Darwin, Racism, and Evolution
Although much of what Charles Darwin wrote is now ignored, he is treated with reverence by many admirers. Indeed, he is the Prophet of evolutionism. When posting material about his racist views, atheists are often outraged — outraged, I tell you! It has been said that discussing his racism is an ad hominem. He was a product of his times, after all. That means it is irrelevant, but they still tidy it up.
Not hardly! It was instrumental in his philosophies and what he presented as science.
Muddy river with rocks, Unsplash / Cowboy Bob Sorensen |
In the wake of Charles Darwin’s On the Origin of Species (1859), thought leaders in Europe and the United States used his theory of evolution by natural selection to justify violent and dehumanizing treatment of non-whites around the globe. This much is well known. Less widely recognized is that Darwin’s case for ape-to-man evolution rested in no small part on his racist view of non-whites.
The jump from ape-like to human may seem like too great a leap for mindless evolution, he conceded, but not, he suggested, if we recognize that the “lower races” are far closer to apes than are the “higher races,” with Caucasians, in his view, at the top of the human evolutionary pyramid.
To read the rest, see "Darwin’s Racism of the Gaps." Also for your consideration is "Charles Darwin was not a Slavery Abolitionist."