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Race and Reality: What Everyone Should Know about Our Biological Diversity by Guy P. Harrison — book cover

Race and Reality: What Everyone Should Know about Our Biological Diversity

by Guy P. Harrison
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Overview

The concept of race has had a powerful impact on history and continues to shape the world today in profound ways. Most people derive their attitudes about race from their family, culture, and education. Very few, however, are aware that there are vast differences between the popular notions of race and the scientific view of human diversity. Yet even among scientists, who understand the current evidence, there is great controversy regarding the definition of the term race or even the usefulness of thinking in terms of race at all. Drawing on research from diverse sources and interviews with key scientists, award-winning journalist Guy P. Harrison surveys the current state of a volatile, important, and confusing subject. Harrison’s thorough approach explores all sides of the issue, including such questions as these:
• If analysis of the human genome reveals that all human beings are 99.9% alike, how meaningful are racial differences?
• Is the concept of race merely a cultural invention?
• If race distinctions are at least partially based in biological reality, how do we decide the number of races? Are there just three or maybe 3 million?
• What do studies of racial attitudes reveal? Are we all, in one way or another, racists?
• How does race correlate with environmental and geographical differences?
• Are race-based drugs a good idea?
• How does race influence intelligence, athletic ability, and love interests?
Harrison delves into these and many more intriguing, controversial, and important questions in this enlightening book. After reading Race and Reality, you will never think about race in the same way again.

Synopsis

"The reality of human races is another commonsense 'truth' destined to follow the flat Earth into oblivion." -JARED DIAMOND, evolutionary biologist

"It's fashionable to say there are no races. But it's silly." -VINCENT SARICH, anthropologist

The concept of race has had a powerful impact on history and continues to shape the world today in profound ways. Most people derive their attitudes about race from their family, culture, and education. Very few, however, are aware that there are vast differences between the popular notions of race and the scientific view of human diversity. Yet even among scientists, who understand the current evidence, there is great controversy regarding the definition of the term race or even the usefulness of thinking in terms of race at all.

Drawing on research from diverse sources and interviews with key scientists, award-winning journalist Guy P. Harrison surveys the current state of a volatile, important, and confusing subject. Harrison's thorough approach explores all sides of the issue, including such questions as these:

• If analysis of the human genome reveals that all human beings are 99.9% alike, how meaningful are racial differences?
• Is the concept of race merely a cultural invention?
• If race distinctions are at least partially based in biological reality, how do we decide the number of races? Are there just three or maybe 3 million?
• What do studies of racial attitudes reveal? Are we all, in one way or another, racists?
• How does race correlate with environmental and geographical differences?
• Are race-based drugs a good idea?
• How does race influenceintelligence, athletic ability, and love interests?

Harrison delves into these and many more intriguing, controversial, and important questions in this enlightening book. After reading Race and Reality, you will never think about race in the same way again.

David B. Grusky

Do we need a book that reminds us that the earth revolves around the sun? Probably not, as Copernicus still carries the day, and another book is surely superfluous. Do we need a book that explains why an apple falls to the ground? Here again Newton seems to have set us nicely straight. But all is different when it comes to race and the false view that races are biologically fixed and naturally occurring. We desperately need a book that sets us no-nonsense straight, and Race and Reality is just that book, a tour de force that conveys the current science on racial classification in a rigorous yet readable way. A book so clearly written, so elegantly crafted, so packed with nuggets that even those who think they know it all about race and racial classification will come away changed. (David B. Grusky, professor of sociology, director of the Center for the Study of Poverty and Inequality, Stanford University)

About the Author, Guy P. Harrison

Guy P. Harrison (Grand Cayman, Cayman Islands) is an award-winning journalist and the author of 50 Reasons People Give for Believing in a God. He has also published articles in Free Inquiry magazine and other publications.

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Editorials

David B. Grusky

Do we need a book that reminds us that the earth revolves around the sun? Probably not, as Copernicus still carries the day, and another book is surely superfluous. Do we need a book that explains why an apple falls to the ground? Here again Newton seems to have set us nicely straight. But all is different when it comes to race and the false view that races are biologically fixed and naturally occurring. We desperately need a book that sets us no-nonsense straight, and Race and Reality is just that book, a tour de force that conveys the current science on racial classification in a rigorous yet readable way. A book so clearly written, so elegantly crafted, so packed with nuggets that even those who think they know it all about race and racial classification will come away changed. (David B. Grusky, professor of sociology, director of the Center for the Study of Poverty and Inequality, Stanford University)

Steve Olson

...comprehensive and engaging book should be required reading for anyone who has thought about the benighted issue of "race." It will clear the cobwebs from your head. (Steve Olson, author of Mapping Human History: Discovering the Past Through Our Genes)

Audrey Smedley

Guy Harrison's well-written and passionate plea for eliminating the idea and ideology of race should be widely read. He has shown that the idea of race not only is contradicted by science but is a social anachronism that should not be tolerated by society in the 21st century. (Dr. Audrey Smedley, Professor Emerita Anthropology and African-American Studies, Virginia Commonwealth University)

Jefferson M. Fish

For decades, social and biological scientists have amassed evidence demonstrating that the human species has no races, and that differences between groups called 'races' are not biologically based. Race and Reality by Guy P. Harrison makes this knowledge accessible, and knocks the props out from under 'scientific' arguments that have been used to justify racism. (Jefferson M. Fish, Professor Emeritus of Psychology, St. John's University, New York)

Book Details

Published
December 1, 2009
Publisher
Prometheus Books
Pages
320
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9781591027676

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