Kepler
Si certus es dubita
Re: The Religion Thread: A Believer-Atheist Alliance
I don't, though it's certainly possible (even likely) that's been one of our debates. Rather than hunt backwards, I'll give up a very quick snapshot of how I feel about it at 11:57 this morning: culture strongly influences not only how men and women see themselves but even the very possibilities from which we get to choose. The vast majority of people are not original thinkers in the sense of being able to conceive of possibilities that don't already exist, if not physically than at least intellectually. The main work of culture is to take the countless logically possible images of one's identity and pare it down to a manageable number (thousands in cosmopolitan centers, hundreds in typical communities, dozens in tiny backwaters) from which to choose.
To the extent that the filter is gender-specific, people's true sense of identity (the inner self) is channeled by their culture into gendered categories.
But that doesn't say anything about whether males and females have hard-wired differences before culture gets to work. I suspect they do; including big ones.
You really don't remember our discussions on there being (or not being) inherent differences between men and women? A lot of it was in the context of child development. Well, I recall them quite clearly, but I have no desire to search thousands and thousands of Kepler posts to show you.
The things are always the same topic is a different one, so let's not cross wires here or we'll understand each other even less than usual.
I don't, though it's certainly possible (even likely) that's been one of our debates. Rather than hunt backwards, I'll give up a very quick snapshot of how I feel about it at 11:57 this morning: culture strongly influences not only how men and women see themselves but even the very possibilities from which we get to choose. The vast majority of people are not original thinkers in the sense of being able to conceive of possibilities that don't already exist, if not physically than at least intellectually. The main work of culture is to take the countless logically possible images of one's identity and pare it down to a manageable number (thousands in cosmopolitan centers, hundreds in typical communities, dozens in tiny backwaters) from which to choose.
To the extent that the filter is gender-specific, people's true sense of identity (the inner self) is channeled by their culture into gendered categories.
But that doesn't say anything about whether males and females have hard-wired differences before culture gets to work. I suspect they do; including big ones.
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