Adam's Ancestors: Race, Religion, and the Politics of Human Origins

Front Cover
JHU Press, Apr 28, 2008 - History - 301 pages

Winner of the Selection for Professional Reading List of the U.S. Marine Corps

Although the idea that all human beings are descended from Adam is a long-standing conviction in the West, another version of this narrative exists: human beings inhabited the Earth before, or alongside, Adam, and their descendants still occupy the planet.

In this engaging and provocative work, David N. Livingstone traces the history of the idea of non-adamic humanity, and the debates surrounding it, from the Middle Ages to the present day. From a multidisciplinary perspective, Livingstone examines how this alternative idea has been used for cultural, religious, and political purposes. He reveals how what began as biblical criticism became a theological apologetic to reconcile religion with science—evolution in particular—and was later used to support arguments for white supremacy and segregation.

From heresy to orthodoxy, from radicalism to conservatism, from humanitarianism to racism, Adam's Ancestors tells an intriguing tale of twists and turns in the cultural politics surrounding the age-old question, "Where did we come from?"

 

Contents

Questioning the Mosaic Record
1
Isaac La Peyrère and the PreAdamite Scandal
26
The Cultural Politics of the Adamic Narrative
52
PreAdamism and the Harmony of Science and Religion
80
Adam Adamites and the Science of Ethnology
109
Evolution and the Birth of Adam
137
PreAdamism and the Politics of Racial Supremacy
169
The Continuing Legacy of PreAdamite Discourse
201
Concluding Reflections
219
Notes
225
Bibliography
255
Index
287
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (2008)

David N. Livingstone is a professor of geography and intellectual history at the Queen's University Belfast, Northern Ireland, and author of several books, including Putting Science in Its Place: Geographies of Scientific Knowledge, The Geographical Tradition, and Darwin's Forgotten Defenders.