Samuel George Morton

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    impartial when conducting research, scientists in the South attempted to legitimize pro-slavery arguments by providing pseudoscientific evidence proving the superiority of whites and the inability of blacks to be self-sufficient as freedmen. Dr. Samuel George Morton, a famous physician and researcher in natural history, provided the South with flawed anthropological evidence in order to bolster the anti-abolitionist case. His universal acclaim for devotion to objective data allowed for his research to

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    factor in proving my statement will be the objectifying nature to racial science by Samuel Morton. Biological concept of race was developed mainly in the USA, and in 1830, Samuel Morton put forward evidence to describe a racial hierarchy. Samuel Morton was an American natural scientist and physician who established the “The American School”, which was considered by some as the beginning of scientific racism. Morton measured skull samples and found that ‘Caucasians’ have the largest

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    Study2 Essay

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    Morton as trying to state he was objective, and was being honest. The two major different pieces that support the thesis that Morton tried to be objective is his use of lead shot instead of mustrard seed and his openness with all his data. When Morton realized that his Mustard seed technique was unstable and presented varied results he quickly changed to a lead shot which was more accurate. Morton was very open when it came to displaying his data

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    Question 1. Biological determinism as stated by Gould, states “that shared behavioral norms, and the social and economic differences between human groups-primarily races, classes, and sexes-arise from inherited, inborn distinctions and that society, in this sense, is an accurate reflection of biology” (Gould, p.52). He explains this idea further through his explanation of how biological determinism can be measured or assigned based on the craniometry, which is the size of the skull, for at the time

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    Jefferson had written and made some changes to the Declaration. On July 4, 1776 Congress adopted the Declaration and it was signed by: John Hancock, Button Gwinnett, Lyman hall, George Walton, Wm Hooper, Joseph Hewes, John Penn, Edward Rutledge, Thos Heyward Jr., Thomas Lynch Jr., Arthur Middleton, Samuel Chase, Thos. Stone , George Wythe, Charles

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    Scientific Racism

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    The larger skull meant a larger brain. In Stephen Jay Gould’s book, The Mismeasure of Man, he argued that Samuel Morton had falsified the craniometrical data, perhaps inadvertently over-packing some skulls, to so produce results that would legitimize the racist presumptions he was attempting to prove. historical evaluation of IQ, which were and are the measures

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    Jefferson’s doctrine, racial science developed rapidly with the accrual of select Northern scientists whose goal was to further the boundaries of ethnology and phrenology. The most influential of these scientists were Samuel George Morton and his two cohorts Josiah Nott and Louis Agassiz; Morton launched a study

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    renowned and respected journalist that has written for major newspapers, such as the New York Times and The Washington Post. One chapter from Mismeasure focused on the work of a 19th-century physician, Samuel George Morton, who amassed a collection of almost 1,000 skulls from around the world. Morton estimated the brain size of different racial groups by pouring seed and lead shot into the skulls. He concluded that whites have larger brains on average than blacks, confirming his suspicion that the

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    The Declaration of Independence was a statement adopted by the thirteen colonies to represent their new found independence from Great Britain. In 1776, over the course of a month, many authors, most importantly Thomas Jefferson created the infamous 1,458 worded document. The intentions of the document and of Thomas Jefferson was to persuade people to side with the rebellion and disassociate from Great Britain publicly. Jefferson also wanted to explain under what circumstances the governed could justly

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    Indian Removal Dbq

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    Politics, race, and medicine were all important factors during the Indian Removal of 1830, as they had convinced the people of the United States that removing the Natives from their land was the right step for the nation. Presidents Jefferson and Jackson main goals were to either force the Natives to migrate further away or to force them to assimilate to western culture. Politics has always and will always play a large role in how the United States interacts with other cultures. Jefferson through

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