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Lorenzo Warby's avatar

We are a cognitively dimorphic species, so some sex imbalances are inevitable. But 3% male in a humanities honours program is unhealthy, because we are a cognitively dimorphic species.

https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/jopy.12500

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Alex Small's avatar

An interesting thought experiment is to consider who would have to move where in order to get all majors to be 50-50. Or, if you prefer to take issues one-at-a-time, get all majors to match the current gender skew of overall enrollment, so 60% women and 40% men. (Roughly.) How many women would you march from the humanities building to engineering? How many men would you march from philosophy to Elementary Education? How many of them would be happy with this?

Obviously some of them would. There's always someone who likes a new thing more than they thought they would. And surely there are some women out there who chose Comparative Literature over Chemical Engineering because they didn't like the male atmosphere, but would be happy to study engineering if it were 60% women. Likewise some men who would be OK training to teach kindergarten if they weren't the only guy in the room.

Still, there would be a whole lot of unhappy people. I'm not saying this is because of any innate preference, but rather than a whole lot of things have already been inculcated before they get to campus. It would take a pretty major overhaul of the situation in k-12 (and in the home, and in the media) to get every major at or near 50-50 or 6--40 or whatever.

But it could be quite humorous to imagine a bunch of philosophy dudes forcibly marched over to the Business School to study HR Management or Marketing or whatever. I would donate to a kickstarter to make that YouTube series.

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