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Chapter 11 - Darwin’s Human History

from Part III - Humanism after Darwin

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 December 2022

Devin Griffiths
Affiliation:
University of Southern California
Deanna Kreisel
Affiliation:
University of Mississippi
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Summary

In The Descent of Man, Charles Darwin sought to erase the hard border between humans and other animals. Attempts to define a human exception within nature persist, however, among evolutionary anthropologists as well as in popular histories of the human species. Darwin proposes a cultural rather than biological perfection of “humanity” through an evolution of the moral sense or conscience, which takes the form of a deliberative expansion of the sympathetic imagination to embrace other nations and races and, eventually, all sentient life. At the same time, Darwin predicts a future widening of the extinction gap between a more highly evolved human type and “lower” races and species. Extermination, seemingly at odds with a universal sympathy, provides its historical condition. The crux informs subsequent accounts of a revolutionary rather than evolutionary stage of human emergence, in which the enhancement of Homo sapiens’ social intelligence entails the extermination of other human populations.

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After Darwin
Literature, Theory, and Criticism in the Twenty-First Century
, pp. 137 - 150
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2022

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