Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Are some races naturally better boxers?

Collapse
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

    #61
    Originally posted by Thread Stealer View Post
    Thank you, Jimmy the Greek.
    Hahaha, yes...but was he lying?

    He got into trouble because it stirred emotions...it brought up "why?" would they {the "African-American} have an advantage, if they did at all.

    It's a bad thing to bring up. One side doesn't want to know that it was possible that they were bred like animals to make superior workers, being born not from "love" but from force and need. The other side doesn't want to feel inferior or worse, feel the guilt of the past.
    Last edited by Benny Leonard; 01-07-2008, 09:16 PM.

    Comment


      #62
      Originally posted by Benny Leonard View Post
      Hahaha, yes...but was he lying?

      He got into trouble because it stirred emotions...it brought up "why?" would they {the "African-American} have an advantage.

      It's a bad thing to bring up. One side doesn't want to know that it was possible that they were bred like animals to make superior workers, being born not from "love" but from force and need. The other side doesn't want to feel inferior or worse, feel the guilt of the past.
      IMO, Jimmy the Greek caught too much flack for stating something that's been said in history books.

      Comment


        #63
        Originally posted by Benny Leonard View Post
        One side doesn't want to know that it was possible that they were bred like animals to make superior workers, being born not from "love" but from force and need.
        Well, I'd have to say that people who DON'T believe such are at least slightly familiar with human biology and why such a proposition is completely absurd in the context of physical anthropology. In other words, pseudo-scientific babble..

        Comment


          #64
          It isn't in race it's in ability. Every race has the ability to succeed so it's more in the person than the race. I seriously hope this thread hasn't turned into a flame war.

          Comment


            #65
            tunney5 - your phys ed instructer must've been one dumb mother.....


            to be great, in any art, you have to practice. and you have to know how to practice.

            having met a very wide variety of people in many different upbringings and situations, it seems that no one race has a particular advantage. how your raised, your training, your outlook, etc.....have far more of an impact than anything.

            kenyans are known for long distance running, but i'll take a well conditioned mexican athlete to beat a poor conditioned kenyan any day of the week.

            Comment


              #66
              Originally posted by sonofisis View Post
              Well, I'd have to say that people who DON'T believe such are at least slightly familiar with human biology and why such a proposition is completely absurd in the context of physical anthropology. In other words, pseudo-scientific babble..
              You've illicitly converted when can plausibly be said here

              Comment


                #67
                Originally posted by kayjay View Post
                You've illicitly converted when can plausibly be said here
                This is a bit incoherent.. I don't understand what you're trying to say.

                Comment


                  #68
                  Originally posted by j View Post
                  tunney5 - your phys ed instructer must've been one dumb mother.....


                  to be great, in any art, you have to practice. and you have to know how to practice.

                  having met a very wide variety of people in many different upbringings and situations, it seems that no one race has a particular advantage. how your raised, your training, your outlook, etc.....have far more of an impact than anything.

                  kenyans are known for long distance running, but i'll take a well conditioned mexican athlete to beat a poor conditioned kenyan any day of the week.
                  Yes, of course you have to practice and practice correctly, with many other factors that follow.

                  For "Kenyans": would a well-conditioned "Kenyan" be favored over other "well-conditioned" athletes of "lighter" skin?

                  I'm not sure so I'll leave it up to you. I haven't checked the numbers. I'm not even sure if they have built up their genetics a bit from generations of doing intense long distance training, which could be possible.

                  I would assume at least you would need a light bone structure to do well in that kind of long distance in the "time" they put up.


                  Moroccan athlete, Hicham El Guerrouj was a great middle-distance runner. Of
                  Last edited by Benny Leonard; 01-07-2008, 09:37 PM.

                  Comment


                    #69
                    Originally posted by sonofisis View Post
                    This is a bit incoherent.. I don't understand what you're trying to say.

                    "Illicit conversion" is the name for the fallacy of substituting a general statement for its converse. ('All A are B' for 'All B are A')

                    What can plausibly be said in this case:

                    People at least slightly familiar with human biology (are people who) don't believe such

                    You said:

                    People who don't believe such are at least slightly familiar with human biology


                    The statements are not equivalent. Surely some people neither are familiar with human biology nor believe such.


                    Edit: this is not necessarily relevant to the discussion, just giving you a hard time Brother Isis

                    Comment


                      #70
                      Originally posted by kayjay View Post
                      "Illicit conversion" is the name for the fallacy of substituting a general statement for its converse. ('All A are B' for 'All B are A')

                      What can plausibly be said in this case:

                      People at least slightly familiar with human biology (are people who) don't believe such

                      You said:

                      People who don't believe such are at least slightly familiar with human biology


                      The statements are not equivalent. Surely some people neither are familiar with human biology nor believe such.


                      Edit: this is not necessarily relevant to the discussion, just giving you a hard time Brother Isis
                      Well, **** me, if it's not an english degree at work.

                      For all my ability I would not be able to notice that.

                      Comment

                      Working...
                      X
                      TOP