Article ID: CBB000772495

Race, Language, and Mental Evolution in Darwin's Descent of Man (2007)

unapi

Charles Darwin was notoriously ambiguous in his remarks about the relationship between human evolution and biological race. He stressed the original unity of the races, yet he also helped to popularize the notion of a racial hierarchy filling the gaps between the highest anthropoids and civilized Europeans. A focus on Darwin's explanation of how humans initially evolved, however, shows that he mainly stressed not hierarchy but a version of humanity's original mental unity. In his book The Descent of Man, Darwin emphasized a substantial degree of mental development (including the incipient use of language) in the early, monogenetic phase of human evolution. This development, he argued, necessarily came before primeval man's numerical increase, geographic dispersion, and racial diversification, because only thus could one explain how that group was able to spread at the expense of rival ape-like populations. This scenario stood opposed to a new evolutionary polygenism formulated in the wake of Darwin's Origin of Species by his ostensible supporters Alfred Russel Wallace and Ernst Haeckel. Darwin judged this outlook inadequate to the task of explaining humanity's emergence.

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Authors & Contributors
Alter, Stephen G.
Marciano, Alain
Ulrich Kattmann
Henrich, Joseph
Vetter, Jeremy
Schwartz, Joel S.
Journals
Journal of the History of Biology
Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences
Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization
Studies in History of Biology
Osiris: A Research Journal Devoted to the History of Science and Its Cultural Influences
Notes and Records: The Royal Society Journal of the History of Science
Publishers
Princeton University Press
Oxford University Press
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
Éditions du Seuil
Concepts
Human evolution
Evolution
Social evolution
Language and languages
Science and race
Spiritualism
People
Darwin, Charles Robert
Wallace, Alfred Russel
Haeckel, Ernst
Hamilton, James
Müller, Friedrich Max
Hayek, Friedrich August von
Time Periods
19th century
20th century
20th century, early
Places
Great Britain
Institutions
Ethnological Society of London
Anthropological Society of London
British Association for the Advancement of Science
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