequently, Clarence Darrow was perceived as a traitor when he
excoriated the scientic community for its eagerness to abrogate other
peoples rights. Amongst the schemes for remolding society this is
the most senseless and impudent that has ever been put forward by
irresponsible fanatics to plague a long-suffering race, he wrote the
year after defending John T. Scopes for teaching evolution.
Darrow had evolved from biologys champion to biologys basher
in less than a year. Why? He was mortied by scientists pronouncing
authoritatively on elds in which they had little training, little insight,
and lots of arrogance. All they did was to bring the voice of authority
to the aid of popular bigotry.
And they refused to acknowledge it, because they were speaking
the facts.
The eugenics movement died with the onset of the Depression.
After the Crash, geneticists belatedly came to appreciate that social
worth and genetic endowment might not be so closely connected.
269
But there was no great scientic discovery involvedsimply a growing appreciation for human rights, an appreciation that they saw eroding quickly in Germany. And American geneticists were actually quite
conicted about it.
One prominent geneticist believed that the Germans were beating
us at our own game. Others were less outspoken but still conicted.
In 1934, colleagues and students of the leading geneticist in Germany, Eugen Fischer, honored him with a special issue of the Zeitschrift fur Morphologie und Anthropologie. In their preface, the editors
glowed about the new government rmly in place: We stand upon
the threshold of a new era. For the rst time in the history of the
world, the fuhrer Adolf Hitler is putting into practice the insights
about the biological foundations of the development of peoples
race, heredity, selection. It is no coincidence that Germany is the
locus of this event: German science provides the tools for the politician.
In Fischers honor, the two leading human geneticists in America
contributed papers to that volumeRaymond Pearl of Johns Hopkins, and Charles Davenport. Neither lived to see the end of World
War II. Wouldnt it be interesting to know how they felt in retrospect,
about having their own words appear behind those just quoted?
To complete the storythe preface was written by Otmar Freiherr
von Verschuer, a student of the honoree Eugen Fischer, and quite
obscure except for the fact of having been the academic advisor of
Josef Mengele, the infamous Auschwitz camp doctor. And Fischer
himself applied for and received full Nazi party membership in 1940.
th e l e s son
What are we to make of the eugenics movement? One modern geneticist writes for his student readers: As is often the case in science,
geneticists have become much more humble about their understanding of their subject as they realise how little they really know. Eugenics
was based on ignorance and prejudice rather than on fact; a science
with these at its centre was bound to die.
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271
re l a t i v i s m a n d scie nce
272
273
274
This contrast was made more sensitively and cleverly by Cole Porter
in a song he wrote for Silk Stockings, the musical version of the classic
Garbo movie Ninotchka. The lovely Soviet empiricist/sociobiologist
sings of love:
When the electromagnetic of the female
meets the electromagnetic of the he-male,
if right away
she should say
This is the male
Its a chemical reaction, thats all.
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276
a u th ori t y a n d accuracy
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278
279
s ci e n ce a n d my th
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281
useful. But using technology derived from it, and caring about it, are
different things. The things that people care about tend to be the
things outside the domain of scienceWhat is death? Will I always
be able to take care of my children? Why do good things happen to
bad people? How can I be happy?
All humans care about these things. All cognitive systems provide
answers for them. In addition, they provide explanations for how
humans and the world they live in came to beas the scientic myth
does. And more than that, other myths explain not simply how we
came into existence, but why.
And science doesnt.
Science explains how we came to exist more accurately than does
any other myth. By its own criterion, it is therefore the best explanation. But it is an answer to a relatively small and trivial question.
Science tells us that we are descended from apes, a fact that affects
peoples lives and minds minimally, if at all. On the other hand,
science says nothing about whether the cosmos is ultimately benevolent or just. The perpetual crisis in science education is largely the
result of a consistent failure of scientists themselves to be educated
about what they do and its implications.
Richard Dawkins writes in River Out of Eden:
[I]f the universe were just electrons and selsh genes, meaningless
tragedies . . . are exactly what we should expect, along with
equally meaningless good fortune. Such a universe would be neither
evil nor good in its intention. It would manifest no intentions of
any kind. In a universe of blind physical forces and genetic
replication, some people are going to get hurt, other people are
going to get lucky, and you wont nd any rhyme or reason in it,
nor any justice. The universe we observe has precisely the properties
we should expect if there is, at bottom, no design, no purpose,
no evil and no good, nothing but blind, pitiless indifference.
And for good measure he adds, DNA neither knows nor cares.
DNA just is. And we dance to its music.
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283
But for those of us who think that perhaps people do have the right
to be happy (or at least, as Thomas Jefferson believed, the right to
pursue happiness), it is an impoverished and unfullling worldview.
Small wonder it is so unpopular! Small wonder that people would
rather derive pleasure from the comforting inanities of The Celestine
Prophecy.
Science attacks complex, integrated mythologies with a unidimensional substitute: one that is simply more accurate about mundane,
mechanistic things. Science thus sets for itself a single goalempirical
accuracyand relentlessly attempts to supplant other systems of belief on that basis, leaving an intellectual vacuum in its wake in many
other ways. In other words, science does chicken right but frequently
leaves diners bored and nutritionally imbalanced.
There is considerable ideological baggage associated with compelling nonscientists to think as scientists door at least as the most
cynical scientists do. It may be worth reecting upon the implications
of denying people the other qualities that nonscientic origin myths
provide. Science has only recently and marginally come to consider
its responsibilities, and in our culture, the responsibility attached to
telling people authoritatively that they are unimportant in the universe is great.
And it may be worth considering as a question of scientic ethics
whether, in an insecure world, science may actually be doing more
harm than good to people in actively undermining their images of
self-worth in a benevolent cosmos. Perhaps, rather than asserting the
authority of science aggressively in opposition to whatever else is popularly and ignorantly believed, a humanistic, anthropological approach to science, as a set of ideas about the universe arising from a
particular historical development and serving a particular function,
may be a more effective way of getting its central messages across.
Teaching how scientists think about science is fundamentally different
from compelling people to think the way scientists do (or the way
they are supposed to think).
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285
286
287
half a century ago to his friend Theodosius Dobzhansky, who understood the value of anthropology for genetics.
In sum, the place of the human species in the natural order is
predicated on the place of the chimpanzee, and is consequently a
contested site on the boundary of animalness and godliness, beast
and angel. When genetics provides information bearing on that question, it does so within the contexts of both the scientic study of
heredity and the study of human systems of meaning. It cannot be
divorced either from its intellectual contexts, social and philosophical
implications, or the responsibilities of scientists.
And more than that, it provides an entry for anthropology into
molecular studies to create a truly interdisciplinary research area.
Molecular anthropology shows in microscosm how we can integrate science into our contemporary culture and acknowledge science
as a signicant part of it, while at the same time valuing other cultural
subsystems and other kinds of knowledge. The other kinds of knowledge are as important for the proper interpretation of scientic data
as science is for modern life. Humanistic knowledge is thus at least
as crucial to the scientist as scientic knowledge is for the masses.
Ultimately, this hybrid eld permits us to bridge the two cultures
and give a broader and more effective base to understanding of the
molecular basis of human existence.
288
i n t rod ucti on
C. P. Snow, The Two Cultures and the Scientic Revolution (New York: Cambridge
University Press, 1959). First published in preliminary form in the New Statesman, October 6, 1956.
Richard J. Herrnstein and Charles Murray, The Bell Curve: Intelligence and Class
Structure in American Life (New York: Free Press, 1994).
ch a pte r 1
For an overview of primate evolution and systematics, see John G. Fleagle, Primate
Adaptation and Evolution (San Diego: Academic Press, 1988; 2d ed., 1999).
On the work of Sarich and Wilson, see V. M. Sarich, Appendix: Retrospective on
Hominoid Macromolecular Systematics, in New Interpretations of Ape and Human Ancestry, ed. R. L. Ciochon and R. S. Corruccini (New York: Plenum Press,
1983), 13750.
On weird phylogenies based on molecular data, see G. J. P. Naylor and W. M.
Brown, Structural Biology and Phylogenetic Estimation, Nature 388 (1997):
52728; J. P. Curole, and T. D. Kocher, Mitogenomics: Digging Deeper with
Complete Mitochondrial Genomes, Trends in Ecology and Evolution 14 (1999):
39498; W. W. de Jong, Molecules Remodel the Mammalian Tree, Trends in
Ecology and Evolution 13 (1998): 27075; D. Graur, L. Duret, and M. Gouy,
Phylogenetic Position of the Order Lagomorpha (Rabbits, Hares, and Allies),
Nature 379 (1996): 33335; D. Graur, W. A. Hide, and W.-H. Li, Is the Guineapig a Rodent? Nature 351 (1991): 64951.
289
For Sarichs view from retirement, see V. M. Sarich, Molecular Clocks: Then and
Now (paper presented at the Dual Congress of the International Association
for the Study of Human Paleontology and the International Association of Human Biologists, Sun City, South Africa, 1998).
On early studies of the apes, see R. M. Yerkes and A. W. Yerkes, The Great Apes:
A Study of Anthropoid Life (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1929).
For Andrew Battell, see Samuel Purchas, Hakluytus Postumus, or, Purchas His Pilgrimes, Contayning a History of the World in Sea Voyages and Lande Travells by
Englishmen and Others (1625; Glasgow: James MacLehose, 1905), 6: 39799.
Nicolaas Tulp, Observationum medicarum libri tres . . . (Amsterdam: Apud Ludovicum Elzevirium, 1641).
Edward Tyson, Orang-outang, sive homo sylvestris, or, The anatomy of a pygmie compared with that of a monkey, an ape, and a man to which is added, A philological
essay concerning the pygmies, the cynocephali, the satyrs, and sphinges of the ancients:
wherein it will appear that they are all either apes or monkeys, and not men, as
formerly pretended (London: Thomas Bennett & Daniel Brown, 1699). Facsimile
edition with an introduction by Ashley Montagu (London: Dawsons of Pall
Mall, 1966).
Willem Bosman, A New and Accurate Description of the Coast of Guinea, Divided
into the Gold, the Slave, and the Ivory Coasts (London: J. Knapton, 1705).
Speaker chimpanzee: Animalis rarioris, chimpanzee dicti, Nova Acta Eruditorum
8 (1739): 56465, an anonymous report attributed to Hubert Gravelot by G.
Barsanti, Les singes de Lamarck, in Ape, Man, Apeman: Changing Views since
1600: Evaluative Proceedings of the Symposium . . . Leiden, the Netherlands, 28
June1 July 1993, ed. Raymond Corbey and Bert Theunissen (Leiden: Dept. of
Prehistory, Leiden University, 1995).
Linnaeuss System of Nature: [Carl von Linne], Caroli Linni Systema naturae, sive,
Regna tria naturae systematice proposita per classes, ordines, genera, & species (Leiden: Apud Theodorum Haak, Ex typographia Joannis Wilhelmi de Groot, 1735);
10th rev. ed., Caroli Linni Systema natur per regna tria natur secundum classes,
ordines, genera, species, cum charateribus, differentiis, synonymis, locis (2 vols.,
Stockholm: Impensis L. Salvii, 175859). And see also Lisbet Koerner Linnaeus:
Nature and Nation (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1999).
Thomas Pennant, Synopsis of Quadrupeds (Chester, Eng.: J. Monk, 1771).
Johann Friedrich Blumenbach: On the Natural Variety of Mankind, 3d ed. (1795),
in The Anthropological Treatises of Johann Friedrich Blumenbach, trans. and ed.
Thomas Bendyshe (London: Longman, Green, 1865).
George Gaylord Simpson, The Principles of Classication and a Classication of
Mammals. Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 85 (New York:
American Museum of Natural History, 1945).
Julian Huxley, Evolution, Cultural and Biological, Yearbook of Anthropology 0
(1955): 225. (This is formally listed as volume zero because the Yearbook of
Anthropology evolved into Current Anthropology shortly thereafter.)
290
ch a pt e r 2
On differences between human and chimpanzee proteins, see M.-C. King and A. C.
Wilson, Evolution at Two Levels in Humans and Chimpanzees, Science 188
(1975): 10716; W. J. Bailey, K. Hayasaka, C. G. Skinner, S. Kehoe, L. C. Sieu,
J. L. Slightom, and M. Goodman, Reexamination of the African Hominoid
Trichotomy with Additional Sequences from the Primate Beta-Globin Gene
Cluster, Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 1 (1992): 97135.
On differences in mitochondrial DNA among humans, chimpanzees, and gorillas,
see U. Arnason, X. Xu, and A. Gullberg, Comparison between the Complete
Mitochondrial DNA Sequences of Homo and the Common Chimpanzee Based
on Nonchimeric Sequences, Journal of Molecular Evolution 42 (1996): 14552.
On misrepresentation of the genetic similarity of humans to the apes by DNA
hybridization, see Jonathan Marks, Whats Old and New in Molecular Phylogenetics, American Journal of Physical Anthropology 85 (1991): 20719.
On the number of chimpanzee chromosomes, see W. J. Young, T. Merz, M. A.
Ferguson-Smith, and A. W. Johnston, Chromosome Number of the Chimpanzee, Pan troglodytes, Science 131 (1957): 167273.
On chromosome fusion in human lineage, see R. R. Stanyon, B. Chiarelli, and D.
Romagno, Origine del cromosoma n. 2 del cariotipo umano, Antropologia
contemporanea 6, 3 (1983): 22530.
On banded tips of chromosomes in chimpanzees and gorillas, see Jonathan Marks,
Hominoid Heterochromatin: Terminal C-bands as a Complex Genetic Character Linking Chimps and Gorillas, American Journal of Physical Anthropology
90 (1993): 23746.
On hypothesis of two kinds of genes, see A. C. Wilson, L. R. Maxson, and V. M.
Sarich, Two Types of Molecular Evolution: Evidence from Studies of Interspecic Hybridization, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, USA 71
(1974): 284347.
291
Blood tests for studying the similarity of human and ape proteins are described in
G. H. F. Nuttall, Blood Immunity and Blood Relationship (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1904). Nuttalls sister Zelia was an anthropologist who
did important archaeological work in Mexico and was inuential in the academic
professionalization of the eld. Small world, no?
L. M. Hussey, The Blood of the Primates, American Mercury 9 (1926): 31921.
On the similarity of hemoglobin in humans and gorillas, see Emile Zuckerkandl,
Perspectives in Molecular Anthropology, in Classication and Human Evolution, ed. S. L. Washburn (Chicago: Aldine, 1963), 24372.
George Gaylord Simpson comments on the difference between gorillas and humans
in Organisms and Molecules in Evolution, Science 146 (1964): 153538.
Richard Dawkins, Meet My Cousin, the Chimpanzee, New Scientist, June 5,
1993, 3638.
On proposed classication by descent only, see W. Hennig, Phylogenetic Systematics, Annual Review of Entomology 10 (1965): 97116; K. de Queiroz and
Jacques Gauthier, Phylogenetic Taxonomy, Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics 23 (1992): 44980.
On biblical dietary prohibitions, see Mary Douglas, Purity and Danger: An Analysis
of Concepts of Pollution and Taboo (New York: Praeger, 1966).
On Linnaeuss views on breast-feeding, see Londa L. Schiebinger, Natures Body:
Gender in the Making of Modern Science (Boston: Beacon Press, 1993).
ch a pte r 3
This chapter is based in part on Jonathan Marks, Science and Race, American
Behavioral Scientist 40 (1996): 12333, and a few other previously published essays.
On seventeenth-century perceptions of Gods plan in nature, see Ivan Hannaford,
Race: The History of an Idea in the West (Washington, D.C.: Woodrow Wilson
Center Press, 1996).
Francois Berniers essay was published anonymously in the Journal des Scavans,
April 24, 1684, and translated in Thomas Bendyshe, The History of Anthropology, Memoirs of the Anthropological Society of London 1 (1865): 335458; Flavius
Josephus, The Antiquities of the Jews, trans. William Whiston (n.p.), bk. 1, ch.
5.
The tension between the approaches of Buffon and Linnaeus to human variation
is discussed in Jonathan Marks, Human Biodiversity: Genes, Race, and History
(New York: Aldine de Gruyter, 1995).
Earnest Hootons views on race will be found in E. A. Hooton, Methods of Racial
Analysis, Science 63 (1926): 7581, and Plain Statements about Race, Science
83 (1936): 51113. And see also Hooton, Up from the Ape (New York: Macmillan,
1931).
Lancelot Hogben, Genetic Principles in Medicine and Social Science (New York:
Knopf, 1932).
292
On race based on ABO blood-type variants, see Jonathan Marks, The Legacy of
Serological Studies in American Physical Anthropology, History and Philosophy
of the Life Sciences 18 (1996): 34562.
For further discussion of the Manoilov blood test, see Jonathan Marks, Human
Biodiversity, and id., Blood Will Tell (Wont It?)? A Century of Molecular Discourse in Anthropological Systematics, American Journal of Physical Anthropology 94 (1994): 5979. Additional information is drawn from correspondence in
the archives of the American Philosophical Society.
Frederick Goodwin was quoted in all the newspapers in FebruaryMarch 1992.
The full statement, a very meaty text, is: If you look, for example, at male
monkeys, especially in the wild, roughly half of them survive to adulthood. The
other half die by violence. That is the natural way of it for males, to knock each
other off and, in fact, there are some interesting evolutionary implications of
that because the same hyperaggressive monkeys who kill each other are also
hypersexual, so they copulate more and therefore they reproduce more to offset
the fact that half of them are dying. Now, one could say that if some of the loss
of structure in this society, and particularly in the high impact inner city areas,
has removed some of the civilizing evolutionary things that we have built up
and that maybe it isnt just careless use of the word when people call certain
areas of certain cities jungles, that we may have gone back to what might be
more natural, without all of the social controls that we have imposed upon
ourselves as a civilization over thousands of years in our own evolution. See
P. R. Breggin, Campaigns against Racist Federal Programs by the Center for
the Study of Psychiatry and Psychology, Journal of African American Men 1
(199596): 322.
A 1996 book on apes and the origins of human violence : Richard Wrangham
and Dale Peterson, Demonic Males: Apes and the Origins of Human Violence
(Boston: Houghton Mifin, 1996). For comment, see L. Gould, Negro
Man, American Anthropologist 67 (1965): 128182. The paperback version of
Demonic Males toned down the illustration slightly by showing Adolph Schultzs
full rendering (human, gorilla, chimpanzee, orangutan) on the front, rather than
just the human and gorilla; a subsequent reprint of the paperback has a tasteful
abstract design instead.
ch a pt e r 4
This chapter incorporates some material from Jonathan Marks, The Limits of Our
Knowledge: Abilities, Responses, and Responsibilities, Anthropology Newsletter
36, 4 (1997): 72.
Carleton Coons correspondence is in the National Anthropological Archives at the
Smithsonian Institution. S. L. Washburn, The Study of Race, American Anthropologist 65 (1963): 52131; Ashley Montagu, What Is Remarkable about Varieties of Man Is Likenesses, Not Differences, Current Anthropology 4 (1963):
36164.
293
On Samuel Morton, see S. J. Gould, Mortons Ranking of Races by Cranial Capacity, Science 200 (1978): 5039; id., The Mismeasure of Man (New York: Norton, 1981); J. S. Michael, A New Look at Mortons Craniological Research,
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J. P. Rushton, Differences in Brain Size, Nature 358 (1992): 532; Colin Groves,
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R. C. Lewontin, The Apportionment of Human Diversity, Evolutionary Biology
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R. L. Cann, M. Stoneking, and A. C. Wilson, Mitochondrial DNA and Human
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Amos Deinard, The Evolutionary Genetics of the Chimpanzees (Ph.D. thesis,
Department of Anthropology, Yale University, 1997).
On studies of immigrant groups, see H. L. Shapiro, Migration and Environment
(New York: Oxford University Press, 1939); B. Kaplan, Environment and Human Plasticity, American Anthropologist 56 (1954): 78199.
On Neandertal mitochondrial DNA, see M. Krings, A. Stone, R. W. Schmitz, H.
Krainitzki, M. Stoneking, and S. Paabo, Neandertal DNA Sequences and the
Origin of Modern Humans, Cell 90 (1997): 1930; M. Krings, H. Geisert, R. W.
Schmitz, H. Krainitzki, and S. Paabo, DNA Sequence of the Mitochondrial
Hypervariable Region II from the Neandertal Type Specimen, Proceedings of
the National Academy of Sciences, USA 96 (1999): 558185; I. V. Ovchinnikov, A.
Gotherstrom, G. P. Romanova, V. M. Kharitonov, K. Liden, and W. Goodwin,
Molecular Analysis of Neanderthal DNA from the Northern Caucasus, Nature
404 (2000): 49093.
M. Nei and M. Roychoudhury, Evolutionary Relationships of Human Populations on a Global Scale, Molecular Biology and Evolution 10 (1993): 927
43.
On mutations in mitochondrial DNA, see C. Vila`, P. Savolainen, J. E. Maldonado,
I. R. Amorim, J. E. Rice, R. L. Honeycutt, K. A. Crandall, J. Lundeberg, and
R. K. Wayne, Multiple and Ancient Origins of the Domestic Dog, Science 276
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A High Observed Substitution Rate in the Human Mitochondrial DNA Control Region, Nature Genetics 15 (1997): 36367.
294
ch a pte r 5
This chapter is partly based on Jonathan Marks, Skepticism about Behavioral
Genetics, in Exploring Public Policy Issues in Genetics, ed. M. S. Frankel (Washington, D.C.: American Association for the Advancement of Science, 1997), 159
72.
Midcentury study of fruit ies: A. J. Bateman, Intra-sexual Selection in Drosophila, Heredity 2 (1948): 34968.
Can Social Behavior of Man be Glimpsed in a Lowly Worm? New York Times,
September 8, 1998; Jonathan Marks, Science Wars Revisited, Anthropology
Newsletter, November 1998, 5.
On Lesch-Nyhan syndrome: T. Beardsley, Crime and Punishment, Scientic
American, December 1995, 22.
On MAOA: H. G. Brunner, M. Nelen, X. O. Breakeeld, H. H. Ropers, and B. A.
van Oost, Abnormal Behavior Associated with a Point Mutation in the Structural Gene for Monoamine Oxidase A, Science 262 (1993): 57880; V. Morell,
Evidence Found for a Possible aggression gene, Science 260 (1993): 172223.
H. G. Brunner, MAOA Deciency and Abnormal Behaviour: Perspectives on
an Association, in Genetics of Criminal and Antisocial Behaviour, Ciba Foundation Symposium 194 (New York: Wiley, 1995), 15567.
E. O. Wilson, Consilience: The Unity of Knowledge (New York: Knopf, 1998).
Richard J. Herrnstein and Charles Murray, The Bell Curve: Intelligence and Class
Structure in American Life (New York: Free Press, 1994).
On left-handedness, see Robert Hertz, Death and the Right Hand, trans. Rodney
and Claudia Needham, with an introduction by E. E. Evans-Pritchard (Glencoe,
Ill.: Free Press, 1960).
In a chart listing behaviors . . .: R. Plomin, Michael J. Owen, and Peter McGufn, The Genetic Basis of Complex Behaviors, Science 264 (1994): 173339.
Genes Are Tied to Homosexuality and Schizophrenia: N. Angier, Gene Hunters
Pursue Elusive and Complex Traits of Mind, New York Times, October 31, 1995.
On homosexuality: S. Levay, A Difference in Hypothalamic Structure between
Heterosexual and Homosexual Men, Science 253 (1991): 103437; N. Angier,
Zone of Mens Brain Linked to Sexual Orientation, New York Times, August
30, 1991, A1; D. Gelman, D. Foote, T. Barrett, and M. Talbot, Born or Bred?
Newsweek, February 24, 1992, 4653; W. Byne and Bruce Parsons, Human
Sexual Orientation: The Biologic Theories Reappraised, Archives of General
Psychology 50 (March 1993): 22838; D. Hamer, S. Hu, V. L. Magnuson, N. Hu,
and A. M. L. Pattatucci, A Linkage between DNA Markers on the X Chromosome and Male Sexual Orientation, Science 261 (1993): 32127; N. Risch, E.
295
Squires-Wheeler, and B. Keats, Male Sexual Orientation and Genetic Evidence, Science 262 (1993): 206365.
On eugenics: Madison Grant, The Passing of the Great Race (New York: Scribners,
1916); F. A. Woods, review of id., Science 48, 1243 (1918): 41920; Stefan Kuhl,
The Nazi Connection: Eugenics, American Racism, and German National Socialism
(New York: Oxford University Press, 1994); C. B. Davenport, Heredity in Relation to Eugenics (New York: Holt, 1911); E. W. Sinnott, and L. C. Dunn, Principles of Genetics (New York: McGraw-Hill, 1925).
On crime: E. A. Hooton, The American Criminal: An Anthropological Study, vol. 1:
The Native White Criminal of Native Parentage (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard
University Press, 1939); id., Crime and the Man (New York: Macmillan, 1940);
R. K. Merton and M. F. Ashley-Montagu, Crime and the Anthropologist,
American Anthropologist 42 (1940): 384408; P. A. Jacobs, M. Brunton, M. M.
Melville, R. P. Brittain, and W. F. McClemont, Aggressive Behaviour, Mental
Sub-normality, and the XYY Male, Nature 208 (1965): 135152; B. Glass, Science: Endless Horizons or Golden Age? Science 171 (1971): 2329; E. B. Hook,
Behavioral Implications of the Human XYY Genotype, Science 179 (1973): 139
50; H. A. Witkin, S. A. Mednick, F. Schulsinger, E. Bakkestrom, K. O. Christiansen, D. R. Goodenough, K. Hirschhorn, C. Lundsteen, D. R. Owen, J.
Philip, D. R. Rubin, and M. Stocking, Criminality in XYY and XXY Men,
Science 193 (1976): 54755; Patricia A. Jacobs, The William Allan Memorial
Award Address: Human Population CytogeneticsThe First Twenty-ve
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Biological Basis of Crime: An Historical and Methodological Study, Historical
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J. Q. Wilson and R. J. Herrnstein, Crime and Human Nature (New York: Simon
& Schuster, 1985).
E. A. Hooton, Up from the Ape (New York: Macmillan, 1931), 491.
ch a pt e r 6
This chapter is partly based on Jonathan Marks, review of Taboo: Why Black Athletes
Dominate Sports and Why We Are Afraid to Talk About It, by Jon Entine (New
York: PublicAffairs, 2000), Human Biology 72 (2000): 107478, and Folk
Heredity, in Race and Intelligence: Separating Science from Myth, ed. J. Fish (New
York: Lawrence Erlbaum, 2001).
On taxonomism: W. C. Boyd, Genetics and the Human Race, Science 140 (1963):
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Human Evolution: A Study with DNA Polymorphisms, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, USA 88 (1991): 83943; L. Cavalli-Sforza, The Genetics of Human Populations, Scientic American 231, 3 (1974): 8189; M. Nei
and A. Roychoudhury, Genic Variation within and between the Three Major
296
ch a pt e r 7
This chapter draws on Jonathan Marks, review of Demonic Males: Apes and the
Origins of Human Violence, by Richard Wrangham and Dale Peterson (Boston:
Houghton Mifin, 1996), Human Biology 70 (1998): 14346.
S. Sperling, Baboons with Briefcases: Feminism, Functionalism, and Sociobiology
in the Evolution of Primate Gender, Signs 17 (1991): 127.
Jane Goodall, In the Shadow of Man (Boston: Houghton Mifin, 1971); id., The
Chimpanzees of Gombe: Patterns of Behavior (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1986); id., Through a Window: My Thirty Years with the Chimpanzees
of Gombe (Boston: Houghton Mifin, 1990); Dale Peterson and Jane Goodall,
Visions of Caliban: On Chimpanzees and People (Boston: Houghton Mifin,
1993).
297
Man the Hunter, ed. Richard B. Lee and Irven DeVore (Chicago: Aldine, 1969);
R. B. Lee, Art, Science, or Politics? The Crisis in Hunter-Gatherer Studies,
American Anthropologist 94 (1992): 3154.
Patrick Tierney, Darkness in El Dorado: How Scientists and Journalists Devastated
the Amazon (New York: Norton, 2000).
F. B. M. de Waal, Good Natured: The Origins of Right and Wrong in Humans and
Other Animals (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1996).
Craig Stanford, The Hunting Apes: Meat Eating and the Origins of Human Behavior
(Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1999).
ch a pt e r 8
This chapter draws on Jonathan Marks, review of The Great Ape Project: Equality
beyond Humanity, ed. Paola Cavalieri and Peter Singer (1993; 1st U.S. ed., New
York: St. Martins Press, 1994), Human Biology 66 (1994): 111317, and on some
brief essays by the author in Anthropology Newsletter.
Franz Boas, The Mind of Primitive Man, rev. ed. (New York: Macmillan, 1938).
Joel Wallman, Aping Language (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1992).
A. Whiten, J. Goodall, W. C. McGrew, T. Nishida, V. Reynolds, Y. Sugiyama,
C. E. G. Tutin, R. W. Wrangham, and C. Boesch, Cultures in Chimpanzees,
Nature 399 (1999): 68285.
A. Whiten and C. Boesch, The Cultures of Chimpanzees, Scientic American,
January 2001, 6167.
Chimpanzees with Culture (editorial), New York Times, July 7, 1999.
B. Meggers, Mate Copying and Cultural Inheritance, Trends in Ecology and Evolution 13 (1998): 240.
R. Tuttle, On Culture and Traditional Chimpanzees, Current Anthropology 42
(2001): 4078.
The Great Ape Project: Equality beyond Humanity, ed. Paola Cavalieri and Peter
Singer (London: Fourth Estate, 1993).
Daniel Povinelli, Folk Physics for Apes: The Chimpanzees Theory of How the World
Works (New York: Oxford University Press, 2000).
Section 85 of the Animal Welfare Act passed by the New Zealand Parliament in
1999 places restrictions on [the] use of non-human hominids. Its target specically is scientic research (which comprises a minuscule proportion of the
problems affecting and threatening the apes). Although supporters of ape rights
hailed it as a victory (for example, in the New York Times, August 12, 2001), it
does not use the words rights or apes. In fact, the phrase non-human hominids would seem to allow a loophole to any researcher who cared to use the
traditional classication, which restricts hominids to humans, and calls the
apes pongids. At face value, the law might be seen simply as placing limits on
experimentation upon australopithecines.
298
ch a pt e r 9
J. Walsh and J. Marks, Sequencing the Human Genome, Nature 322 (1986): 590.
L. L. Cavalli-Sforza and A. W. F. Edwards, Analysis of Human Evolution, in
Genetics Today: Proceedings of the XI International Congress of Genetics, ed. S. J.
Geerts (Oxford: Pergamon, 1965), 92333; M. Nei and A. Roychoudhury, Genic
Variation within and between the Three Major Races of Man, Caucasoids, Negroids, and Mongoloids, American Journal of Human Genetics 26 (1974): 421
43.
Cavalli-Sforza was prepared to acknowledge . . . mistaken: L. L. Cavalli-Sforza,
A, Piazza, P. Menozzi, and J. Mountain, Reconstruction of Human Evolution:
Bringing Together Genetic, Archaeological, and Linguistic Data, Proceedings of
the National Academy of Sciences, USA 85 (1988): 60026.
The Human Genome Diversity Project: L. L. Cavalli-Sforza, A. C. Wilson, C. R.
Cantor, R. M. Cook-Deegan, and M.-C. King, Call for a Worldwide Survey
of Human Genetic Diversity: A Vanishing Opportunity for the Human Genome
Project, Genomics 11 (1991): 49091; L. Roberts, A Genetic Survey of Vanishing
Peoples, Science 252 (1991): 161417; J. M. Diamond, A Way to World Knowledge, Nature 352 (1991): 567; L. Roberts, Genetic Survey Gains Momentum,
Science 254 (1991): 517; id., Genome Diversity Project: Anthropologists Climb
(Gingerly) On Board, Science 258 (1992): 13001301.
Criticism of the HGDP: Jonathan Marks, The Human Genome Diversity Project:
Good For if Not Good As Anthropology? Anthropology Newsletter 36 (April
1995): 72; J. C. Gutin, End of the Rainbow, Discover, November 1994, 7075;
S. Subramanian, The Story in Our Genes, Time, January 16, 1995, 5455; A. M.
Bowcock, J. R. Kidd, J. L Mountain, J. M. Hebert, L. Carotenuto, K. K. Kidd,
and L. L. Cavalli-Sforza, Drift, Admixture, and Selection in Human Evolution:
A Study with DNA Polymorphisms, Proceedings of the National Academy of
Sciences, USA 88 (1991): 83943; G. Taubes, Scientists Attacked for patenting
Pacic Tribe, Science 270 (1995): 1112. And see also Carleton S. Coon, The Story
of Man (New York: Knopf, 1954); M. F. A. Montagu, The Concept of Race in
the Human Species in the Light of Genetics, Journal of Heredity 32 (1941): 243
47.
National Research Council, Evaluating Human Genetic Diversity (Washington,
D.C.: National Academy Press, 1997); E. Pennisi, NRC OKs Long-Delayed
Survey of Human Genome Diversity, Science 278 (1997): 568; V. Dominguez,
Misleading News Coverage Concerning HGDP, Anthropology Newsletter, January 1998, 18; E. Marshall, DNA Studies Challenge the Meaning of Race,
Science 282 (1998): 65455.
On going beyond microphylogenetic issues, see, e.g., L. G. Carvajal-Carmona,
I. D. Soto, N. Pineda, B. Ortiz, C. Daniel, C. Duque, J. Ospina-Duque, M.
McCarthy, P. Montoya, V. M. Alvarez, G. Bedoya et al., Strong Amerind/White
Sex Bias and a Possible Sephardic Contribution among the Founders of a Pop-
299
ch a pte r 10
On the subjects discussed in this chapter, see also Jonathan Marks, Racism, Eugenics, and the Burdens of History, Yale Journal of Ethics 5 (1996): 1215, 40
42.
The experimental hybridization of human and ape has been seriously proposed in
the scientic literature, for example, by biologist Charles Remington, in Experimentation with Human Beings: The Authority of the Investigator, Subject, Professions, and State in the Human Experimentation Process, ed. Jay Katz (New York:
Russell Sage Foundation, 1972), 46164.
Paul R. Ehrlich, Human Natures: Genes, Cultures, and the Human Prospect (Washington, D.C.: Island Press for Shearwater Books, 2000).
D. W. Brock, Cloning Human Beings: An Assessment of the Ethical Issues Pro
and Con, in Clones and Clones: Facts and Fantasies about Human Cloning, ed.
M. C. Nussbaum and C. R. Sunstein (New York: Norton, 1998), 14164.
On the Native American Grave Protection and Repatriation Act and Kennewick
Man, see also David Hurst Thomas, Skull Wars: Kennewick Man, Archaeology,
and the Battle for Native American Identity (New York: Basic Books, 2000).
For James Chatterss side of the story, see J. C. Chatters, Encounter with an Ancestor, Anthropology Newsletter, January 1997, 910; id., Response from Chatters, ibid., May 1997, 6.
There is no primary scientic literature on the subject of the Kennewick Man.
Reports include T. Egan, Tribe Stops Study of Bones That Challenge History,
New York Times, September 30, 1996; Douglas Preston, The Lost Man, New
Yorker, June 16, 1997, 7078, 8081; C. W. Petit, Redisovering America, U.S.
News & World Report, October 12, 1998, 5664; N. Charles and J. Hannah,
Head Case: Archaeologist James Chatters Speaks for Science in a Fight over
the Fate of a 9,000 Year-Old Skeleton, People, November 30, 1998, 18182.
Both the Seattle Times and the Tri-City Herald have on-line archives. See esp.
John Stang, Skull Found on Shore of Columbia, Tri-City Herald, July 29,
1996; Mike Lee, Tri-Citians Sculpt Theoretical Look for Kennewick Man,
ibid., Feb 10, 1998, and Missing Ancient Bones Discovered, ibid, June 22,
2001.
300
ch a pte r 11
K. Skorecki, S. Selig, S. Blazer, R. Bradman, N. W. P. J. Bradman, M. Ismajlowiscz,
and M. Hammer, Y Chromosomes of Jewish Priests, Nature 385 (1997): 32; D.
Grady, Finding Genetic Traces of Jewish Priesthood, New York Times, January
7, 1997.
V. A. McKusick, R. Eldridge, R. A. Hostetler, and J. A. Egeland, Dwarsm in the
Amish, Transactions of the Association of American Physicians 77 (1964): 15168.
M. G. Thomas, K. Skorecki, H. Ben-Ami, T. Partt, N. Bradman, and D. Goldstein, Origins of Old Testament Priests, Nature 394 (1998): 13839.
The only other study associating surnames and Y-chromosomes looked at fortyeight men named Sykes in three English counties, without knowing how many,
if any, were known relatives. Half of them were found to have the same Ychromosome, which the researchers assumed derived from an original Sykes in
late medieval times. The other Sykeses in the group were attributed either to
false paternity or to adoption over the centuries. See B. Sykes and C. Irven,
Surnames and the Y Chromosome, American Journal of Human Genetics 66
(2000): 141719.
Methodological problems with the Cohanim study are detailed in A. ZoossmannDiskin, Are Todays Jewish Priests Descended from the Old Ones? Homo 51
(2000): 15662.
On Jewish genetic data invested with religious authority, see D. Grady, Who Is
Aarons Heir? Father Doesnt Always Know Best, New York Times, January 19,
1997; P. Herschberg, Decoding the Priesthood, Jerusalem Report, May 10, 1999,
3035.
D. M. Schneider, American Kinship: A Cultural Account, 2d ed. (Englewood Cliffs,
N.J.: Prentice-Hall, 1980). See also K. Finkler, The Kin in the Gene, Current
Anthropology 42 (2001): 23563.
M. G. Thomas, T. Partt, D. A. Weiss, K. Skorecki, J. Wilson, M. le Roux, N.
Bradman, and D. Goldstein, Y Chromosomes Traveling South: The Cohen
Modal Haplotype and the Origins of the Lembathe Black Jews of Southern
Africa, American Journal of Human Genetics 66 (2000): 67486.
On creationism, see Ronald L. Numbers, The Creationists (1992; Berkeley and Los
Angeles: University of California Press, 1993); Phillip E. Johnson, Darwin on
Trial (Washington, D.C.: Regnery Gateway, 1991). Quotations taken from Phillip E. Johnson, Objections Sustained: Subversive Essays on Evolution, Law, and
Culture (Downers Grove, Ill.: InterVarsity Press, 1998), 20. See also B. Appleyard, You Asked for It, New Scientist, April 22, 2000.
On social Darwinism, see Peter J. Bowler, Social Metaphors in Evolutionary Biology, 18701930: The Wider Dimension of Social Darwinism, in Biology as
Society, Society as Biology: Metaphors, ed. Sabine Maasen, Everett Mendelsohn,
and Peter Weingart (Boston: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1995), 10726.
M. Goodman, Epilogue: A Personal Account of the Origins of a New Paradigm,
Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 5 (1996): 26985; V. M. Sarich, The Or-
301
ch a pte r 12
This chapter is partially based on Jonathan Marks, The Anthropology of Science,
Part I: Science as a Humanities and The Anthropology of Science, Part II:
Scientic Norms and Behaviors, Evolutionary Anthropology 5 (1996): 610, 75
80. Extensive references can be found there.
I. Parker, Richard Dawkinss Evolution: An Irascible Don Becomes a Surprising
Celebrity, New Yorker, September 9, 1996; Richard Dawkins, River Out of Eden:
A Darwinian View of Life (New York: Basic Books, 1995).
Alan Sokal and Jean Bricmont, Fashionable Nonsense: Postmodern Intellectuals Abuse
of Science (New York: Picador USA, 1998).
Clarence Darrow, The Eugenics Cult, American Mercury 8 (1926): 12937.
One molecular geneticist writes . . . : S. J. Jones in The Cambridge Encyclopedia
of Human Evolution (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1992), 442.
N. Wade, Genetic Code of Human Life Is Cracked by Scientists, New York Times,
June 27, 2000.
E. Gosney and P. Popenoe, Sterilization for Human Betterment (New York: Macmillan, 1929).
Mary Midgley, Science as Salvation (New York: Routledge, 1992).
E. O. Wilson, Consilience: The Unity of Knowledge (New York: Knopf, 1998).
Charles Davenport, Heredity in Relation to Eugenics (New York: Holt, 1911).
Erwin Schrodinger, What Is Life? (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1944).
Richard Dawkins, River Out of Eden: A Darwinian View of Life (New York: Basic
Books, 1995), 13233.
Jose Ortega y Gasset, The Revolt of the Masses (New York: Norton, 1932).
As one commentator has noted: Bernard Dixon, What Is Science For? (London:
Penguin Books, 1973), 68.
Ashley Montagu to Theodosius Dobzhansky: quoted from Susan Sperlings obituary of Montagu in the American Anthropologist (2000).
302
index
303
304
index
index
305
306
index
Galileo, 52
genes vs. chromosomes, 36
genetics: vs. anatomy, 2329, 31, 200; credibility of, 147; human variation, as
based on, 8891; race, as based on, 81
82 (see also race); and racism/xenophobia, 2; as social panacea, 28586. See
also behavioral genetics; DNA; folk
heredity; humanape genetic similarity;
molecular anthropology
Genetics and the Origin of Species (Dobzhansky), 74
genocide, 14143
Genomics, 2034
genotypes vs. phenotypes, 100101, 157
58
gibbons, 8
Gill, George, 232
Gillen, F. J., 169
Gish, Duane, 256
Glass, Bentley, 124
Gods bounty vs. parsimony, 52
Goodall, Jane, 22, 16364, 192
Goodman, Morris, 10, 26162
Goodwin, Frederick, 70, 293
gorillas, 8, 910, 1415, 4243
Gould, Stephen Jay, 79
Grant, Madison: The Passing of the Great
Race, 11920, 26869
The Great Ape Project, 56, 18589
The Great Ape Project (Cavalieri and
Singer), 186, 189
great chain of being, 69
Great Genome Diversity Project, 56
Greely, Henry, 207
Groves, Colin, 7980
Guinier, Lani, 69
Gypsies, 140
index
307
hunting, 162
Huxley, Thomas, 161, 19192, 262
identity and descent, 21925, 23941; and
cloning, 22325; and humanchimpanzee hybrids, 21921; and kinship, 22122; who and what we are,
questions of, 22123. See also Kennewick Man
IgNobel prize (Harvard), 30
immigration, 9091, 117, 11920, 121, 269
inbreeding, measures of, 247
Indians,52
indigenous peoples, 206, 217. See also
Kennewick Man
Indonesia, 19394
Inherit the Wind, 257, 258
In His Image (Rorvick), 223
Institute for Creation Research, 256
intermarriage, laws against, 68
IQ, 146, 149. See also The Bell Curve
isolationism, 273
isonymy, 247
Jack and Oskar (twins), 15253
Jacobs, Patricia, 12324
Jantz, Richard, 232
Jefferson, Thomas, 284
Jenkins, Carol, 21213
Jensen, Arthur, 149, 210
Jews, 140, 24546, 24749, 251
Jim twins, 14951
Johnson, Phillip, 257, 261
Josephus, Flavius: Antiquities of the Jews,
5354
Kaestle, Frederika, 22526, 229, 252
Kafka, Franz: Report to an Academy, 40
Kamileroi people (Australia), 169
Keith, Sir Arthur, 73
Kellogg, Vernon, 261
Kennewick Man, 22540; DNA tests on,
25153; and human rights/respect issues,
22528, 252; hype about, 22837; and
race, 23336; reasons for returning him
to Native Americans, 23739
King, Mary-Claire, 3233, 202
308
index
NAGPRA (Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act), 206, 227
28, 229, 230, 23233, 240
National Academy of Sciences, 215
National Institutes of Health (NIH), 122,
213
National Research Council, 215, 216
Native American Graves Protection and
Repatriation Act. See NAGPRA
Native Americans: artifacts/skeletal remains reclaimed by, 206; and genetic
tests for proof of ancestry, 24445; as
natural man, 16669, 179; origins of
(see Kennewick Man); as a race, 53, 64
naturalistic fallacy, 161
natural selection, 130
Nature, 197
nature-vs.-nurture debate, 100, 10810, 158
Navajo people, 21617
Nazis, 75, 140, 270, 271, 277
Neandertals, vs. modern people, 9599
Near East peoples, as a race, 52
Nebraska Man, 256
Nei, Masatoshi, 13435
New Scientist, 19697
Newton, Isaac, 20, 52
New World, discovery of, 166
New Yorker, 23334
New York Times, 23132
New York Zoological Society, 119, 26869
New Zealand, ape-rights legislation in, 196
97, 298
NIH (National Institutes of Health), 122,
213
Noahs Sons model of racial origins, 5354,
67, 9798, 21112
nonintervention, 273
Nuremberg Code, 2089
Nuttall, George, 42
Nuttall, Zelia, 292
index
309
orangutans (continued )
11; humans genetic similarity to, 2628;
humans similarity to, 89
The Origin of Races (Coon), 7677
Ortega y Gasset, Jose, 285
Overton, William R., 256
Owsley, Douglas, 232
paraphyletic categories, 4546, 50
Parche, Gunther, 148
The Passing of the Great Race (Grant), 119
20, 26869
Pearl, Raymond, 270
Pearson, Karl, 260
Pecos Pueblo skulls, 23637
pedophilia, 175
Pennant, Thomas, 21, 60
percentages of genetic similarity, interpreting, 2931
personality traits, 8889
Peterson, Dale, 159, 173, 174
phenotypes vs. genotypes, 100101, 15758
physical anthropology, 6169, 7374, 140
Pilbeam, David, 1112
Piltdown Man, 256
Pioneer Fund, 14950
Plato, 58
Pliny (the Elder), 166
polygenists, 53
polygyny, 17778
Popper, Karl, 267
populations, 7475, 77, 8082, 13234
Porter, Cole, 275
potentials /abilities, 9195, 18081
poverty, 122
Povinelli, Daniel, 196
prejudice, 6971, 71, 9495, 293
Preston, Douglas, 23334
primates, hands/feet of, 2122
proteins, 1011, 23, 32
psychic connections, 151
Purchas, Samuel, 1314
Putnam, Carleton, 77
Pygmie, 1718, 18
pyramids, 234
Quadrupedia (four-legged), 49
310
index
index
311
taxonomism, 13638
technology, 23334, 27273
Third Reich. See Nazis
Tierney, Patrick, 172; Darkness in El Dorado, 287
Time, 20910, 211
time-keeping systems, 277
Tishkoff, Sarah, 84, 85
transcendentalism, 27475
Travels of Sir John Mandeville (Mandeville), 166
Tri-City Herald, 228, 229
Trobriand Islanders (Melanesia), 129
Tsonga people (southern Africa), 129
Tulp, Nicolaas, 1517, 16
Twain, Mark, 30
twin studies, 11415, 14953, 158
Tylor, Edward Burnett, 181, 287
Tyson, Edward, 17, 18, 264
312
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