Skeptic Ginger
Nasty Woman
- Joined
- Feb 14, 2005
- Messages
- 96,955
If you want to change the term from human races to human breeds, we might reach an agreement. But I'm guessing race and breed are not synonymous and breed doesn't apply to humans.I don't know enough about blood types to answer. I imagine some type of factor or cluster analysis on traits and genetic markers could offer evidence for or including it as a defining characteristic.
We can identify both fuzzy and distinct characteristics of cocker spaniels that makes the label, cocker spaniel, useful. We can do the same for Shih Tzus.
Is your argument: If these dogs bred, we wouldn't be able to label the pups as cockers or as shih's. Therefore cockers and shihs can't exist?
The thing is, race has an historical connotation. Genetic science discoveries require we re-think what is meant by race. It's like thinking different colored boxes correlate to something different inside then finding out they don't.
In the mean time as you tried to sort the boxes by color, you couldn't decide if the orange one was in the yellow or red category. So you make an orange category. Now you have an orange-red box. Where do you put it? With the red or orange boxes or do you start a new category? After a while, yes you can see the blue box is different from the red one, but when does the light blue one become a new 'race'.
Then it turns out the outside of the box doesn't correlate well to what is inside the box. Inside you find all sorts of other things you could categorize the boxes by. And the insides sometimes, but not always, bear some correlation to the outer color. Now how do you divide up the categories?
You can make any categories you want. But the outside color and the inside contents are not readily conducive to natural categories, rather, they are more of a continuum. Categories you chose are by nature, arbitrary. I.e. they are human constructs, not natural biologic divisions.
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