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The Reality of Race - A Summary of John R. Baker's book: "Race"
by Thomas Jackson
From American Renaissance magazine November, 1993
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
"Race is a veritable mountain of evidence, all of which can lead only to
the conclusion that the races differ in ability. Nevertheless, Dr. Baker is
strictly the scientist. He draws no further conclusions and makes no
suggestions about social policy. There is no doubt in his mind that current
orthodoxy on this subject is absurd, but he limits his exegesis to the
interpretation of data."
John R. Baker, Race, Foundation for Human Understanding (original
publisher: Oxford Univ. Press), 1974
* Introduction
* The Proper Study of Mankind
* Race and Color
* Equal or Unequal?
* A Mountain of Evidence
Race, by John Baker, is a remarkable book. There is probably no other
treatment of the biology and physical anthropology of race that approaches it
in breadth, detail, erudition or style. Even more remarkable is the book's
point of view. Far from evading the issue of racial differences in ability, it
was written for the very purpose of investigating and clarifying those
differences.
Dr. Baker, now deceased, was the ideal author for this book. He was
professor emeritus of cytology at Oxford University, a Fellow of the Royal
Society, and president of the Royal Microscopical Society. To these
professional qualifications he added an abiding interest in what he called the
"ethnic question," that is to say, the entire range of ways in which the races
differ.
Written late in life, Race is Dr. Baker's definitive statement on what he
considered one of the most important issues of our time. From start to finish
the book is stuffed with little-known, eye-opening facts, and it is
fascinating, even essential reading for anyone with a serious interest in
race. It is supplemented with more than 80 illustrations, and some of the
simpler line drawings are reproduced here.
Race is organized in four parts. The first is a summary of what was
thought and freely written about racial differences up through the end of the
1920s when, as Dr. Baker puts it, "the curtain came down" on open discussion.
The second is an introduction to the biology of taxonomy or classification,
including a thorough treatment of how races and species are identified. The
third is a detailed inventory of the biological differences that distinguish
the major races and subraces. In this section Dr. Baker makes a particular
study of whites, or Europids as he calls them, and of Africans (Negrids),
Bushmen (Sanids), Australian aborigines (Australids), Celts, and Jews. In the
final section, Dr. Baker sets out what he considers to be the essential
criteria for determining what he bluntly calls superiority and inferiority.
Not surprisingly, his conclusions are at odds with current dogma.
Dr. Baker's historical account of what has been written about ethnic
differences includes introductions to a number of people one might well
expect, such as the Comte de Gobineau, Houston Stewart Chamberlain, Nietzsche,
Francis Galton, and even Hitler. Dr. Baker also describes the pioneering but
no longer recognized work of men like Johann Blumenbach (1752-1840) and Samuel
Sommerring (1755-1830).
Other famous men have pronounced themselves on the question of racial
differences and, until recently, few have had any sympathy for the notion of
equality. Rousseau, for example, thought the chimpanzee was a primitive form
of human being, and Kant, Voltaire, and Hume thought the Negro vastly inferior
to the European. Dr. Baker reminds us that even the Bible is hardly silent on
the ethnic problem. The Children of Israel routinely exterminated enemies,
whom they considered inferior, and in the tenth book of Joshua, they enslaved
the entire Hivite people.
The Proper Study of Mankind
In the more technical sections that follow, Dr. Baker draws on his
scientific training to treat homo sapiens as just one more member of the
animal kingdom. "No one knows man who knows only man," he observes, and adds:
"One might almost go so far as to say, in relation to the ethnic problem, that
the proper study of mankind is animals." By this he means that without a
thorough grounding in biology and taxonomy it is impossible to view man with
the detachment that science requires. Dr. Baker writes, he explains, in the
spirit that inspired T.H. Huxley to conclude that "Anthropology is a section
of zoology [and] . . . the problems of ethnology are simply those which are
presented to the zoologist by every widely distributed animal he studies." In
this, Dr. Baker is out of step with many contemporary social scientists who
seem to believe that humans are uniquely exempt from the laws of heredity and
from the kind of scrutiny to which all other animals are subject.
Dr. Baker leads us firmly back to biology with an account of how evolution
gave rise to different species, how species are classified, the nature of
hybridity, and the circumstances under which animals can be made to mate with
differing species. Anthropology indeed becomes a branch of zoology. However,
in this discussion it becomes clear that man differs from animals in at least
one important way: humans are exceedingly unselective in their mating habits
and will copulate with individuals--across racial lines, for example--from
whom they are physically very different.
The contrast with the seven kinds of European mosquito, for example, could
not be greater. Their eggs can be distinguished because of slight differences,
but adults are so similar that not even experts can tell them apart under a
microscope. What experts cannot do, the mosquitoes do without fail; they never
interbreed.
Dr. Baker likewise reports that Grant's gazelle and Thompson's gazelle live
together in mixed herds and are so similar in appearance that it takes a
trained eye to tell them apart. They, too, never interbreed. It is only under
domestication that animals can be made to overcome their repugnance for mates
unlike themselves and thus produce mules or leopons (a cross between tiger and
leopard). Domesticated dogs breed indiscriminately with widely different types
but wild dogs like wolves, foxes, and coyotes breed only with their own kind.
Man is the most domesticated of animals and the least exclusive in his
amours--but his promiscuity varies enormously by group and individual. As Dr.
Baker points out, the Indian caste system successfully prevented interbreeding
even among racially similar people. At the same time, there are individuals
whose lust for animals is so great that bestiality has had to be specifically
forbidden ever since Biblical times.
The races and sub-races of man have evolved largely because of geographical
separation, but Dr. Baker also refers to what he calls "ecological races" that
evolved to fill different but overlapping niches. The small stature of African
pygmies, for example, fits them to forest life while the larger Negrids live
in clearings.
If humans had continued to evolve in isolation or if they were as
discriminating as animals in their choice of mates, racial differences would
eventually lead to mutually infertile species. This would be diversity of a
truly remarkable kind.
Domestication and travel have led to increasing miscegenation, but Dr.
Baker speculates about another possible reason. The skulls of our remote
ancestors show that their olfactory organs were much better developed than
ours. It is also likely that ancient man had stronger odors than does modern
man, and since our ancestors' mating habits were probably governed by smell
just like those of animals, this discouraged mating with unfamiliar peoples.
Even today the races have different odors.
Dr. Baker notes drily that although modern man is scrupulous in selecting
only the most promising breeding couples among his domestic animals, he almost
never gives the same attention to his own reproduction. "It follows," he adds,
"that we cannot look for any advance in inborn intelligence . . . ."
Race and Color
Dr. Baker writes at some length about skin color, but only because race and
color are sometimes confused. He himself thinks the subject is trivial and, in
fact, since at least Darwin's time scientists have recognized that color is
unimportant in distinguishing biological forms. Dr. Baker points out that to
make color the touch stone of race is as stupid as to think that a red rose is
more closely related to a red petunia than to a white rose.
Australian aborigines are similar in color to Bushmen, for example, but it
would be difficult to think of two racial groups that are more dissimilar
biologically. Likewise, Dr. Baker explains that some of the inhabitants of
northern India have relatively dark skin but are racially very close to
Europids.
Skin color is affected by the color of blood that may be visible through
it, but the main reason for variations in skin color is the presence of
different amounts of the pigment melanin. All humans make the same melanin and
have much the same number of melanocytes--the difference is in how much
melanin is produced. The darkest Africans have visible concentrations of
melanin even in the whites of their eyes and on their tongues. Melanin colors
hair as well as skin, though it is the presence of a slightly different
substance, called phaeomelanin, that causes "red" hair.
Dr. Baker explains that blue eyes are not caused by a blue pigment but by
the absence of pigment. Eyes appear to be blue for the same reason the edges
of a snow bank may appear blue: red light and other long wave lengths pass
through but shorter, bluer wave lengths are refracted and scattered, and some
are reflected back towards the viewer.
Light-skinned people are probably descended from dark-skinned people who
migrated from the tropics. The skin of Europeans transmits three and a half
times as much sunlight as the skin of Africans, and the ultraviolet rays
convert ergosterol in the body into vitamin D. Dark-skinned people, whose
skins are adapted to sunnier latitudes, may therefore get rickets--caused by
vitamin D deficiency--if they live in cold climates.
The third section of Race, in which Dr. Baker describes the myriad ways in
which the races differ from each other physically is the most technical. It
includes general descriptions of blood chemistry, physiology and skeletal
structure, with a special emphasis on the characteristics of the skull. It
introduces concepts like brachycephaly, paedomorphism, and the cranial index.
It is useful for the reader to have had some training in physiology but it
is not necessary. Even the most technical passages can usually be understood
by a non-specialist who has paid close attention to earlier explanations, and
Dr. Baker has set his most abstruse observations in smaller type as a signal
to laymen that they may skip over them without much loss.
A certain level of scientific detail is necessary here not merely because
physiological differences between the races require a certain vocabulary. In
this section Dr. Baker is at pains to explain the extent to which some races
show the traits of primitiveness--the retention into the modern era of
features possessed by our remote ancestors--and paedomorphy--the retention as
adults of traits commonly associated with children.
For example, it is indisputable that Australids are more primitive than
other races. Like Pithecanthropus, their teeth and lower jaws are strikingly
large, and their skulls are twice as thick as those of any other race. The
forehead recedes sharply, and the brow ridges are so well developed as to be
reminiscent of Pithecanthropus and of the larger apes. The brain is only about
85 percent the size of that of Europids and the back part has lunate folds not
found in other races but similar to those in the brains of orang-utans.
Likewise, the nasal aperture is similar, in some respects, to that of the
orang-utan.
The Bushmen, or Sanids, show equally remarkable evidence of paedomorphy.
Their very small size--males are often no taller than 4'7" or 4'9"--is the
most obviously juvenile characteristic retained by adults. Their skulls are
notably short and squat like those of a Europid infant and their eyes are set
wide apart like a new-born's. The facial and body hair of both sexes is very
weakly developed and reminiscent of children. Among males, the scrotum is like
that of a pre-adolescent: so small and tightly drawn up that one might think
only one testicle had descended.
As for Negrids, aside from a brain that is very slightly smaller than that
of Europids and Sinids (North Asians), Dr. Baker finds no characteristics that
could be called either primitive or paedomorphous. Negrids differ in blood
chemistry from other races, and have broader shoulders and thinner calves.
Certain tribes, such as the Hottentot, show extreme steatopygia or enlarged
buttocks. In some cases the posterior extends horizontally, almost like a
shelf.
Francis Galton, who travelled among the Hottentot in 1850 and 1851, wrote
of one such woman that he was "perfectly aghast at her development." He wanted
to measure her dimensions but could not bring himself to ask her permission to
do so. Instead, he took observations through his sextant and, he says, "worked
out the results by trigonometry and logarithms."
Equal or Unequal?
The question of whether Africans are, on average, equal in intelligence to
whites is important both in the United States and in Britain. Dr. Baker
therefore devotes considerable space to 19th-century accounts of African
societies before they came into sustained contact with foreigners. This is the
only sure way to know how far they had been able to advance without outside
influence.
Every explorer found a remarkable poverty of development. No black African
society had a written language or a calendar. None used the wheel or practiced
joinery or built multi-story buildings. Iron smelting was common but no black
Africans built what could be called a mechanical device, even one so simple as
a hinge. Africans apparently tamed no animals themselves but received
already-domesticated dogs and cattle from north of the Sahara. None used any
beast of burden, despite the presence of large mammals that could have been
tamed.
Although African societies are today described as having rich oral
histories, this was by no means universal. A few tribes did have men who could
recite the histories of their kings, but many were completely ignorant of the
past. The Ovaherero tribe, for example, kept no count of years at all.
Slavery and polygamy were widespread. Arbitrary execution of subjects by
rulers or wives by husbands was common. A few tribes ate human flesh though
even some of their own members seem to have rejected this custom. Some coastal
natives, seeing slaves being fed before being loaded onto ships for export,
believed that Europeans intended to eat them.
Some people have argued that the reason Africans showed such poor
development was that the effort to maintain life was too great to permit the
leisure for advancement. On the contrary, the missionary and explorer, David
Livingstone, found that some parts of the continent were a veritable paradise:
"To one who has observed the hard toil of the poor in old civilized
countries, the state in which the inhabitants here live is one of glorious
ease. . . . Food abounds, and very little labour is required for its
cultivation; the soil is so rich that no manure is required."
Although Dr. Baker does not pursue this idea very far, he suggests that it
was the very ease of life in Africa that kept high intelligence from being as
necessary for survival as it was in harsher climates.
In the concluding section of Race, Dr. Baker draws the only conclusions
that the data will permit: Just as they differ in biology, the races differ in
their mental traits. They are not equally intelligent or capable of building
civilized societies. Dr. Baker reviews the literature on mental testing and on
the heritability of intelligence and finds that it only confirms his
conclusions.
After setting out an interesting set of criteria for genuine civilization
he finds that the first people to achieve it were the Sumerians of the fourth
millennium B.C. Physically, it is likely that they were more closely related
to the Kurds than to any other present people. Europids and Sinids have also
created genuine civilizations, but Negrids and Australids have not.
Dr. Baker puts the Maya of Central America in a category of their own.
Their astronomy and mathematics were extremely advanced and were at one time
the most sophisticated in the world. They built great cities and administered
large territories. However, Dr. Baker hesitates to call them genuinely
civilized for several reasons: they did not use the wheel or use commercial
weights, their written language was poorly developed and their religion was a
mass of superstitions that were often the basis for torture, human sacrifice,
and mass slaughter.
A Mountain of Evidence
Race is a veritable mountain of evidence, all of which can lead only to the
conclusion that the races differ in ability. Nevertheless, Dr. Baker is
strictly the scientist. He draws no further conclusions and makes no
suggestions about social policy. There is no doubt in his mind that current
orthodoxy on this subject is absurd, but he limits his exegesis to the
interpretation of data.
In its realm, however, Race is a magisterial work to which justice cannot
be done in a review. It is probably the single most ambitious and
comprehensive volume on the subject ever attempted, and is surely without peer
in its treatment of the physical differences that distinguish races. It is not
an easy book -- Dr. Baker does not address himself to dullards or dilettantes
-- but in these blighted times it is a stroke of astonishing good fortune that
a man of his immense learning and ability should have chosen to take up a
position on the unpopular but truthful side of "the ethnic problem."
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