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by mdorazio
3860 days ago
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No offense, but you seem to be fishing for a genetic justification for sexism in the workplace, and I don't think you're going to find it. The only thing genetics will tell you is if people have physical aptitude for one type of work/activity, which may or may not make them more interested in a certain vocation. The scientific findings are muddy at best, with some studies [1] showing that development factors are the leading cause of interest, and others [2] showing some correlation for twins raised apart. And while yes, there are some small differences in things like spatial reasoning between genders [3], you would be hard pressed to show how this translates into some legitimate reason for women not wanting to write code. It's far, far more likely that social pressures account for most of the disparity in STEM careers. You don't even have to look farther than the kids toys aisle at Walmart - girls are marketed barbies, while boys are marketed RC cars. [1] http://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2013/05/14/18263340...
[2] https://books.google.com/books?id=YqanMBTJbxwC&lpg=PA300&ots...
[3] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spatial_visualization_ability#... |
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If you tell me that the Sears Tower and the Empire State Building are the same height (a hypothesis), you should show up with evidence that they are the same height, or some other a priori reason to believe that your hypothesis is more likely to be true than untrue (for instance, if both buildings were the product of the same prefab factory).
[1] is a rat study. How it relates to any hypothesis about XY versus XX humans is beyond me.
If XX and XY humans have different interests/aptitudes, that's a very parsimonious explanation for the toy aisle at Walmart, right?
But if your hypothesis is true, we need to search for other explanations. For instance, Walmart and other toy stores might be controlled by a conspiracy of conservative Christians who believe in different gender roles, and are willing to sacrifice profits (from boys buying Barbies, girls buying cars, etc) to support their goal of an unequal society. Is this the hypothesis you're proposing? It also needs to apply to Target, etc, all of which have the same boy/girl aisles.