payitforward wrote:nuposse04 wrote:E550wahoo wrote:I agree there's only the one human race, based on the following genetic fact:
How much genetic variation is there among humans?
Perhaps the most widely cited statistic about human genetic diversity is that any two humans differ, on average, at about 1 in 1,000 DNA base pairs (0.1%). Human genetic diversity is substantially lower than that of many other species, including our nearest evolutionary relative, the chimpanzee.
Genetic Variation and Human Evolution - The American Society of ...
https://www.ashg.org/education/pdf/geneticvariation.pdf
So if the human race is a single species based on a 0.1% genetic variance, then it would probably be more accurate to classify the different skin colors as different sub-species, right? Whites are a sub-species, blacks are a sub-species, etc. Of course there's an infinite variation of skin color, so does that make each variation a separate sub-species? Who knows? In the end, we're all children of God (IMO), one (human) race, or species, with an infinitely variegated sub-species.
I think a better term then sub species would be phenotype. Any species can exhibit various degrees of phenotypes due to a given gene pool. Healthy people are able to breed fertile offspring together so that ought to be enough for us to consider ourselves one species.. I'd extend that to generally infertile too, usually that is simply due to some disease process or a chromosmal defect like downs syndrome.
As far being the children of god... sure got a lot of **** up diseases from em'!
Good God!
I don't know who you are, E550wahoo (but an E550 is a nice car). But please don't make up scientific terms b/c they make sense to you. Here are a few corrections:
The term "race" is an invention. There are no races -- where "no" means 0, that is ZERO -- not 1. So, no, there's not one human race. There are zero human races. "Humans" are not "a race."
"Race" does not = "species."
Moreover, no, humans are not "a single species." We are a subspecies (see my post above). All of us are a single subspecies.
Finally, no, different skin colors are not "different sub-species." Different hair colors are also not different subspecies. Different eye colors are also not. Tall people are not a different subspecies from short people. Etc. etc. etc.
No, there is no such thing as "an infinitely variegated sub-species."
Now you, nuposse -- no, "phenotype" doesn't improve things. A phenotype is a single individual, or rather it is the bundle of characteristics of that individual based on its genotype & its interaction w/ the environment. Period. Nothing else.
I don't mean to sound exasperated, but it is important to get the word "race" completely out of circulation. It's also important not to invent category differences among different populations. All you do is give people a word to substitute for race. Next thing you know you have people with the idea that "Polish" & "German" are somehow 2 different genetic categories, etc.
E550wahoo just got here, don't chase him away! It takes a minute to get used to PIF surgical precision.
In fairness to him, I took his "subspecies" references (as much questions as statements) as rhetorical devices to try and move beyond divisions based on "race," especially where he says, "there's an infinite variation of skin color, so does that make each variation a separate sub-species?"





















