In "Race and Progress," Boas states, "as long as we insist in stratification in racial layers, we shall pay the penalty in the form of interracial struggle" (17). Here, we see the ethical concerns of Boas. "Race and Progress" takes an inductive, argumentative stance against many of the assumptions that were being made at the time. Boas felt that the attitudes, or even the scientific studies, concerning race were based on cultural constructs. They were the result of deductive reasoning, in which a hypothesis is formed and then data (most likely, in this case, to strengthen the hypothesis) is gathered. The assumptions that Boas presents to the reader revolve around false notions of inferiority and difference. They are assumptions lacking empirical evidence. In hindsight, an anthropologist can clearly see instances of flawed methodology. Racial differences were taken as factual and accepted without proper, scientific scrutiny. This is undoubtedly due to the extreme ethnocentrism of the early twentieth-century. At any rate, Franz Boas was a staunch advocate of empirical thought. He believed strongly that from data a hypothesis could be gleaned, not the other way around. In terms of anthropological studies, his methodology, in turn, creates a more scientific approach towards human behavior and culture. It demands first-hand contact with cultural groups and does not rely on top-down methodology. The result of this is that "we have to reckon with social settings which have a very real existence" (14). Culture is malleable and is susceptible to change in either time or space. It must be studied empirically.
References
McGee, R. & R. Warms. (2007). Anthropological Theory: An Introductory History. New York: McGraw-Hill.
Published by Todd Nelsen
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