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In A Realist Metaphysics of Race: A Context-Sensitive, Short-Term
Retentionist, Long-Term Revisionist Approach, Jeremy Pierce defends
a social kind view of racial categories. On this view, the
biological features we use to classify people racially do not make
races natural kinds. Rather, races exist because of contingent
social practices, single out certain groups of people as races,
give them social importance, and allow us to name them as races.
Pierce also identifies several kinds of context-sensitivity as
central to how racial categorization works and argues that we need
racial categories to identify problems in how our racial
constructions are formed, including the harmful effects of racial
constructions. Hence, rather than seeking to eliminate such
categories, Pierce argues that we should also make efforts to
change the conditions that generate their problematic elements,
with an eye toward retaining only the unproblematic aspects. A
Realist Metaphysics of Race contains insights relevant not just to
professional philosophers in metaphysics, philosophy of race,
social philosophy, philosophy of language, and philosophy of
science, but also to students and scholars working in sociology,
biology, anthropology, ethnic studies, and political science.
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