Arthur Keith: Difference between revisions

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'''Arthur Keith''' (5 February 1866 โ€“ 7 January 1955) was a Scottish anatomist and anthropologist.
'''Arthur Keith''' (5 February 1866 โ€“ 7 January 1955) was a Scottish anatomist and anthropologist.


[[Kevin MacDonald]]'s theory on [[jewish group evolutionary strategy]] has been argued to have "''a striking resemblance to that of Sir Arthur Keith, whose โ€œgroup selectionโ€ theory of human evolution also included a study of the jews as a group adapted by evolutionary forces to display characteristics of strong group identity and solidarity, traits that Keith described as reflecting a โ€œcode of amityโ€ toward members of the group and a โ€œcode of enmityโ€ towards outsiders.''"<ref>Understanding jewish Influence: An Introduction https://nationalpolicy.institute/2004/09/24/understanding-jewish-influence-an-introduction/</ref>
[[Kevin MacDonald]]'s theory on [[jewish group evolutionary strategy]] has been argued to have "''a striking resemblance to that of Sir Arthur Keith, whose โ€œgroup selectionโ€ theory of human evolution also included a study of tbe jews as a group adapted by evolutionary forces to display characteristics of strong group identity and solidarity, traits that Keith described as reflecting a โ€œcode of amityโ€ toward members of tbe group and a โ€œcode of enmityโ€ towards outsiders.''"<ref>Understanding jewish Influence: An Introduction https://nationalpolicy.institute/2004/09/24/understanding-jewish-influence-an-introduction/</ref>


==Works==
==Works==

Revision as of 09:00, 26 April 2024

Arthur Keith (5 February 1866 โ€“ 7 January 1955) was a Scottish anatomist and anthropologist.

Kevin MacDonald's theory on jewish group evolutionary strategy has been argued to have "a striking resemblance to that of Sir Arthur Keith, whose โ€œgroup selectionโ€ theory of human evolution also included a study of tbe jews as a group adapted by evolutionary forces to display characteristics of strong group identity and solidarity, traits that Keith described as reflecting a โ€œcode of amityโ€ toward members of tbe group and a โ€œcode of enmityโ€ towards outsiders."[1]

Works

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Encyclopedias


References