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Human Genetic Diversity: Lewontin's Fallacy

"Human Genetic Diversity: Lewontin's Fallacy" is a 2003 paper by A. W. F. Edwards.[1] He criticises an argument first made in Richard Lewontin's 1972 article "The Apportionment of Human Diversity", that the practice of dividing humanity into races is taxonomically invalid because any given individual will often have more in common genetically with members of other population groups than with members of their own.[2] Edwards argued that this does not refute the biological reality of race since genetic analysis can usually make correct inferences about the perceived race of a person from whom a sample is taken, and that the rate of success increases when more genetic loci are examined.[1]

Edwards' paper was reprinted, commented upon by experts such as Noah Rosenberg,[3] and given further context in an interview with philosopher of science Rasmus Grønfeldt Winther in a 2018 anthology.[4] Edwards' critique is discussed in a number of academic and popular science books, with varying degrees of support.[5][6][7]

Some scholars, including Winther and Jonathan Marks, dispute the premise of "Lewontin's fallacy", arguing that Edwards' critique does not actually contradict Lewontin's argument.[7][8][9] A 2007 paper in Genetics by David J. Witherspoon et al. concluded that the two arguments are in fact compatible, and that Lewontin's observation about the distribution of genetic differences across ancestral population groups applies "even when the most distinct populations are considered and hundreds of loci are used".[10]

Lewontin's argument

In the 1972 study "The Apportionment of Human Diversity", Richard Lewontin performed a fixation index (FST) statistical analysis using 17 markers, including blood group proteins, from individuals across classically defined "races" (Caucasian, African, Mongoloid, South Asian Aborigines, Amerinds, Oceanians, and Australian Aborigines). He found that the majority of the total genetic variation between humans (i.e., of the 0.1% of DNA that varies between individuals), 85.4%, is found within populations, 8.3% of the variation is found between populations within a "race", and only 6.3% was found to account for the racial classification. Numerous later studies have confirmed his findings.[6] Based on this analysis, Lewontin concluded, "Since such racial classification is now seen to be of virtually no genetic or taxonomic significance either, no justification can be offered for its continuance."

This argument has been cited as evidence that racial categories are biologically meaningless, and that behavioral differences between groups are not caused by genetic differences.[7] One example is the "Statement on 'Race'" published by the American Anthropological Association in 1998, which rejected the existence of races as unambiguous, clearly demarcated, biologically distinct groups.[11]

Edwards' critique

Edwards argued that while Lewontin's statements on variability are correct when examining the frequency of different alleles (variants of a particular gene) at an individual locus (the location of a particular gene) between individuals, it is nonetheless possible to classify individuals into different racial groups with an accuracy that approaches 100 percent when one takes into account the frequency of the alleles at several loci at the same time. This happens because differences in the frequency of alleles at different loci are correlated across populations—the alleles that are more frequent in a population at two or more loci are correlated when we consider the two populations simultaneously. Or in other words, the frequency of the alleles tends to cluster differently for different populations.[12]

In Edwards' words, "most of the information that distinguishes populations is hidden in the correlation structure of the data". These relationships can be extracted using commonly used ordination and cluster analysis techniques. Edwards argued that, even if the probability of misclassifying an individual based on the frequency of alleles at a single locus is as high as 30% (as Lewontin reported in 1972), the misclassification probability becomes close to zero if enough loci are studied.[13]

Edwards' paper stated that the underlying logic was discussed in the early years of the 20th century. Edwards wrote that he and Luigi Luca Cavalli-Sforza had presented a contrasting analysis to Lewontin's, using very similar data, already at the 1963 International Congress of Genetics. Lewontin participated in the conference but did not refer to this in his later paper. Edwards argued that Lewontin used his analysis to attack human classification in science for social reasons.[13]

Support and criticism

Evolutionary biologist Richard Dawkins discusses genetic variation across human races in his book The Ancestor's Tale.[5] In the chapter "The Grasshopper's Tale", he characterizes the genetic variation between races as a very small fraction of the total human genetic variation, but he disagrees with Lewontin's conclusions about taxonomy, writing: "However small the racial partition of the total variation may be, if such racial characteristics as there are highly correlate with other racial characteristics, they are by definition informative, and therefore of taxonomic significance."[5] Neven Sesardić has argued that, unbeknownst to Edwards, Jeffry B. Mitton had already made the same argument about Lewontin's claim in two articles published in The American Naturalist in the late 1970s.[14][15][16]

Biological anthropologist Jonathan M. Marks agrees with Edwards that correlations between geographical areas and genetics obviously exist in human populations but goes on to write:

What is unclear is what this has to do with 'race' as that term has been used through much in the twentieth century—the mere fact that we can find groups to be different and can reliably allot people to them is trivial. Again, the point of the theory of race was to discover large clusters of people that are principally homogeneous within and heterogeneous between, contrasting groups. Lewontin's analysis shows that such groups do not exist in the human species, and Edwards' critique does not contradict that interpretation.[7]

The view that while geographic clustering of biological traits does exist, this does not lend biological validity to racial groups, was proposed by several evolutionary anthropologists and geneticists prior to the publication of Edwards' critique of Lewontin.[11][17][18][19][20]

In the 2007 paper "Genetic Similarities Within and Between Human Populations",[10] Witherspoon et al. attempt to answer the question "How often is a pair of individuals from one population genetically more dissimilar than two individuals chosen from two different populations?" The answer depends on the number of polymorphisms used to define that dissimilarity, and the populations being compared. When they analysed three geographically distinct populations (European, African, and East Asian) and measured genetic similarity over many thousands of loci, the answer to their question was "never"; however, measuring similarity using smaller numbers of loci yielded substantial overlap between these populations. Rates of between-population similarity also increased when geographically intermediate and admixed populations were included in the analysis.[10]

Witherspoon et al. write:

Since an individual's geographic ancestry can often be inferred from his or her genetic makeup, knowledge of one's population of origin should allow some inferences about individual genotypes. To the extent that phenotypically important genetic variation resembles the variation studied here, we may extrapolate from genotypic to phenotypic patterns. ... However, the typical frequencies of alleles responsible for common complex diseases remain unknown. The fact that, given enough genetic data, individuals can be correctly assigned to their populations of origin is compatible with the observation that most human genetic variation is found within populations, not between them. It is also compatible with our finding that, even when the most distinct populations are considered and hundreds of loci are used, individuals are frequently more similar to members of other populations than to members of their own population. Thus, caution should be used when using geographic or genetic ancestry to make inferences about individual phenotypes.[10]

Witherspoon et al. add: "A final complication arises when racial classifications are used as proxies for geographic ancestry. Although many concepts of race are correlated with geographic ancestry, the two are not interchangeable, and relying on racial classifications will reduce predictive power still further."[10]

In a 2014 paper, reprinted in the 2018 Edwards Cambridge University Press volume, Rasmus Grønfeldt Winther argues that "Lewontin's fallacy" is effectively a misnomer, as there really are two different sets of methods and questions at play in studying the genomic population structure of our species: "variance partitioning" and "clustering analysis". According to Winther, they are "two sides of the same mathematics coin" and neither "necessarily implies anything about the reality of human groups".[8]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Edwards, A. W. F. (2003). "Human genetic diversity: Lewontin's fallacy". BioEssays. 25 (8): 798–801. doi:10.1002/bies.10315. PMID 12879450.
  2. ^ Lewontin, R. C. (1972). "The Apportionment of Human Diversity". Evolutionary Biology. pp. 381–398. doi:10.1007/978-1-4684-9063-3_14. ISBN 978-1-4684-9065-7.
  3. ^ Rosenberg, N. (2018). "Variance-Partitioning and Classification in Human Population Genetics". In R.G. Winther (ed.). Phylogenetic Inference, Selection Theory, and History of Science: Selected Papers of AWF Edwards with Commentaries. pp. 399–403. ISBN 9781107111721.
  4. ^ Edwards, A.W.F. (2018). "Human Genetic Diversity: Lewontin's Fallacy". In R.G. Winther (ed.). Phylogenetic Inference, Selection Theory, and History of Science: Selected Papers of AWF Edwards with Commentaries. pp. 249–253. ISBN 9781107111721.
  5. ^ a b c Dawkins, R. (2005). The Ancestor's Tale: A Pilgrimage to the Dawn of Evolution. with additional research by Y. Wong. New York: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. pp. 406–407. ISBN 9780618619160.
  6. ^ a b Ramachandran, S.; Tang, H.; Gutenkunst, R. N.; Bustamante, C. D. (2010). (PDF). In Speicher, M. R.; et al. (eds.). Vogel and Motulsky's Human Genetics: Problems and Approaches. Heidelberg: Springer. p. 596. doi:10.1007/978-3-540-37654-5. ISBN 978-3-540-37653-8. Archived from the original (PDF) on 3 December 2013. Retrieved 29 October 2013.
  7. ^ a b c d Marks, Jonathan M. (2010). "Ten Facts about Human Variation". In Muehlenbein, M. P. (ed.). Human Evolutionary Biology. Cambridge University Press. p. 270. ISBN 9781139789004.
  8. ^ a b Winther, R.G. (2018). "The Genetic Reification of "Race"? A Story of Two Mathematical Methods". In R.G. Winther (ed.). Phylogenetic Inference, Selection Theory, and History of Science: Selected Papers of AWF Edwards with Commentaries. pp. 489, 488–508. ISBN 9781107111721.
  9. ^ Winther, R.G. (2018). "Race and Biology". In Paul C. Taylor; Linda Martín Alcoff; Luvell Anderson (eds.). The Routledge Companion to the Philosophy of Race. pp. 305–320. ISBN 9781107111721.
  10. ^ a b c d e Witherspoon, David. J.; Wooding, S.; Rogers, A. R.; Marchani, E. E.; Watkins, W. S.; Batzer, M. A.; Jorde, L. B. (2007). "Genetic Similarities Within and Between Human Populations". Genetics. 176 (1): 351–359. doi:10.1534/genetics.106.067355. PMC 1893020. PMID 17339205.
  11. ^ a b American Anthropological Association (1998). "American Anthropological Association Statement on 'Race'".
  12. ^ Bhatt, C. (2010). "The spirit lives on: race and the disciplines". In Hill Collins, P.; Solomos, J. (eds.). The SAGE handbook of race and ethnic studies. London: SAGE. p. 115. ISBN 9780761942207.
  13. ^ a b McCabe, Linda L.; McCabe, Edward R. B. (2008). DNA: promise and peril. University of California Press. pp. 76–77. ISBN 9780520933934. Retrieved July 13, 2011.
  14. ^ Sesardić, Neven (2010). "Race: a social destruction of a biological concept". Biology & Philosophy. 25 (2): 143–162. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.638.939. doi:10.1007/s10539-009-9193-7. S2CID 3013094.
  15. ^ Mitton, J. B. (1977). "Genetic Differentiation of Races of Man as Judged by Single-Locus and Multilocus Analyses". The American Naturalist. 111 (978): 203–212. doi:10.1086/283155. S2CID 85018125.
  16. ^ Mitton, J. B. (1978). "Measurement of Differentiation: Reply to Lewontin, Powell, and Taylor". The American Naturalist. 112 (988): 1142–1144. doi:10.1086/283359. S2CID 86524123.
  17. ^ Weiss, K. M.; Fullerton, S. M. (2005). "Racing around, getting nowhere". Evolutionary Anthropology: Issues, News, and Reviews. 14 (5): 165. doi:10.1002/evan.20079. S2CID 84927946.
  18. ^ Graves, Joseph L. (2003). The Emperor's New Clothes: Biological Theories of Race at the Millennium. Rutgers University Press. ISBN 978-0-8135-2847-2.
  19. ^ Brace, C (2005). "Race" is a four-letter word : the genesis of the concept. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780195173512.
  20. ^ "RACE: Are We So Different? - Learn and Teach". www.aaanet.org.

human, genetic, diversity, lewontin, fallacy, 2003, paper, edwards, criticises, argument, first, made, richard, lewontin, 1972, article, apportionment, human, diversity, that, practice, dividing, humanity, into, races, taxonomically, invalid, because, given, i. Human Genetic Diversity Lewontin s Fallacy is a 2003 paper by A W F Edwards 1 He criticises an argument first made in Richard Lewontin s 1972 article The Apportionment of Human Diversity that the practice of dividing humanity into races is taxonomically invalid because any given individual will often have more in common genetically with members of other population groups than with members of their own 2 Edwards argued that this does not refute the biological reality of race since genetic analysis can usually make correct inferences about the perceived race of a person from whom a sample is taken and that the rate of success increases when more genetic loci are examined 1 Edwards paper was reprinted commented upon by experts such as Noah Rosenberg 3 and given further context in an interview with philosopher of science Rasmus Gronfeldt Winther in a 2018 anthology 4 Edwards critique is discussed in a number of academic and popular science books with varying degrees of support 5 6 7 Some scholars including Winther and Jonathan Marks dispute the premise of Lewontin s fallacy arguing that Edwards critique does not actually contradict Lewontin s argument 7 8 9 A 2007 paper in Genetics by David J Witherspoon et al concluded that the two arguments are in fact compatible and that Lewontin s observation about the distribution of genetic differences across ancestral population groups applies even when the most distinct populations are considered and hundreds of loci are used 10 Contents 1 Lewontin s argument 2 Edwards critique 3 Support and criticism 4 See also 5 ReferencesLewontin s argument EditIn the 1972 study The Apportionment of Human Diversity Richard Lewontin performed a fixation index FST statistical analysis using 17 markers including blood group proteins from individuals across classically defined races Caucasian African Mongoloid South Asian Aborigines Amerinds Oceanians and Australian Aborigines He found that the majority of the total genetic variation between humans i e of the 0 1 of DNA that varies between individuals 85 4 is found within populations 8 3 of the variation is found between populations within a race and only 6 3 was found to account for the racial classification Numerous later studies have confirmed his findings 6 Based on this analysis Lewontin concluded Since such racial classification is now seen to be of virtually no genetic or taxonomic significance either no justification can be offered for its continuance This argument has been cited as evidence that racial categories are biologically meaningless and that behavioral differences between groups are not caused by genetic differences 7 One example is the Statement on Race published by the American Anthropological Association in 1998 which rejected the existence of races as unambiguous clearly demarcated biologically distinct groups 11 Edwards critique EditSee also Race and genetics Edwards argued that while Lewontin s statements on variability are correct when examining the frequency of different alleles variants of a particular gene at an individual locus the location of a particular gene between individuals it is nonetheless possible to classify individuals into different racial groups with an accuracy that approaches 100 percent when one takes into account the frequency of the alleles at several loci at the same time This happens because differences in the frequency of alleles at different loci are correlated across populations the alleles that are more frequent in a population at two or more loci are correlated when we consider the two populations simultaneously Or in other words the frequency of the alleles tends to cluster differently for different populations 12 In Edwards words most of the information that distinguishes populations is hidden in the correlation structure of the data These relationships can be extracted using commonly used ordination and cluster analysis techniques Edwards argued that even if the probability of misclassifying an individual based on the frequency of alleles at a single locus is as high as 30 as Lewontin reported in 1972 the misclassification probability becomes close to zero if enough loci are studied 13 Edwards paper stated that the underlying logic was discussed in the early years of the 20th century Edwards wrote that he and Luigi Luca Cavalli Sforza had presented a contrasting analysis to Lewontin s using very similar data already at the 1963 International Congress of Genetics Lewontin participated in the conference but did not refer to this in his later paper Edwards argued that Lewontin used his analysis to attack human classification in science for social reasons 13 Support and criticism EditEvolutionary biologist Richard Dawkins discusses genetic variation across human races in his book The Ancestor s Tale 5 In the chapter The Grasshopper s Tale he characterizes the genetic variation between races as a very small fraction of the total human genetic variation but he disagrees with Lewontin s conclusions about taxonomy writing However small the racial partition of the total variation may be if such racial characteristics as there are highly correlate with other racial characteristics they are by definition informative and therefore of taxonomic significance 5 Neven Sesardic has argued that unbeknownst to Edwards Jeffry B Mitton had already made the same argument about Lewontin s claim in two articles published in The American Naturalist in the late 1970s 14 15 16 Biological anthropologist Jonathan M Marks agrees with Edwards that correlations between geographical areas and genetics obviously exist in human populations but goes on to write What is unclear is what this has to do with race as that term has been used through much in the twentieth century the mere fact that we can find groups to be different and can reliably allot people to them is trivial Again the point of the theory of race was to discover large clusters of people that are principally homogeneous within and heterogeneous between contrasting groups Lewontin s analysis shows that such groups do not exist in the human species and Edwards critique does not contradict that interpretation 7 The view that while geographic clustering of biological traits does exist this does not lend biological validity to racial groups was proposed by several evolutionary anthropologists and geneticists prior to the publication of Edwards critique of Lewontin 11 17 18 19 20 In the 2007 paper Genetic Similarities Within and Between Human Populations 10 Witherspoon et al attempt to answer the question How often is a pair of individuals from one population genetically more dissimilar than two individuals chosen from two different populations The answer depends on the number of polymorphisms used to define that dissimilarity and the populations being compared When they analysed three geographically distinct populations European African and East Asian and measured genetic similarity over many thousands of loci the answer to their question was never however measuring similarity using smaller numbers of loci yielded substantial overlap between these populations Rates of between population similarity also increased when geographically intermediate and admixed populations were included in the analysis 10 Witherspoon et al write Since an individual s geographic ancestry can often be inferred from his or her genetic makeup knowledge of one s population of origin should allow some inferences about individual genotypes To the extent that phenotypically important genetic variation resembles the variation studied here we may extrapolate from genotypic to phenotypic patterns However the typical frequencies of alleles responsible for common complex diseases remain unknown The fact that given enough genetic data individuals can be correctly assigned to their populations of origin is compatible with the observation that most human genetic variation is found within populations not between them It is also compatible with our finding that even when the most distinct populations are considered and hundreds of loci are used individuals are frequently more similar to members of other populations than to members of their own population Thus caution should be used when using geographic or genetic ancestry to make inferences about individual phenotypes 10 Witherspoon et al add A final complication arises when racial classifications are used as proxies for geographic ancestry Although many concepts of race are correlated with geographic ancestry the two are not interchangeable and relying on racial classifications will reduce predictive power still further 10 In a 2014 paper reprinted in the 2018 Edwards Cambridge University Press volume Rasmus Gronfeldt Winther argues that Lewontin s fallacy is effectively a misnomer as there really are two different sets of methods and questions at play in studying the genomic population structure of our species variance partitioning and clustering analysis According to Winther they are two sides of the same mathematics coin and neither necessarily implies anything about the reality of human groups 8 See also EditRace and genetics Population groups in biomedicineReferences Edit a b Edwards A W F 2003 Human genetic diversity Lewontin s fallacy BioEssays 25 8 798 801 doi 10 1002 bies 10315 PMID 12879450 Lewontin R C 1972 The Apportionment of Human Diversity Evolutionary Biology pp 381 398 doi 10 1007 978 1 4684 9063 3 14 ISBN 978 1 4684 9065 7 Rosenberg N 2018 Variance Partitioning and Classification in Human Population Genetics In R G Winther ed Phylogenetic Inference Selection Theory and History of Science Selected Papers of AWF Edwards with Commentaries pp 399 403 ISBN 9781107111721 Edwards A W F 2018 Human Genetic Diversity Lewontin s Fallacy In R G Winther ed Phylogenetic Inference Selection Theory and History of Science Selected Papers of AWF Edwards with Commentaries pp 249 253 ISBN 9781107111721 a b c Dawkins R 2005 The Ancestor s Tale A Pilgrimage to the Dawn of Evolution with additional research by Y Wong New York Houghton Mifflin Harcourt pp 406 407 ISBN 9780618619160 a b Ramachandran S Tang H Gutenkunst R N Bustamante C D 2010 Chapter 20 Genetics and Genomics of Human Population Structure PDF In Speicher M R et al eds Vogel and Motulsky s Human Genetics Problems and Approaches Heidelberg Springer p 596 doi 10 1007 978 3 540 37654 5 ISBN 978 3 540 37653 8 Archived from the original PDF on 3 December 2013 Retrieved 29 October 2013 a b c d Marks Jonathan M 2010 Ten Facts about Human Variation In Muehlenbein M P ed Human Evolutionary Biology Cambridge University Press p 270 ISBN 9781139789004 a b Winther R G 2018 The Genetic Reification of Race A Story of Two Mathematical Methods In R G Winther ed Phylogenetic Inference Selection Theory and History of Science Selected Papers of AWF Edwards with Commentaries pp 489 488 508 ISBN 9781107111721 Winther R G 2018 Race and Biology In Paul C Taylor Linda Martin Alcoff Luvell Anderson eds The Routledge Companion to the Philosophy of Race pp 305 320 ISBN 9781107111721 a b c d e Witherspoon David J Wooding S Rogers A R Marchani E E Watkins W S Batzer M A Jorde L B 2007 Genetic Similarities Within and Between Human Populations Genetics 176 1 351 359 doi 10 1534 genetics 106 067355 PMC 1893020 PMID 17339205 a b American Anthropological Association 1998 American Anthropological Association Statement on Race Bhatt C 2010 The spirit lives on race and the disciplines In Hill Collins P Solomos J eds The SAGE handbook of race and ethnic studies London SAGE p 115 ISBN 9780761942207 a b McCabe Linda L McCabe Edward R B 2008 DNA promise and peril University of California Press pp 76 77 ISBN 9780520933934 Retrieved July 13 2011 Sesardic Neven 2010 Race a social destruction of a biological concept Biology amp Philosophy 25 2 143 162 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 638 939 doi 10 1007 s10539 009 9193 7 S2CID 3013094 Mitton J B 1977 Genetic Differentiation of Races of Man as Judged by Single Locus and Multilocus Analyses The American Naturalist 111 978 203 212 doi 10 1086 283155 S2CID 85018125 Mitton J B 1978 Measurement of Differentiation Reply to Lewontin Powell and Taylor The American Naturalist 112 988 1142 1144 doi 10 1086 283359 S2CID 86524123 Weiss K M Fullerton S M 2005 Racing around getting nowhere Evolutionary Anthropology Issues News and Reviews 14 5 165 doi 10 1002 evan 20079 S2CID 84927946 Graves Joseph L 2003 The Emperor s New Clothes Biological Theories of Race at the Millennium Rutgers University Press ISBN 978 0 8135 2847 2 Brace C 2005 Race is a four letter word the genesis of the concept New York Oxford University Press ISBN 9780195173512 RACE Are We So Different Learn and Teach www aaanet org Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Human Genetic Diversity Lewontin 27s Fallacy amp oldid 1134178271, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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