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From the 17th through the 19th centuries, the merging of folk beliefs about group differences with scientific explanations of those differences produced what one scholar has called an " ideology of race ".
According to this ideology, races are primordial, natural, enduring and distinct.
It was further argued that some groups may be the result of mixture between formerly distinct populations, but that careful study could distinguish the ancestral races that had combined to produce admixed groups.
Subsequent influential classifications by Georges Buffon, Petrus Camper and Christoph Meiners all classified " Negros " as inferior to Europeans.
In the United States the racial theories of Thomas Jefferson were influential.
He saw Africans as inferior to Whites especially in regards to their intellect, and embued with unnatural sexual appetites, but described Native Americans as equals to whites.

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