Sexism is a set of beliefs that can be embraced by either sex. — frank
There's no doubt that beliefs are passed down generationally. — frank
Structuralism says that transcultural symbols reveal the structure of the human mind. — frank
Beliefs are usually related in some way to body of symbolism embraced by a society. — frank
Structuralism says that transcultural symbols reveal the structure of the human mind.
— frank
What empirical evidence is that based on, exactly? — Terrapin Station
"When it comes to discrimination, the only war is the class war." — Bitter Crank
The way I define sexism is expecting certain behaviors of someone that has nothing to do with their sexual morphology - like females/women wear dresses, long hair, make-up and shave their legs.Sexism is not a man who hates women. Sexism is a set of beliefs that can be embraced by either sex. — frank
I started this thread because I was trying to understand why I'm seeing more overt expressions of sexism than I once did. — frank
Could I use a time machine to take my present self back to the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s New York City (and dear god, I wish I could) I'd find it fascinating -- the beats, Warhol and Company, Mapplethorpe -- all those and many more — Bitter Crank
In this sense, both the left and the right are sexist as they have adopted the same ethnocentric view that what is means to be a woman is to wear dresses, make-up, long hair and shave your legs. — Harry Hindu
What are some examples of that for you? — Terrapin Station
James Damore and incel culture. What's striking about both is that the proponents are young. — frank
That tends to give the impression that various things are more common than they really are. — Terrapin Station
Women's proclivity to say no, more than any other force, has shaped our evolution into the creative, industrious, upright, large-brained (competitive, aggressive, domineering) creatures that we are — Jordan Peterson
I'm not. While I may be in the minority on this left-leaning forum, I'm certainly not alone here, nor the minority outside of this forum. It's just that some people choose to live inside bubbles and don't bother looking at alternative views.I think you're alone on that. — frank
You're right. It isn't necessary because I never advocated for treating people the same, so it would be a straw-man anyway.The alternative to sexism is not that everyone should be exactly the same. It just seems to some people that making everyone the same would undermine the possibility of sexism. I could go on about that, but I don't think it's necessary. — frank
Wait, I thought it wasn't about treating everyone the same - as a person?The best way to get past sexism (if you're a man) is to learn to think of gender or sex as superficial. Learn to see the person. — frank
Do you think consciousness can be fluid enough that a person can get a sense of what it's like to be autistic? — frank
As far as I know I am not autistic, but one winter I became obsessed with readability and how to engineer it. — Bitter Crank
What you are really implying is that to be treated as a "person" is to be treated "equally" - correct? That is fine. I'm not arguing against that. I'm actually arguing for that. I'm saying that there isn't anything inherently male or female in wearing a skirt, make-up, or having long hair. Men in other cultures wear skirts, make-up, and have long hair. It has nothing to do with one's sex. Claiming that it does is sexist. — Harry Hindu
I’m not sure you actually believe all this socialist stuff. — Noah Te Stroete
How did you come to be obsessed with that? — frank
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.