| > This attempt at summarizing the research is innumerate, disconnected from empirical data, and offensive. Maybe you should elaborate on why it is innumerate and disconnected. As for calling it "offensive", that's entirely irrelevant. It outs you as somebody who is more interested in silencing people than debating them on more objective merits. > Research on gender and IQ does not show that "there exist fewer females with high IQ" Research does show that there exist fewer females at either ends of the distribution and more towards the center, compared to males. http://www.aei.org/publication/statistical-tests-shows-great... This does mean that there exist fewer female individuals with exceptionally high or exceptionally low IQs. That is indeed how statistics work. If you want to contest that the research is flawed and that the result is wrong, do that. If we suppose the data is valid, then my conclusion is sound. > And there are an enormous number of women in STEM: the concern is that there are few of them in computer science. The broader concern is STEM, not just computer science. Sure, there's an enormous amount of women in STEM, there's also an enormous amount of men in STEM and if you put both in relation, the relative amount of women in STEM is quite low (compared to other fields). The only real argument here is how much (if any) of that is due to causes that aren't social. |
Negligible, based on the statistics. The differences, if they even exist, are minuscule, while the gender disparity is enormous. It strains credibility to imagine that the root cause of the gender disparity in STEM employment is innate, especially since the disparity varies across cultures and subfields.