PLAYER57832 wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:No, I'm referring to the fact that they are quite obviously different in a variety of inherent ways. For starters, white skin color arises from a genetic mutation compared to brown skin color; white and black people have different DNA.
Biologically, this is not true.
I said that white skin color is the result of a genetic mutation that occurred some time ago from an originally darker-skinned human race. This is by far the leading theory in the scientific community -- that is, that the human race was dark skinned until roughly 100,000 years ago. For example, see this article and some of the references therein:
http://mbe.oxfordjournals.org/content/e ... 3.full.pdfBesides, it should be fairly obvious that white and black people have to be genetically different if they present a different biological trait (that is, skin color).
different customs and traditions, sure.. but those are passed on and change.
They didn't change enough that one could reasonably say now that black people and white people come from similar cultural backgrounds on the whole. If that were true, we wouldn't see entire sections of cities that are statistically dominated by one group or the other.
Uh.. no. This is an old idea long since disproven. Education, culture do impact the way IQ shows up on a test, but that is independent of any genetic basis.
Old idea, but not disproven. There is evidence still being presented now that indicates some component explaining IQ differences. See, for example, this article from 2005:
http://psychology.uwo.ca/faculty/rushtonpdfs/PPPL1.pdfThe fact that there's a
debate about whether genetics plays a role does not mean that the genetics proponents are wrong. It means they could be right and that more studies should be done if we're interested in the answer. I know that you are not a scientist, but I am and I assure you that "disproven" is a
very strong word to use. You are not using it correctly.
:shock:

Not sure why this statement shocks me more than the last, but again, absolutely not true! What IS true is that some individual people.. families, tribes, etc do seem to have better runners... or whatever. Its as much random variation as anything else.
http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/ar ... Ll8iSIwcJwhttp://run-down.com/guests/je_black_athletes_p2.phphttp://jap.physiology.org/content/75/4/1822.abstracthttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/ar ... 3303002277Do your research before making such assertions. African runners are simply biologically better runners. Not all black people are of African descent, but many or most Africans are black and they do have a significant advantage over Caucasians in running ability (Western Africans are a bit better at sprinting, Eastern/Southern Africans seem to be better at long-distance running).
Also, again, its culture. There are some studied differences. The Serpa, for example do seem to be better able to withstand higher altitudes. However, they also live there from birth. When these people migrate away from those high altitude regions, the distinction is far less clear.
This seems to demonstrate a fundamental misunderstanding of biology, though I think you know better. The high altitude environment
engendered biological changes in the tribe which was passed down over time; this evolution was necessary to adapt to their low-oxygen environment. These biological changes in favor of, say, better oxygen capacity don't disappear when someone goes to live in a low altitude region. The Kalenjin tribe people from Kenya still dominate races even when they're doing them on sea level.
...the first part of your statement shows you really need to educate yourself a bit more.
This is a totally ludicrous statement unless you're willing to provide sources for your outrageous claims (I say outrageous because of your very strong statements, that most reasonable scientists wouldn't even touch with a ten foot pole).