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Henry Fairfield Osborn - Race and the Search for the Origins of Man (Hardcover, New Ed)
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Henry Fairfield Osborn - Race and the Search for the Origins of Man (Hardcover, New Ed)
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The discovery in the 1920s of a huge cache of fossils in the Gobi
Desert fuelled a mania for dinosaurs that continues to the present.
But the original goal of the expedition was to search for the
origins of man. Henry Fairfield Osborn (1857-1935), director of the
American Museum of Natural History, stood at the forefront of the
debate over human evolution and the expedition aimed to prove his
theory of human origins. Osborn rejected the idea of primate
ancestry and constructed a non-Darwinian theory that the evolution
of man was the long adventurous story of individuals and groups
exerting personal will-power and inborn characteristics to achieve
both biological and spiritual success. It is an idea that still
echoes today. Study of Osborn's thinking, however, has been
obscured by the perception that racism influenced his theories.
Brian Regal paints a different and more textured picture in this
book - he shows that Osborn's views on race, like his political
ideas, were motivated by his science, itself grounded in religious
doctrine. His belief in the Central Asian origins of man, his role
as an activist for eugenic reform and immigration controls, his
support for Nordicism, his place in the 'New' versus 'Old' biology
debate, his role in the Christian Fundamentalist controversy, the
Scopes Monkey trial, and finally his construction of the 'Dawn Man'
hypothesis - all stemmed from his desire to support his human
evolution theory, and point the way to salvation. This biography
charts Osborn's intellectual development, from its roots in the
eclectic Christianity of his mother, through his student days with
Arnold Guyot, James McCosh, and T.H. Huxley, to his mature work at
the American Museum. It examines his trials and tribulations,
friendships and conflicts, and the world in which he lived: all
contributed to the construction of his theory. It is the dramatic
story of a man holding onto ideas that for him represented the very
meaning of life itself.
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