Cavalli-Sforza's Ink
Cloud
Cavalli-Sforza II: Seven Dumb Ideas about
Race
By Steve Sailer
Race is a topic of such enormous importance
that it's essential to think clearly about it.
Yet much of the intelligentsia now attempts to
deal with the problem by defining race as merely
a mass hallucination afflicting the entire human
race - other than we few members of the Great
and the Good. As we saw in last week's column on
the schizophrenic writings of the leading
population geneticist, Luigi Luca Cavalli-Sforza,
much of the professoriat now publicly deny the
very reality of race. Prominent anthropologist
C. Loring Brace asserts, "There is no such
thing as a biological entity that warrants the
term 'race.'" The American Association of
Physical Anthropologists recently announced:
"… old biological concepts of race no
longer provide scientifically valid distinctions…"
Similarly, the American Anthropological
Association proclaimed " …
differentiating species into biologically
defined 'races' has proven meaningless and
unscientific as a way of explaining variation…”
Well, wishing isn't going to make race vanish
into thin air. Let's review some of the major
myths about race.
If races exist, then one must be supreme.
Much of the Race Does Not Exist cant stems
from the following logic (if you can call it
logic): “If there really are different racial
groups, then one must be The Master Race, which
means -- oh my God – that Hitler Was Right!
Therefore, we must promote whatever ideas most
confuse the public about race. Otherwise, they
will learn the horrible truth and they'll all
vote Nazi.”
Look, this is one big non-sequiter: Of
course, there are different racial groups. And
of course their members tend to inherit certain
different genes, on average, than the members of
other racial groups. And that means racial
groups will differ, on average, in various
innate capabilities. But that also means
that no group can be supreme at all jobs. To be
excellent at one skill frequently implies being
worse at something else. So, there can't be a
Master Race. Sports fans can cite countless
examples. Men of West African descent monopolize
the Olympic 100m dash, but their explosive
musculature, which is so helpful in sprinting,
weighs them down in distance running, where they
are also-rans. Similarly, there are far more
Samoans in the National Football League than
Chinese, simply because Samoans tend to be much,
much bigger. But precisely because Samoans are
so huge, they'll never do as well as the Chinese
in gymnastics.
Every person falls into a single
clear-cut racial group.
This one is so silly that I doubt that
anybody who has thought about race in the real
world for more than ten minutes believes this.
Nobody can agree on how many racial groups there
are, exactly who is in each one, or what to call
them.
Since nobody can agree on how many racial
groups there are, exactly who is in each one, or
what to call them, then race does not exist.
This one's equally daft. Outside of
mathematics, and of human inventions like the
law, categories almost always fall across
continuous dimensions. Where does
"young" end and "old" begin?
It all depends on the situation. For example,
among female gymnasts, 18 is "old."
Among architects, 45 is "young." Yet
that does not mean that "age" is
meaningless. Further, categories are typically
fuzzy. Few people are 100% "sick" or
100% "well." But "health" is
still a useful concept.
The best example of the fuzziness of natural
categories is the concept of "extended
family." All the criticisms made about the
fuzziness of racial groups apply in spades to
extended families. How many extended families do
you belong to? Well, at least two: your mom's
and your dad's. But they each belonged to their
parents' two extended families, so maybe you
belong to four. And your grandparents each
belonged to two …
And what are the boundaries of your various
extended families? If the question at hand is
who you'd give a spare kidney to, you'd probably
draw the limits rather narrowly. But, when
making up your Christmas card list, you probably
toss in the occasional third cousin, twice
removed. And exactly what's the appropriate name
for all these extended families anyway?
In fact, extended families are even less
clear-cut than racial groups. Yet, nobody goes
around smugly claiming that extended families
don't exist.
But why is extended family such a perfect
analogy for race? Because it's not an analogy.
They are the same thing: kin, individuals united
by common descent. There's no natural law
defining where extended families end. A racial
group is merely an extended family (often an
extremely extended family) that inbreeds to some
extent. It's this tendency to marry within the
group that makes racial groups somewhat more
coherent, cohesive, and longer lasting than
smaller-scale extended families.
Genetic differences between the races
can't exist because there hasn't been enough
time for them to evolve in the 50,000 to 200,000
years since modern humans first emerged from
Africa.
The popularity of this argument is bizarre,
since genetic differences between the races are
written on the faces of the people you see every
day. If there wasn't enough time for these
racially characteristic traits to evolve, how
exactly did they come into existence? Magic?
It's particularly amusing to hear paleontologist
Stephen Jay Gould assert this since his one
major contribution to science has been to
document that evolution sometimes occurs at the
speed of revolution.
In the History and Geography of Human
Genes, Cavalli-Sforza calculates the
surprisingly short time in which a version of a
gene that leads to more offspring can spread
from 1% to 99% of the population. If a rare
variant of a gene produces just 1% more
surviving offspring, it will become nearly
universal in a human group in 11,500 years. But,
if it provides 10% more "reproductive
fitness," it will come to dominate in just
1,150 years. A classic example is the gene for
lactose-tolerance. It was almost nonexistent
until humans started milking cattle about 10,000
years ago. Today, its prevalence ranges from
negligible among East Asians to 97% among Danes.
Race is only skin deep.
I'm sure this bit of conventional wisdom is
most comforting to Jews suffering from Tay-Sachs
disease, to blacks enduring sickle cell anemia,
and to American Indians battling alcoholism. In
reality, there is absolutely nothing that
restricts racial differences to "mere
cosmetics." Races can differ in any of the
ways that families can differ from each other.
Most variation is within racial groups,
not between racial groups. Two members of the
same race are likely to differ from each other
more than the average member of their race
differs from the average member of another race.
Sure, but so what? No single human category
can account for a majority of all the many ways
humans differ from each other. Try substituting
other categories like "age:"
"Most variation is within age groups, not
between age groups." Yup, that's true, too.
But, it doesn't mean that Age Does Not Exist.
You often hear that between-group racial
differences only account for 15% of genetic
variation. This number comes from a 1972 study
by Richard Lewontin of 17 blood types, comparing
variation between continental-scale races and
between national-scale racial groups (e.g.,
Swedes vs. Italians). Now, blood types are, I
suppose, important, but they hardly represent
all we want to know about human genetic
diversity. Certain other traits are known to be
more racially determined -- the figure for skin
color, not surprisingly, is 60%. What the
overall number is for all the important genes
remains unknown.
Still, let's assume that Lewontin's 15%
solution is widely applicable. That's like going
to a casino that has American Indian and African
American croupiers, and 85% of the time the
roulette spins are random, but 15% of the time
the ball always comes up red for Indian
croupiers and black for the black croupiers --
pretty useful information, huh?
Most of the human race's genetic
variation is among black Africans.
This chestnut is true only for junk genes,
the DNA that doesn't do anything. Junk genes are
highly useful to population geneticists tracing
the genealogies of racial groups, but they don't
affect anything in the real world.
Then, are black Africans highly diverse
physically? Well, that depends upon who you are
lumping together. There are indeed some highly
unusual peoples in Africa, but almost none of
them were brought to America as slaves. The most
genetically distinct people in sub-Saharan
Africa are the Khoisan. These are the
yellowish-brown, tongue-clicking Bushmen and
Hottentots of the Southern African wastelands,
the remnants of a great race that once dominated
most of Africa before the blacks ethnically
cleansed them from the more desirable lands. The
most striking contrast in Africa is between the
tiny Pygmies and the ultra-tall herding tribes
of East Africa. But except for the 7'7",
190-pound basketball novelty Manute Bol, few of
either group made it to America. In contrast,
the West African tribes that did provide the
vast majority of American slaves are relatively
homogenous. Cavalli-Sforza sums up the situation
on the ground like this, "… differences
between most sub-Saharan Africans other than
Khoisan and Pygmies seem rather small."
This does not exhaust the list of dumb ideas
about race that I've collected. But it does give
a taste of how anthropologists try to make race
disappear by closing their eyes and wishing.
Well, race won't go away, because it's an
inevitable outgrowth of family. Our only hope to
manage the problems of race is to study it
honestly.
[Steve Sailer [email
him] is founder of the Human Biodiversity Institute and
movie critic for
The American Conservative.
His website
www.iSteve.blogspot.com features his daily
blog.]
May 31, 2000