Pranam
In continuation article appeared recently on yesterday's topic:

How Scientific Taxonomy Constructed the Myth of Race
------------------------------

Botanist Carl Linnaeus' classification system has been adopted around the
globe—but have we adequately reckoned with how his ideas about humans laid
the groundwork for scientific racism?

By Brittany Kenyon-Flatt
<https://www.sapiens.org/authors/brittany-kenyon-flatt/>

BRITTANY KENYON-FLATT
<https://www.sapiens.org/authors/brittany-kenyon-flatt/> is a National
Science Foundation postdoctoral research fellow at North Carolina State
University.

As a graduate assistant in biological anthropology at the University at
Buffalo, I was tasked with curating the primate skeletal collection. The
collection of skeletons—taken from cadavers studied during a primate
anatomy class—had been neglected for a few years. Most of the specimens had
lost their labels. So, when I began re-cataloguing the collection in 2016,
I ran into trouble.

I knew that the skeletons were from three different species of macaques,
but I didn’t know how to tell them apart, given that most research tends to
focus on skeletal variation at a higher taxonomic rank, like genus or
family. I wondered if one species had an anatomical feature that others did
not which had been overlooked by previous scientists.

This project ended up becoming the topic of my dissertation. I started
reading everything I could about macaque skeletons, taxonomy, and
evolution. I also found myself gravitating toward books and papers on the
history of taxonomy as a science.

The field of taxonomy, historically, is dominated by one man: Carl
Linnaeus. Often called “The Father of Taxonomy,” Linnaeus invented binomial
nomenclature, the formal system used to classify the natural world. The
creation of this system, which is still used today, has made him one
of the most
influential people
<https://www.newscientist.com/article/dn25703-jesus-and-hitler-beaten-in-wikipedia-influence-list/#ixzz6oAMNV9Ql>
in
history. Children often learn Linnaean taxonomy in school and grow up
thinking that this ordering system is objective and neutral.

But, in my research on the history of taxonomy, it became apparent that
while Linnaeus did play a crucial role in creating a formalized system to
classify the natural world, this system left damaging effects. Aside from
what historians today see as his Eurocentrism
<https://cup.columbia.edu/book/sex-botany-and-empire/9780231134262> and
sexism <https://www.jstor.org/stable/2166840?seq=1> (see, for example, his
snubbing of Jane Colden
<https://massivesci.com/articles/jane-colden-botany-colonial-america-new-york-marsh-st-johns-wort/>,
a pioneering botanist), he promoted deeply misguided theories regarding
human variation <https://www.nature.com/articles/447028a>. These views
effectively laid the groundwork for scientific racism
<https://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/disturbing-resilience-scientific-racism-180972243/>
—the pseudoscientific idea
<https://culanth.org/fieldsights/anthrobites-scientific-racism> that racism
can be justified with empirical evidence.

These completely faulty ideas continue to shape how some people think about
race today—as a biological fact
<https://www.sapiens.org/biology/is-race-real/> rather than as a social
construct. Where did these ideas come from, and how did they become so
central to science? Linnaeus is a big part of the answer to that question.



Bottom of Form

Like many men in 18th-century Europe, Linnaeus was groomed for a career in
the Protestant church. Though he ended up becoming a botanist rather than a
clergyman, his scientific theories were guided by religious teachings.
During his time as a student at Uppsala University in Sweden, Linnaeus
sought to develop a more organized classification system for plants than
what existed at the time.

He was inspired by Aristotle’s work theorizing a hierarchical ladder
(Latinized to *scala naturae*
<https://www.huffpost.com/entry/the-scala-naturae-is-aliv_b_4719171>, later
called the Great Chain of Being) where all matter and living organisms were
arranged on a continuum based on advancement, with humans at the top
followed by other mammals, vertebrates, invertebrates, insects, plants,
rocks, and minerals. Medieval Christians added “spiritual beings” to the
ladder, placing God at the top, followed by angels, humans, and so on.

This framework supported the popular European view of nature that separated
humans from animals. Linnaeus, too, followed this logic in his
classification scheme, deciding that the most natural scientific order was
a hierarchical one, where organisms were ranked according to their
intelligence, as he thought God intended.

In 1735, the first edition of Linnaeus’ *Systema Naturae*
<https://www.linnean.org/learning/who-was-linnaeus/career-and-legacy> was
published. The text presented a working classification of matter and living
organisms, including humans. Linnaeus, following Aristotle’s idea that “man
is animal,” created the class “Anthropomorpha,” which he subdivided into
three genera: *Homo *(human), *Simia *(meaning ape and also some monkeys),
and *Bradypus *(sloth). (Contrary to common lore, Linnaeus was not the
first thinker to connect humans with apes. The 12th-century Muslim
scholar Nidhami
Arudi
<https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/00219266.2016.1268190?journalCode=rjbe20>
made
similar links, but his work was often overlooked by Europeans and remains
underrecognized today.)

[image: race scientific taxonomy - Carl Linnaeus published the first
edition of Systema Naturae in 1735.]
<https://www.sapiens.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/02_852px-Systema_naturae.jpg>

Carl Linnaeus published the first edition of *Systema Naturae *in
1735. Carl Linnaeus/Wikimedia Commons
<https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Systema_naturae.jpg>

This part of Linnaeus’ framework ended up being rather controversial; the
idea that humans, apes, and sloths all belong in the same order went
against church teachings. The pope forbade
<https://www.penguinrandomhouse.ca/books/617996/what-linnaeus-saw-by-karen-magnuson-beil/9781324004684>
the
use of his books, and Linnaeus was widely criticized. His peers mocked him
for imagining himself “a second Adam
<https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1111/j.1467-9744.2009.01039.x>,”
in reference to the Biblical Adam, who is said to have named animals in the
Garden of Eden.

Although many mocked him, some of his peers and students (called “Linnaeus’
apostles”
<https://www.academia.edu/1790918/LINNAEUS_AND_HIS_APOSTLES_BY_PROF_SOBHAN_KR_MUKHERJEE>)
still considered him the foremost expert on botanical classification during
his lifetime. However, shortly after his death in 1778, Linnaeus’ legacy
was all but forgotten. This remained true until Swedish nationalism grew in
the 19th century, and Linnaeus was reclaimed from history and became the
country’s icon.

In the first edition, Linnaeus coined the term *Homo *and divided humans
into four varieties
<https://www.linnean.org/learning/who-was-linnaeus/linnaeus-and-race>:
Europaeus albus (people from Europe), Americanus rubescens (people from the
Americas), Asiaticus fuscus (people from Asia), and Africanus niger (people
from Africa). (In science, genus and species names, such as *Homo sapiens,* are
italicized; none of Linnaeus’ original classifications of humans are considered
valid species names
<https://www.itis.gov/servlet/SingleRpt/SingleRpt?search_topic=TSN&search_value=180092#null>
today,
so they are not italicized here.)

The fact that there were four human varieties reflected a tendency within
European natural philosophy to divide the world into sets of four: the four
rivers in the Garden of Eden; the four (known) continents; the four
universal elements (earth, air, fire, and water); and the four humors
(blood, yellow bile, black bile, and phlegm) that governed human health.

Linnaeus saw a connection there—geography influenced climate, and together,
climate and the humors provided an observable characteristic in humans:
skin color. Thus, in the 10th edition of *Systema Naturae *(1758), Linnaeus
formally made this connection, saying that people from Europe were governed
by the humor white phlegm, so they had whitish skin, while people from the
Americas were governed by the humor blood and had reddish skin.

These completely faulty ideas continue to shape how some people think about
race today—as a biological fact rather than as a social construct.

In this edition, Linnaeus also replaced “Anthropomorpha” with “Primates”
and named humans *Homo sapiens*
<https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1057%2F9781137338211_10>, revising
his taxonomic definition of the species. He changed the names of the
varieties to Homo americanus, Homo europaeus, Homo asiaticus, and Homo
africanus. Linnaeus also suggested two new varieties: Homo ferus (wild
children) and Homo monstrosus, or individuals he considered to be
abnormally shaped by their environments, such as those from the high
mountains (“Alpine dwarfs,” “Patagonian giants”), the “Hottentots
<https://www.bbc.com/news/magazine-35240987>,” and European women with
artificially constrained waists.

Linnaeus based these varieties on physical characteristics such as skin
color and hair color; geographic location; and perceived behaviors. For
example, Homo americanus was defined as those with “straight, black, and
thick hair; gaping nostrils … beardless chin” and “unyielding, cheerful,
and free” behavior. Homo europaeus were those with “plenty of yellow hair;
blue eyes” and were “light, wise, inventor[s].” Homo asiaticus had
“blackish hair, dark eyes” and were “stern, haughty, greedy.” Homo
africanus were those with “dark hair, with many twisting braids; silky
skin; flat nose; swollen lips” and were “sly, sluggish, neglectful.”

In the first edition of *Systema Naturae*, “Europaeus” were classified at
the top of the *Homo *hierarchy. Linnaeus later revised this, placing
“Asiaticus” at the top. By the 10th edition, “Americanus” moved to the top,
perhaps because he was guided by the idea of the “noble savage
<https://theconversation.com/explainer-the-myth-of-the-noble-savage-55316>,”
which, in the 18th century, was used to describe Indigenous people who were
“free from sin, appetite, or the concept of right and wrong.”

Notably, “Africanus” continually remained at the bottom of the hierarchy,
and Linnaeus’ description of “Africanus” was the most detailed, and the
most negative. Around the same time that Linnaeus was writing, Sweden was
involved in the enslavement of Africans, and therefore it would have been
in the country’s interest to portray Africans as inferior
<https://www.ibramxkendi.com/stamped-from-the-beginning/>.

The fact that Linnaeus aligned physical traits like skin color with
variable characteristics such as behavior, clothing, and politics meant
that he was not interested in identifying “discrete and stable types
<https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4326670/>.” By this logic,
Linnaeus did not directly suggest the existence of distinct human “races.”
Importantly, the concept of “race” as meaning the division of humans on the
basis of physical traits was not apparently used
<https://www.routledge.com/Anamorphosis-in-Early-Modern-Literature-Mediation-and-Affect/Boyle/p/book/9781138249295>
in
the 18th century. However, the 1792 English translation
<https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/119041#page/9/mode/1up> of *Systema
Naturae *presented Linnaeus’ human varieties as “subspecies,” which likely
led to the later assumption that Linnaeus himself believed in human races.

Regardless, it is fair to say that, as the first serious attempt to
subdivide humans into categories globally, Linnaeus’ formalized system of
ordering and ranking humans later led to racial categories.

History has shown that these ideas were picked up by eugenicists such as
German biologist Ernst Haeckel in the 19th century. Haeckel divided humans into
12 hierarchical species
<https://www.gutenberg.org/files/40473/40473-h/40473-h.htm#Page_296> and 36
races, with the “Mediterranese” (specifically, the “Indo-Germanians”)
ranked the highest and groups that made up “Primaeval Man” (Indigenous
peoples in Africa and Oceania) ranked the lowest. He used physical but also
cultural traits, such as language, to both define these “races” and make
claims about their evolution (noting which ones were more or less evolved).

These ideas, combined with Haeckel’s social Darwinist belief that evolution
ruled human civilization and nature, may have helped shape the racist
ideologies <https://www.hup.harvard.edu/catalog.php?isbn=9780674639416> of
some Nazi organizers. Alfred Rosenberg (who was appointed leader of the
Nazi movement by Adolf Hitler after he was jailed in 1924 for an attempted
coup) reportedly read and was influenced by Haeckel’s ideas. Similarly, his
ideas are thought to have helped stimulate the birth of fascism
<https://books.google.com/books/about/Haeckel_s_Monism_and_the_Birth_of_Fascis.html?id=Ba4UAQAAIAAJ>
in
Italy and France.

The British Eugenics Society produced this propaganda poster in the 1930s—a
time when the organization’s membership peaked and included prominent
scientists, economists, and other public figures who supported
eugenics. Wellcome Library/Wikimedia Commons
<https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Eugenics_Society_Poster_(1930s).png>

Of course, Haeckel is not the only one who used Linnaean teachings for this
purpose. There are numerous examples of others (mostly men in Europe and
the U.S.) who used these ideas about human variation to promote and advance
scientific racism.

Linnaeus surely remains an important historical figure, and his taxonomic
ideas will likely continue to be taught in schools globally. However, it
must be remembered that when his work is praised as a major scientific
achievement, his deeply problematic legacy is also celebrated.
While it is true, as many scholars argue, that Linnaeus did not promote the
idea of distinct human species, his concepts of human classification paved
the way for pseudoscientific ideas about human biological diversity—the
horrific consequences of which are still felt today.    KR  IRS 11422

On Mon, 11 Apr 2022 at 10:50, Rangarajan T.N.C. <[email protected]>
wrote:

> https://backofyourhand.com/30.7339,76.7889
>

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