All Thinkers

Franz Boas

Franz Boas (1858-1942) was a German-American anthropologist, widely regarded as the founder of modern cultural anthropology. He was born in Minden, Westphalia, into a secular Jewish family with strong liberal values. He studied physics and geography at German universities, completing his doctorate in 1881. A field expedition to Baffin Island in the Canadian Arctic in 1883, where he spent a winter studying the Inuit people, transformed his intellectual orientation: he became convinced that geography and environment could not explain the enormous variety of human cultures and that culture had to be understood on its own terms. He emigrated to the United States in 1887, eventually becoming a professor at Columbia University in New York, where he spent most of his career. He became the most influential figure in American anthropology, training a generation of students who went on to transform the discipline — including Margaret Mead, Ruth Benedict, Zora Neale Hurston, and many others. He was a lifelong anti-racist and used his scientific authority to challenge the racial pseudo-science that was used to justify immigration restriction, colonialism, and eventually Nazism. He died in 1942, reportedly collapsing mid-conversation at a dinner where he had been speaking about racism.

Origin
Germany / United States
Lifespan
1858-1942
Era
19th-20th century
Subjects
Anthropology Cultural Relativism Race Linguistics Fieldwork
Why They Matter

Boas matters because he dismantled scientific racism at its foundations and established a way of studying human diversity that remains the basis of cultural anthropology today. In his era, it was widely believed among scientists and intellectuals that human races were biologically distinct and hierarchically ordered, with Europeans at the top, and that racial characteristics — intelligence, moral capacity, cultural achievement — were genetically determined.

Boas challenged this with rigorous data

His studies of the body shapes of immigrants showed that physical characteristics changed rapidly in a new environment, demonstrating that supposedly fixed racial features were far more plastic than race science claimed. His concept of cultural relativism — the principle that every culture should be understood on its own terms rather than judged by the standards of another — provided the methodological foundation for genuinely comparative human science.

He also insisted on fieldwork

You could not study other cultures from the armchair or from colonial reports but had to go and live among them, learn their languages, and understand their practices from the inside. These contributions, made against fierce resistance from the scientific establishment and from political reactionaries, transformed how humanity understood itself.

Key Ideas
1
Culture, not biology, explains human diversity
Boas's most fundamental contribution was establishing that the differences between human groups — in customs, beliefs, languages, arts, and ways of organising social life — were the products of culture and history, not of biology or race. He demonstrated this through empirical research: his studies of immigrant body shapes showed that physical characteristics previously thought to be fixed racial features changed within one generation in a new environment. If the body was this plastic, how much more plastic were the cultural characteristics that race scientists attributed to genetic determination? This argument, backed by meticulous data, dismantled the intellectual foundations of scientific racism.
2
Cultural relativism: understanding cultures on their own terms
Cultural relativism is the methodological principle that each culture must be understood in its own terms — in the context of its own history, environment, and internal logic — rather than being judged by the standards of another culture. This was not a moral claim that all practices were equally good, but an epistemological one: you cannot understand a culture if you approach it with the assumption that your own culture's standards are universally applicable. Before Boas, Western anthropology routinely ranked cultures on a scale from primitive to civilised, with Western European cultures at the top. Cultural relativism replaced this ranking with a commitment to genuine understanding.
3
The historical method: each culture has its own history
Boas insisted that to understand any cultural practice, you needed to understand its history — how it had developed over time through contact, borrowing, transformation, and innovation. He was critical of the evolutionary schemes dominant in nineteenth-century anthropology, which claimed that all cultures passed through the same stages of development from savagery through barbarism to civilisation. These schemes assumed that different cultures were at different stages of the same journey. Boas showed instead that each culture had its own unique historical trajectory, shaped by its particular circumstances, contacts, and choices. History, not universal evolutionary stages, was the key to understanding cultural difference.
Key Quotations
"The mind of man is the same the world over."
— Various lectures and writings
This simple statement captures Boas's fundamental challenge to scientific racism. He was not claiming that all cultures were the same — the vast diversity of human cultural expression was the central datum of his life's work. He was claiming that the capacity for complex thought, for moral reasoning, for artistic creation, for cultural achievement, was equally distributed across all human groups. What differed was the historical and cultural circumstances in which that capacity was exercised, not the capacity itself.
"The behaviour of an individual is therefore determined not by his racial affiliation, but by the character of his ancestry and his cultural environment."
— The Mind of Primitive Man, 1911
Boas is making his central methodological argument: race is the wrong variable for explaining human behaviour and cultural achievement. What matters is the specific cultural and environmental circumstances that shape individual development, not biological racial category. This was a direct challenge to the race science of his era, which attributed intellectual and moral differences between groups to their racial heredity. Boas insisted that the evidence pointed overwhelmingly to cultural and historical explanation.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Cultural Heritage and Identity When introducing cultural relativism as a way of understanding difference
How to introduce
Ask: when you encounter a custom or practice from another culture that seems strange or wrong to you, what is the right response? After discussion, introduce Boas's principle: you cannot understand a cultural practice if you judge it immediately by your own culture's standards. You have to ask first: what does this practice mean within its own cultural context? What purposes does it serve? How did it develop? This is cultural relativism as a methodological tool. Ask: does this mean you can never criticise practices from other cultures? Or does it mean you need to genuinely understand them before you evaluate them?
Scientific Thinking When discussing how science can be misused to justify prejudice
How to introduce
Introduce the context: in Boas's era, leading scientists at major universities claimed to have scientific evidence that certain races were intellectually inferior. Ask: how did Boas challenge this? He used better science — more rigorous data collection, more careful analysis, more honest acknowledgment of what the evidence actually showed. Ask: what does this tell us about the relationship between science and power? Can science be used to justify prejudice? What is the difference between genuine science and pseudo-science dressed in scientific language?
Further Reading

For a short biography

Rosemary Zumwalt's Franz Boas: The Emergence of the Anthropologist (2019, University of Nebraska Press) is the most recent and most accessible scholarly life.

For his central arguments

The Mind of Primitive Man (1911, revised 1938) is his most systematic work.

For a short overview

The entry on Boas in the International Encyclopedia of the Social and Behavioral Sciences provides a reliable summary.

Key Ideas
1
Fieldwork and the participant observer
Boas established fieldwork — the extended, first-hand study of a community in its own setting — as the essential method of anthropology. Before Boas, much anthropology was conducted in armchairs: scholars compiled reports from missionaries, travellers, and colonial administrators and drew comparative conclusions. Boas argued that this was methodologically inadequate: you could not understand a culture without learning its language, spending extended time among its members, participating in its practices, and understanding its history. He trained his students in rigorous fieldwork and insisted that anthropological claims had to be grounded in this kind of direct, sustained engagement.
2
Language and culture: the Sapir-Whorf connection
Boas was a pioneer of linguistic anthropology and argued that language was not simply a tool for expressing thoughts that existed independently of it, but was itself a shaping force on thought and perception. Different languages carved up reality differently — they distinguished different colours, had different grammatical categories for time and person, and embedded different assumptions about the world. He trained his students, particularly Edward Sapir, in this linguistic anthropology, which eventually developed into the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis: the idea that the language you speak shapes how you perceive and think about the world.
3
Against scientific racism: the political use of science
Boas spent much of his career fighting the misuse of science to justify racial hierarchy. He testified before Congress against immigration restriction legislation that used racial categories. He publicly challenged eugenicists who claimed scientific authority for their assertions of racial inferiority. He was one of the first scientists to clearly distinguish race, language, and culture as separate phenomena that did not map onto each other: the same race could speak different languages, practise different cultures, and achieve vastly different things in different circumstances. This clear-headed empirical challenge to racial pseudo-science was one of the most important scientific and political contributions of the twentieth century.
Key Quotations
"Civilisation is not something absolute, but is relative, and our ideas and conceptions are true only so far as our civilisation goes."
— The Mind of Primitive Man, 1911
Boas is making the case for cultural relativism: the standards by which we judge civilisation are themselves products of a particular cultural moment and place, not universal truths. What seems civilised from a Western European perspective may not seem so from another, and what seems primitive may, in its own context, represent a sophisticated adaptation to particular circumstances. This does not mean all practices are equally good — Boas had his own moral commitments — but it means that the categories of civilised and primitive do not map onto a universal scale of human development.
"I am a scientist. My duty is to find truth, wherever it may lead."
— Various
Boas is articulating the scientist's obligation to follow the evidence rather than to confirm preferred conclusions or serve powerful interests. In his case, following the evidence led him into direct conflict with the racial science of his era, with eugenicists, with immigration restrictionists, and eventually with the Nazi regime, which burned his books. His commitment to truth over comfort or safety was both a methodological principle and a personal courage.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Research Skills When examining fieldwork as a method of knowledge production
How to introduce
Introduce Boas's insistence on fieldwork: you cannot understand a culture from armchair reports; you must go and live among its members, learn their language, and understand their practices from the inside. Ask: what can fieldwork tell you that secondary sources cannot? What are the risks and limitations of fieldwork? Introduce Boas's recognition that the fieldworker always brings their own perspective — their trained incapacity. Ask: how do you do rigorous fieldwork while acknowledging that you cannot be perfectly objective? Connect to Davis's microhistory: both demand sustained, direct engagement with the material rather than abstract theorising.
Critical Thinking When examining the relationship between race, language, and culture
How to introduce
Present Boas's empirical observation: race, language, and culture do not reliably correlate. The same racial group speaks different languages and practises different cultures; different racial groups speak the same language or share cultural practices. Ask: what follows from this? If these three things are genuinely separate, what does this tell us about claims that racial groups have distinctive cultural characteristics? Apply to contemporary examples: is there a relationship between a person's ancestry and their cultural practices, language, or intellectual capacity?
Ethical Thinking When examining the difference between cultural relativism and moral relativism
How to introduce
Introduce the distinction Boas made: cultural relativism is a methodological principle about how to understand cultures, not a moral claim that all practices are equally good. Ask: can you use cultural relativism as a tool for understanding while still maintaining moral commitments? Boas himself was deeply committed to anti-racism and human equality — he was not morally neutral. The question is about the sequence: understand first, then evaluate, rather than evaluating without understanding. Ask: can you think of a cultural practice you find morally problematic? Would understanding it in its own context change your evaluation?
Further Reading

Race, Language and Culture (1940, Macmillan) collects his most important essays and gives the best overview of his mature positions.

For the political dimension

Elazar Barkan's The Retreat of Scientific Racism (1992, Cambridge University Press) examines Boas in the context of the scientific challenge to racial hierarchy.

For his influence on students

Richard Handler's Schneider on Schneider (1995, Duke University Press) gives a sense of the Columbia school Boas created.

Key Ideas
1
Diffusion: cultures spread by contact, not parallel development
One of Boas's most important empirical arguments against evolutionary anthropology was his demonstration of diffusion: the process by which cultural practices, objects, and ideas spread from one society to another through contact, trade, migration, and imitation. When similar practices appeared in different societies, evolutionary anthropologists assumed this showed that all societies passed through the same stages. Boas showed that the similarities were often the result of direct or indirect historical contact rather than parallel independent development. This had major implications: it meant that cultures were not self-contained units developing independently but interconnected networks constantly borrowing and transforming each other's elements.
2
The trained incapacity of the fieldworker
Boas was aware that even the most rigorous fieldwork could not produce purely objective knowledge, because the fieldworker always brought their own cultural assumptions, their own language, and their own perspective to their observations. He developed methods to make fieldwork more rigorous — learn the local language thoroughly, spend extended time in the community, cross-check observations with multiple informants, be aware of your own biases — but he acknowledged that complete objectivity was unattainable. This honest acknowledgment of the limitations of fieldwork anticipates later anthropological reflexivity: the recognition that the anthropologist's own position shapes what they can see.
3
The plasticity of human nature
Running through all of Boas's work was a foundational claim about human nature: it was far more plastic, flexible, and culturally shaped than race science assumed. Human beings were not determined by their biology to behave in particular ways, think in particular categories, or achieve particular levels of cultural development. The same biological inheritance, placed in different cultural and historical circumstances, could produce radically different outcomes. This was both a scientific claim and a political one: it meant that the differences between human groups were not fixed and permanent but the products of circumstances that could change. It was the most powerful possible argument against racial determinism.
Key Quotations
"Race, language, and culture are not necessarily correlated. Members of the same race speak different languages and have different cultures; members of different races may speak the same language and share the same culture."
— Race, Language and Culture, 1940
This empirical observation had enormous political implications. If race, language, and culture were separate phenomena that did not reliably co-vary, then the entire edifice of race science collapsed: you could not read cultural capacity from racial category or linguistic affiliation from biological type. Each had to be studied independently, on its own terms, using its own methods. This analytical separation was one of Boas's most important scientific contributions.
"We talk glibly of the progress of civilisation — as though there were only one kind of progress."
— Various lectures
Boas is challenging the unilinear evolutionary model of cultural development that dominated nineteenth-century anthropology. The idea that all cultures were moving towards the same goal — Western European civilisation — and that some were further along than others was both empirically wrong and politically dangerous. It justified colonialism as a mission of uplift and dismissed indigenous cultural achievements as mere stages to be superseded. Boas's anthropology replaced this single-line model with an acknowledgment of the genuine diversity of human ways of flourishing.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Global Studies When examining the legacy of evolutionary anthropology in contemporary thought
How to introduce
Introduce the evolutionary anthropology Boas challenged: the idea that all cultures were on a single developmental track from primitive to civilised, with Western Europe at the top. Ask: do you think this idea is entirely gone from contemporary thinking? Where do you encounter versions of it today — in development theory, in education, in media representations of non-Western societies? Connect to Rodney's argument about underdevelopment, to Diop's argument about African civilisation, and to Menchú's account of how indigenous cultures are dismissed as backward. Ask: how do Boas's tools of cultural relativism and historical method help challenge these residual evolutionary assumptions?
Critical Thinking When examining the plasticity of human nature and its political implications
How to introduce
Introduce Boas's foundational claim: human nature is far more plastic and culturally shaped than biological determinism assumes. Ask: what are the political implications of this claim? If human behaviour and cultural achievement are primarily the products of environment and circumstance rather than fixed biological nature, then inequality between groups cannot be explained by natural differences in capacity. Ask: does this mean that differences in outcomes between groups are always the result of unjust circumstances? Or are there other explanations? Connect to Sen's capabilities approach and to the nature-nurture debate that Mead continued to develop.
Common Misconceptions
Common misconception

Cultural relativism means you cannot criticise practices in other cultures.

What to teach instead

Boas's cultural relativism was a methodological principle about how to understand cultures, not a moral claim that all practices were equally acceptable. He was deeply committed to anti-racism and human equality and spent his career fighting the racial hierarchies he found morally unacceptable. The principle was: understand first, then evaluate. Understanding a practice in its cultural context — how it developed, what it means to those who practise it, what purposes it serves — is the necessary precondition for genuine evaluation, not a substitute for it. Boas himself made clear moral judgments about many practices.

Common misconception

Boas proved that race does not exist at all.

What to teach instead

Boas showed that race as a biological category explaining cultural and intellectual differences was scientifically unsupported. He did not claim that observable physical differences between human populations did not exist — they clearly do. He argued that these physical differences did not determine cultural capacity, intellectual achievement, or moral worth, and that they did not reliably co-vary with language or cultural practice. The contemporary scientific consensus, based on genetics, broadly supports Boas's position: the genetic variation within so-called racial groups is greater than the variation between them, and race is better understood as a social category than a biological one.

Common misconception

Boas's students simply extended his methods without changing them.

What to teach instead

Boas trained a remarkable generation of students who went on to develop anthropology in directions that sometimes departed significantly from his approach. Margaret Mead developed a more public, popular style of anthropology. Ruth Benedict developed the concept of culture as a coherent pattern or configuration. Zora Neale Hurston brought her own African American perspective to the discipline. Edward Sapir developed linguistic anthropology in directions Boas had opened. These students did not simply apply Boas's methods; they transformed them, often in productive disagreement with each other and sometimes with their teacher.

Common misconception

Boas's anti-racism was simply a product of his own experience as a Jewish immigrant.

What to teach instead

While Boas's experience as a Jewish immigrant to America — where he encountered antisemitism and anti-immigrant racism — undoubtedly shaped his sensitivities, his anti-racism was grounded in rigorous empirical research and careful argument rather than in personal grievance. He spent decades collecting and analysing data on human physical variation, cultural practice, and linguistic diversity. His conclusions were driven by what the evidence showed, not by what he wished it showed. The fact that his personal experience made him alert to racial injustice helped him ask the right questions; the answers came from science.

Intellectual Connections
Influenced
Zora Neale Hurston
Hurston was one of Boas's most gifted students at Columbia University. He recognised her exceptional talent for ethnographic fieldwork and supported her research on African American folklore in the American South and the Caribbean. The relationship was productive but sometimes tense: Hurston brought perspectives and methods to fieldwork that reflected her own position as a Black woman inside the cultures she studied, which challenged and extended Boas's methods in ways that went beyond what he had envisioned.
Influenced
Margaret Mead
Mead was Boas's most famous student and became the most publicly prominent anthropologist of the twentieth century. Her work on adolescence, gender, and sexuality in Samoa and New Guinea extended Boas's challenge to biological determinism into the most charged political territory of the nature-nurture debate. She shared his commitment to using anthropological evidence to challenge Western assumptions about what was natural and universal in human behaviour.
In Dialogue With
Herodotus
Both Boas and Herodotus insisted on genuine curiosity about peoples and cultures different from their own, and both argued against judging other cultures by the standards of one's own. Herodotus's custom is king and Boas's cultural relativism are expressions of a similar intellectual commitment: to understand before judging, to approach the unfamiliar with openness rather than with the assumption of one's own culture's superiority. Boas placed this commitment on a rigorous scientific footing that Herodotus could not have.
In Dialogue With
Cheikh Anta Diop
Both Boas and Diop used rigorous research to challenge racial pseudo-science, though from very different positions. Boas challenged the scientific racism that ranked all non-European cultures as inferior. Diop challenged the specific claim that African civilisation was insignificant and argued that ancient Egypt was African. Both were swimming against powerful currents of racialised scholarship, and both insisted that the evidence, carefully gathered and honestly interpreted, told a different story from what the dominant scholarship claimed.
In Dialogue With
Natalie Zemon Davis
Both Boas and Davis insisted on understanding cultures from the inside — using the methods of careful, sustained, direct engagement rather than imposing external frameworks. Boas established fieldwork as the method of anthropology. Davis brought anthropological sensibility into history, applying thick description and the effort to understand past cultures on their own terms. Both are committed to what Davis called understanding from the inside and what Boas called genuine understanding of a culture in its own context.
Anticipates
Clifford Geertz
Boas established the foundations on which Geertz built his interpretive anthropology. Boas's insistence on understanding cultures in their own terms and on the importance of language and meaning in cultural analysis anticipates Geertz's argument that culture is a web of meanings and that the anthropologist's task is thick description. Geertz developed and refined the interpretive approach that Boas had begun, making it more explicitly hermeneutic and more reflexive about the anthropologist's own role in interpretation.
Further Reading

For the most thorough intellectual biography

George Stocking Jr.'s Race, Culture and Evolution (1968, Free Press) remains the definitive scholarly account of Boas's intellectual development.

For Boas and politics

Marshall Hyatt's Franz Boas: Social Activist (1990, Greenwood Press) examines his political commitments.

For the contemporary relevance

Jonathan Marks's Is Science Racist? (2017, Polity) applies Boasian principles to contemporary debates about race and genetics.