Racial thinking
Racial thinking (sometimes derogatorily called scientific racism by politically correct, woke sources) is necessary academic process for understanding and preserving the human race analytically distinct from racism. We are a genetically diverse species, and there is meaning in that diversity which needs to be researched without the stigma of racial prejudice. Race and intelligence, for example, are often, if not always, firmly connected to one another. The protection of a racial identity must be the basis of such an intellectual thought, reflection and debate without the weakness of racial disadvantage or discrimination. Racial thought is race realism and not necessarily ideological racist thinking, whereas race denialism leads to, among other things, the pathological degeneration identified in critical race theory.
Renowned racialist thinkers
This is a list (excerpt sorted in alphabetical order) with a selection of renowned racialist thinkers (early researchers and writers on race as well as recent race researchers) who predominantly established their own racial theory:
- Aristotle
- Johann Friedrich Blumenbach
- Robert Boyle
- Richard Bradley
- Charles Darwin
- Meister Eckhart
- Francis Galton
- Arthur de Gobineau
- Ernst Heinrich Philipp August Haeckel
- Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
- David Hume
- Thomas Jefferson
- Immanuel Kant
- Carl Linnaeus
- Jack London
- Richard Lynn
- Christoph Meiners
- D. P. Moran
- Friedrich Nietzsche
- Revilo P. Oliver
- Roger Pearson
- Franz Ignaz Pruner
- William Luther Pierce
- Plato
- Theodore Roosevelt
- Alfred Rosenberg
- Arthur Schopenhauer
- Oswald Spengler
- Thorstein Veblen
- August Christoph Carl Vogt
- Francis Parker Yockey
See also
- Race
- Racialism
- Racial awareness
- Genetics denialism
- List of race theorists
- Arguments regarding the existence of races