Delvo
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What would those included traits be? I can't think of any that I've ever seen included as part of what races are rather than just conditionally affiliated with it under certain circumstances. Nobody expects a Kenyan cattle-herder to buy gold teeth and play rap music about life in the streets and killing whitey. Nobody thinks that a rap-blasting authority-hating gold-toothed guy at age 20 who ends up with a PhD and wearing a business suit to his administrative job for the state government in his 40s has changed his race, or that a daughter of cattle-herders who moves to a city and works for a hospital is a different race from her parents. What behavioral pattern is ever attributed to an entire race in all of the different cultures where members of that race live?the word race, as it's used in the media, in much scientific parlance and in everyday speech, includes behavioral and cultural traits which do not derive from any discrete geographic polymorphisms.
If that's your goal, then the fact that races are real is not irrelevant to it. It's an obstacle and a sign that you're trying to walk down the wrong path for the destination you hope to reach, because no change of people's minds or hearts that I can think of has ever worked by eradicating a concept of something that is real according to all evidence. You can get people to drop concepts of things that there's no evidence for, but with things that definitely exist, all you can do is change their understanding of the details about them. So that's what you should be going for.I consider the debate a sidebar to my purpose in creating this thread... I remain firm in my intentions to disintegrate the idea of race. I want to tear it down in order to make a better, more inclusive, less restrictive society. Call it lofty or elitist or liberal or unrealistic; it remains my purpose here
For example, macroscopic life was once in two groups: animals (things that move) and plants (things that are stuck to the ground). Mushrooms were plants. Later, people decided to treat mushrooms separately from other things that are stuck to the ground, whether because of discoveries in microbiology or because it was easy to see that they aren't green and don't have leaves. Did this change come from people "disintegrating the idea of" mushrooms? No, it came from people acknowledging that mushrooms were real but saying they should be looked at one way instead of another way. Similarly, there have also been people who thought the Earth was flat, and that the stars were small and close. Nobody changed their minds by telling them to forget about the Earth or stars completely; they did it by giving them another way to describe them and sound reasons to favor that description over the previous one.
To stick with ideas about categories of people, consider handedness. Once there was a "right" hand to use for all one-handed or asymmetrical tasks, and using the other hand was "sinister". Now nobody cares. That change didn't involve anybody saying the idea of handedness is bad and should be ended. We still have the idea, actually the observed fact, of handedness, and nobody could possibly ever have gotten anywhere by saying it wasn't real. All that happened was detaching another concept that was once unnecessarily associated with it.
It's also the same on the individual scale, not just the scale of things whole societies have changed about. For example, I was once under the impression that jet engines were supposed to work like rockets, with the continuous explosion out the back pushing the engine forward (just with one of the reactants being from the air instead of stored onboard). Since then, I've learned that that reaction actually is used as a power source to drive a turbine which drives a compressor and usually a big fan, which are actually what does most of the work by pulling the engine forward. Even when I didn't know as much about jets as I do now, anybody trying to tell me that there's no such thing--or even the more carefully phrased "jet engines, as you think of them, don't exist"--would have just made himself/herself look ridiculous. The way to correct me was to address the real things called "jet engines" that I was already perfectly aware of, and describe them better.
It gets even worse with a word that you've already seen can be defined in more than one way that have important differences from each other. If your fight is only against one of the definitions (one that has behavior built in), then the process you're imposing on yourself consists unnecessarily of two steps instead of one, and those two contradict each other: first, convincing people who use any other definition that their definition is invalid and they should all be using yours instead, and then, if they go along with that, convincing them that the definition you just convinced them to use is invalid and they shouldn't use it. They were already starting off where you wanted them to end up (not including behavior as part of race), so you don't need to try to get them to move at all in the first place! The other people, the ones actually using the definition you object to, are the ones you need to focus on. And you can point them to others who are already using the better definition.
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