Daily Archives: September 24, 2012

Humanity isn’t, it becomes | Gene Expression

Posted: September 24, 2012 at 12:10 pm

John Hawks prompts to reemphasize an aspect of my thinking which has undergone a revolution over the past 10 years. I pointed to it in my post on the Khoe-San. In short, the common anatomically modern human ancestors of Khoe-San and non-Khoe-San may not have been people. Rather, people may have evolved over the past 100-200,000 years ago. Of course the term people is not quite as scientific as you might like. In philosophy and law you have debates about personhood. Granting the utility of these debates I am basically saying that the common ancestor of Khoe-San and non-Khoe-San may not have been persons, as well understand them. Though, as a person myself, I do think they were persons. At this point I am willing to push the class person rather far back in time.

As I suggested earlier there is an implicit assumption that personhood is a shared derived trait of our species. Or at least it is a consensus today that all extant members of H. sapiens are persons. Since Khoe-San are persons, the common ancestor of Khoe-San and non-Khoe-San must also be persons if personhood is a shared derived trait. But, we also know that there are many aspects of realized personhood on a sociological or cultural scale which seem to diminish the further back in time you go. For example, the Oldowan lithic technology persisted for ~1 million years. A common modern conception of persons is that persons in the aggregate are simply never so static. Persons have culture, and culture is protean. Therefore, one might infer from the nature of Oldowan technological torpor that the producers of that technology were not persons.

But theres a large gap between the decline of the Oldowan and the rise of anatomically modern humans. Where to draw the line? Lets take a step back about a decade. Heres an extract from Richard Kleins excellent Dawn of Human Culture:

Our third and final observation is that the relationship between anatomical and behavioral change shifted abruptly about 50,000 years ago. Before this time, anatomy and behavior appear to have evolved more or less in tandem, very slowly, but after this time anatomy remained relatively stable while behavioral (cultural) change accelerated rapidly. What could explain this better than a neural change that promoted the extraordinary modern human ability to innovate? This is not to say that Neanderthals and their non-modern contemporaries possessed ape-like brains or that they were as biologically and behaviorally primitive as yet earlier humans. It is only to suggest that an acknowledged genetic link between anatomy and behavior in yet earlier people persisted until the emergence of fully modern ones, and that that postulated genetic change 50,000 years ago fostered the uniquely modern ability to adapt to a remarkable range of natural and social circumstances with little or no physiological change.

Arguably, the last key neural change promoted the modern capacity for rapidly spoken phonemic language, or for what anthropologists Duane Quiatt and Richard Milo have called a fully vocal language, phenmiized, syntactical, and infinitely open and productive.

The non-moderns were not ape-like, but they were clearly not human-like, if they lacked language as what we understand language to be. Today this view is likely in the minority position, but why? I think the possibility of admixture between these distinct human lineages suggests that the gap between them and us was not quite as large Klein postulates above. And even then there is a major problem with Kleins thesis: there was mitochondrial and archaeological evidence even then that the divergence of the Khoe-San and non-Africans far pre-dated the 50,000 year time period alluded to above. Since then the evidence has become even stronger that the divergence of the Khoe-San from other humans, and likely Africans from non-Africans, pre-dates the emergence of behavioral modernity.

An implicit assumption that personhood is a shared derived trait from a common human ancestor to me speaks to the same needs and urges which posit a specific ensoulment or creation of humanity from clay. Our minds are not very good at continuities, so we must create distinctive breaks. One moment an animal, and another moment a man! The occasional scientist who speculates that there may be a set of genes which define humanity I think falls into the trap of assuming discontinuity where there is none. There may be no genetic variant necessary or sufficient to being a human. Let me finish by quoting John Hawks, who inspired me to be a bit more explicit in my own line of thinking:

Personally, I think that cognitive modernity is a red herring. Todays people learn some kinds of technical and symbolic complexity that were never present in ancient peoples. Somepeople living today in Western cultures, despite all our educational efforts, fail to attain levels of technical knowledge that are regular outcomes for the majority of people in the same environment. Human performance varies continuously.

I assert that it is unreasonable to suppose that Neandertals had a stupid gene. If so, it should be just as unreasonable to suppose that a smart gene could explain the evolution of human cognition during the last 100,000 years. These unrealistic assumptions are widespread, and impede our understanding just as thoroughly as assumptions about the nature of biological species impeded our understanding of Neandertal ancestry of living human populations. Some archaeologists have concluded that Neandertal cognition is an either/or proposition. Some look at Neandertals, find a lack of evidence that they behave identically to later people, and conclude that the Neandertals were therefore unquestionably cognitive inferiors. Others look at Neandertals, find some signs of modern-like behaviors, and conclude that Neandertals were therefore unquestionably our cognitive equals.

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Humanity isn’t, it becomes | Gene Expression

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Freedom of religion is a really great thing

Posted: at 6:18 am

If there was an opportunity to promote a cool consensus position on Muslims in Australia, Mariam Veiszadeh took it.

None of my best friends are Muslims.

Not that I have anything against Muslims.

It's just that women my age were migrants (or children of migrants) of other races and religions. But it is also true that none of my best friends are Chinese or Vietnamese.

So I'm in my little white ghetto in my little white house with my little white friends.

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Despite that, even from deep inside the gated community of class and culture in Australia, even a complete raving idiot could see that not all Muslims, or Chinese, or Vietnamese are the same. And blaming all Muslims for the craziness of rioting and bombing is like blaming me for Martin Bryant or Ivan Milat. Those two serial murderers arose in a culture of white Australia but no-one blames Australian culture. Instead, all the material I've ever read about them talks about individual backgrounds; how those two came to be who they are.

That's what needs to happen now. Find the person - or people - who sent the computer-generated text message inviting - actually inciting - a riot in Sydney on Saturday and discover what it is that transformed them from your garden-variety Muslim (normal, peaceful, law-abiding, nagging their children) to Koran-thumping craziness.

What made them think it was OK to get six- and seven-year-old children holding up placards that incite brutal murder? And how the hell can we fix it - and them - right now?

Of course the problem is fixable. I know this because, when my parents lobbed into Australia (after years in a displaced person's camp), no white Christian Australian was allowed anywhere near their beloved children (me and my siblings). No English at home. No fraternising. We definitely weren't allowed sleepovers. Now I sleep over with a white (formerly Christian) Australian every night of the week. The sky has not fallen in. I have not become (terribly) disreputable.

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Freedom of religion is a really great thing

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Freedom & our faltering economy

Posted: at 6:18 am

Which candidate, President Obama or Mitt Romney, has the right prescription for what ails the US economy? Its a question maybe the key question that every voter should ask. But first you need the answer to a different puzzler: What went wrong?

Why did the US economy surge in the 1980s and 1990s, only to stagnate and sink in the 2000s?

Imagine if you could time travel back to 1999 and tell people then what the next unlucky 13 years held. The 99ers might well guess the Y2K problem really had crashed all the worlds computers at midnight. But once you informed them the Millennium Bug was a bust, what would you say next?

Barack Obama would tell them a story. A liberal fantasy, really. It would be a tale about how the Long Boom was manna for Wall Street but a mirage for Main Street. And finally over the past decade, all the tax cuts and deregulation and inequality finally caught up with the US economy and led to a financial crisis and Great Recession.

As Obama told a crowd in Osawatomie, Kansas, late last year, There is a certain crowd in Washington who, for the last few decades, have said, lets respond to this economic challenge with the same old tune. The market will take care of everything, they tell us. If we just cut more regulations and cut more taxes especially for the wealthy our economy will grow stronger. But heres the problem: It doesnt work. It has never worked.

And how would Mitt Romney explain why from 1981 through 2000, the US economy grew at an average annual rate of 3.4 percent and created some 42 million jobs but from 2001 through 2011, it grew at less than 2 percent, creating no net new jobs?

Since Romney is famous for loving deep dives into data, he should check out a new study from the Fraser Institute. Obama, too, for that matter.

Every year, the Canadian think-tank ranks the worlds nations on how free their economies are (or arent) based on factors such as size of government, security of property rights and freedom to trade. In the 1980s and 1990s, it listed the United States consistently as one of the freest economies in the world, typically ranking 2nd or 3rd through that entire period.

Since then, however, the US economys freedom ranking had steadily eroded to 8th in 2005, 15th in 2009 and 18th in 2010. The United States is now nestled between Qatar and Kuwait.

One problem is weakened property rights, the institute notes, such as the increased use of eminent domain to transfer property to powerful political interests . . .[and] the violation of the property rights of bondholders in the bailout of automobile companies.

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Freedom & our faltering economy

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Limits on speech to get U.N. hearing – Sun, 23 Sep 2012 PST

Posted: at 6:16 am

September 23, 2012 in Nation/World Speakers may revive debate onblasphemy

Hannah Allam McClatchy-Tribune

UNITED NATIONS The divide in world opinion over what constitutes free speech will be on display again this week at the United Nations, where arguments over a proposed blasphemy law were an annual feature for the past decade. This time its the global reaction to a YouTube video that disparages Islams Prophet Muhammad thats sure to roil the meeting of the U.N. GeneralAssembly.

Muslim leaders have vowed to discuss the offensive video from their U.N. platforms, sowing concern among free-speech activists of a fresh push toward an international law that would criminalize blasphemy. Human rights groups and Western democracies resisted such a law for years and thought they had finally quashed the matter after convincing enough nations that repressive regimes use blasphemy laws to imprison or executedissidents.

I expect that well regress to where we were a couple of years ago, said Courtney C. Radsch, program manager for the Global Freedom of Expression Campaign at Freedom House, a Washington-based nonprofit group that promotes democraticvalues.

Human rights are not about protecting religions; human rights are to protect humans, Radsch said. Who is going to be the decision-maker on deciding what blasphemyis?

At one end of the spectrum is France, where a magazine last week published cartoons of Muhammad as a naked, cowering man to underscore a point that even the most offensive expression should beprotected.

At the other end of the spectrum is U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, who surprised and disappointed many free-speech activists by suggesting limitations to freedom of speech when its used to provoke orhumiliate.

We are living through a period of unease. We are also seeing incidents of intolerance and hatred that are then exploited by others, Ban told the 193-member General Assembly at the gatherings opening last week. Voices of moderation and calm need to make themselves heard at this time. We all need to speak up in favor of mutual respect and understanding of the values and beliefs ofothers.

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Limits on speech to get U.N. hearing - Sun, 23 Sep 2012 PST

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