Then using those to define "Jewish race" rather than finding "Jewish race" as a category rooted in biological difference from "Aryan race"; such a distinction does not identify human population with a distinct character driven by biological differences. — fdrake
And the child of an Aryan and a Jew? — fdrake
It rather is, it's about what we're attributing causal power; stuff that drives distinctions; to. — fdrake
An Aryan and a Jew have a baby, is it an Aryan or a Jew? How do you decide? — fdrake
The modern concept of the master race is generally derived from a 19th-century racial theory, which posited a hierarchy of races that was based on darkness of skin color. This 19th-century concept was initially developed by Count Joseph Arthur De Gobineau. Gobineau's basic concept, as further refined and developed in Nazism, placed black Indigenous Australians and Equatorial Africans at the bottom of the hierarchy, while white Northern and Western Europeans (which consisted of Germans, Swedes, Icelanders, Norwegians, Danes, British, Irish, Dutch, Belgian and Northern French) were placed at its top; olive skinned white Southern Europeans (who consisted of Southern French, Portuguese, Spaniards, Italians, Romanians, and Greeks, i.e., those who were called the Mediterranean race, were regarded as another sub-race of the Caucasian race) and placed in its upper middle ranks; and the Semitic and Hamitic races (supposed sub-races of the Caucasian race) were placed in its lower-middle ranks (because the Jews, were Semites, the [u[Nazis believed their cleverness made them extremely dangerous[/u]—they had their own plan for Jewish world domination, a conspiracy which needed to be opposed by all thoughtful Aryans) — Wikipedia
Racism against the jews was based on a different, but not necessarily true, belief that jews were more intelligent and posed a threat to the Aryans. — TheMadFool
Maybe, but anti-Semitism was also associated with Germany's failure to become an integrated nation like the UK or France. They attempted forced assimilation through public education, but it didnt work. Jews remained distinct. This is a case where distinctness causes friction that eventually erupts into bloody scapegoating, but racism wasnt the primary driver, it was a symptom of social — frank
Maybe, but anti-Semitism was also associated with Germany's failure to become an integrated nation like the UK or France. They attempted forced assimilation through public education, but it didnt work. Jews remained distinct. This is a case where distinctness causes friction that eventually erupts into bloody scapegoating, but racism wasnt the primary driver, it was a symptom of social instability brought on by economic turmoil. — frank
The problem with your posts, Fool, is that they're completely lacking in history. — coolazice
Nevertheless racism against Africans and Asians was bases on biology. — TheMadFool
That leads to the question of whether science is itself a social construct (or a type of game). There was once a strong bias against the "recent African origin" thesis which, per Stringer, was based on racist beliefs among white scientists. They wanted blacks, whites, and asians to have evolved separately in different parts of the world from different populations of homo erectus. How exactly that separation in time was supposed to support white supremacy, I'm not sure.
But you can see how a change in culture influenced science. Stringer says the opposition to RAO was strong and at times propelled by anger. In a Nazi world, there would have been no room in science for a voice pointing to the close relationship of all humans.
I guess my point is that biology doesn't stand apart from social construction the way we would like to think it does. — frank
one may always fall back on what hasn't changed, the constants that ground all human activity - our biology and human nature. — TheMadFool
The point is precisely that what you are calling 'human nature' has in fact changed over time and this is well-documented by historians. — coolazice
If racism has a biological basis, tolerance must also. — frank
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.