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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 6 page paper examines the validity of the concept of race. Definitions from the past and present are discussed. The subject is explored from a scientific point of view. Whether race is a biological fact or a social construction is discussed. The future of race may rest on information attributable to the human genome, but the jury is still out on a conclusion to the race question. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Page Count:
6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: RT13_SA519rac.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
created babies whose race is unclear, some have called this mulatto or mixed and some individuals simply decide what they want to be. Some girls consider themselves black for example
even though one of the parents may be white. While definitions of race are somewhat flexible, it seems that it is something attached to scientific study and there are specific
guidelines. However, prior the the advent of evolutionary biology, the definition of race would go to to common lineage, which was actually a vague concept that was interchangeable with
breed or species or cultural origin ("Race," 2005). The word race is thought to signify something along the lines of common descent and was something introduced during the 1500s ("Race,"
2005). It is also something based on the idea that race was set on defining a minute number of groups that are based on lineage and this goes back to
the days of Christopher Columbus ("Race," 2005). Older concepts like nation and tribe, entail a broader number of groupings ("Race," 2005). Of course, the first time a true classification of
human beings was divided into separate races is attributable to Fran?ois Bernier ("Race," 2005). That was in 1684 where the author distinguishes among four "races" ("Race," 2005). With this
new model, there seems to be a political message which is that race was something attached to the color of ones skin, in addition to other features such as facial
type and the color and texture of hair ("Race," 2005). Some experts have declared this to have only a scant relationship with other inheritable characteristics that are rather persuasive ("Race,"
2005). Of course, with interracial breeding a reality, such classification schemes are not as strong as they once were ("Race," 2005). During the 1800s, there were naturalists in
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