Women are more social, men are more represented among both geniuses and criminals. I think even among progressives the resistance to accepting the veracity of both points is halfhearted.
> men are more represented among both geniuses and criminals.
Is there a reason for this that's more interesting than "Men have, historically and to some extent in the present, been more likely to have the freedom and the resources to accomplish what they set their minds on"? For instance, is there a study that investigates people's dispositions to genius-like behavior and criminal-like behavior, doing everything they can to control for social factors?
There are plenty of truths that aren't very meaningful. I'm totally willing to believe that this one is, I'd just like to see some research on it.
(In particular, if either of these are contingent on structural inequality, then we'd expect both of these to get less true if the arc of history keeps bending the same way, and long-term social designs should not expect these to be reliable.)
One theory is that intelligence is largely inherited by way of the X chromosome oh which men have one while women have two. So with women things are more likely to average out a bit more.
I know almost nothing about this subject and this theory could very will be bullshit. Just something I've read.
> I think even among progressives the resistance to accepting the veracity of both points is halfhearted.
That's because when it comes to society, data can sometimes be dangerous. Data tells us how the world looks, but whereas in nature the laws are fixed (or so we hope), society is very fluid. This can confuse people. Any data about society is a snapshot of current conditions: it doesn't mean that things have never been different or won't be different, and it most certainly does not tell us that this is how things should be (the latter is the biggest difference between the natural and the social sciences -- in nature there's only "is" while in society there's "is" and "ought" and the two are rarely the same; also, we have at least some power over the structure of our society, while changing nature can be tricky).
This is why data means very different things in physics and sociology, and why -- at least by default, or until proven otherwise -- any sociological data should be understood as: this is how things currently are; should we try to change them?
What society "ought" to be, as you say, are rarely the same, and varies over time.
At any point of time we're trying to force society to be something other than it is.
In 1700 we're assimilating natives.
In 1800 we're converting slaves to Christianity.
In 1900 we're banishing jews from countries.
In 2000 we're enacting laws that favour some over others.
None of these attempts at societal change were ever complete.
Today we're sure changes society tried to make in 1700, 1800, 1900 were misguided and harmful.
I wouldn't be surprised if society in a hundred years will have a different again perspective to what we're doing now.
> I wouldn't be surprised if society will have a different again perspective to what we're doing now.
I would, because the things are completely opposite. One is about subjugating the weak, and the other is about freeing them. I'm surprised you can compare the two! We're not "enacting laws that favor some over others", but laws intended to help communities or groups that have, for centuries or millennia been put down. If you think for one second that women or minorities are somehow "favored" in modern Western society, then you're either blind or delusional. They are still very much disfavored, and some laws are trying to ever-so-lightly tilt the scales a little bit in their favor, and a lot less than they deserve.
> One is about subjugating the weak, and the other is about freeing them.
In 1700's, europeans thought they were raising the natives to their level.
In 1900's, some germans thought they saw jews as having excess privileges and need to be brought down.
In 2000's, feminists think men have an excess of privileges in society, and that they need to tilt the scales in women's favor.
> I would, because the things are completely opposite.
They're all instances of trying to pull society from what it is to what it thinks it ought to be.
Also, of all the ways women may be disadvantaged, I don't think freedom is one of them, at least in developed countries. Also, women were never put in chains. If they thought they were being put down, there were many opportunities for them to have thrown down the metaphorical chains and shackles men have placed on them, and overcome their male masters, in the past thousands of years, just like the various native aboriginals who fought against European invaders, as Jews having the tenacity to form dominant minorities in hostile nations and organising to form their own country, and as slaves had done throughout history in various rebellions since the Ancient Roman Empire as well as participating in the fight against American South in the Civil War. Instead all we have is a relatively benign tweaking of laws in their favour. Many of the new laws are definitely beneficial of course; I'd just thought I'd point out a comparison between todays and historical attempts to bridge the difference between what society is and ought to be.
> In 1700's, europeans thought they were raising the natives to their level.
They really didn't. They might have thought they were raising them a bit but never up to their level.
> In 1900's, some germans thought they saw jews as having excess privileges and need to be brought down.
They really didn't. Such propaganda was simply used to make people feel better about the hatred they felt, and to channel it wherever the Nazis wanted.
> In 2000's, feminists think men have an excess of privileges in society, and that they need to tilt the scales in women's favor.
They don't think it; they know it because that's scientifically proven. If you want to put it another way, women have a dearth of privilege.
> They're all instances of trying to pull society from what it is to what it thinks it ought to be.
Yes, in opposite directions.
> Also, women were never put in chains.
Seriously?
> If they thought they were being put down
They don't think, they know.
> there were many opportunities for them to have thrown down the metaphorical chains and shackles men have placed on them
And that's exactly what they're trying to, and have been doing at least since 1848, but it's slow work -- just like those other examples. Have blacks achieved parity with whites in America yet?
> Instead all we have is a relatively benign tweaking of laws in their favour.
First, it's not in their favor, but a little less against it. Second -- the problem of sexism is very different from racism in that women, while subjugated, have never been considered "foreign", and so the power struggle wears a different shape in either direction.
> ... historical attempts to bridge the difference between what society is and ought to be.
Of course it's everyone's duty to help shape society in the form they think it should take, but that doesn't mean the content of those attempts can be compared -- at least not so haphazardly.
>If they thought they were being put down, there were many opportunities for them to have thrown down the metaphorical chains and shackles
The problem with that thinking is it ignores the way women are socialize by society and culture. The way people view themselves is influenced by the culture they grew up in and how society views them in their formative years and the influences they have from the media. These are subtle and not intentional.
Is there a reason for this that's more interesting than "Men have, historically and to some extent in the present, been more likely to have the freedom and the resources to accomplish what they set their minds on"? For instance, is there a study that investigates people's dispositions to genius-like behavior and criminal-like behavior, doing everything they can to control for social factors?
There are plenty of truths that aren't very meaningful. I'm totally willing to believe that this one is, I'd just like to see some research on it.
(In particular, if either of these are contingent on structural inequality, then we'd expect both of these to get less true if the arc of history keeps bending the same way, and long-term social designs should not expect these to be reliable.)