A Special Tribute In Memory of
Ashley
Montagu
June 28, 1905 - November 26, 1999
Honoring Him for 95 years of Extraordinary
Contributions to Science and Humanity

... for human beings the trait that will always remain
the most adaptively valuable in the struggle for
existence is the ability to love...
--Ashley Montagu
At 95 anthropologist Ashley Montagu has contributed
an amazing range of benefits to all of us now living on this
earth.
His book Man's Most Dangerous Myth: The Fallacy of Race
-- for 56 years insisting on our ethnic equality
-- has everywhere helped demolish scientifically the false claims
of racial superiority or inferiority, and foster worldwide movement
for ethnic respect and liberation. Originally published in 1942,
he himself created and brought out the sixth edition
in 1998, at age 94.
His book The Natural Superiority of Women -- originally
published in 1953 and recently updated by Montagu in a new edition,
now in press -- came out when the idea of the equality
of the sexes still seemed bizarre to most men, and even
many women. Encouraging and strengthening the global rise of
women's movements during the 1960s and 1970s, it still does so
on into our time.
His books Touching and The Direction of Human
Development, which identify love as an action rather
than an emotion, have been in print and new editions continually
since their original publication in 1971 and 1955. They contain
the most cogent and valid statements of the central importance
of love in our lives and in the evolution of our species
made by a scientist in the 20th century.
Often providing important scientific leadership, Montagu also
has fought for the causes of humanity that really matter -- opposition
to the Viet Nam war, advocacy of the extension of appropriate
nurturance to all children and, in particular, support of civil
and human rights. Through his fifty books, his thousands of witty
lectures, and hundreds of entertaining television appearances,
more than any other scientist of our time he has brought science
to life and lifted it to a level of hope and higher meaning for
millions of people worldwide. Student of Franz Boas and Ruth
Benedict in anthropology, cherished friend of Albert Einstein,
honored with the Distinguished Achievement Award of The American
Anthropological Association and the Darwin Award of the Society
of American Physical Anthropologists, Ashley Montagu has been
the 20th century's most effective bridge between the great scientists
and humanists of the past and the much-needed humanistic science
of the future.
Along with people around the world, we salute Ashley Montagu
for his pivotal contributions to science, society, and the humanization
of humankind.
The
Ashley Montagu Institute
The Center for Partnership
Studies
The Humanist
Association
The
Touch Research Institute
Sierra
Nevada College
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