Originally posted by: MadCowDisease
Koing, the bottom line remains the same - the presence of a general trend in observable differences does not equivocate a GENETIC change..
I've notice that the trend among "PC" people is to use this kind of logic:
Just because it looks like a duck, walks like a duck, and quacks like a duck does NOT necessarily mean that it's a duck. Therefore it's not a duck.
You can see that such logic is ridiculous.
You're saying that the presence of a trend in observable performance differences does not equivocate a genetic change. You're right- it doesn't equivocate a genetic change. But it also doesn't rule it out as a possibility, and compared to the various, inconsistent, far fetched alternative possibilities you gave, it does seems more likely to be the reason.
I believe in statistics. While the "PC" crowd likes to point out that statistics usually use approximations and aren't 100% accurate, they are pretty damn accurate and the more samples you have, the more accurate the statistic gets. The PC crowd doesn't seem to have much faith in math or science, they say do what sounds good. If you ask them, they'll usually use the exception as an example and not the rule. If I was trying to prove that group A has a 95% predisposition to activity A and showed how 95 out of 100 people did in fact follow this observation, the PC crowd would use the 5 exceptions to prove that my theory is wrong. That's just not very scientific reasoning.
Like I've said to Dijobi, I don't think that race is an accurate classification because it's too general, but I do think that regional genetics do play a large role.