DC
Banned
- Joined
- Mar 20, 2008
- Messages
- 23,064
Facts are things we can observe about the world. There are some facts associated with this: the living human population has less genetic variation than some (maybe even most, but not all) other living multicellular species, and recent fossils of a predecessor population to the current one have been found. But to get from one of those facts to "the living human population is a subspecies" requires the application of a rule that some human(s) made up, such as "A species with an amount of genetic variation below this quantity computed by this statistical procedure can be called a subspecies of itself" or "A species can be called a subspecies of itself if fossils of a predecessor population are known from this long ago or less".
Of course, people are entitled to make up such rules and get others to follow them; it's pretty much the only way for words to have definitions, for example. The catch in this case, other than the fact that the implications of such rules are choices rather than "facts", is that no such rule has actually been written or applied in this case. If it had been, then other species meeting the same qualifications would also have the same thing (that they're just "subspecies") said about them. The fact that other species do not get this same treatment means that the rule you would need in this case doesn't really exist or get used in biology, which means that a claim that that's the case for humans is an ad-hoc excuse/rationalization, not a scientific conclusion/fact. (And this is consistent with the fact that the just-a-subspecies claim is only brought up in contexts like this one, where somebody has an interest in emphasizing human unity over differences, which, while sociologically benevolent and not even really dishonest, is not scientific either.)
They didn't conclude it. Some of them (even without fighting over whether those represent the whole "community" or not) have simply declared it. You are welcome to change my mind about that: simply show what method was used to legitimately draw it as a conclusion, and establish that it's really a method that's used for drawing conclusions about species/subspecies in general. If it isn't (i.e., if other species aren't also declared to be merely subspecies for the same reasons), then it's just an excuse/rationalization designed to allow people to say about humans what they want to say about humans.
Another way to put it would be "ascientific". Those who call the entire human species just a subspecies of itself aren't going against science in doing so, but aren't using science to get there either. Without a real, actual rule like I described above, there's no evidence that could be for it or against it, and it makes no difference in any way to any scientific theory or procedure or question.
Not meant as an argument at all.
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PS: This kind of thing is why I've responded relatively little to your posts. You're mostly talking about formalities and arbitrarily labeling practices, and I didn't want a discussion of those things to become a sidetrack away from the biological (or statistical) facts in dispute. In a thread where people make false claims about real, actual, solid facts like those, I figure getting those facts straight is a higher priority than debating a naming/classification scheme. (To make an analogy with legal cases, I identify more with forensic scientists, detectives, and expert witnesses than with lawyers.)
Human Races are not real, actual, solid facts
