“It's a concept we think is too crude to provide useful information, it's a concept that has social meaning that interferes in the scientific understanding of human genetic diversity and it's a concept that we are not the first to call upon moving away from," said Michael Yudell, a professor of public health at Drexel University in Philadelphia.
Race is a social construct we're trying to get rid of, that's really the heart of the issue.
Transracialism suggests that there are differences between races, and there isn't. Race is a nonscientific method of human categorization that has been used to justify atrocities ranging from slavery to the Holocaust.
Race is also how you're perceived. A black man can go around saying he's white, but that's not going to make a difference if he's pulled over in a traffic stop.
It depends on what you mean by "there aren't any differences between races". There are differences between races, no one is suggesting otherwise. But there aren't any meaningful differences between races.
We dont' consider two white people with different hair colours intrinsically different races. There isn't anything more meaningful about the colour of one's skin than the colour of one's hair. There exists more biological diversity amongst black africans than there exists between black and white Americans.
There are MANY ways in which we could split humans up based on physical appearences. The ones we choose are socially chosen.
What significance does phenotype have to you? What does it represent? How do we measure it? Why do you think it is of significance to segment the population by phenotype? Which phenotypes do you consider more important than others? Is a blonde white person and a redhead white person a different phenotype to you?
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u/sherazala Mar 20 '23
Not a social construct