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RE: Evolution & Racism

 
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RE: Evolution & Racism - 5/13/2008 5:34:49 PM   
Method

 

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quote:

ORIGINAL: Jhud
This is all fine and good, but do you understand, that logically, this does not deny the premise that evolution can be used as a basis to rationalize racism?


How can it? Where in the theory of evolution does it state that a person's worth can be measured by their intelligence? Just to save you the time, it doesn't. Nowhere in the theory of evolution does it state that we should sterilize people who carry a specific allele. Nowhere in the theory of evolution does it state that we should kill off those who are less intelligent. Those ideas are from man's natural inclination towards xenophobia which has existed since man began keeping records.
Post #: 151
RE: Evolution & Racism - 5/13/2008 5:52:37 PM   
gluadys

 

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quote:

ORIGINAL: Jhud

quote:

Don't forget that those with a lower intellectual capacity because of retardation factors also used to suffer a great deal of discrimination. It is not retardation and African that is being compared, but the treatment of those really (mentally retarded) and allegedly judged to have a lower intellect.

What does lower intellect compel in the way of social policy? We have learned in the cases of those really affected that positive attention to their special needs allows many to live independent lives of human dignity. And even those who cannot live independently, can still be treated as humans.

Remembering that in connection with race, nothing has been demonstrated yet, why would any information on differing intellectual abilities dictate a specific social policy?


Well, in the case of those who are significantly mentally retarded, like Down’s kids, we simply eliminate the problem. We do that specifically because we make a direct link between their mental capacity and how much burden they would place on individual lives and society.

If, as Watson surmises, the African people are on the whole less intelligent, then wouldn’t it make the world an easier place if they, like the other less intelligent people we eliminate, simply didn’t exist?


You are evading the issue. You are assuming consequences that do not logically follow from information that doesn't even actually exist.

quote:

quote:

I think you are erroneously assuming that any finding would show all those of one race less capable than all those of another. The fact that many people of African descent have done well in higher education indicates this is not the case. The most that any measure could give us is a difference in average capacity. And that tells us nothing about individual capacities.


You don’t have to convince me because I don’t reduce human capabilities to genetics; but this ignores the argument made by Watson that we should adjust social policy to compensate for the lower intelligence of Africans.


No, it doesn't ignore Watson's argument. It asks what the nature of the social policy should be, and even whether one is needed. You are assuming that any social policy consequent on the possible accuracy of Watson's argument must be one of eliminating, dehumanizing or oppressing Africans. You have not shown that this is the only possibility or even that it is the sort of social policy Watson himself is advocating.

My point is that even if Watson is right (and I doubt that he is), the most any measure could show is an different in the aggregate, in the average capacity. What social policy does that entail? Does it entail any social policy at all?

quote:

quote:

So you have not answered the question. As essentialsaltes has said, men and women also differ, on average, in various capacities. This was once used to justify excluding women from certain professions (e.g. police work). Today, we operate on the basis of individual ability, not gender-based averages. Why would the same not apply for alleged racial differences in intellectual capacity?


Well, I think women would escape elimination by evolutionists for two reasons; they are necessary for procreation, and no substantive argument could be made that on the whole they have inferior cognitive capabilities. Though interestingly, in China and India they are being systematically eliminated because men are seen as less burdensome.


Again, you are evading the question. Why would the same individual treatment not apply for alleged racial differences in intellectual capacity as for gender differences in height, weight, and muscular strength?

< Message edited by gluadys -- 5/13/2008 6:51:23 PM >
Post #: 152
RE: Evolution & Racism - 5/13/2008 6:01:57 PM   
essentialsaltes


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Jhud

Well, in the case of those who are significantly mentally retarded, like Down’s kids, we simply eliminate the problem. We do that specifically because we make a direct link between their mental capacity and how much burden they would place on individual lives and society.


Who's this 'we'?

As far as I know, 'we' don't force mothers to abort their children, or force infanticide on them after they're born.

The parents make these decisions, based on their own personal ethics and the advice of their doctors, and the decision is obviously not always elimination.

_____________________________

"My object in all arguments is not to make any preconceived opinion of mine seem right, but merely to discover and establish the truth, whatever the truth may be."

-- HP Lovecraft, letter to Robert E. Howard 7/27-28/34
Post #: 153
RE: Evolution & Racism - 5/13/2008 6:09:36 PM   
Agahnim

 

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Essentialsaltes already addresses your second point here, so I’m going to address this one:

quote:

So you would argue Watson is simply a racist abusing evolutionary theory?

This has been explained so many times, it’s hard for me to understand why you still aren’t getting it.

1: By the definition of racism used by almost everyone, Watson is not a racist. He doesn’t believe that one race is actually “inferior” to another, and certainly doesn’t believe that this justifies mistreating them. What he does believe, as a result of psychometric and genetic data, is that Africans have a lower average intelligence than Caucasians. As Essentialsaltes pointed out in post #139, studying a difference that exists between two groups is not the same as discrimination or racism / sexism.

2: Even if Watson’s views on this actually were racist, he still would not be abusing evolution in order to have them. I suppose if he actually were a racist, you could argue that he was abusing psychology and genetics, since those are the fields that produced the data his viewpoints are based on. But as I pointed out before, they were not based on evolution. The only way evolution is relevant to this is that having the data about this difference in intelligence, which is the same regardless of one’s views on evolution, he has tried to come up with an evolutionary explanation of why it exists.

Get it now?

_____________________________

"I like your Christ. I do not like your Christians. Your Christians are so unlike your Christ." --Mahatma Gandhi
Post #: 154
RE: Evolution & Racism - 5/13/2008 6:48:49 PM   
Jhud


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quote:

This has been explained so many times, it’s hard for me to understand why you still aren’t getting it.

1: By the definition of racism used by almost everyone, Watson is not a racist. He doesn’t believe that one race is actually “inferior” to another, and certainly doesn’t believe that this justifies mistreating them. What he does believe, as a result of psychometric and genetic data, is that Africans have a lower average intelligence than Caucasians. As Essentialsaltes pointed out in post #139, studying a difference that exists between two groups is not the same as discrimination or racism / sexism.

2: Even if Watson’s views on this actually were racist, he still would not be abusing evolution in order to have them. I suppose if he actually were a racist, you could argue that he was abusing psychology and genetics, since those are the fields that produced the data his viewpoints are based on. But as I pointed out before, they were not based on evolution. The only way evolution is relevant to this is that having the data about this difference in intelligence, which is the same regardless of one’s views on evolution, he has tried to come up with an evolutionary explanation of why it exists.

Get it now?


So Watson says (according to the Independent) that:

...there was a natural desire that all human beings should be equal but "people who have to deal with black employees find this not true".

And you don't consider that racist?

I have to conclude you either don't know what racism is, or you simply intend to defend racists you happen to otherwise admire.

_____________________________

Jack

“I mean to live my life an obedient man, but obedient to God, subservient to the wisdom of my ancestors; never to the authority of political truths arrived at yesterday at the voting booth”
William F. Buckley Jr. 1925-2008
Post #: 155
RE: Evolution & Racism - 5/13/2008 6:53:36 PM   
Jhud


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quote:

Who's this 'we'?

As far as I know, 'we' don't force mothers to abort their children, or force infanticide on them after they're born.

The parents make these decisions, based on their own personal ethics and the advice of their doctors, and the decision is obviously not always elimination.


When I talk about the sin of slavery or the civil liberties violations that followed I would say that is something 'we' allowed even though most of the people here weren't around to have a say - I say that because I believe it is our collective resposibility to oppose that which is evil when we have the power to do so.

So in light of that, when we allow by law Down's syndrome children to be systematically eliminated with the full consent of the institutions concerned, we are guilty of those actions in so much as we ignore them or consent to them.

_____________________________

Jack

“I mean to live my life an obedient man, but obedient to God, subservient to the wisdom of my ancestors; never to the authority of political truths arrived at yesterday at the voting booth”
William F. Buckley Jr. 1925-2008
Post #: 156
RE: Evolution & Racism - 5/13/2008 7:05:33 PM   
essentialsaltes


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Jhud
So in light of that, when we allow by law Down's syndrome children to be systematically eliminated with the full consent of the institutions concerned, we are guilty of those actions in so much as we ignore them or consent to them.


Before, you said that we eliminate them "because we make a direct link between their mental capacity and how much burden they would place on individual lives and society."

But abortion is legal not just for cases of mental incapacity. Inasmuch as 'we' made all* abortions legal (*subject to the relevant laws), this link of yours is imaginary.

_____________________________

"My object in all arguments is not to make any preconceived opinion of mine seem right, but merely to discover and establish the truth, whatever the truth may be."

-- HP Lovecraft, letter to Robert E. Howard 7/27-28/34
Post #: 157
RE: Evolution & Racism - 5/13/2008 7:24:44 PM   
Agahnim

 

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quote:

So Watson says (according to the Independent) that:

...there was a natural desire that all human beings should be equal but "people who have to deal with black employees find this not true".

And you don't consider that racist?

I have to conclude you either don't know what racism is, or you simply intend to defend racists you happen to otherwise admire.

This is why when it comes to politically charged topics like this, you have to be careful where you get your news.

I’ve read all of Watson’s comments about this, and he was talking about intelligence and nothing but intelligence. However, what news agencies reported about it is another matter. If you want to know what I consider the worst example of them misreporting his comments, look again at what I quoted from him in post #65:

quote:

To those who have drawn the inference from my words that Africa, as a continent, is somehow genetically inferior, I can only apologise unreservedly. That is not what I meant. More importantly from my point of view, there is no scientific basis for such a belief...

The overwhelming desire of society today is to assume that equal powers of reason are a universal heritage of humanity....

To question this is not to give in to racism. This is not a discussion about superiority or inferiority, it is about seeking to understand differences, about why some of us are great musicians and others great engineers.

That’s pretty clear, right? What he’s saying is that a difference in intelligence isn’t the same thing as actual inferiority, that there’s no scientific reason to believe the second one, and that he apologizes to people who assumed that he believes Africans are actually inferior. Now, here is what the journal Nature reported about the specific comment from him that I quoted:

“Watson has apologized and retracted the outburst... He acknowledged that there is no evidence for what he claimed about racial differences in intelligence.”

No, he didn’t, and it’s pretty obvious from reading Watson’s actual comments that Nature misreported this. There are more examples of this sort of thing than I can list. The quote you just posted is another of them: the thing that people find to be “not true” of black employees is that they have the same average intelligence as employees of other ethnic groups, not that they’re universally “unequal” the way that article implies.

Hopefully you’re used to the idea of the scientific community and the news media distorting information about certain topics, since I know you approve of Ben Stein’s movie “Expelled”. Well, as far as I’m concerned, the distortion and suppression of certain viewpoints in the fields of psychology and genetics are what that movie should have been about. Hopefully the example I just posted will give you an idea of how pervasive this is, and why you shouldn’t trust a news article that attempts to summarize Watson’s views while providing nothing but a sound bite from him.

_____________________________

"I like your Christ. I do not like your Christians. Your Christians are so unlike your Christ." --Mahatma Gandhi
Post #: 158
RE: Evolution & Racism - 5/14/2008 2:28:23 AM   
Jhud


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quote:

This is why when it comes to politically charged topics like this, you have to be careful where you get your news.

I’ve read all of Watson’s comments about this, and he was talking about intelligence and nothing but intelligence. However, what news agencies reported about it is another matter. I


I want to know if you think the statement that I posted is racist? Enough evasion.

_____________________________

Jack

“I mean to live my life an obedient man, but obedient to God, subservient to the wisdom of my ancestors; never to the authority of political truths arrived at yesterday at the voting booth”
William F. Buckley Jr. 1925-2008
Post #: 159
RE: Evolution & Racism - 5/14/2008 2:30:03 AM   
Jhud


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quote:

Before, you said that we eliminate them "because we make a direct link between their mental capacity and how much burden they would place on individual lives and society."

But abortion is legal not just for cases of mental incapacity. Inasmuch as 'we' made all* abortions legal (*subject to the relevant laws), this link of yours is imaginary.


A test is given, an indication of Dawn's is demonstrated, a Down's baby is eliminated; pretending it's just another abortion is absurd.

_____________________________

Jack

“I mean to live my life an obedient man, but obedient to God, subservient to the wisdom of my ancestors; never to the authority of political truths arrived at yesterday at the voting booth”
William F. Buckley Jr. 1925-2008
Post #: 160
RE: Evolution & Racism - 5/14/2008 3:54:04 AM   
Agahnim

 

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quote:

I want to know if you think the statement that I posted is racist? Enough evasion.

The statement would be racist if Watson had actually said what the article is implying that he said. However, as I just pointed out, he didn’t.

_____________________________

"I like your Christ. I do not like your Christians. Your Christians are so unlike your Christ." --Mahatma Gandhi
Post #: 161
RE: Evolution & Racism - 5/14/2008 4:41:01 AM   
ianz

 

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quote:

ORIGINAL: Agahnim

quote:

I want to know if you think the statement that I posted is racist? Enough evasion.

The statement would be racist if Watson had actually said what the article is implying that he said. However, as I just pointed out, he didn’t.


I was under the impression that Watson actually *did* say make the statement Jack quoted, but subsequently retracted it.

Yes it's racist. It's the ramblings of a quite old man who should have known better, and he got a bollocking for it from his supporters and critics alike. Probably disproportionately so, when you consider it garnered very wide publication.

Maybe he is racist. Maybe he isn't. Whatever. His statements have been disregarded by virtually everyone. Rolling with the popular but not necessarily correct contention on these forums that most evolutionists are atheist, I'd have thought this was a rather positive argument for atheism. A bunch of atheists with no moral foundation except their own good judgement, barrelled an old man for making racist comments. That's quite good isn't it?

Regards, Ian
Post #: 162
RE: Evolution & Racism - 5/14/2008 5:45:16 AM   
Agahnim

 

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quote:

I was under the impression that Watson actually *did* say make the statement Jack quoted, but subsequently retracted it.

Yes it's racist. It's the ramblings of a quite old man who should have known better, and he got a bollocking for it from his supporters and critics alike. Probably disproportionately so, when you consider it garnered very wide publication.

His “retraction” of the statement is what I quoted in post #158. Sounds like more of a clarification than an actual retraction, doesn’t it? But like almost everything else he’s said about this topic, the media seems to have had a very difficult time reporting it accurately.

quote:

Maybe he is racist. Maybe he isn't. Whatever. His statements have been disregarded by virtually everyone. Rolling with the popular but not necessarily correct contention on these forums that most evolutionists are atheist, I'd have thought this was a rather positive argument for atheism. A bunch of atheists with no moral foundation except their own good judgement, barrelled an old man for making racist comments. That's quite good isn't it?

Good for evolution, maybe. But as you can probably tell by now, I find it more than a little disappointing that one of the architects of modern biology got treated this way for what I consider an unjust reason.

What’s most interesting about this is that although you’re right that most people who study evolution are in agreement that Watson didn’t know what he was talking about, this is not the majority opinion of people who study psychology or genetics, which happen to also be the people who are most capable of having an informed opinion about whether Watson was right or wrong. Among people in the field of psychometrics, there’s virtually no debate that the testing data says what Watson says that it does, and that the testing protocols used for this (which include more than IQ tests) are capable of accurately measuring intelligence. The only debate is about whether this difference in intelligence is the result of genetic factors or whether it exists for some other reason, although the new genetic data mentioned in the NY Times article Jhud linked to appears to be close to resolving that question.

Even the textbook for my girlfriend’s introductory-level psychology class covers the difference in intelligence between races, although it doesn’t attempt to answer the question of whether this difference has a genetic basis. Considering one year of college-level psychology is apparently enough for anyone to be aware that Watson was telling the truth when he said what the testing data shows, I don’t think there’s an excuse for the amount of ignorance that most people have shown in how they reacted to his comments.

_____________________________

"I like your Christ. I do not like your Christians. Your Christians are so unlike your Christ." --Mahatma Gandhi
Post #: 163
RE: Evolution & Racism - 5/14/2008 8:44:13 AM   
Jhud


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quote:

The statement would be racist if Watson had actually said what the article is implying that he said. However, as I just pointed out, he didn’t.


Well, as you weren't there, and there is little reason to doubt the Guardian's reporting in this respect, and as Watson has a history of such statements, I will leave it to others to decide what he did and didn't say; I am just trying to figure out what the baseline is for evolutionists when it comes to what is and isn't racist - and I'm not encouraged.

_____________________________

Jack

“I mean to live my life an obedient man, but obedient to God, subservient to the wisdom of my ancestors; never to the authority of political truths arrived at yesterday at the voting booth”
William F. Buckley Jr. 1925-2008
Post #: 164
RE: Evolution & Racism - 5/14/2008 9:48:14 AM   
Agahnim

 

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quote:

Well, as you weren't there, and there is little reason to doubt the Guardian's reporting in this respect, and as Watson has a history of such statements, I will leave it to others to decide what he did and didn't say; I am just trying to figure out what the baseline is for evolutionists when it comes to what is and isn't racist - and I'm not encouraged.

I just told you that I had read the rest of what Watson said about this, and that it’s clear from the context that he was talking only about intelligence, not about universal equality or inequality. Did you completely ignore what I was saying, again? The original interview with Watson, which did not receive much reaction when it first appeared, is here. Nobody made a big deal about what Watson had to say about this until the Independent published their own article about it, selectively quoting him. I see that now you’re bringing up what the Guardian had to say about him, without even linking to it or quoting it.

The only thing it takes to determine what Watson said is to read the original interview with him. But it seems you’d rather pretend that nobody can tell what he said or didn’t say, while ignoring the source of information about it that all of these newspapers used.

I have another question about your attitude. It’s clear from your last post that you think people who accept evolution are more likely to make “racist” assumptions than people who don’t, and that James Watson is an example. So in other words, you apparently think people could draw a more reasonable conclusion about this line of data if they didn’t accept evolution. So in that case, using a non-evolutionist viewpoint, what conclusion do you think people ought to draw from the discovery that the average IQ of people of African ancestry is between 70 and 85; that this has been determined using several independent methods of testing that do not involve any cultural bias; that this difference is never less than 15 points when socio-economic conditions between the two groups are equal; that IQ has been shown to correlate with ability to perform most real-world skills that depend on intelligence; and that several of the genes that contribute to intelligence have recently been shown to be more common in Caucasians than in Africans? And more importantly, how is this “more reasonable conclusion” that you think could be drawn the result of not accepting evolution?

If you are unable to answer these questions, then there is no support for your claim that evolution is to blame for Watson, or anyone else, concluding from this data that a difference in intelligence exists between the two groups.

_____________________________

"I like your Christ. I do not like your Christians. Your Christians are so unlike your Christ." --Mahatma Gandhi
Post #: 165
RE: Evolution & Racism - 5/14/2008 10:06:12 AM   
Jhud


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quote:

I just told you that I had read the rest of what Watson said about this, and that it’s clear from the context that he was talking only about intelligence, not about universal equality or inequality. Did you completely ignore what I was saying, again? The original interview with Watson, which did not receive much reaction when it first appeared, is here. Nobody made a big deal about what Watson had to say about this until the Independent published their own article about it, selectively quoting him. I see that now you’re bringing up what the Guardian had to say about him, without even linking to it or quoting it.

The only thing it takes to determine what Watson said is to read the original interview with him. But it seems you’d rather pretend that nobody can tell what he said or didn’t say, while ignoring the source of information about it that all of these newspapers used.


Well, it's not as if the statement was isolated or unique. There are a number of people who have known Watson over the years who testify to his racist and sexist views; you seem to ignore all of that evidence in the light of a few after the fact self-defenses by Watson, and I have no idea why.

quote:

I have another question about your attitude. It’s clear from your last post that you think people who accept evolution are more likely to make “racist” assumptions than people who don’t, and that James Watson is an example. So in other words, you apparently think people could draw a more reasonable conclusion about this line of data if they didn’t accept evolution. So in that case, using a non-evolutionist viewpoint, what conclusion do you think people ought to draw from the discovery that the average IQ of people of African ancestry is between 70 and 85; that this has been determined using several independent methods of testing that do not involve any cultural bias; that this difference is never less than 15 points when socio-economic conditions between the two groups are equal; that IQ has been shown to correlate with ability to perform most real-world skills that depend on intelligence; and that several of the genes that contribute to intelligence have recently been shown to be more common in Caucasians than in Africans? And more importantly, how is this “more reasonable conclusion” that you think could be drawn the result of not accepting evolution?


Well, first off, I would separate data from what are obviously the racist conclusions of Watson. And I think what happens with defenders of evolution and scientism is because they tend to deify science and scientists, they have a very hard time criticizing even the most egregious abuses of science provided those commiting the abuses generally agree with consensus science. That is my primary concern in the matter.

As far as IQ disparities, I would say that culture and opportunity are much stronger factors in explaining such disparities than some vague notions of genetics for which we have no certain link at all. Whatever one thinks of Obama's politics, he is obviously a very bright guy, and I would say that has much more to do with his life experiences and opportunities than the fact that his father happens to be African.

_____________________________

Jack

“I mean to live my life an obedient man, but obedient to God, subservient to the wisdom of my ancestors; never to the authority of political truths arrived at yesterday at the voting booth”
William F. Buckley Jr. 1925-2008
Post #: 166
RE: Evolution & Racism - 5/14/2008 10:58:59 AM   
Agahnim

 

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quote:

Well, it's not as if the statement was isolated or unique. There are a number of people who have known Watson over the years who testify to his racist and sexist views; you seem to ignore all of that evidence in the light of a few after the fact self-defenses by Watson, and I have no idea why.

You seem to think I’m not familiar with Watson in this respect. Although there’s been some controversy around his comments in the past, there haven’t been any widespread accusations of racism or sexism before his most recent one. You can bring up one of his other comments about this if you like, but for the reason I mentioned, I think you’ll find that the case for him being racist or sexist that can be made from any of the others is even weaker than it is for this one.

As for the most recent comment, what I just linked to is not a self-defense by him—it is the original interview in which he made this comment. When you’re presenting an argument based on what someone has said, do you no longer consider it worthwhile to be shown that quote in its proper context?

quote:

Well, first off, I would separate data from what are obviously the racist conclusions of Watson. And I think what happens with defenders of evolution and scientism is because they tend to deify science and scientists, they have a very hard time criticizing even the most egregious abuses of science provided those commiting the abuses generally agree with consensus science. That is my primary concern in the matter.

As far as IQ disparities, I would say that culture and opportunity are much stronger factors in explaining such disparities than some vague notions of genetics for which we have no certain link at all. Whatever one thinks of Obama's politics, he is obviously a very bright guy, and I would say that has much more to do with his life experiences and opportunities than the fact that his father happens to be African.

First of all, all of the data I’ve described only applies to the average for each race—every group of people will have both people who are exceptionally intelligent and exceptionally dumb. If you want to make a conclusion based on what can be seen in society, a more relevant thing to observe is what percentage of the most famous mathematicians and physicists of the past 30 years have been black, and whether that’s less than the percentage of the U.S. population which is black. Based on studies of interracial adoption, in which the IQ of children is more consistent with the race of their biological parents than it is with the cultural environment in which they’re raised, I favor the genetic hypothesis. But in any case, for the purpose of this discussion it doesn’t really matter whether it’s caused by genes or environment; the only thing that matters is whether the idea that this difference is due to genetic factors is a valid explanation of the data that exists. Within the relevant field (psychometrics), there is no question that it at least deserves consideration.

So this is the data, and even if you think genetics isn’t the only possible explanation for it, it’s at least an explanation that’s supported well enough to be considered. The genetic explanation is Watson’s position, and there’s no more to his position than that, as has been demonstrated both by the original interview with him and his clarification afterwards. So what “racist conclusion” do you think he’s drawn that needs to be “separated” from the data?

_____________________________

"I like your Christ. I do not like your Christians. Your Christians are so unlike your Christ." --Mahatma Gandhi
Post #: 167
RE: Evolution & Racism - 5/14/2008 11:13:02 AM   
Jhud


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quote:

You seem to think I’m not familiar with Watson in this respect. Although there’s been some controversy around his comments in the past, there haven’t been any widespread accusations of racism or sexism before his most recent one. You can bring up one of his other comments about this if you like, but for the reason I mentioned, I think you’ll find that the case for him being racist or sexist that can be made from any of the others is even weaker than it is for this one.

As for the most recent comment, what I just linked to is not a self-defense by him—it is the original interview in which he made this comment. When you’re presenting an argument based on what someone has said, do you no longer consider it worthwhile to be shown that quote in its proper context?


It's not like the interview was the only comment of it's sort he ever made; and if his comments were prefectly acceptable, why did he apologize, retract, and resign?

quote:

First of all, all of the data I’ve described only applies to the average for each race—every group of people will have both people who are exceptionally intelligent and exceptionally dumb. If you want to make a conclusion based on what can be seen in society, a more relevant thing to observe is what percentage of the most famous mathematicians and physicists of the past 30 years have been black, and whether that’s less than the percentage of the U.S. population which is black. Based on studies of interracial adoption, in which the IQ of children is more consistent with the race of their biological parents than it is with the cultural environment in which they’re raised, I favor the genetic hypothesis. But in any case, for the purpose of this discussion it doesn’t really matter whether it’s caused by genes or environment; the only thing that matters is whether the idea that this difference is due to genetic factors is a valid explanation of the data that exists. Within the relevant field (psychometrics), there is no question that it at least deserves consideration.

So this is the data, and even if you think genetics isn’t the only possible explanation for it, it’s at least an explanation that’s supported well enough to be considered. The genetic explanation is Watson’s position, and there’s no more to his position than that, as has been demonstrated both by the original interview with him and his clarification afterwards. So what “racist conclusion” do you think he’s drawn that needs to be “separated” from the data?


Well, yes, you have provided a substantive defense of racism here; ignoring the many factors which would effect ones ability to become "famous mathematicians and physicists" like culture and opportunity; but I don't think there is any solid evidence that reduces practical intelligence simply down to a few genes, and I don't think we should allow evolutionary thinking, which reduces all of humanity down to genetics, to be the final say in the matter.

_____________________________

Jack

“I mean to live my life an obedient man, but obedient to God, subservient to the wisdom of my ancestors; never to the authority of political truths arrived at yesterday at the voting booth”
William F. Buckley Jr. 1925-2008
Post #: 168
RE: Evolution & Racism - 5/14/2008 1:31:52 PM   
Agahnim

 

Posts: 205
Joined: 2/27/2008
Status: offline
quote:

It's not like the interview was the only comment of it's sort he ever made; and if his comments were prefectly acceptable, why did he apologize, retract, and resign?

This is bizarre; I’ve already explained this at least twice.

In response to the media reaction to Watson’s comments, Cold Spring Harbor suspended him from his post as its chancellor. In order to try and prevent additional harm, he made the statement clarifying his comments that I quoted. He did not retract them, his apology was only apologizing to people who misinterpreted his comments to mean he thought Africans were inferior overall, and this is obvious to anyone who cares to spend a few minutes reading what he actually said when he “apologized”.

However, as I pointed out, what the media reported of the statement I quoted was just that he “retracted” his comments. In response, various organizations he was affiliated with demanded that he resign, and he eventually gave in.

quote:

Well, yes, you have provided a substantive defense of racism here; ignoring the many factors which would effect ones ability to become "famous mathematicians and physicists" like culture and opportunity; but I don't think there is any solid evidence that reduces practical intelligence simply down to a few genes, and I don't think we should allow evolutionary thinking, which reduces all of humanity down to genetics, to be the final say in the matter.

This is a paragraph full of red herrings, none of which answer the question I was asking you. Let me ask it again: The genetic explanation is Watson’s position, and there’s no more to his position than that, as has been demonstrated both by the original interview with him and his clarification afterwards. So what “racist conclusion” do you think he’s drawn that needs to be “separated” from the data?

Are you implying that anyone who holds the opinion that genetic factors contribute to this difference in IQ is, by definition, a racist? So when Arthur Jensen and J. Philippe Rushton analyzed this data in the peer-reviewed paper I linked to earlier in this thread, and came to the conclusion that genetic factors were are more likely explanation for it than any other, this automatically made them racists also even though they attempting to do nothing more than find the conclusion that was best-supported by the data? By the definition you seem to be using, the only way for anyone to not be a racist is if they literally deny the existence of discoveries that have already been made, because some of the genes responsible for intelligence have already been identified and shown to be distributed unequally between races. This is explained in further detail here.

You also have yet to answer my question about how evolution is responsible for this conclusion, when the conclusion is based on nothing but psychometrics and genetics, and is the same whether you approach it from an evolutionary perspective or not. I asked you this question before, and instead of trying to answer it, you changed the subject for a little while before repeating same claim again. This is what you have been doing for the past four pages of this thread: bringing up a red herring whenever I make a point you don’t like, and then after a little while make the same claim again, without attempting to address what I’ve already said to refute it. You’re going all over the place here, even moreso than the way you used to complain about in my case. Is this the only thing you know how to do when you’re in a situation where most people would just admit they were wrong?

_____________________________

"I like your Christ. I do not like your Christians. Your Christians are so unlike your Christ." --Mahatma Gandhi
Post #: 169
RE: Evolution & Racism - 5/14/2008 1:57:05 PM   
Jhud


Posts: 6709
Joined: 4/11/2005
From: Lake Wobegon
Status: offline
quote:

In response to the media reaction to Watson’s comments, Cold Spring Harbor suspended him from his post as its chancellor. In order to try and prevent additional harm, he made the statement clarifying his comments that I quoted. He did not retract them, his apology was only apologizing to people who misinterpreted his comments to mean he thought Africans were inferior overall, and this is obvious to anyone who cares to spend a few minutes reading what he actually said when he “apologized”.

However, as I pointed out, what the media reported of the statement I quoted was just that he “retracted” his comments. In response, various organizations he was affiliated with demanded that he resign, and he eventually gave in.


Well, it's your opinion against a host of sources, and those who knew him. I think his actions are sufficiently telling.

quote:

Are you implying that anyone who holds the opinion that genetic factors contribute to this difference in IQ is, by definition, a racist? So when Arthur Jensen and J. Philippe Rushton analyzed this data in the peer-reviewed paper I linked to earlier in this thread, and came to the conclusion that genetic factors were are more likely explanation for it than any other, this automatically made them racists also even though they attempting to do nothing more than find the conclusion that was best-supported by the data? By the definition you seem to be using, the only way for anyone to not be a racist is if they literally deny the existence of discoveries that have already been made, because some of the genes responsible for intelligence have already been identified and shown to be distributed unequally between races. This is explained in further detail here.



I think anyone who attributes to people of a certain color and geographical origin less intelligence than others is a racist, yes. In fact, I would suggest that is the essence of racism.

quote:

You also have yet to answer my question about how evolution is responsible for this conclusion, when the conclusion is based on nothing but psychometrics and genetics, and is the same whether you approach it from an evolutionary perspective or not. I asked you this question before, and instead of trying to answer it, you changed the subject for a little while before repeating same claim again. This is what you have been doing for the past four pages of this thread: bringing up a red herring whenever I make a point you don’t like, and then after a little while make the same claim again, without attempting to address what I’ve already said to refute it. You’re going all over the place here, even moreso than the way you used to complain about in my case. Is this the only thing you know how to do when you’re in a situation where most people would just admit they were wrong?


Well, as you hold that certain races have lower IQ than other races, what processes do you attribute these differences to?

_____________________________

Jack

“I mean to live my life an obedient man, but obedient to God, subservient to the wisdom of my ancestors; never to the authority of political truths arrived at yesterday at the voting booth”
William F. Buckley Jr. 1925-2008
Post #: 170
RE: Evolution & Racism - 5/14/2008 2:44:55 PM   
Agahnim

 

Posts: 205
Joined: 2/27/2008
Status: offline
quote:

Well, it's your opinion against a host of sources, and those who knew him. I think his actions are sufficiently telling.

When it’s possible to access the information itself that the “host of sources” is reporting, whether they’re right or not is not a matter of authority. All you have to do is look at the data itself—in this case, what Watson actually said—and then when the people reporting what he said contradict Watson’s own words, that means they’re wrong. None of the authors of the newspaper articles you’re talking about actually knew Watson, so nothing about the opinion of “those who knew him” supports your argument.

I really don’t understand why I should have to explain this to an ID proponent. If you think “a host of sources” is any kind of authority, why do you disagree with the host of sources that say the theory of evolution is true? You can’t have it both ways. If you think the majority of scientists and news sources are wrong to support evolution, then they’re capable of being wrong about Watson also.

quote:

I think anyone who attributes to people of a certain color and geographical origin less intelligence than others is a racist, yes. In fact, I would suggest that is the essence of racism.

The essence of racism is believing that one race is inherently superior to another. I don’t believe this, and neither does Watson, Rushton, Jensen, or (as far as I know) any of the people posting in this thread who are aware of this line of data. If you want to call all of us racists, I can’t stop you, but you should be aware that by doing so you’ll be using a definition of racism that almost nobody else does.

I guess I’m curious: if in your opinion it qualifies as racism to think that one race has slightly greater ability than another in a specific area like this, what other abilities does this apply to? Do you also consider it racist to believe that Africans have slightly greater athletic potential than Caucasians, so in other words the only way to avoid being racist is to believe socio-economic factors are the reason why black athletes almost always win the gold medal in Olympic sprint races, and why almost all NBA players are black? How about differences between genders; do you consider it sexist to say that men tend to have greater physical strength than women?

If you always consider it racism or sexism to believe that one group has greater average ability in a certain area than another, you’ll have a hard time finding anyone who doesn’t meet your definition of a racist or sexist. If this standard only applies to some abilities and not others, though, how do you choose which of them we are or aren’t allowed to believe some groups are better at than others?

quote:

Well, as you hold that certain races have lower IQ than other races, what processes do you attribute these differences to?

As an evolutionist, I attribute it to the effects of natural selection. Creationists, on the other hand, attribute it to the difference in intelligence between Noah’s sons. The evidence and the conclusion it points to are the same regardless of our worldviews, but when we try to explain why the world happens to be this particular way, our worldviews cause us to come up with different reasons why this difference in intelligence exists.

I explained this in more detail in post #131. In response, instead of trying to address what I was saying, you changed the subject and asked me whether evolution could be misinterpreted in order to rationalize racism. Are you going to answer my question and/or address my point from 40 posts ago, or just keep skipping from topic to topic?

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