- Joined
- Apr 18, 2010
- Messages
- 27,508
- MBTI Type
- INTJ
- Enneagram
- 5w6
- Instinctual Variant
- sp/sx
What you wrote before was:Yes, women were denied all kind of things I never denied that. However I trully think that before pregnancy was bigger problem than it was over the last 100 years. Since deficit of roads, access to food and good room temperatures were much bigger issues. If you go thorugh my words I never said that pregnant woman are incapable of doing anything but this objectively is extra burden and for that few months woman should/needs to recieve more than it provides. (at least that is the ideal scenario). Also I know what was killing the children but I am looking at the effect and that was that more pregnancies were needed to compensate for that. What naturally places women at disadvantage, it is survivable but it is still disadvantage when compared with men. (since they don't go through anything similar)
which is definitely inaccurate unless a complication has required extended bed rest, as I explained in my earlier post. Pregnancy is less likely to result in death in recent times, but modern medicine has sometimes created problems which earlier generations did not face. On balance we are better off, but it has been two steps forward, one step back. In any case, men have been more susceptible to certain illnesses, and historically have had the primary burden of warfare, so I wouldn't say men were advantaged in the area of physical well-being and longevity.On the other hand women are almost immobile when pregnant
I am not overlooking social context - quite the contrary. I am pointing to it as the source of the greater dependence often seen in women, rather than innate physiology or role in reproduction. Human biology could reasonably have led to any number of social arrangements that supported raising offspring and maximized health and survival. An explanation for the particular social arrangement that eventually developed in most places must therefore be found elsewhere. Hints can be found in the way you link larger families with defense needs. Most references I have seen link family size to the ability to grow, hunt, or gather sufficient food for the family/community. A good reference on this topic is Riane Eisler's book, The Chalice and the Blade[/].Also I think you are overlooking the wider social context. If you go just a few centuries back you have just about nothing in the terms of human rights and various conventions. Therefore despite deseases and everything women had to give birth constantly in order to make bigger collectives that will be safer. Because the collective that wasn't like that was dissadvantaged in the terms of "firepower" and regenerating numbers. Therefore once defences fell women ended up as sex slaves somewhere in the woods and because of this any sociaty that was too friendly towards women was disadvantaged from strategic point of view and probably didn't survive. Don't get me wrong I am not a fan of such social dynamics but the past was quite messed up and I am not sure that there were real alternatives at the time, since it was impossble to put everyone at the table and talk over this. I can agree that women got a pretty lousy deal in all of this but their biology was the part of why it happned, that is all what I am really saying.
Men often are seen to perform at higher levels, but there is nothing innate about it. It is because they are expected, if not required, to do so, and provided more of the means of developing that level of performance.See, I've had this impression that men just naturally perform at higher levels, due to innate personality tendencies, greater intellect, greater drive, etc.
. . . unless they aren't. This is horrendous stereotyping. Plenty of women also master things, but I suspect over the course of history, women have far less often been accorded the seclusion and independence necessary for such work. Virginia Woolf's essay "A room of one's own" touches on this reality.Women's brains are like Ne, expansive and explosive, whereas men's brains are like Ni, leaning more towards mastery and the seclusion that allow for said skills. Few women can master something, that's why throughout history, now and then, all of the GREAT people in any field were predominantly men. I'll let Nikola Tesla and sum it up.
Strangely enough you have a valid point buried in here, namely the idea that not being expected to provide for oneself curries a mindset in which one feels no need to do so. This is part of why many women do not fit the classic definition of feminist. Your theory that people like me are simply special snowflakes, however, fails Occam's Razor.Back to the topic at hand. I'd say women are less independent than men in general due to the fact that they are more likely to get free shit than men. That feeds complacency. I'm sure none of this applies to any of you hard & tuff smack-talking INTJ bitches, but that's because you're very special and not representative of the general population.