| | Brad,
Who appointed you dictator of other people's romantic choices? Are you seriously telling me that people aren't justified in marrying a person of a different race -- that they should be discouraged from doing so in order to preserve racial "phenotypes"? You say that Rand romanticized Nordic and Caucasian features in her novels, and you worry about the demise of the latter due to interracial marriage. You remind me a black guy I once knew who told me that he thought Rand was a racist, because her heroes had Nordic and Caucasian features. Now you're saying basically the same thing, but on her behalf. Rand had her physical preferences, as do a lot of people. That doesn't mean that she was a racist or that she was romanticizing racial stereotypes. (By the way, she once said that Mohammad Ali was one of her heroes, because of the unabashed pride that he took in his own accomplishments.)
Moreover, if what you're concerned about is a more intelligent person's marrying someone less intelligent and thus having offspring whose intelligence is "mediocre," then that can happen between members of the same race. So are you saying that no one should marry someone who is not their intellectual equal, regardless of their race? In that case, what about a black man and a white woman who are of equal intelligence? Shouldn't you prefer their relationship over one involving two whites of unequal intelligence?
In this case, you are lumping all people together on the basis of race. You're not viewing them as individuals with their own particular level of intelligence. You're inveighing against inter-racial dating and marriage as such, regardless of the intelligence of the people involved. This is a collectivist mantra; it is quintessentially anti-individualist.
What's funny about your position is that it fits right in with multicultural diversity and identity politics.
I wrote that "people tend to choose partners who are close to their own level of intelligence anyway, so in a free society, I don't think one has to worry about any leveling to 'mediocrity' due to miscegenation." Steve disagreed: 1. Many people, for reasons that are cultural or personal, don't choose for an equal level of intelligence. Ask any intelligent woman who has dated for a number of years how many men were turned off by her intelligence. Here in the US there are many men who choose for looks and many women who chose for status or wealth or looks. And it nearly takes a psychologist to unweave the many strands that generate a particular individual's basis of sexual/romantic attraction. Well, sure, men prefer attractive women; and women, successful men, but neither is going to marry someone who is not at their level of intelligence. What man wants to marry and live in a permanent relationship with a bimbo whom he can't relate to or communicate with? Such a marriage, if it were to occur, would not last for long. 2. But even if people did choose for intelligence, we need to remember that it is not genetically transmitted. All that is transmitted genetically is a rough potential for certain mental capacities - capacities that, by themselves, do not begin to account for what is required for functional intelligence - real intelligence. You grant Brad's ugly premise (which carries within it, the epistemological requirement for innate ideas and an absence of choice, and the elimination of critical thinking, psychological clarity, and a host of other important considerations) when you phrase your statement using the words you used. I made it clear that I was referring to potential, not to the actualization of that potential, which of course is not inherited. I also said that Objectivism is opposed to the doctrine of innate ideas -- that it supports the view that man is born tabula rasa, which is obviously something I agree with.
(Edited by William Dwyer on 5/22, 12:19pm)
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