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| Tags: chess, efficient, less, men, than, women |
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#21
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You will find that the psychological and neurological sciences often
attempt to find causual answers *and will hold up shaky evidence as the truth when it supports causual theories* over normative ones. Why are females paid less in work? It is proven that, at school, they out-perform males in tests. Yet their superiority here does not cross over into being valued and paid equally at work. It is because of the way society still operates along gender lines. One does not need to pretend we understand the brain. The same may well be true of chess. We could be eager to point to an apparent male deficiency at abstract mind games as caused by a difference in brain structure, if only to wildly scramble back legitimacy for our long-held assumption that they were naturally inferior. Get more women in chess and, hey, maybe they'll kick our asses, just like they're doing in schools. Tom |
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#22
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"Alsvid" wrote in message om... Why are females paid less in work? They aren't. Women are paid the same as men for doing the same job, education and experience being equal. At least that is the case in the U.S. If you are talking about less pay for the total female workforce, sure, but then you have to take into account that more women than men opt for part-time work, and that more women than men drop out of the workforce temporarily or permanently in order to attend to children. Your point about women doing better in school is well-taken, and only underscores another myth, that being that "schools shortchange girls." |
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#23
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women do better in school than men do because most of their teachers are
women. and these women practice favoritism and have equally stupid prejudices about boys comparable to male chess players who have never had their ass kicked by a WGM. "Bob Musicant" wrote in message . net... "Alsvid" wrote in message om... Why are females paid less in work? They aren't. Women are paid the same as men for doing the same job, education and experience being equal. At least that is the case in the U.S. If you are talking about less pay for the total female workforce, sure, but then you have to take into account that more women than men opt for part-time work, and that more women than men drop out of the workforce temporarily or permanently in order to attend to children. Your point about women doing better in school is well-taken, and only underscores another myth, that being that "schools shortchange girls." |
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#24
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Bob Musicant wrote:
"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 Surely you recognize that I am not doubting the principle of parsimony; I am suggesting that "superior spatial visualization" as it has been defined by experimenters is likely NOT an adequate explanation. Do these studies manage to control for culture, language and education? Of course, given the sparseness of the explanation given here, I admit that I could be wrong... This thread reminds me of the fruitless links between race and intelligence, or links between race and athletic ability arguments that crop up with depressing regularity. John |
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#25
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Bob Musicant wrote:
"Alsvid" wrote in message om... Why are females paid less in work? They aren't. Women are paid the same as men for doing the same job, education and experience being equal. At least that is the case in the U.S. I'd love to see compelling evidence of this! Do you have a source? If you are talking about less pay for the total female workforce, sure, but then you have to take into account that more women than men opt for part-time work, and that more women than men drop out of the workforce temporarily or permanently in order to attend to children. Your point about women doing better in school is well-taken, and only underscores another myth, that being that "schools shortchange girls." Oh my goodness. So the biological necessity of being the child-bearer in a family is justifiable grounds for wage discrimination, is it? John |
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#26
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marc margolies wrote:
women do better in school than men do because most of their teachers are women. and these women practice favoritism and have equally stupid prejudices about boys comparable to male chess players who have never had their ass kicked by a WGM. And your evidence is? John |
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#27
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"John Macnab" wrote in message news:9Q4ib.74522$6C4.27609@pd7tw1no... Bob Musicant wrote: "Alsvid" wrote in message om... Why are females paid less in work? They aren't. Women are paid the same as men for doing the same job, education and experience being equal. At least that is the case in the U.S. I'd love to see compelling evidence of this! Do you have a source? I'm sure I could do a little hunting around and come up with a few. In the meantime, I'm wondering if you believe that there are actually employers out there who are paying less to women than to men doing the same job? I don't think that even the most vocal women's rights groups are making that claim. If you are talking about less pay for the total female workforce, sure, but then you have to take into account that more women than men opt for part-time work, and that more women than men drop out of the workforce temporarily or permanently in order to attend to children. Your point about women doing better in school is well-taken, and only underscores another myth, that being that "schools shortchange girls." Oh my goodness. So the biological necessity of being the child-bearer in a family is justifiable grounds for wage discrimination, is it? John, Discrimination is only wrong when similarly situated persons are treated differently. That is the sort of discrimination against which civil rights law, such as the 14th Amendment and the 1984 Civil Rights Act, protect citizens. It follows that it is not wrong to treat differently situated people differently. If it is standard practice for an employer to pay a higher wage to people with more experience in a certain job, is the employer committing a wrong for paying less to a woman who has less experience because she has chosen to take time out of the job market to see to her children? Should the reason that a person has less experience be of concern to the employer? Bob |
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#28
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Bob Musicant wrote:
"John Macnab" wrote in message news:9Q4ib.74522$6C4.27609@pd7tw1no... Bob Musicant wrote: "Alsvid" wrote in message e.com... Why are females paid less in work? They aren't. Women are paid the same as men for doing the same job, education and experience being equal. At least that is the case in the U.S. I'd love to see compelling evidence of this! Do you have a source? I'm sure I could do a little hunting around and come up with a few. In the meantime, I'm wondering if you believe that there are actually employers out there who are paying less to women than to men doing the same job? I don't think that even the most vocal women's rights groups are making that claim. If you are talking about less pay for the total female workforce, sure, but then you have to take into account that more women than men opt for part-time work, and that more women than men drop out of the workforce temporarily or permanently in order to attend to children. Your point about women doing better in school is well-taken, and only underscores another myth, that being that "schools shortchange girls." Oh my goodness. So the biological necessity of being the child-bearer in a family is justifiable grounds for wage discrimination, is it? John, Discrimination is only wrong when similarly situated persons are treated differently. That is the sort of discrimination against which civil rights law, such as the 14th Amendment and the 1984 Civil Rights Act, protect citizens. It follows that it is not wrong to treat differently situated people differently. If it is standard practice for an employer to pay a higher wage to people with more experience in a certain job, is the employer committing a wrong for paying less to a woman who has less experience because she has chosen to take time out of the job market to see to her children? Should the reason that a person has less experience be of concern to the employer? Bob 1. Note that for many members of this group (including me) American law is irrelevant. 2. There are cases where treating people differently based upon their differences is defensible. What is contested is when these cases occur. For example, not too long ago it was considered reasonable not to hire young married women because they are likely to have children in the near future. Almost everyone recognizes this as discrimination now. I am suggesting (and this is by no means a "far-out" suggestion) that your argument that time lost due to child-bearing is relevant grounds for wage discrimination is highly self-serving. If men suddenly bore the biological "burden" of giving birth we would have an amazingly abrupt change in policy. John |
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#29
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I'm sure I could do a little hunting around and come up with a few. In the
meantime, I'm wondering if you believe that there are actually employers out there who are paying less to women than to men doing the same job? I don't think that even the most vocal women's rights groups are making that claim. http://www.google.co.uk/search?q=wom...+less+than+men Just a quick google for 'women earn less than men', sans quotemarks. Tom |
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#30
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I'm sure I could do a little hunting around and come up with a few. In the
meantime, I'm wondering if you believe that there are actually employers out there who are paying less to women than to men doing the same job? I don't think that even the most vocal women's rights groups are making that claim. http://www.google.co.uk/search?q=wom...+less+than+men Just a quick google for 'women earn less than men', sans quotemarks. Tom |
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