[Marxism] Bonds, Genes, Racism
Rakesh Bhandari
bhandari at berkeley.edu
Sat Aug 11 22:51:17 MDT 2007
>But they shouldn't be dismissed simply on the grounds that " (A)
>Clark's arguments sound like sociobiology, AND (B) Some
>sociobiologists hold right-wing views, ERGO (C) Clark must be
>wrong/racist" This is a horrible way to argue anything, and gives
>Marxism/Marxists a bad name.
You are constructing the basis for skepticism in the weakest possible
way. 1. The genetic change could not have been realized in the time
Clark allows, 2. places where there was putatively no genetic change
industrialized and evidenced same behavioral change, 3. institutional
change, the accidental result of many independent causes, can explain
the changes in behavior, 4. the changes in behavior were not as
hardwired as Clark claims, and early capitalism often depended on
behavior which Clark does not think was hardwired (negative
reciprocity and slaving violence for example). Clark's thesis is
absurd, and it does attempt to naturalize international income
inequality as the on line intro to his book makes clear. To
understand why such an absurd thesis can be taken seriously or
lightly questioned only as speculative one must understand the
imbrication of race and biology in the course of slavery and
imperialism.
Rakesh
More information about the Marxism
mailing list