Race in biological and biomedical research Journal Article


Author: Cooper, R. S.
Article Title: Race in biological and biomedical research
Abstract: The concept of race has had a significant influence on research in human biology since the early 19th century. But race was given its meaning and social impact in the political sphere and subsequently intervened in science as a foreign concept, not grounded in the dominant empiricism of modern biology. The uses of race in science were therefore often disruptive and controversial; at times, science had to be retrofitted to accommodate race, and science in turn was often used to explain and justify race. This relationship was unstable in large part because race was about a phenomenon that could not be observed directly, being based on claims about the structure and function of genomic DNA. Over time, this relationship has been characterized by distinct phases, evolving from the inference of genetic effects based on the observed phenotype to the measurement of base-pair variation in DNA. Despite this fundamental advance in methodology, liabilities imposed by the dual political-empirical origins of race persist. On the one hand, an optimistic prediction can be made that just as geology made it possible to overturn the myth of the recent creation of the earth and evolution told us where the living world came from, molecular genetics will end the use of race in biology. At the same time, because race is fundamentally a political and not a scientific idea, it is possible that only a political intervention will relieve us of the burden of race.
Journal Title: Cold Spring Harbor perspectives in biology
Volume: 5
Issue: 11
ISSN: 1943-0264
Publisher: Unknown  
Journal Place: United States
Date Published: 2013
Start Page: 10.1101/cshperspect.a008573
Language: eng
DOI/URL:
Notes: JID: 101513680; epublish
LUC Authors
  1. Richard Stanley Cooper
    119 Cooper
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