So you're equating my position to a rant by a crazy guy?
If it quacks like a duck...
There is nothing esel to talk about. The biological concept of gentic populations has nothing to do with discrimination. They are unrelated. It is the social concept of race that powers discrimination, and it is the social concept of race that I am pointing out is not scientific.
Mm. OK. This sounds like a distinction without a difference, though: that the concept of genetic populations is legitemate, but that 'races' are not examples of a 'genetic population'.
See, this is exactly like arguing with a religous zealot. First they tell you X exsits. When you point out that the definition of X they are using is contradicted by the facts, they claim they meant Y all along. Then, they go back to talking about X without skipping a beat.
I don't follow. I'm not sure what X and Y mean in this paragraph. Could you be more specific?
Any concept that requires you to equivocate is not a valid concept. The biological grouping of populations into geographical origins has nothing to do with race. Your friend's mother did not lose her house because of genetic geographic grouping. What caused that crime was racism; the social theory of race. Which is bunk.
Nah. A biological theory of race could be abused just as easily. We know what AIDS is, and there is no 'social theory' of AIDS, but these patients are still mistreated. Perhaps more so because scientific reification carries legitemacy. My impression from past discussions on this topic is that one motivation for resisting a scientific exploration of race is exactly because it may legitemize abuses.
I wrote:
What we use for race metrics is pretty objective, once it's been defined.
You replied:
I'm disappointed with this response. Particularly since I had some examples in another post which demonstrate that most of the scientific racial classifications use objective metrics such as visible anatomy, metabolic factors, and biochemistry such as MHC.
The debate is about the subjective process that is used to select the objective criteria. However, I pointed out that this is a common problem in science with parallels in other fields. Again: planets have to be a certain size, shape, &c. These properties are objectively measureable, but the choice of
how big is subjective.
You wouldn't be wanting to hang onto the concept of race so you can extract some compensation, would you?
Well, sure. In this case, I consider 'compensation' the synonym for 'justice.' So: yeah. And by 'hang onto' I mean 'defend'.
May I also point out that white people gave you your freedom. It was white men who died to end slavery. Plenty of white people showed up for the Civil Rights struggle. It was white men and women who changed the laws to bring equality to the South. And it was black people who sold your ancestors into slavery.
I think there's been a misunderstanding. I'm white.
How many times have I said "social" theory of race? Are you drowning in strawmen, or do you just not bother to read what I write?
I guess I glossed over the term because I'm unfamiliar with it. Wasn't "Social Theory" the postmodern magazine that hosted the Sokal hoax?
What I said was that genetic populations are grouped by geography. Then I said that we have no reason to think those populations have any significant impact on that gigantically complex phenomona we call "character." Specific gene issues, like sickle-cell anemia; sure. Broad genetic clusters whose effect we cannot even reliably measure: premature. Way premature.
Agreed.
I need know no more than this to recognize that you got it from some idiotic Black Power website. To divide Africans into 3 races, while lumping the rest of the planet into 3 races, bespeaks an overwhelming bias.
Mmno. This is from peer-reviewed Anthropological literature. I believe it was popularized in a Discover magazine article in November 1994, (incidentally, written by James Shreeve, with sidebars by Stephen Jay Gould and Jared Diamond, who are not, imo, collaborating with 'idiotic black power websites').
The rational is that the classic social theory of race is bunk, and cannot possibly be true.
Maybe. I'm not sure, exactly, what this 'social theory' is. Is this a postmodernism thing?
You can explore your scientific genetic populations all you want, but who cares? They have nothing to do with politics, because no one commits racism based on your scientific genetic populations. People commit racism based on skin color. That kind of racism is logically incoherent and unjust. Since that is the kind of racism we are dealing with on the political arena, since that is what the vast majority of people mean when they use the word race, that is what I mean by the word race.
I'm not sure this is true. Particularly where people of blended race are concerned, and in particular, I'm thinking of Jews who infiltrated gentile society by changing their names, and also that in states that made the distinction, light-skinned blacks were classified as 'colored' regardless of their appearance. The birth certificate's racial category was based on the parents' birth certificate with the 'one drop' principle.
That's the whole point. Height has actually increased. Do you think intelligence has actually increased?
Average intelligence increase? Sure. Why not?
How much stock would you put in a ruler if they told you that 60 years ago it was 6 inches shorter?
Bad analogy. The test scores are adjusted to be conveted to an IQ score. However, the raw scores are still available. Modern test-takers score better on average than previous testees on these tests. That's the observation that Flynn made. The average of course will always be 100 by definition. However, modern subjects get more answers correct than our ancestors, and they get further through the tests. They do the timed components faster, and more accurately.
Ok, not hide. But if the Flynn effect is not a secret, why do so many people still put stock in IQ tests as a measure of historical value?
I don't understand the question. What do mean by "as a measure of historical value?" Do you mean: why would they be used in a longitudinal study? See above.
Maybe you should read Flynn's paper on this. Absolutely everyone in the field agrees that this is not the case. The fact that you seriously suggest people are 30% smarter than they were 60 years ago immediately disqualifies anything else you have to say about intelligence. Don't take my word for it; ask the people you think you think you are defending (i.e. psychologists).
Mm. Well, I get a different impression from the field. I'm not sure what qualifies as a 'psychologist,' but I do have a B.A. in psychology, and my peers are of a mixed opinion on this subject. Flynn has many papers on this, so I'm not sure which one you're talking about. The theories vary, but the most popular theory I'm aware of is consistent with the belief that there's an increase in average intelligence brought about by reducing the number of underperformers. What is controversial is the explanation for what has happened to this cohort to cause them to improve. The most popular explanation is 'diet'. I'm not convinced that there is one single factor, so much as we are seeing the fruits of social programs directed to those who would have been completely lost in previous generations.
But they are not known to be less accurate than the effect we are trying to measure.
Nobody is suggesting black people score 30% lower on tests than white people. Yet we know the tests are imperfect to that level.
"Yes sir, I know my ruler only measures to the nearest foot, but I'm telling you white people are 2 inches taller!"
Well, that's an exaggeration. Psychological testing has validation standards, and one of them is that we're looking for consistency, especially longitudinally within-subject. One of the reasons some people believe that IQ reflects an innate property is because it's so consistent over a subject's lifetime. My interpretation of this is different, but the observation is that individuals' test results don't vary much, and random noise is mitigated by increasing the sample size anyway.
I probably agree with you. But all that tells us is that other psych surveys are even more useless.
Ah. A psychology denier, too. Lots to do here (rolling up sleeves).
I said:
A question: what do you mean by 'gorilla'? Is there such a thing as a 'gorilla'? Isn't this just a human social convention?
If that's the best argument you have to offer, then I can see I'm in the wrong room.
I'll let the other readers decide if this is a satisfactory demolition of my claim that science has many examples of human classification being somewhat arbitrary, but still useful.
Are you completely unaware that there are black men who look as white as David Brinkley? When I say black, I mean, born to a wide majority of black ancestors, and hence genetically more closely related to Alabama negroes than anything else. When I say white, I mean they look white. They get sunburns.
Your eyeball test has just proven my entire rant. The social theory of race - the pernicious disease of racism - is about skin color, not genetics.
I've already indicated that this is a logical fallacy called corruption of the continuum. Ethnoclines are not proof against the concept of races. My neighbour has a wolf-dog. This doesn't mean wolfs and dogs can't be distinguished.
Another poster raised the example that we don't use mere colour to classify genetic populations as distinct species. Sure we do! Two examples: one is dog subspecies (ie: dog races, varieties, breeds)... cairns and westies. Westies are white-furred Cairns. That's the only difference. The other example is big cats... panthers are leopards whose spots have merged. Lions and tigers look diffrerent and are geographically isolated, but are otherwise the same. We speciate them because we have a tradition to do so. They mate and form hybrids. But a child can tell them apart.