Re: RE: Re: Re: Re: genome news (fwd)

2000-04-10 Thread Brad De Long

>  >Brad,can you please read the rest of Steve's post, or the sentence that
>>prior to the sentence you cite? since Steve is not here, I can not talk
>>on behalf of him, but his work is an excellent piece in Marxian sociology.
>
>Here's a precious snippet from this nitwit (Steve Rosenthal)
>from a couple of years ago:
>
>. . . This line of attack against the Clintonites is being led by Dick
>Gephardt and the business and big labor forces behind him. The
>Economic Policy Institute (EPI), whose funding comes from the
>Rockefeller Foundation, C.S. Mott (GM), Russell Sage (Cabot gas and
>banking money), sets forth the line Gephardt has been offering . . .
>
>http://csf.colorado.edu/mail/psn/jan98/0072.html
>
>No I don't save this stuff.  I remembered since I wrote
>a reply (which he didn't answer), and I thought I would
>see if I could find it quickly with Google.  Came up
>instantly.  Google rules.
>
>mbs

Google Rules!

Brad DeLong




RE: Re: genome news (fwd)

2000-04-10 Thread Max B. Sawicky

You "gather"?  In truth you haven't a clue as to
either what our "policies" are or how they are
"determined". Our relation to the 'bigwigs' is
similar to yours with dead Trotskyists.  We are
motivated by their interests, and we try to avoid
offending them.

To take the infamous example of trade, anyone who
tracked the respective statements and pubs of
EPI and trade union orgs, including the Federation,
would find EPI was a leading indicator, not
a lagging one.

mbs


>From what I can gather, the policies of EPI are determined more by the
AFL-CIO bigwigs on the board rather than the philanthropic establishment.
But I would have assumed that EPI, following the lead of similar groups
such as the Sierra Club and Public Citizen, does not disclose the identity
of major donors. As far as getting funding from Stuart Mott and the
Rockefeller Foundation is concerned, virtually the entire liberal left is
implicated, from the Nation Magazine to all of the mainstream Green groups.
For that matter, my own organization was always hitting up Mott and the
Rockefellers, as well as the Ford Foundation. Sort of like Lenin taking a
ride on a German train.

Louis Proyect
Marxism mailing list: http://www.marxmail.org/




Re: Re: Re: genome news (fwd)

2000-04-09 Thread Michael Perelman

We're at an impasse here.  Rosenthal is not here.  Nor is Wilson.  I wonder
however about how many people today would change their ideas just because
somebody remains unnamed showed that their ideas supported capitalism.
Perhaps the majority of academics would wear
the defense of capitalism as a batch of honor.

Let's not go back and forth on this anymore unless somebody has something
more substantial to contribute.

[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

>
> >Wilson put these arguments into Sociobiology: The New Synthesis,
> >published in 1975 by Harvard University Press and widely promoted by
> >the popular media. Many natural and social scientists exposed human
> >sociobiology as an unscientific attempt to defend the capitalist
> >status quo as natural and unchangeable.
>
> >Because of these sharp critiques, Wilson reinvented himself as an
> >environmentalist concerned about bio-diversity.

--
Michael Perelman
Economics Department
California State University
Chico, CA 95929

Tel. 530-898-5321
E-Mail [EMAIL PROTECTED]




Re: Re: genome news (fwd)

2000-04-09 Thread md7148


>Mine. You still haven't answered Brad's point. S.R. either tells a
>deliberate
>lie or he doesn't know what he is talking about. Wilson did not "remake
>himself"

okey!!! Whoever calls Steven Rosenthal a "lier" either does not have
any slightest notion of who Steven Rosenthal is or has not digested
his article completely. "Lier" is an uprofessional and disgusting
accusation, Rod! The fellow is an "honest" Marxist and a sociologist, who
has put his years on this topic. I am presenting "again" the context of
Steven's discusssion of Wilson, and the reasons why he thinks Wilson is
insincere when he remakes himself as an enviromentalist. Let's pay
attention to Wilson's main argument here rather than spending gas over
whether he prentends to be an enviromentalist or not.Even if we assume
that he is an enviromentalist (which is not sincere anway), this does not
justify his "real" side that "At my core, I am a social conservative, a
loyalist. I cherish traditional institutions, the more venerable and
ritual-laden the better." or when he talks about Rwandan genocide in 1994
as an example of "ethnic rivalry run amuck," reflecting our genetically
based tribal instincts" (quotes are from Steven's article).what an
enviromentalist bio-diversity!

Since it is asked, Steven says the following about Wilson's 
enviromentalist side (refer to article):

>Wilson put these arguments into Sociobiology: The New Synthesis,
>published in 1975 by Harvard University Press and widely promoted by
>the popular media. Many natural and social scientists exposed human
>sociobiology as an unscientific attempt to defend the capitalist
>status quo as natural and unchangeable.

>Because of these sharp critiques, Wilson reinvented himself as an
>environmentalist concerned about bio-diversity.  A quarter century
>and five books later, Wilson today poses as a reasonable advocate of
>genetic and cultural "co-evolution" and as a proponent of
>genetic/environmental interaction.  He pretends to reject biological
>determinism, social Darwinism, and eugenics.  The ruling class has
>extolled Consilience as the crowning achievement of a visionary elder
>statesman of capitalist science.  The New York Times and The Wall
>Street Journal lavishly praised his call for the subjugation of the
>social sciences and the humanities to the natural sciences, and for
>the elevation of his pseudo-science to state religion.  The Atlantic
>Monthly interviewed Wilson and published excerpts of Consilience.

I continue:

Moreover, Edward Wilson says the following in introduction to _What
is Sociobiology_: 

"Sociobiology is defined as the systematic study of the biological
basis of all forms of social behavior, including sexual
and parental behavior, in all kinds of organisms including humans. As
such, it is a discipline inevitable discipline,
since there must be a systematic study of social behavior.
Sociobiology consists mostly of zoology. About 90 percent
of its current material concerns animals, even though over 90 percent
of the attention given to sociobiology by
nonscientists, and especially journalists, is due to its possible
applications to the study of human social behavior.
There is nothing unusual about deriving principles and methods, and
even terminology, from intensive examinations of
lower organisms and applying them to the study of human beings. Most
of the fundamental principles of genetics and
biochemistry applied to human biology are based on colon bacteria,
fruit flies, and white rats. To say that the same
science can be applied to human beings is not to reduce humanity to
the status of these simpler creatures".
(http://www.runet.edu/~lridener/courses/SOCBIO.HTML) 

(From Edward O. Wilson, "Introduction: What is Sociobiology?" In
Michael S. Gregory, Anita Silvers, and Diane Such (Eds.). 1978.
Sociobiology and Human Nature: An Interdisciplinary
Critique and Defense. San Francisco, CA:
Jossey-Bass, pp. 
1 - 12.) 


Mine




Re: Re: genome news (fwd)

2000-04-09 Thread Rod Hay

Mine. You still haven't answered Brad's point. S.R. either tells a deliberate
lie or he doesn't know what he is talking about. Wilson did not "remake himself"




[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

> Doyle,I agree! you too are getting the heart of the matter..
> actually, check out the articles in _Mankind Quartely_, a journal edited
> by Roger Pearson, and its liberal co-associate JCPES. see especially the
> one called _Virtues in Racism_. the man is implying that it is not racist
> to say that people differ because they differ genetically. It is somewhat
> treathening to see how the liberal rhetoric of "individual differences"
> relies on geneticist arguments to justify a morality of ethics of
> difference! another one published by a Washington policy analyst "boldly"
> says that affirmative action has erased our differences, and created a
> society of equals and conformity. See how equality is equated
> there with "confirmity and sameness" and genetics is praised for
> celebrating difference. Basically, you will find this as an interesting
> example on post-modern version of right wing and neo-liberalism, which
> approves my claim that socio-biology is inherently a reactionary science.
>
> Mine
>
> -- Forwarded message --
> Date: Sun, 09 Apr 2000 11:02:54 -0700
> From: Doyle Saylor <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: [PEN-L:17884] Re: genome news (fwd)
>
> Greetings Economists,
>JKS writes in reply to Mines,
>
> JKS,
> No it's not. It would be racist (and genetically illiterate, for the most
> part) to say that some groups of people are inferior to another because of
> their genes, but it is not racist to say, for example, that Black people are
> different in the color of their skin from whites in large part because of
> their genes. That is just true.  Genes are causally efficaous; they do
> account for some of the variation in differences between groups and
> individuals, and anyone who denies that has no idea what he is talking
> about.
>
> Doyle
> The theory of sociobiology is that genes control behavior.  In other words
> any social group are the way they are because of their genes.  Is that true?
> Well you say above that is not true (falsifiable in the traditional sense of
> the words in science).
>
> Let's look at Mine's comment again,
>
> Mine
> << the socio-biological claim that
> people differ because they differ genetically is called RACISM,  >>
>
> Doyle
> JKS says anyone who claims sociobiology does not assert control over the
> human social behavior has no idea what he is talking about.   And I have no
> idea from JKS what exactly makes him different from Sociobiology.   If I
> pick up a book on evolutionary psychology is that not the whole thrust of
> their theory?  See "The Adapted Mind, Evolutionary Psychology and the
> Generation of Culture", Jerome H. Barkow Leda Cosmides, John Tooby, Oxford
> University Press, 1992.
>
> In replying to M. Forstater,  JKS writes,
>
> JKS
> Don't assume any such thing. Of course I am aware of the social contruction
> of race, and I don't uncritically assume anything. I also don't need to do
> the dance every time I use a  loaded word,a t least, I hope, in this
> context.
> Among people to whom the social construction of race might bea  new thought,
> I'd emphasize it. Here, I might have hoped that I could take it for granted.
> How very foolish of me.
>
> I might have said, I briefly contemplated it, that malinin content avrirs
> with geographic origin; that genetics explains why people from subSaharan
> Africa have darker skins, because of higher melanin content, on average,
> than
> people fron Northern Europe. But it is tiresome, particularly when one is
> talking about race, to pretend that one is not. Political correctness is
> very
> boring.
>
> Doyle
> Your comments do not explain "black" skin, because you don't understand
> genetics or you wouldn't so loosely assert something about black skins.
> When groups are relatively isolated from each other there are directions to
> that in changes arising or falling in a pool in relation to other pools
> otherwise related to the isolate, selection may make dark skin arise, and it
> may not according to a climate, because the source of change is contingent.
> Color vision in primates is interesting in that sense.  But not in the crude
> way you articulate your views.  That is why arguments such as yours fade
> away in time in the sciences because they are not sufficiently accurate and
> practical in understanding reality.  In current times when all the human
> community intermarries there is not going to be a geographic origin to skin
> color and your point seems just plain Eurocentric to others.  Which comes
> first, light or dark in skin?  What about a Baboon's blue ass, why aren't
> humans blue skinned, since they are our relatives too.  And your point is
> just how you insert yourself into this argument when you have no sense
> what
> so ev

RE: RE: Re: Re: Re: genome news (fwd)

2000-04-09 Thread Max B. Sawicky

MD:
. . . What I understand is that
Economic Policy Institute may have a finger in socio-biological research . .
.

We don't do sociology & we don't do biology.  I would
wager that the word 'socio-biology' does not appear
in one EPI publication.  I don't even know what it
means, but if you don't like it, I probably wouldn't
either.

cheers,
mbs




RE: Re: Re: Re: genome news (fwd)

2000-04-09 Thread md7148


>>Brad,can you please read the rest of Steve's post, or the sentence that
>>prior to the sentence you cite? since Steve is not here, I can not talk
>>on behalf of him, but his work is an excellent piece in Marxian
>sociology.

>Here's a precious snippet from this nitwit (Steve Rosenthal)
>from a couple of years ago:

.> . . This line of attack against the Clintonites is being led by Dick 
>Gephardt and the business and big labor forces behind him. The 
>Economic Policy Institute (EPI), whose funding comes from the 
>Rockefeller Foundation, C.S. Mott (GM), Russell Sage (Cabot gas and 
>banking money), sets forth the line Gephardt has been offering . . .

>http://csf.colorado.edu/mail/psn/jan98/0072.html

>No I don't save this stuff.  I remembered since I wrote
>a reply (which he didn't answer), and I thought I would
>see if I could find it quickly with Google.  Came up
>instantly.  Google rules.

>mbs

Max, I appreciate the information you found in the archives of the list.
however, Steven Rosenthal is not here so I can not make
speculations about him. moreover, I don't know the context of the
discussion between you and him. It does not seem fair to me to interpret
somebody else's citation out of context, also because i don't have time
(seriously!) to go over past posts one by one. What I understand is that
Economic Policy Institute may have a finger in socio-biological research
in a similar way to Human genome project conducted by the Clinton
administration. Liberal position (as well as liberal leftist type) on
socio-biology is very clear. Their liberal leftism does not excuse their
implicit racism. These people think "scientific" exploration
of biological differences can help cure 1)certain diseases, physical and 
mental disorders. 2) can help promote an understanding of "individual
differences" for achieving a democratic pluralist society. If I have
a child scored a high degree in IQ test, let's say in humanities, I am
supposed to send her to a liberal arts college.So the argument locates
mental achievement in genetics, rather than looking at the social, class
and gender envioroment of the people. thus, it is class, race and gender
blind. I reject this argument becasue once you "presuppose"
certain biological differences, you are inevitably left with "explaining"
those differences or "attributing a meaning to them", so they will
inevitably be politicized or create a discourse of the "other",
essentialized identities, as Andy rightly said, "different people,
different cultures", irrational people, rational people, bla, bla..
Given that we are not living under ideal circumstances, but in a
society charecterized by all sorts of stratificaitons, politics
always underwrites biology. Just as allocation of resources is a
"political act" which vulgar economism conceals that it is not, production
of scientific knowledge is too a political act. One can not seperate the
two. Let's stick with the original article written by Steven Rosenthal
"How Science is Perverted to Build Fascism: A Marxist Critique of E.O.
Wilson's Consilience: The Unity of Knowledge."

If you  disagree with this article, we can talk about the specifics.

these are my last comments on this issue.I say no kudos to biological
and cultural racism!

thanx..

Mine




Re: Re: Re: Re: genome news (fwd)

2000-04-09 Thread md7148


This is the heart of the matter; very clear and to the point!

Andrew Wayne Austin wrote:

I do not believe sociobiology can be progressive. It is inherently
reactionary, no matter what spin its advocates put to it. And even if we
could put politics aside (in some theoretical world) it is flat-earth
science. Why do I think self-described leftists subscribe to the view?
Some, I think, are liberals claiming to be leftist. Others I know,
including Marxists, believe that everything operates on the principle of
the vulgar dialectic and that the phantoms of the brain reflect some
physiological process. They misunderstand Marxian materialism. For Marx,
materialism is the world human beings build through their collective
activities and their social being that is realized through the
construction of that world. Vulgar materialism is a species of
physicalism. There are others still who wish to articulate a vision of
human nature where the individual is altruistic (a nature undermined by
capitalism). These people do not disagree with the search for a human
nature, only with the human nature Wilson and others come up with. This is
an ideological position, however more desirable an altruistic nature is
over a selfish one. Of course, there is no human nature, since being human
is to stand at the intersection of an assemblage of social and historical
relations. I think the processual frightens the hell out of some people,
and they want that one essential truth that will give them ontological
security. The hard empirical body seems to afford them that truth. But
this is an illusion.

Andrew

>>
>>On Sun, 9 Apr 2000, Mine Aysen Doyran wrote:
>
>>>the socio-biological claim that people differ because they differ
>>>genetically is called RACISM, which is what Wilson does eventually.
>
>>This is the crux of the matter. If one supposes that culture is
>>determined
>>by genes, then one is left explaining cultural differences in terms of
>>genetic differences. Different cultures, different people. If you claim
>>that there are different types of people, you are making a racist
>>argument.
>
>>Andrew
>
>this is *exactly* Wilson! finally somebody has attempted to challenge
>socio-biology. i appreciate your contribution Andy!! where have
>you been lately?
>
>My problem is that why is this person popular among leftists so much given
>that he is a self-proclaimed anti-marxist. What makes Wilson so
>attractive and appealing to some people? and why? this the heart of the
>matter that seems worth looking at. why are the marxists critical of
>socio-biology are minority in every forum i have been to, and forced to
>declare their own scientific status? I get from your reading that there
>are "fundamental" problems with socio-biology? so one can not be, in
>principle, progressive and socio-biologist? am i right?
>
>Mine
>
>
>
>




Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: genome news (fwd)

2000-04-09 Thread JKSCHW

In a message dated 00-04-09 12:38:32 EDT, you write:

<< the
 sentence that includes the categories "Black people" and "whites"
 uncritically assumes that these term themselves are unproblematic with
 regard to the very issues the sentence is discussing. which individuals end
 up in the "Black" category and the "white" category depends. so it is true
 that the shade of one's skin is biological but the categories that are
 mediated by this are not, and either is the social meaning assigned to them. 
>>

Don't assume any such thing. Of course I am aware of the social contruction 
of race, and I don't uncritically assume anything. I also don't need to do 
the dance every time I use a  loaded word,a t least, I hope, in this context. 
Among people to whom the social construction of race might bea  new thought, 
I'd emphasize it. Here, I might have hoped that I could take it for granted. 
How very foolish of me.

I might have said, I briefly contemplated it, that malinin content avrirs 
with geographic origin; that genetics explains why people from subSaharan 
Africa have darker skins, because of higher melanin content, on average, than 
people fron Northern Europe. But it is tiresome, particularly when one is 
talking about race, to pretend that one is not. Political correctness is very 
boring. 

Incidentally, when I use the word "group" or "race"; I am not implying 
anything about a class of persons constututed by some feature entirely apart 
from human choice and conventions. I am not, in other words, being 
"essentialist." (Boo, hiss.)  Racism is not a matter of talking as if people 
are divided into differenbt groups,a nymore than it is natioanlsit of me to 
talk about Americans, Sudanese, French. It is a matter of buying into certain 
assumptions abour superiority, inferiority, entitlement, etc. These 
assumptions need not be tied to any beliefs about genetics or 
"blood"--cultural racism is pretty common. 

--jks




Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: genome news (fwd)

2000-04-09 Thread Mathew Forstater

part of what has made "race" -- and "gender" for that matter -- so confused,
etc. is that it regards the *social* assignment of meaning to traits that
are biologically inherited-- so people say "what are talking about, of
course gender is biological" because we see anatomical differences, but the
meaning of those differences is what is socially constructed.  people have
had a hard time making these distinctions.  so we either get the pure social
constructionist position, and some people feel uneasy about that because
they see anatomical differences, or we get the other extreme and people know
that isn't right.  racism takes physiognomic differences and assigns social
meaning to them.  the meaning is arbitrary and socially constructed and has
no basis in anatomy or biology, etc.  but there are biological reasons for
having whatever color hair you have, etc.  of course, now it is possible to
change one's biological features, too, so sex changes, and lightening skin
color, and etc., and this has to be dealt with and factored in.  but
constructing discrete categories out of what is essentially a continuum
(skin shades) is pure social construction, but a social construction that is
mediated by physiognamy? I still think Harry Chang in the special issue of
Review of Radical Political Economics had this right how many years ago now,
but we are still going around in circles some of us some of the time on all
this.  Of course, Chang wasn't the only one or the first or anything. the
discussion below is still sloppy in these regards, because, e.g., the
sentence that includes the categories "Black people" and "whites"
uncritically assumes that these term themselves are unproblematic with
regard to the very issues the sentence is discussing. which individuals end
up in the "Black" category and the "white" category depends. so it is true
that the shade of one's skin is biological but the categories that are
mediated by this are not, and either is the social meaning assigned to them.


-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Sunday, April 09, 2000 10:46 AM
Subject: [PEN-L:17872] Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: genome news (fwd)


>In a message dated 00-04-09 00:04:25 EDT, you write:
>
><< the socio-biological claim that
> people differ because they differ genetically is called RACISM,  >>
>
>No it's not. It would be racist (and genetically illiterate, for the most
>part) to say that some groups of people are inferior to another because of
>their genes, but it is not racist to say, for example, that Black people
are
>different in the color of their skin from whites in large part because of
>their genes. That is just true.  Genes are causally efficaous; they do
>account for some of the variation in differences between groups and
>individuals, and anyone who denies that has no idea what he is talking
about.
>
>--jks




Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: genome news (fwd)

2000-04-09 Thread JKSCHW

In a message dated 00-04-09 00:04:25 EDT, you write:

<< the socio-biological claim that
 people differ because they differ genetically is called RACISM,  >>

No it's not. It would be racist (and genetically illiterate, for the most 
part) to say that some groups of people are inferior to another because of 
their genes, but it is not racist to say, for example, that Black people are  
different in the color of their skin from whites in large part because of 
their genes. That is just true.  Genes are causally efficaous; they do 
account for some of the variation in differences between groups and 
individuals, and anyone who denies that has no idea what he is talking about.

--jks




RE: Re: Re: Re: genome news (fwd)

2000-04-09 Thread Max B. Sawicky

>Brad,can you please read the rest of Steve's post, or the sentence that
>prior to the sentence you cite? since Steve is not here, I can not talk
>on behalf of him, but his work is an excellent piece in Marxian sociology.

Here's a precious snippet from this nitwit (Steve Rosenthal)
from a couple of years ago:

. . . This line of attack against the Clintonites is being led by Dick 
Gephardt and the business and big labor forces behind him. The 
Economic Policy Institute (EPI), whose funding comes from the 
Rockefeller Foundation, C.S. Mott (GM), Russell Sage (Cabot gas and 
banking money), sets forth the line Gephardt has been offering . . .

http://csf.colorado.edu/mail/psn/jan98/0072.html

No I don't save this stuff.  I remembered since I wrote
a reply (which he didn't answer), and I thought I would
see if I could find it quickly with Google.  Came up
instantly.  Google rules.

mbs




Re: Re: Re: Re: genome news (fwd)

2000-04-08 Thread md7148


>On Sun, 9 Apr 2000, Mine Aysen Doyran wrote:

>>the socio-biological claim that people differ because they differ
>>genetically is called RACISM, which is what Wilson does eventually.

>This is the crux of the matter. If one supposes that culture is
>determined
>by genes, then one is left explaining cultural differences in terms of
>genetic differences. Different cultures, different people. If you claim
>that there are different types of people, you are making a racist
>argument.

>Andrew

this is *exactly* Wilson! finally somebody has attempted to challenge
socio-biology. i appreciate your contribution Andy!! where have
you been lately?

My problem is that why is this person popular among leftists so much given
that he is a self-proclaimed anti-marxist. What makes Wilson so
attractive and appealing to some people? and why? this the heart of the
matter that seems worth looking at. why are the marxists critical of
socio-biology are minority in every forum i have been to, and forced to
declare their own scientific status? I get from your reading that there
are "fundamental" problems with socio-biology? so one can not be, in
principle, progressive and socio-biologist? am i right?

Mine




Of Steve Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: genome news (fwd)

2000-04-08 Thread Stephen E Philion

For the record, the Steve referred to below is Steve Rosenthal, not me...

Steve (The "PEN Steve")

Stephen Philion
Lecturer/PhD Candidate
Department of Sociology
2424 Maile Way
Social Sciences Bldg. # 247
Honolulu, HI 96822


On Sat, 8 Apr 2000, Mine Aysen Doyran wrote:

> >
> 
> > >Steve wrote:
> > >
> > >>>   Because of these sharp
> > >critiques, Wilson reinvented himself as an
> > >  >>  environmentalist concerned about bio-diversity.
> >
> 
> Brad replied:
> 
> > >If it is an excellent piece of Marxian sociology, why does it make
> > >false claims about Wilson's intellectual development?
> >
> > >Either Steve does not know enough about E.O. Wilson to know that >he
> > >was always *both* a sociobiologist and an environmentalist--in >which
> > >I have better things to spend my time reading, things written by
> > >people who have done their homework--or Steve knows that he is >lying
> > >when he claims that Wilson's environmentalism is an intellectual
> > >re-make--in which case I have better things to spend my time >reading,
> > >things written by people who don't lie to me.
> >
> 
> Brad, please know what you are saying. Nobody is a lier about Wilson's
> intellectual development here. Steve is DOCUMENTING passages from Wilson's
> book. Accordingly, he CITES Wilson who says that human nature "is
> the_hereditary regularities of mental development that bias cultural evolution
> in one direction_and thus connect the genes to culture" (p. 164). well, how do
> you interpret this? just a naive bio-diversity or an objective scientific
> statement?If you agree with what Wilson says, there is no point in continuing
> this debate because my reading of him is that he is obviously racist. This is
> because Wilson is reducing cultural and other social differences to genes, and
> then reconstructing and universalizing an hypothetical theory of  human nature,
> which is completely false and ideological. Human beings are *not* determined by
> their genes. They are shaped by the social, cultural, ideological and
> political-economic environment they live in. As cross-cultural anthropological
> studies further proves that many societies such as tribal bands, small
> communities, ancient groupings did not have the same perceptions of masculinity
> and feminity that we have today. these are socio-historical constructions, sex
> roles, broadly defined, not genetic givens. the socio-biological claim that
> people differ because they differ genetically is called RACISM, which is what
> Wilson does eventually. thus, i don't understand why you support the man!
> 
> 
> --
> 
> Mine Aysen Doyran
> PhD Student
> Department of Political Science
> SUNY at Albany
> Nelson A. Rockefeller College
> 135 Western Ave.; Milne 102
> Albany, NY 1
> 
> 




Re: Re: Re: Re: genome news (fwd)

2000-04-08 Thread Mine Aysen Doyran

>

> >Steve wrote:
> >
> >>>   Because of these sharp
> >critiques, Wilson reinvented himself as an
> >  >>  environmentalist concerned about bio-diversity.
>

Brad replied:

> >If it is an excellent piece of Marxian sociology, why does it make
> >false claims about Wilson's intellectual development?
>
> >Either Steve does not know enough about E.O. Wilson to know that >he
> >was always *both* a sociobiologist and an environmentalist--in >which
> >I have better things to spend my time reading, things written by
> >people who have done their homework--or Steve knows that he is >lying
> >when he claims that Wilson's environmentalism is an intellectual
> >re-make--in which case I have better things to spend my time >reading,
> >things written by people who don't lie to me.
>

Brad, please know what you are saying. Nobody is a lier about Wilson's
intellectual development here. Steve is DOCUMENTING passages from Wilson's
book. Accordingly, he CITES Wilson who says that human nature "is
the_hereditary regularities of mental development that bias cultural evolution
in one direction_and thus connect the genes to culture" (p. 164). well, how do
you interpret this? just a naive bio-diversity or an objective scientific
statement?If you agree with what Wilson says, there is no point in continuing
this debate because my reading of him is that he is obviously racist. This is
because Wilson is reducing cultural and other social differences to genes, and
then reconstructing and universalizing an hypothetical theory of  human nature,
which is completely false and ideological. Human beings are *not* determined by
their genes. They are shaped by the social, cultural, ideological and
political-economic environment they live in. As cross-cultural anthropological
studies further proves that many societies such as tribal bands, small
communities, ancient groupings did not have the same perceptions of masculinity
and feminity that we have today. these are socio-historical constructions, sex
roles, broadly defined, not genetic givens. the socio-biological claim that
people differ because they differ genetically is called RACISM, which is what
Wilson does eventually. thus, i don't understand why you support the man!


--

Mine Aysen Doyran
PhD Student
Department of Political Science
SUNY at Albany
Nelson A. Rockefeller College
135 Western Ave.; Milne 102
Albany, NY 1




Re: Re: Re: genome news (fwd)

2000-04-08 Thread Brad De Long

>Brad,can you please read the rest of Steve's post, or the sentence that
>prior to the sentence you cite? since Steve is not here, I can not talk
>on behalf of him, but his work is an excellent piece in Marxian sociology.
>Steve wrote:
>
>>>   Because of these sharp
>critiques, Wilson reinvented himself as an
>  >>  environmentalist concerned about bio-diversity.

If it is an excellent piece of Marxian sociology, why does it make 
false claims about Wilson's intellectual development?

Either Steve does not know enough about E.O. Wilson to know that he 
was always *both* a sociobiologist and an environmentalist--in which 
I have better things to spend my time reading, things written by 
people who have done their homework--or Steve knows that he is lying 
when he claims that Wilson's environmentalism is an intellectual 
re-make--in which case I have better things to spend my time reading, 
things written by people who don't lie to me.


Brad DeLong




Re: Re: genome news (fwd)

2000-04-08 Thread md7148



Brad,can you please read the rest of Steve's post, or the sentence that
prior to the sentence you cite? since Steve is not here, I can not talk
on behalf of him, but his work is an excellent piece in Marxian sociology.
moreover, it is a serious critique of socio-biological assumptions about
human nature and biological determinism of Wilson. the man (wilson) is
briefly saying that capitalism, sexim and racism are in our genes, which
is what almost all the socio-biologists fundamentally share theoretically 
(Pearson, DAwkins, Lynn, Rushton, etc...).Racism is not "accidental" to
socio-biological assumptions; on the contrary, it is very intrinsic.

Steve wrote:

>>  Because of these sharp
critiques, Wilson reinvented himself as an
>>  environmentalist concerned about bio-diversity.

You replied:

>Serious critics of Wilson don't make such an accusation because it is
>false. One can be--and Wilson always has been--both a sociobiologist



this is not an accusation, Brad!; this is what Wilson says. Below *is*
real Wilson, not the enviromentalist Wilson you are talking
about. I have fought with folks elsewhere who tend to give a
progresive reading of Wilson, but this is *not* Wilson. Marxists should
solve the problem of socio-biology because this is completely an
an ideological science. Wilson is racist, sexist and
anti-labor..see below..


Steve wrote:

>The unifying concept of Consilience is human nature.  According to
>Wilson, human nature "is the_hereditary regularities of mental
>development that bias cultural evolution in one direction_and thus
>connect the genes to culture" (p. 164).  Therefore, in all human
>societies we favor our own family, ethnic and religious group,
>impose male dominance, create hierarchies of status, rank, and wealth
>and rules for inheritance, promote the territorial expansion and
>defense of our society, and enter into contractual agreements (pp.
>168-172). Recycling the main ideological assertions of Sociobiology,
>Wilson claims that racism, religious hatred, sexism, and war are not
>inevitable features of capitalism, but universal traits of our
>genetically evolved human nature.


I wrote:

 >A Marxist sociologist Steve Rosenthal replies to those who
think >that there is no problem
>with studying genome.
>
>
>Mine Aysen Doyran
>PhD Student
>Department of Political Science
>SUNY at Albany
>Nelson A. Rockefeller College
>135 Western Ave.; Milne 102
>Albany, NY 1