Title: Lecture 10 Racism
1Lecture 10Racism
2The attack on Fort Dix
It all began on a frigid January day in 2007 with
10 bearded Muslim men huddled in the parking lot
of a Circuit City debating who would go inside to
have a copy made of a tape showing them firing
guns and praising jihad. Eventually, the group
selected two men who went inside. They handed the
teenage clerk a mini-cassette tape from a
camcorder and asked for a 20 transfer to be made
to DVD. When the teen went to a back room to do
the conversion of the tape, he saw a group of
bearded men wearing "fundamentalist attire",
screaming "God is great!" and shooting "big,
fing guns". At first, the teenage clerk didn't
know what to do. He frantically told his
co-worker "Dude, I just saw some really weird
s. I don't know what to do. Should I call
someone or is that being racist?"
3What is racism?
- The right tactic with racism, if you really want
to oppose it, is to object to it rationally in
the form in which it stands the best chance of
meeting objections. (K. A. Appiah, Racisms in
L. Harris ed., Racism, 1999, p. 4.) - Racism any action, practice, or belief that
reflects the racial worldviewthe ideology that
humans are divided into separate and exclusive
biological entities called races, that there is
a causal link between inherited physical traits
and traits of personality, intellect, morality,
and other cultural behavioral features, and that
some races are innately superior to others.
Britannica Online - Racism the tendency to think worse of some
people (e.g., in regard to their character or
abilities), or to treat them worse than others,
merely on account of information about their race
or ethnicity. (T. Pogge, in askphilosopher.org)
4The four components of racism
- The Morphological ComponentHuman groups have
different genetic ancestries, which make them
differ statistically with respect to a number of
morphological characteristics (skin color, hair
texture, etc.). - The Psychological ComponentGenetic differences
between these groups make them also differ with
respect to some psychological, socially important
traits (e.g., intelligence, personality traits,
criminality, etc). - The Differential Treatment ComponentIt is
sometimes legitimate to treat members of these
groups differently merely because of their group
membership. - The Moral Condemnation ComponentRacism is
morally unacceptable.
5The relation between the four components
1. Morphological component
2. Psychological component
3. Differential treatment legitimate
CONTRADICTION?
4. Racism is morally unacceptable
Moral intuition
6The moral condemnation component
- Most people who discuss racism take it for
granted that it is an evil. (R. Hare, Objective
Prescriptions Other Essays, 1999 p.179) - To describe a policy, law, movement or nation as
racist is to condemn it.(P. Singer, Is
Racial Discrimination Arbitrary, Philosophia
1978 p. 185) - No account of what racism is can be adequate
unless it at the same time makes clear what is
wrong with it.(J. Garcia The Heart of Racism,
Journal of Social Philosophy, 1996 p. 6) - Recently racism has come to be used to mean
something that is necessarily morally
objectionable.(K. Baier Merit and Race,
Philosophia, 1978 p. 127) - You would have to be eccentric to think that
racism is not wrong. (A. Appiah, History of
Hatred, New York Times, 2002) - While there is no generally accepted
understanding of racism, there is at least a
general agreement that racism is in some way
wrong or objectionable. (J. Arthur, Race,
Equality and the Burdens of History, Cambridge U.
P., 2007, p. 8)
7Discrimination legitimate or not?
FACT 1 Individuals A and B ostensibly differ
only with respect to an irrelevant M-trait
CONCLUSION It is OK to treat A and B differently
Wrong?
FACT 2 The irrelevant M-trait is correlated with
a relevant P-trait
8The evaluative component
- Racism by definition includes attributing to some
racial group(s) some generally undesirable
characteristics (like a lower IQ, predisposition
toward anti-social behavior, etc.) - Isnt it obviously and entirely irrational to
make such an attribution to groups that are
identified by some superficial and normatively
neutral characteristics like, say, skin color? - Well, not necessarily. It all depends on whether
these superficial and normatively neutral
characteristics are associated with these other,
generally undesirable characteristics. - The association may exist or it may not. It is an
empirical question. It cannot be decided by moral
reasoning or political condemnation.
9The moral condemnation component
- Racism is usually regarded as morally
unacceptable and also as stupid (or
unreasonable). - Since it is quite clear that skin color is in
itself a morally irrelevant characteristic, it
could seem that any negative opinion of groups
defined by skin color must spring from an
arbitrary hatred of these groups. Such a hatred
is clearly a moral defect. - But racists are not moved by skin color only. In
fact, they believe that skin color is associated
with certain other, socially important
characteristics, and this is the reason they have
different attitudes toward groups with different
skin color. - Their defect (if it is a defect) is cognitive,
not moral.
10Empirical claim with wrong normative
consequences
(E) Racial psychological differences exist
(N2) Group inequality OK
(N1) Differential treatment OK
Unacceptable!
Unacceptable!
- If (E) leads to (N1) and/or (N2), the moral
outrage will tend to transfer from the consequent
to the antecedent. - The moral condemnation, which can meaningfully
apply only to those who defend (N1) or (N2), will
now perversely attach even to those who just
embrace the empirical claim (E).
11Overlapping groups
- Whichever two racial groups one takes, and
whichever sociably desirable characteristic,
there will always be many members of each group
that are better with respect to that
characteristic than most members of the other
group. - In other words, it will never be true that all
members of one group are better than all members
of the other group. - Racial groups always overlap to a large extent,
and this is frequently taken as a refutation of
racism. - It does refute one kind of racism (an empirically
very implausible version of racism). But does it
refute every kind of racism? - What about a belief that racial groups differ in
average values of certain socially desirable
characteristics?
12Statistical differences
- The average IQ in whites is 100, in American
blacks it is 85, while among North-East Asians
(Chinese, Japanese and Koreans) it is higher than
100. - If we consider the same three groups, the rate of
crime is highest among blacks and lowest among
Asians. - These are hard empirical data, and they are
beyond dispute. - But a question remains about the explanation of
these differences. Are they the result of genetic
or environmental causes? Or perhaps of the
combination of the two? - If they are genetic (or partly genetic), there
will be a tendency to regard these differences as
somehow intrinsic characteristics of these
groups. Is this justifiable? - Would this support racism?
13Groups and individuals
- According to a very influential argument, a
difference in group averages would be totally
irrelevant for judgments about individuals, and
therefore even if these differences existed (and
even if they were genetic in origin) they would
have no social implications. - Would that were true!
- People would have to be either saints or idiots
not to be influenced by the collective
statistics (Genovese 1995 333). - The statistical information about groups is
relevant for judging individuals. In fact, the
less we know about a given individual, the more
important is the information about his group
membership. - The reason ignorance makes all information more
valuable.
14The problem of a taxi driver
- A taxi driver prefers not to take black
passengers because the proportion of muggers
among blacks is significantly higher than among
other groups. - This looks very much like racism and seems to
deserve moral condemnation. The driver is
behaving differently towards different people
only on the basis of their group membership. - He is not treating people as individuals. This is
very unfair toward those black people (most of
them!) who are law-abiding citizens. - But the driver argues I have to take care of
myself, and if I dont take race into account I
will increase the probability of being mugged
(and perhaps even killed).
15Rational racism?
- Is the behavior of the taxi driver rational?
- In some sense it seems it is. If the drivers who
take race into account are mugged less frequently
than those who dont, then this type of behavior
has some justification. - Some writers discussing this type of situation
started to talk about rational racism. - What shows that the drivers behavior is not an
example of stupid and irrational racism is the
fact that black taxi drivers often behave in the
same way. They also tend to take in black
customers less often than it would be expected by
chance. - Jesse Jackson " There is nothing more painful to
me at this stage in my life than to walk down the
street and hear footsteps and start thinking
about robbery. Then look around and see someone
white and feel relieved."
16A sophistical argument against racial profiling
- Police forces have found that racial profiling
doesn't work. Race is too broad a category to be
useful. Every cop will tell you what's important
is suspicious behavior, Harris says. If you
focus on race, the eye is distracted from
behavior and moves to what is literally skin
deep. Customs Service agents used to stop blacks
and Latinos at vastly disproportionate rates to
whites. Then they switched and began using
information and behavior as their criteria. They
looked at where and how tickets were bought, did
background checks, watched whether you stuck to
your bags at all times. As a result, they
searched fewer people and found many more people
who were running drugs. - F. Zakaria, Newsweek, 18 July 2002
17Crime, gender and race statistical data
Â
18A threatening characteristic E
- Suppose that there is a threatening
characteristic E, which is much more often
present in murderers than in the rest of us. - Suppose that 20 percent of murderers have E,
whereas only 0.2 percent of the others have E. - If we meet someone who has characteristic E, how
worried should we be? How likely is it that he is
a murderer? - We know that p(E/M) 0.2, but what is p(M/E)?
- It might seem that group membership is irrelevant
here. - If p(E/M) is the same (0.2) in both groups
(whites and blacks), how could it make any
difference whether a person with characteristic E
is white or black? - But in fact it does.
19Calculation for whitesp(M/E) 0.005 (1/201)
E 1 (20)
M 5(5 in 100,000)
Not-E 4
E 200 (0.2)
Not-M 99,995
Not-E 99,795
20Calculation for blacksp(M/E) 0.04 (8/208, or 1
in 26)
E 8 (20)
M 40(40 in 100,000)
Not-E 32
E 200 (0.2)
Not-M 99,960
Not-E 99,760
21Conclusion
- If most terrorists are Muslims (though most
Muslims are not terrorists!), then being a Muslim
becomes a relevant (though not a decisive)
consideration for judging whether someone is a
terrorist or not. - Example two suspiciously behaving people at the
airport. - In the world of imperfect information, group
membership often represents relevant information.
It may be politically incorrect to take it into
account but it is not irrational! - Of course, if you have complete (or very
detailed) knowledge about all relevant
characteristics of a given individual, group
membership fades into insignificance. - God does not need to rely on statistical
information! But we, mortals, living in the world
of limited knowledge, cannot afford the luxury of
neglecting these probabilistic cues.