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  5. Assimilating Reported Natural Histories of Human Diversity: Theories of the Nature of Mankind
 
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Assimilating Reported Natural Histories of Human Diversity: Theories of the Nature of Mankind

PROSS WOLFGANG DIETRICH
2020
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ISBN
978-88-5511-112-6
http://hdl.handle.net/10077/30263
  • Book Chapter

e-ISBN
978-88-5511-113-3
Abstract
Until the late eighteenth century, a set of arguments provided seemingly valid etiologies for human diversity: they were based on classical antiquity theoories on the influence of climate on the physiology of humans and on accounts of the Bible and its chronology (Cain’s secession from his family, Noah and the Flood, the confusion of languages at the tower of Babel). The experience of travellers and missionaries started, from late sixteenth and early seventeenth century onward, to cast doubts on similar assumptions, and natural history systematically developed during the eighteenth century a quite different approach. By comparing the distribution and adaptation of animals to the climate zones of the globe, it became evident that probably only ‘mankind’ was capable of sustaining itselves under all life conditions, from the torrid zones to the polar regions. The “geographical history of mankind”, closely linked to questions of the natural history of the Earth, prompted scientists to substitute assumptions about congenital diversities of humans by looking at them simply as varieties of only a single and identical species. Attention will focus on authors like Aristotle or Hippocrates, who gave rise to the arguments in favour of human diversity, and on their followers till late eighteenth century; and we will outline how these views were deconstructed by new ways of conceiving the relationship between humans and their habitat, by a new chronology of the Earth and by a more exact knowledge of human physiology. In a set of famous lectures, given in Berlin in 1827/28, and in the first volume of his masterpiece Kosmos (1845), the famous naturalist Alexander von Humboldt summed up the results of the debate, by denying the validity of any concept of different races and defending the unity of humankind in its variegated forms. The term “diversity” will be used in the following essay regarding theories that admit fundamental differences among humans, allegedly founded in nature; “variety” will designate the belief in the existence of one single human species, notwithstanding its various appearances in body, habits and culture.
Subjects
  • Nature of Mankind

  • Human Diversity

Publisher
EUT Edizioni Università di Trieste
Source
Wolfgang Proß, "Assimilating Reported Natural Histories of Human Diversity: Theories of the Nature of Mankind", in: Cinzia Ferrini (Edited by), "Human Diversity in Context", Trieste EUT Edizioni Università di Trieste, 2020, pp. 3-42
Languages
en
Rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 Internazionale
Licence
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
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