Juniversal
CIA + FBI + NWO Employee
- Joined
- Jun 4, 2009
- Messages
- 2,145
On the subject, race is a very foggy concept. If you define race as concrete, discrete and wholly unique population groups then it certainly doesn't exist. But if you define race simply as population groups that differ from others (by a fair margin) in phenotype and genotype in a fairly consistent and predictable way than you could reasonably say it exist. This definition then begs the question where do we draw the racial line? What degree of genetic and phenotypical difference is needed before a population group constitutes it's own race?
Are Asian Negrito's a distinct race? Phenotypically they appear African but genetically have little in common with modern African populations. What about New Guineans and Australian Aborigines? African pygmies? What about the Khoisan people? All are very genetically distinct from any typical "Caucasoid, negroid or mongoloid" population or even each other. Do they constitute their own racial groups even though most tend towards "negroid" phenotypically? Honestly i'm curious if we were to embrace the above definition where these groups would fall.
I certainly have no complete opposition to admitting race exist given the second definition but then other questions arise regarding the number of races and where you draw the line (what percentage of genetic difference before you label a population a distinct race, how important is phenotype as opposed to genotype, how does admixture fit into the equation and how does it effect the veracity of racial labeling, ect)?
Are Asian Negrito's a distinct race? Phenotypically they appear African but genetically have little in common with modern African populations. What about New Guineans and Australian Aborigines? African pygmies? What about the Khoisan people? All are very genetically distinct from any typical "Caucasoid, negroid or mongoloid" population or even each other. Do they constitute their own racial groups even though most tend towards "negroid" phenotypically? Honestly i'm curious if we were to embrace the above definition where these groups would fall.
I certainly have no complete opposition to admitting race exist given the second definition but then other questions arise regarding the number of races and where you draw the line (what percentage of genetic difference before you label a population a distinct race, how important is phenotype as opposed to genotype, how does admixture fit into the equation and how does it effect the veracity of racial labeling, ect)?
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