Cousins Under the Skin
Steve Jones examines the limitations of biology in understanding human affairs and argues that the history of race illustrates the way science can be used to support prejudice.
Dr Steve Jones, Reader in Genetics at University College, London delivers his penultimate Reith lecture, in a series about the new biological insight into humanity.
In this lecture, Steve Jones examines how science has been used to discriminate, arguing that the history of race illustrates more than anything else the way science can be used to support prejudice.
He examines the limitations of biology in understanding human affairs and by using the example of the genetic differences between snails in two valleys in the Pyrenees, which he argues, are greater than between Australian aborigines and ourselves, he explains that there are far greater genetic differences between individuals than between countries or races. Humans, he says, are in fact a tediously uniform species.
Last on
Broadcast
- Wed 11 Dec 1991 09:00麻豆社 Radio 4
Featured in...
Archive 1976-2012—The Reith Lectures
Annual radio lectures on significant issues, delivered by leading figures.
New to the Reith Lectures? Here鈥檚 where to start
Four lectures recommended by the series producer.
Podcast
-
The Reith Lectures
Significant international thinkers deliver the 麻豆社's flagship annual lecture series