| Just positing that these things _might_ be true and should be investigated was a key factor in Larry Summers getting drummed out of his position as President of Harvard. The world at large isn't ready to hear these statistics, and overall that is probably a good thing. We shouldn't accept these disparities as driven by natural forces until we've tried everything we can imagine to try to bring the differences in line. Over the course of history, far more bad has been wrought by assuming differences were innate than assuming they were the result of bias. Given that, we should assume and act as though differences are due to bias long after the differences are well proven to be natural. It is a case where being wrong in one direction is not very costly, but being wrong in the other direction (and thus institutionalizing bias) is disastrous. Tldr: we should err on the side of caution. |
Not the "world at large". Just (provincial) middle/upper class America.
>We shouldn't accept these disparities as driven by natural forces until we've tried everything we can imagine to try to bring the differences in line.
Shouldn't we in fact try to understand what's going on, instead of trying to change it because of a priori notion that there shouldn't be disparities (which, if disparities exist due to natural forces will be unatural and unjust).
Disparity (e.g less women in Tech) is NOT a problem in itself.
Obstacles to access is a problem (e.g a woman not being let to work Tech -- eg not being hired because she is a woman).
Also, why is IT somewhat different? I don't see much push for more female fishermen or male nurses, to name two random professions with similar disparities.