I think there's a bit of misplaced nostalgia here for k-punk's cold rationalist polemics in the early days of this forum.
However problematic or taboo you find it there are in fact, statistically speaking, traits that can be attributed to populations based on DNA. I draw no conclusions from that whatsoever and realise that it would be extremely dangerous to do so but it's the bleeding truth so perhaps we can see why someone might hold that to be the case? You can't just sweep it under the rug. There's got to be a more coherent argument.
Just because a particular belief more often than not leads to unpleasant conclusions first of all doesn't necessarily make it incorrect, but it also doesn't mean that the holder of that belief has extrapolated it backwards from those hideous conclusions. Holding that all 'racists' are bad is prejudicial too in a way.
It seems inadequate to me to say that a belief in a biological basis for certain traits nearly always leads to evil actions and therefore must not be permitted. It must either be shown why this is incorrect or it must be shown why further conclusions based on that belief are illogical and potentially dangerous. If you just say 'racism' is off limits it will keep coming back.
So you're saying racial groups exist?THERE ARE MORE DIFFERENCES WITHIN PERCEIVED RACIAL GROUPS THAN BETWEEN THEM.
So you're saying racial groups exist?![]()
Nonsense. People look at each other as inferior (or superior) for all sorts of reasons. People discriminate and are prejudicial for all sorts of reasons. Maybe I dislike Welsh people because a Welsh kid at school was an asshole. It doesn't mean I think there's a genetic basis for Welshness, and it would be an irrational dislike but that doesn't stop that kind of thing happening. Maybe groups of people are discriminated against because they are perceived as 'superior' and therefore a threat.
However problematic or taboo you find it there are in fact, statistically speaking, traits that can be attributed to populations based on DNA.
Holding that all 'racists' are bad is prejudicial too in a way.
It was just an argument about logic, not what I believe. I've never said race is a biological fact or any of that stuff.There are differences among people, period. There are trends among populations, yes. But the notion of race is socially constructed. If you want to put a lot of stock in socially constructed norms, well, that makes you just like a great majority of the world. It doesn't make you right about race being a biological fact, though.
I was using Welsh people as a deliberately ludicrous example. I mean the example was ludicrous, not the Welsh.Sure, you dislike national and ethnic groups, then. This is just as stupid as disliking people on the basis of the "race" (i.e., skin color and facial features).
Well I think this is where your logic falls down, and the only reason I'm contesting it is because I don't think it helps the counterblaste to racist notions to say this.Pff. Oh there are? Which are these, then? It would be excellent if you could name a few. Biologists certainly haven't found many direct links between the way people look and specific genetic markers.
Which protein is it exactly on that is unique to, say, black people? What is the difference between nucleotides of a white person and those of an asian person?
In fact, the genetic/ genome structure of all humans is remarkably similar from a macroscopic or "macro" perspective, and entirely different from individual level on a microscopic level
So it's helpful to have a readily comprehensible counter argument to unexamined racist notions. Unless they are proud and avowed, in which case it's fair enough, calling someone a racist is always going to sound like an accusation of moral decrepitude isn't it?When did I say this? I think racism is bad, not all racists. Some are just a product of their environment.
So it's helpful to have a readily comprehensible counter argument to unexamined racist notions. Unless they are proud and avowed, in which case it's fair enough, calling someone a racist is always going to sound like an accusation of moral decrepitude isn't it?
Just because genetecists have not yet identified the exact mechanisms by which certain characteristics are determined does not mean that it is not generally reckoned that such characteristics are genetically determined. You do not fully understand the human genome, and neither does anyone else at this stage.
These ideas about the inherent nature of racial identity go all the way back in the West to the story of Cain, one of the sons of Noah who was cursed for having exposed his drunk-and-passed out nude father and subjected him to ridicule.
wearing baggy pants and sagging then far down your backside, talking in ebonics, being more likely to go to prison from a younger age, having more melanin in your skin, having a nose that has a flatter bridge, and coarse hair are "genetically determined" as some sort of package deal that all amounts to "blackness." The problem with everyone "reckoning" that genes determine race is that they CAN'T because no set of human characteristics, even when they are common to a certain population at a given time, is a STATIC, cultural identity-determining biological certainty. What people think of as "blackness" ends up having very little to do with black skin and certain common-looking features, and everything to do with CULTURAL attitudes and poses.
Pff. Oh there are? Which are these, then? It would be excellent if you could name a few. Biologists certainly haven't found many direct links between the way people look and specific genetic markers.
Back to Bible class with you. You're thinking of Canaan. Cain was the son of Adam & Eve who murdered is brother Abel.