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- From: levine@symcom.math.uiuc.edu (Lenore Levine)
- Newsgroups: alt.feminism,soc.women
- Subject: Re: Inherent differences (WAS Re: Feminism is a RELIGION! (eureka!)
- Message-ID: <C17r6D.G7G@news.cso.uiuc.edu>
- Date: 21 Jan 93 16:59:00 GMT
- References: <C141tu.DMF@news.cso.uiuc.edu> <0eeZ02B333vf01@JUTS.ccc.amdahl.com>
- Sender: usenet@news.cso.uiuc.edu (Net Noise owner)
- Organization: University of Illinois at Urbana
- Lines: 46
-
- jjh00@diag.amdahl.com (Joel Hanes) writes:
-
- >(It's also a seldom-reported fact that North American black
- > males average significantly higher in blood
- > testosterone than the general male population.)
-
- (More about the differences between the genders.)
-
- >Ethically, the right thing to do is to base
- >socialization on the differences between individuals, and to
- >provide an environment for each individual that tends to
- >increase their chance of a successful, well-integrated life.
-
- >Adopting this goal as policy, however, will lead to some
- >almost-completely-sex-segregated classes throughout childhood,
- >in which boys' greater average physical energy is expended, and
- >their greater tendency toward aggression countered.
-
- By this reasoning, should white males be separated from black males?
-
- More seriously, I would like to point out that the differences
- between individuals, especially in a pluralistic society (as opposed to
- a village society in which all the inhabitants of the village are
- cousins) seem much greater than the differences between genders.
-
- I would like to talk about my own experiences in particular. I am a
- person of Eastern European Jewish ancestry who grew up and went to
- school in a population of Anglos. I was very unhappy, because I was
- developmentally very different from the children around me, even
- though I *looked* the same; that is, I could do things that the Anglo
- children of my age could not, and could not do things that they could. I
- felt no less different from the young females than the young males.
-
- I am not sure if these differences are statistically more frequent in
- Eastern European Jews than in Anglos; but I am sure they are in large
- part genetic; and I should not have been categorized as being similar
- to my schoolmates, just because we were all female.
-
- Yes, I believe in human differences. And, for that reason, I feel it
- is just as cruel to thrust humans into rigid categories, without regard
- for their *individual* differences, as to assume they are all equal.
- Specifically, I believe that education needs to be tailored, to a
- certain extent, to the individual needs of the child. It is barbarous
- not to do so.
-
- Lenore Levine
-