Leonard Lieberman

{{Short description|American anthropology professor}}

{{Infobox person

| honorific_prefix= Professor

| name = Leonard Lieberman

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| birth_name =

| birth_date = {{Birth-date|October 25, 1925}}

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| death_date = {{Death-date and age|February 6, 2007|October 25, 1925}}

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| nationality = American

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| alma_mater = University of California, Berkeley

| occupation = Anthropologist

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}}

Leonard Lieberman (October 25, 1925{{spaced ndash}}February 6, 2007) was an American anthropology professor at the Central Michigan University for forty years.{{cite web|url=http://www.cm-life.com/2007/02/09/liebermanamentortomany/|year=2007|title=Lieberman a mentor to many}}

Early life and education

Lieberman was educated at the University of California, Berkeley (B.A. - 1956; M.A. - 1959) and at Michigan State University (PhD., 1970). He published The Debate over Race (Phylon 39:127–41); with Alice Littlefield and Larry T. Reynolds, Redefining Race: The Potential Demise of a Concept in Physical Anthropology (current anthropology 23:641–55): and, with Larry T. Reynolds, Race: The Deconstruction of a Scientific Concept, in Race and Other Misadventures: Essays in Honor of Ashley Montagu in His Ninetieth Year.{{#tag:ref|Dix Hills, N.J. General Hall, 1996.|group=N}}

Career

Lieberman's research focused on human races, the debate over creationism and evolution and intelligent design.{{cite web |url=http://media.www.cm-life.com/media/storage/paper906/news/2007/02/09/News/Lieberman.A.Mentor.To.Many-2708625.shtml |title=Lieberman a mentor to many - News |access-date=2009-05-26 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081204051953/http://media.www.cm-life.com/media/storage/paper906/news/2007/02/09/News/Lieberman.A.Mentor.To.Many-2708625.shtml |archive-date=2008-12-04 }} Influential contributor to the theory of anthropology teaching when he saw himself as a follower of Montagu’s pioneering ideas about race. He presented 60 papers at scholarly conferences, the last one at the 105th American Anthropological Association (AAA).{{cite web|url=http://www.staff.amu.edu.pl/~anthro/pdf/paar/vol070/kro1.pdf|title=Meetings in San Jose|date=November 2006}}

Lieberman was a prominent critic of the racial theories of J. Philippe Rushton. One such example is a journal article where Lieberman traced the origins of Rushton's theories showing that Rushton used secondary sources to obtain the size of skulls upon which he based his research about the cranial volume differences of racial groups.{{Cite web |url=http://www.cscs.umich.edu/~crshalizi/sloth/lieberman-on-rushton.pdf |title=How 'Caucasoids' Got Such Big Crania and Why They Shrank: From Morton to Rushton |last=Current Anthropology |date=February 2001 |website=Vol. 42, No. 1 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120202053701/http://www.cscs.umich.edu/~crshalizi/sloth/lieberman-on-rushton.pdf |archive-date=February 2, 2012}}

Bibliography

  • Race and other misadventures (1996){{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=5DLrgG_MflgC|title=Race and other misadventures: essays in honor of Ashley Montagu in his ninetieth year|year=1996|publisher=Rowman & Littlefield|isbn=9781882289356|access-date=April 9, 2013}}

Notes

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References