Chapter 9. (continued)
Further
examples of morés that illustrate this generalization are easy to find. The
fact that so many of the world’s cultures are patriarchal in design, for
instance, is worth pondering.
Female
humans appear, in general, to be slightly less capable than males in some areas
such as large muscle strength and coordination, and in spatial and numerical
reasoning ability.8 However, these differences are slight compared with
the differences among members of the same gender, and compared with the
differences between males and females in other species. In addition, they are
differences that exist between mythical beings called the “average man” and the
“average woman.” Real individuals, male and female, vary considerably from the
mean. Some women are bodybuilders and some are mathematical geniuses, while
some men are weak and moronic.
U. of Georgia
(steroid-free) cheerleader Anna Watson
Furthermore,
objective, scientific analysis reveals that, on average, females are superior
to males in other ways, such as in coordination of the muscles of the hands and
in verbal reasoning skills. That they have not become the majority of doctors,
lawyers, and political leaders in most of the world’s societies, jobs for which
they seem better suited, is puzzling to say the least. (Women are finally
beginning to achieve parity in medicine, for example, which has been long overdue.9)
Why have
females been relegated to positions of lower status and pay in nearly all the
world’s societies? This seems not only unfair but illogical and inefficient.
Aren’t such tribes wasting human resources? Unfortunately, logic and fairness have
not been the determining factors. Cultural efficiency, it turns out, is
subtler.
Actually,
logic and fairness are just values themselves. In other words, like all values,
they’re tentative. They must serve a society’s survival in order to become
entrenched in the value code of that society. If they work counter to the needs
of a society’s survival in certain areas, they will be superseded by what the
society will come to call a “higher” value. In the case of women, motherhood was
a higher value.
Women
bear the young, and a society’s children are its future in the starkest, most
final sense. Women become pregnant due to anatomy and hormones. We are
programmed by our genetics to find sex pleasurable. We seek it without needing instruction.
The biological drive toward sex is often harnessed and redirected by society’s
programming to serve several of society’s needs at the same time, but these do
not have to concern us for now. Our line of reasoning has to continue to follow
the developing child—society’s future—now in the female’s womb.
Human
females, like almost all mammalian females, are not as capable of running, hiding,
gathering, and fighting when in advanced pregnancy as when they are not
pregnant. After delivery, the child, to whom the mother usually bonds deeply,
requires years of care and nurturing before maturing, becoming able to fend for
itself, and making adult contributions to society. In short, for thousands of
years, if a society was to survive, its males had to protect its females and to
assist, at least indirectly, with the work required in nurturing children. A
male was simply more likely to provide assistance and protection when he
believed that the children were his. Individual males who loved all children
were not numerous enough to make a difference to the long-term odds. Those odds
were improved significantly when most of the men knew, or thought they knew,
which kids were biologically theirs.
Note
also that male arousal and orgasm are necessary to procreation; female orgasm
is not. Therefore, societies teaching males to be dominant and females to be
submissive thrived, while competing societies that didn’t teach such values did
not. The logical upshot was that nearly all societies that reproduced at a rate
that enabled them to grow taught their girls to be sexually faithful and
generally submissive to their husbands. Hunting, agricultural, and industrial societies
all grew steadily stronger under patriarchies.
In
addition, these societies evolved toward augmenting their belief in female
submissiveness with supporting values and morés that, in most matters, gave the
community’s approval to male dominance. Other less patriarchal societies
stagnated or were assimilated by expanding, land-seizing, patriarchal ones. Whatever
increased male commitment to child nurture raised the tribe’s odds of going on.
Again note that little of the history of these societies was shaped by a
gender-neutral concept of justice.
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