Originally posted by elijah
But only the attributes can be detected, it is the attributes and combination of them that links to the sociological definition of race. Scientifically, they dont tell if a person is "black", "asian", "chinese" or "jewish" etc, they only show the factors that feed into our discrete concepts thereof.
But only the attributes can be detected, it is the attributes and combination of them that links to the sociological definition of race. Scientifically, they dont tell if a person is "black", "asian", "chinese" or "jewish" etc, they only show the factors that feed into our discrete concepts thereof.
Originally posted by MTG
BINGO! There's your fallacy. You're dead wrong.
First, what is the characteristic set you assume constitutes a particular "race?"
Second, how is that characteristic set expressed in the human genome for a member of that "race?"
(Hints: the first one can't be defined, because nobody yet has a concise definition. How many races are there? Aryans and muds is the simplest premise, but are there 2? 10? 1,000? The second one can't be defined either, because there is no single characteristic gene, or no distinct group of genes that determines, for example, skin color.
BINGO! There's your fallacy. You're dead wrong.
First, what is the characteristic set you assume constitutes a particular "race?"
Second, how is that characteristic set expressed in the human genome for a member of that "race?"
(Hints: the first one can't be defined, because nobody yet has a concise definition. How many races are there? Aryans and muds is the simplest premise, but are there 2? 10? 1,000? The second one can't be defined either, because there is no single characteristic gene, or no distinct group of genes that determines, for example, skin color.
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