The Tragedy of Isolation. By Thomas Sowell.
The Tragedy of Isolation. By Thomas Sowell. Real Clear Politics, July 30, 2013. Also at The American Spectator, National Review Online.
Sowell:
Isolation has held back many peoples in
many lands, for centuries.
In the
20th century, Western intellectuals’ two most dominant explanations of
disparities in economic, educational and other achievements were innate racial
differences in ability (in the early decades) and racial discrimination (in the
later decades).
In
neither era were the intelligentsia receptive to other explanations. In each
era, they were convinced that they had the answer — and dismissed and
disparaged those who offered other answers.
Differences
in mental test scores among different racial and ethnic groups were taken as
proof of genetic differences in innate mental ability during the Progressive
era in the early 20th century. Progressives regarded the fact that the average
IQ test score among whites was higher than the average among blacks as
conclusive proof of genetic determinism.
A
closer look at mental test data, however, shows that there were not only
individual blacks with higher IQs than most whites, but also whole categories of
whites who scored at or below the mental test scores of blacks.
Among
American soldiers given mental tests during the First World War, for example,
white soldiers from Georgia, Arkansas, Kentucky, and Mississippi scored lower
on mental tests than black soldiers from Ohio, Illinois, New York, and
Pennsylvania.
Among
other groups of whites, those with average mental test scores no higher than
the average mental test scores among blacks included those in various isolated
mountain communities in the United States, those living in the Hebrides Islands
off Scotland and those in isolated canal boat communities in Britain.
Looking
at achievements in general, people living in geographically isolated
environments around the world have long lagged behind the progress of people
with a wider cultural universe, regardless of the race of the people in these
isolated places. When the Spaniards discovered the Canary Islands in the 15th
century, they found people of a Caucasian race living at a stone age level.
Many
mountain communities around the world have also been isolated, especially
during the centuries before modern transportation and communications.
These
mountain communities were often not only isolated from the outside world but
also from each other, even when they were not very far apart as the crow flies,
but were separated by rugged mountain terrain.
As
distinguished French historian Fernand Braudel put it, “Mountain life
persistently lagged behind the plain.” A pattern of poverty and backwardness
could be found from the Appalachian Mountains in the United States to the Rif
Mountains of Morocco, the Pindus Mountains of Greece and the mountains and
uplands of Ceylon, Taiwan, Albania and Scotland.
Cultural
isolation due to geographic factors afflicts not only peoples isolated in
mountains or on islands far from the nearest mainland, but also peoples
isolated by deserts or in places isolated by a lack of navigable waterways — or
even by a lack of animal transport, as was the situation in the Western
Hemisphere when Europeans arrived and brought horses that were unknown to the
indigenous peoples.
Cultural
isolation can also be due to government decisions, as when the governments of
15th century China and 17th century Japan deliberately isolated their peoples
from the outside world. At that time, China was the leading nation in the
world. But it lost that lead during centuries of isolation.
Sometimes
isolation is due to a culture that resists learning from other cultures. The
Arab Middle East was once more advanced than Europe but, while Europe learned
much from the Middle East, the Arab Middle East has not translated as many
books from other languages into Arabic in a thousand years as Spain alone
translates into Spanish annually.
Against
this background, racial and ethnic leaders around the world who promote a
separate cultural “identity” are inflicting a handicap on their own people.
Isolation has held back many peoples in many lands, for centuries. But such
social and cultural isolation serves the interests of today’s ethnic leaders.
They
have every incentive to promote a breast-beating isolation. It is a
sweet-tasting poison.