What was the impact of pseudoscientific ideas of race on the jewish nation by the nazi Germany during the period 1930 to 1946
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Answer:
These ideas about race were piled into two main theories, scientific racism, and social Darwinism. Scientific racism developed when Social Scientists, who studied human behavior in different social contexts, believed that the same system used by Natural Scientists to classify animals and plants according to particular characteristics could be used to classify and categorize human beings as well.
Social Scientists then began measuring and categorizing human beings according to particular characteristics like their physical features such as skull sizes and skin colors. After this, they created different types of races, where they made conclusions about typical characteristics that each of the races they established had. Each race had distinct characteristics from another race.
Europeans applied scientific racism when they met natives of their colonies. They did this to prove how superior and civilized they were compared to the natives, who according to them were uncivilized. Europeans then started measuring and categorizing the natives in their colonies to confirm the ideas about race as developed by social scientists at that time. They would take some of these natives, sometimes features of their dead bodies like their skulls, to displays and exhibitions in Europe