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Polygenism


 

Polygenism is a biblical theory of human origins positing that the human races are of different lineages. This is opposite to the idea of monogenism, which posits a single origin of humanity (i.e. Adam and Eve)

Related Topics:
Biblical - Race - Monogenism - Adam and Eve

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Polygenism is an uncommon Biblical interpretation. Until the mid-1800s it was largely considered heretical. It was first raised by Isaac La Peyrère, a French polymath seeking to reconcile the limited number of generations between Adam and Eve and modern day by positing pre-Adamites. It was not believed that the number of races could not have developed within the commonly accepted biblical timeframe. Voltaire even brought the subject up in Essay on the Manner and Spirit of Nations and on the Principal Occurrences in History in 1756 (which was an early work of comparative history), although Voltaire made no attempt to solve the problem.

Related Topics:
Biblical interpretation - 1800s - Heretical - Isaac La Peyrère - Polymath - Pre-Adamites - Voltaire - 1756

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Polygenism came into mainstream scientific and religious thought due to the work of Samuel George Morton and more prominently Louis Agassiz in the United States. The issue of race was polemical, and slave owners attempted to justify their treatment of slaves using empirical science. This group was more closely attached to Morton's work. They argued that each race was a different species, and that black Africans were mentally inferior to Caucasians. Agassiz believed that each race was unique, but could still be classified as the same species. Contemporary geological discoveries descibed the earth as far older than the standard interpretation of Genesis allows, and among the more progressive thinkers, polygenism was a way to reconcile the new discoveries with their faith.

Related Topics:
Samuel George Morton - Louis Agassiz - United States - Slave - Science - Species - Caucasian - Genesis

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In the race debates of the 1860s and 1870s, Charles Darwin and his supporters argued for a monogenism of the species — seeing the common origin of all humans as essential for evolutionary theory. This is called the single-origin hypothesis, although it is no longer acknowledged as crucial to evolution by the scientific community.

Related Topics:
Charles Darwin - Evolutionary theory - Single-origin hypothesis - Scientific community

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In the late 20th century, the work of the paleoanthropologist Carleton Coon was the closest to what can be perhaps considered a "modern" polygenism by positing that the individual races of the earth separately evolved into modern homo sapiens. This hypothesis, called the multiregional hypothesis, was not very popular when it was presented in the mid-1960s and has had even less support since then.

Related Topics:
Paleoanthropologist - Carleton Coon - Homo sapiens - Multiregional hypothesis

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