Luigi Luca Cavalli-Sforza Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
- "The classification into races has proved to be a futile exercise."
Cavalli-Sforza has also written The History and Geography of Human Genes (1994 with Paolo Menozzi and Alberto Piazza), and The Great Human Diasporas: The History of Diversity and Evolution (with his son Francesco). For geneticists, his tome The History and Geography of Human Genes is a standard.
Once the genetic structure of inheritance had been made plain, Cavalli-Sforza was one of the first scientists to ask whether the genes of modern populations might contain an inherited historical record of the human species. The study of demographics was already well-established, based on linguistic, cultural and archaeological clues, but it had become overlaid with nationalist and racist ideologies. Cavalli-Sforza initiated a new field of research by combining the concrete findings of demography with a newly-available analysis of blood groups in an actual human population. His MD in medicine (1944).
Cavalli-Sforza has singled out as spurs to his creative career early connections between migration patterns and blood groups like ABO and Rh-factor described by Robert Race, Arthur Mourant, and by R. A. Fisher especially.
His post-war studies at Cambridge in the area of bacterial genetics were followed by years of teaching in northern Italy, in Milan, Parma and Pavia, and a move in 1970 to Stanford, where he found the intellectual culture more open-ended and cooperative, and where he has remained.
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