The lifecast case: an ethical legal inquiry
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Date
2018
Authors
Wild, Sarah Emily
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Abstract
This report research seeks to determine ethical action regarding the Bushman lifecasts currently
housed in Iziko Museums in Cape Town. Dozens of casts were made in the first half of the 20th
Century with the aim of classifying different races, specifically Bushmen. Race science, as this
form of inquiry became known, gave false scientific grounding to ideas of racial hierarchies,
racism, and white supremacy. It stripped those cast of their dignity, and promoted racist stereotypes
which justified the poor treatment of South Africa’s first inhabitants. Race science formed part of a
scientific paradigm which is at odds with the country’s current paradigm, with its focus on human
rights and dignity. Determining right action requires a dialogue between multiple paradigms: the
past, the present, and possible future paradigms. Using a mixture of Kantian deontology and virtue
ethics, this research report contends that the only ethical action is for the lifecasts to be returned to
descendants of those cast or of communities thought to be depicted by the casts.
Description
A research report submitted to the Faculty of Health Sciences, University of the
Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, in partial fulfilment of the requirements of the degree of
MSc Med (Bioethics and Health Law), Johannesburg 2018