• @[email protected]
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    111 year ago

    there is a bigger difference between men and women, than between men and women themselves.

    This is completely unquantifiable and therefore unprovable

    • @[email protected]
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      31 year ago

      what about physical strength and the inclination for socialization? These traits vary on both genders, but generally all men are physically strong, all women are physically weak(er); and generally all women have inclination for socialization, all men have less inclination for socialization.

      Other traits that largely vary within one gender, probably also largely vary between genders, so these cancel out.

      I might be wrong about this last point though, but to just shrug this off as if this is taken completely out of the blue and rarely intuitively observed in day-to-day life, is not fair.

      • @[email protected]
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        1 year ago

        intuitively observed

        This is the biggest problem. “Intuitive observation” means the evidence is anecdotal, and without “fine tuning.” For example, you observe that in your experience women tend to be more social than men. My experience might be the opposite. And even if our experiences are the same, we can’t assume that those differences are inherent. This is because many perceived differences between genders are actually due to socialization: women are expected to engage with others, to be subservient to others in a lot of ways, to be emotionally engaged. Men are expected to be self reliant and emotionally disengaged. This does not at all suggest a difference in inherent quality - it’s due to society.

        My major point still stands: the number of qualities that people have and their possible variations are practically infinite, and therefore immeasurable. Something immeasurable is unquantifiable. Thus, to say that there are more differences between genders than within individuals of a gender is an absolutely unprovable claim.

        And you might insist on not being so scientific and relying on your anecdotal experience, but these ideas have profound impacts on those around us. Thus we have a responsibility to others to examine these biases and ideas with a fine toothed comb

        • @[email protected]
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          1 year ago

          This is the biggest problem. “Intuitive observation” means the evidence is anecdotal,…

          I agree, I just wanted to point out that I felt like you shrugged away the example as if there is not even an intuitively observed phenomenon.

          BUT back to the point. I may not have proof that women are more sociable, but it’s damn plausible from a evolutionary perspective, women care for children -> thus more sociable inclined to children. So what is your response to this and the trait of physical strength of men? These are pretty obvious no? Do you acknowledge this difference to be more pronounced between genders than within one gender?

          • @[email protected]
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            31 year ago

            Do you acknowledge this difference to be more pronounced between genders than within one gender?

            This question really isn’t relevant on its own. You claimed:

            there is a bigger difference between men and women, than between men and women themselves

            To prove this statement it’s not enough to argue that there are singular differences from men and women, nor that that difference is more pronounced cross-gender than within gender. To prove this statement would require a summation of all qualities and differences both between and within genders, or at least the majority, then comparison of those summations. And you would have to prove that those differences are inherent and not instilled through cultural socialization. Hence it being a massive assumption, and unprovable

          • @[email protected]
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            21 year ago

            You make up a “just so” story by taking something that you observe in our life’s today and construct a reason why it’s supposedly biologically determined.