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| Tags: chess, efficient, less, men, than, women |
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#11
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In this context "Less Efficient" seems to be a politacally correct way of
saying they don't play as well as men. "Jack Rudd" skrev i melding m... (Franky1998) wrote in message ... I hope that the women reading this can be objective in responding to my question, and don't think that I am a male chauvinist or something similar. To the opposite I am upset with that fact, so I am doing a researc on this. Define "efficient". Jack Rudd |
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#12
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#13
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On Tue, 7 Oct 2003, Joe Schoeman wrote:
Most women think chess is pointless, (they're probably right in the bigger scheme), men don't think about this, we just like to play. Still, millions of women like to play Chinese Checkers, Kalaha, Mah-Jong, and other similar games, who - objectively - are just as "pointless". -- Kristian Ronge d99, Computer Science, Royal Institute of Technology -"Economics is extremely useful as a form of employment for economists." --John Kenneth Galbraith |
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#14
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#15
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#17
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"David Ames" Doubtless there are fewer women chess players than men chess players; consequently there are fewer "efficient" women chess players than men chess players. That may be the answer to a question you should have asked. Ah, but look at bridge. There may very well be *more* women bridge players than men bridge players, yet there are very very few women among the world class bridge players. Wonder why. |
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#18
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"Doug Wedel" wrote in message ... "David Ames" Doubtless there are fewer women chess players than men chess players; consequently there are fewer "efficient" women chess players than men chess players. That may be the answer to a question you should have asked. Ah, but look at bridge. There may very well be *more* women bridge players than men bridge players, yet there are very very few women among the world class bridge players. Wonder why. I already explained. Different brain structure/function. |
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#19
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Bob Musicant wrote:
"Doug Wedel" wrote in message ... "David Ames" Doubtless there are fewer women chess players than men chess players; consequently there are fewer "efficient" women chess players than men chess players. That may be the answer to a question you should have asked. Ah, but look at bridge. There may very well be *more* women bridge players than men bridge players, yet there are very very few women among the world class bridge players. Wonder why. I already explained. Different brain structure/function. With all due respect, this hardly seems defensible at this level of abstraction. We have a social phenomenon: men dominate chess at all levels. We have a plausible scientific claim: men's and women's brains are "structured" differently (although I'm not quite sure what this means). You now have a reasonable hypothesis, that's all. FWIW, I'm verys skeptical that there is a simple (single-factor) explanation here, any more than there could be a simple explanation for the observation that about half of the world champions had Jewish ancestry. Or that only one has had Spanish for a first language, etc. John |
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#20
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"John Macnab" wrote in message news:rhChb.62429$pl3.1269@pd7tw3no... Bob Musicant wrote: "Doug Wedel" wrote in message ... "David Ames" Doubtless there are fewer women chess players than men chess players; consequently there are fewer "efficient" women chess players than men chess players. That may be the answer to a question you should have asked. Ah, but look at bridge. There may very well be *more* women bridge players than men bridge players, yet there are very very few women among the world class bridge players. Wonder why. I already explained. Different brain structure/function. With all due respect, this hardly seems defensible at this level of abstraction. We have a social phenomenon: men dominate chess at all levels. We have a plausible scientific claim: men's and women's brains are "structured" differently (although I'm not quite sure what this means). You now have a reasonable hypothesis, that's all. FWIW, I'm verys skeptical that there is a simple (single-factor) explanation here, any more than there could be a simple explanation for the observation that about half of the world champions had Jewish ancestry. Or that only one has had Spanish for a first language, etc. John John, The principle of parsimony, aka Occam's razor, suggests that in the case of male superiority at chess, we not go hunting for alternative explanations when an already adequate one exists, that being men's better natural ability at spatial visualization. This is a thoroughly documented phenomenon, research on which goes back many years. Are there contributions from other sources? Most likely, but take away the difference that I am referring to and the remaining difference is in all likelihood trivial, at least in comparison with the primary source of the difference. I don't know the explanation for the Jewish dominance in chess, or for the dearth of Spanish-speaking champions. Bob |
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