Kingu Kurimuzon
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- Aug 27, 2013
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This sums up my thoughts well on nature vs. nurtue. Just like we thought IQ was first learned, then genetic and now a mix of both. I think further research into consciousness and how it relates to unconscious & subconscious cognition will not only put the final nail into the coffin of free will but move us closer to biodterminism.
And thats why intuition has it purpose. To break the cycle of a bad experience. Very right what you said.
Humanist
I think there's a mix of nature and nurture but I believe that the extent to which society is ontologically a prior to the individual has yet to be totally understood, the mind and consciousness is a property beyond the brain, the extent to which the I is a social phenomenon is going to distress when its fully understood I think, although its not going to invalid free will.
I'm saying a husband and wife are equal.
No our minds aren't really different. Women and men both have testosterone and estrogen, one just has more than the other, that's the only difference.
. Men are socialized to be tough and not have feelings and women are socialized to be nurturers and emotional and if you don't fit that "role" you're seen as weird. I literally saw a "men's" deodorant at the store that said "Men don't go to the doctor unless something breaks." That's socialization right there. Society literally teaching men that it's not okay to ask for help when they need it. To care about their health. Because that's "girly." Kids don't "buy" or not buy consciously, that's the point of socialization.
Why shouldn't it be okay for a man to be "girly" or a woman to be "manly" if that's what they naturally are like?? They should not be forced into a role that they don't fit.
I'm from more family oriented culture, but I think If western countries keep spreading that mentality, that what would actually happen, there are some parts and cities in the world which became extinct or under threat of becoming extinct, Europe is suffering from high ratios of older people and less new-borns, add to that the average age is around 70s and 80s, that would result in more old people that needs to be taken care of than young generation that would contribute to the society's development..No, this does NOT mean families are going to go extinct. They haven't yet. And women haven't changed over the years. They're just being more vocal about inequality now.
This is not true, at all.
Thanks for sharing that Highlander.
Question, was your friend a sole provider?
In either case, I think the dual earner family is becoming the norm, if for no other reason than to compete with the Joneses. This development may help men deal with a loss of income more readily when their partner can pickup the slack.
No. Individuals have different natures and choose different roles. For the most part we all have the same fundamental human needs. Differences in how those needs are best met depend far more on age, medical issues, lifestyle, personal tastes, even location, with a large influence from economic status/available resources. Sex is lost in the noise except in the case of some specialized medical concerns and specific functions in human reproduction. The whole Mars/Venus contrast is mostly T/F anyway.No, I'm giving examples of how each person has different needs, in case of men and women they have different roles, different nature, and of course different needs
This has always mystified me. I have wondered how much of the sense of being the wrong sex comes from failing to identify with gender roles vs. actual physiology. That is, if society were 100% free of any gender-based expectations, would trans people still feel like they were in the wrong bodies? I am not trans, and don't know any trans people well enough to discuss this with them, so my personal knowledge here is very limited. I have read accounts that seem to be saying it is exactly that for some trans people: their body seems alien to them, and if/when they can have corrective surgery, they feel much better adjusted. To me, this seems different only in degree from wanting body piercings, or a nose job, or different hair color. That is, it cannot (yet) address basic functionality (e.g. provide reproductive functions), and thus is mostly about appearance. I know this comment might seem offensive, and apologize to anyone who might find it insensitive. I am sharing the thoughts only to answer how one person applies reasoning to the trans experience, knowing it may be way off the mark.So how do you apply this reasoning to trans people? Are they "born differently" and therefore need to be the opposite sex, or are they "socialized" into believing that they ought to be the opposite sex?
Agreed. Culture and social norms do not change overnight. If they truly reflect hard-wired tendencies, though, they will not change at all.Agreed, in general principle. The main problem is that culture doesn't work like that. Even with a culture that says it is OK to be a stay-at-home dad, you have to find an individual who is willing to put you up as a stay-at-home dad. Culturally, that's going to be rather difficult, as such individuals will tend to be rare, at least for the next generation or so.
There is no question that men and women are different. The more pertinent question is in what ways are they different, and what can we conclude from that? We all know about the differences in reproductive organs and general body makeup (average size, fat vs. muscle distributions, certain facial features, etc.) Then there are hormones, which again differ mainly in relative amounts, even from man to man and woman to woman. Researchers have found differences in brain chemistry and how different parts of the brain are "wired".My answer to the nature vs nurture debate has always been "both". A human being is a complex system. Asserting that all psychological traits are "socialized" is an extremely strong scientific claim, as it would involve actually proving that no psychological traits are innate (or, at least, not generated by socialization). Even narrowing this to the question of gender, it's still an extremely strong assertion to say it's all nurture.
Pseudoscientific polemics notwithstanding, science finds evidence for both nature and nurture, and the question isn't whether it's nature or nurture so much as it is "which traits are nature, which are nurture and which are a mix?" Most brain studies are like this, for example, where scientists discover that things are way more complex than they previously thought. While brains tend to have particular tendencies, the mind turns out to be VERY plastic, or at least way more plastic than we thought. The whole right/left brain thing has been mostly discredited - there or different things on the right and left, but apparently left-handed people have them switched, and various kinds of brain damage or drug use can push things all over the brain map.
So, I would say to you that the same way you feel that you are trans with no explanation (and a socialization explanation seems unlikely), that I feel as a guy that nothing socialized me to like girls and have masculine attitudes. Where I see socialization occurring is with regard to how society (mostly unconsciously) directs those masculine energies (and feminine energies w/r to women and m->f trans). No hard proof, here, of course, but I see these energies as kind of essential to human nature, strongly linked to testosterone levels, and you can't socialize away the energies, but you CAN socialize how those energies are expressed.
First, we hardly need worry that humanity will become extinct, at least from this cause. If anything, fewer women having children will help to ease world overpopulation. More to your point, though, it is worth considering why men are not reluctant to have a family. I suspect it is because they have not been expected to forego a career in order to have one, to put the rest of their life on hold to be at the beck and call of spouse and children. If we continue to support women in not having to choose one or the other as well, having a family would become more appealing.And in my opinion if women keep spreading this mentality of not wanting to have a family, that would effect her and the society negatively on the long run, on a personal level because she'd realize how important it was to have a family and someone whom her life is important and valuable to, and on society level because if there's less women likely to have families, then there will be very little number of next generations and societies would substantially become extinct..
Event the early 60's sitcom "My three sons" had that one figured out; a man can be every bit as good as a mother.This is not true, at all.
Gethenian. And yes, I suspect such a society would be more sensitive to everyone's needs and issues, seeing them first and foremost as humans.Egalitarian? Or is there another word?
Would such a society be better equipped to handle and more sensitive to the issue of suicide with both sexes?
The wage gap is not a misconception, but it is indeed more complicated than many describe it. It cannot be fixed without understanding its real causes, for which women are as much "to blame" as men.I'm getting sick and tired of hearing about the wage gap. It's so much more complicated than most people realize.
Despite my leftist leanings, it's frustrating that liberal and progressive politicians continue to drill the misconception into the public consciousness
The claim sits on unstable ground, since the "modern iterations of the male" are not modern at all, and not drawn in response to criticisms of men as "privileged, violent abusers." I also don't think the womens' rights movement has painted men as "privileged, violent abusers." That's a misunderstanding of what's being said, IMO. Some men ARE violent, and some men DO abuse, but as nice guys on the internet are so fond of saying, "not all men." No one in the mainstream has painted men AS A WHOLE as violent abusers. I don't know that the author understands what is meant by "privilege," either, since in the concept it's not a character flaw but an accident of birth circumstances.
Should start a thread about why men kill, let alone themselves, because its mainly them doing it.
And would that be such a bad thing?And in my opinion if women keep spreading this mentality of not wanting to have a family, that would effect her and the society negatively on the long run, on a personal level because she'd realize how important it was to have a family and someone whom her life is important and valuable to, and on society level because if there's less women likely to have families, then there will be very little number of next generations and societies would substantially become extinct..
And would that be such a bad thing?
We have a rather strong genetic drive to be of some use to society. When we aren't, some take it harder than others.
Who's we? Men? Is that supposed to be distinct from something else? Do women like a drive to be of some use to society?
And if you mean people in general, than what's the point of this statement. That doesn't matter unless men are being especially deprived of an opportunity to be of use, which strikes me as a completely baseless claim.