Viewing 40 posts - 121 through 160 (of 197 total)
  • If you got fired for writing an internal memo that was scientifically correct…
  • geetee1972
    Free Member

    Regardless of what some idiot ex-google employee

    You’re just being ignorant. Have you read the paper? The guy has a PhD for christ’s sake (I have an equivalent to an MPhil).

    So come on, what level of academic attainment did you reach?

    moose
    Free Member

    All the points raised in opposition to his random musing are on point but there is something that is often missed; how women treat and assist each other in the workplace.

    I have actively witnessed the savagery of women in the workplace, they’re ruthless to each other. Many times over my 20+ career I have seen women when they get to a position of authority, ensure they strengthen it by doing what they must to make sure they’re the only woman at that level. The sisterhood only seems to apply when they’re all at the bottom.

    Christ, it’s something my partner openly admits at her workplace, one of the female directors has a long track history of very subtle and intelligent positive discrimination against women. It’s why my other half is leaving for another position, she knows she’s not getting on the same level has her.

    Andy_B
    Full Member

    It would be interesting to see the stats for job applications, e.g. male / female ratio applied and ultimately employed and everything in between. You’d find it hard to criticise any company that had 5% female applicants and took on 10% regardless of the talent / experience. I have no idea what way this might show.

    To extend this further I would be looking at the background of the hiring manager. Does any particular ethnicity of hiring manager favour a particular gender? Is there a candidate rating process put in place to avoid exclusion / favouritism?

    I have some pretty strong opinions and I have objected to practice repeatedly in my previous employer. I wouldn’t say it made a blind bit of difference but I went further than most. Note this was recruitment outside of the UK.

    Jamie
    Free Member

    They’ve clearly found being articulate gets a bigger rise out of people.

    Or it’s had a software update.

    wwaswas
    Full Member

    Maybe a woman has taken over the account 😉

    mattsccm
    Free Member

    What a load of hot air! What tyres for tomorrow? Some wet water and some dry dust.

    geetee1972
    Free Member

    Or it’s had a software update.

    Sorry but irrespective of whether you do or don’t agree with him/her, to refer to someone in such a deliberately dehumanised way is particularly nasty.

    chewkw
    Free Member

    wwaswas – Member
    Has anyone else noticed that chewkw vocabulary, grammar etc have vastly improved now they’ve dropped the zombie maggot bollocks?

    They’ve clearly found being articulate gets a bigger rise out of people.

    😯

    geetee1972 – Member
    You’re just being ignorant. Have you read the paper? The guy has a PhD for christ’s sake (I have an equivalent to an MPhil).

    True, true … 😆

    Jamie – Member
    Or it’s had a software update.

    Version 2.0 perhaps 😆

    geetee1972 – Member

    Or it’s had a software update.

    Sorry but irrespective of whether you do or don’t agree with him/her, to refer to someone in such a deliberately dehumanised way is particularly nasty. [/quote] No worry, they just don’t understand that they are part of the matrix. 😀

    Garry_Lager
    Full Member

    geetee1972 – Member

    Regardless of what some idiot ex-google employee

    You’re just being ignorant. Have you read the paper? The guy has a PhD for christ’s sake (I have an equivalent to an MPhil).

    So come on, what level of academic attainment did you reach? Who has a PhD? The ex-google employee does not – he mastered out of his systems biology program after two years. Clearly not an idiot – possibly a fraud, though, as he was happy to let others infer from his linked in profile that he did in fact have a PhD. [A colossal fabrication, in terms of being a scientist, if that was in fact his intent].

    Not sure why you would even take someone like this seriously? He’s like 27, just dipped his toe into serious research, then binned it off, and he’s revealing deep truths on sociobiological gender disparities? In a pig’s arse, my friend.
    He has insights into what it’s like working for google, sure, but that’s it.

    dangeourbrain
    Free Member

    Version 2.0 perhaps

    Dread to think what the alpha release was like!

    chewkw
    Free Member

    dangeourbrain – Member

    Version 2.0 perhaps

    Dread to think what the alpha release was like! [/quote]
    😆

    Okay, got to go you lot have fun (got work to do).

    kimbers
    Full Member

    The guy has a PhD for christ’s sake (I have an equivalent to an MPhil).

    So come on, what level of academic attainment did you reach?

    😳

    (love that its now a wuilly waving contest about whos better qualified)

    Yep guy faked having a PhD, he flunked out, tells people he passed!

    I think Geetee1872 might be a better username, youd a loved it back then

    All kinds of right-wing types were writing manifestos, explaining why women couldnt vote, eg, their smaller brains- backed up with real science, cranial measurements ! or election day might happen as they were menstruating!!

    thats all this is, same shit different century

    geetee1972
    Free Member

    I think Geetee1872 might be a better username, youd a loved it back then

    Kimbers you’re being so utterly ignorant; you don’t know me, you’ve never asked me what I think or what I believe and yet on the basis of a few posts here you decide that I must be the worst kind of sexist, mysoginist right wing prat.

    You are really so very ignorant, bordering on offensive but hey that’s OK because you feel you have the side of rightousness. Well shame on you.

    For the record:

    – I voted for Corbyn at the last election and voted Labour in general in four of the last six GEs
    – I’ve taken the back seat with my career and sacrificed my own advancement so that my wife can pursue hers; her job is the more significant and important in terms of household income and security whereas I take the lead on looking after and caring for our children.
    – I believe utterly and firmly in equality of opportunity and the importance of encouraging everyone to be the best that they can be and to access the things they want to access.
    – I consider myself 50% Feminist and 50% Meninist, which I guess just makes me a humanist.
    – I believe that our history so far has indeed done many wrongs and injustices to women and in many parts of the world that still happens and it is wrong.
    – I believe that in this country at least we are very close to parity but there is still work to be done; women need to able to choose the careers they want and men need to be able to choose to care gives if they want (currently the law still disciminates against men in this capacity and the gap in choices that genders make about their work and careers will not reduce until this is addressed).

    So go ahead and label me the worst kind of woman hating 19th century dinosaur if you like, it’s only your ignorance you wallow in, it’s not mine.

    Peyote
    Free Member

    thats all this is, same shit different century

    I’m inclined to agree, to be honest I’m a bit surprised that this Google chap has been taken so seriously. These kind of arguments are routinely put forward by MRA types, and then typically ignored by the more serious scientists.

    I was under the impression that the whole evolutionary psychology/pink brain blue brain stuff had been debunked years ago? I suppose that psychology as a science is still in it’s infancy anyway so is a bit of a magnet for folks who like to try and “push boundaries”… …though sometimes they try to push them backwards, rather than forwards.

    geetee1972
    Free Member

    I was under the impression that the whole evolutionary psychology/pink brain blue brain stuff had been debunked years ago?

    Do you mean the idea that male and female brains are different? If that is the case, and if the idea of that is abhorrent, then I guess the question back would be, well why; why is the idea that there might be small but important differences across large population samples of men and women in terms of their make up be so abhorrent?

    There are after all clear physiological differences and these directly affect men’s’ and women’s’ abilities to perform certain tasks. The fastest male 100m runners are faster than the fastest female 100m runners for instance. No one quibbles about that.

    When it comes to potential differences in personality and the way that then translates to life experience, why then does that become such a problem? (Let’s for a moment assume that this is irrefutable, i.e. that there are differences and that some (but note NOT all) of the difference in life experiences and outcomes can be attributed to those differences in personality traits. I accept that this is still open to debate on a number of levels but this is a thought question for the moment).

    Why is the idea of MRA also so abhorrent? You do know that ‘MRA types’ by and large don’t want to try and halt or reverse the advancements in women’s right, we just want to have the issues that specifically affect men (for example suicide, failing/low educational attainment, lack of parental leave rights, health care and life expectancy etc) to be recognised and addressed. Why treat that with such disdain and spite? (Note that if I met any MRA Type who was motivated to reverse the equality levels we have reached, I would disown them. I also accept that there are MRA types who are motivated like this.)

    Your grasp of psychology sounds pretty basic. Mine is not much more advanced and it’s true that a lot of psychology is done in a terribly plebeian way. The highest branches of the subject though use very robust methodologies to try and understand human behaviour though it is also true to say that our understanding of how the mind works is incredibly naive.

    jimjam
    Free Member

    Geetee, you are wasting your time. Let’s ignore the implications that one of the most powerful organisations on the planet is an ideological echo chamber and has a massive political bias.

    Perhaps we should unpack what other forum members are saying instead, since James Damore’s ideas are clearly so laughable.

    So where to start?

    There’s no such thing as a male or female brain (ignoring the fact that there are male and female endocrine systems, that’s inconvenient).
    Gender is non binary.
    Gender is just a social construct.

    Are those the STW™ approved philosophical and sociological theories of gender?

    kimbers
    Full Member

    The highest branches of the subject though use very robust methodologies to try and understand human behaviour

    You need to show us this data, YouTube videos don’t count, 4000 word manifestos from guys that pretend to have a PhD aren’t going to be read either, some actual data is what you need if your ideas are going to wash with anyone. Until you try and convince us with real science

    geetee1972
    Free Member

    Actually I think gender is a social constuct. Sex isn’t but that’s not the same thing hence you get gender dysphoria when your assigned gender doesn’t match your internal biological experience.

    Somebody earlier said something really interseting that I thought was very telling and gave useful insight into some of the problems we’re grappling with.

    They said that women need to be able to feel that they are able to do far more than ‘just be baby factories or housewives’.

    That’s telling because part of the problem as I see it, is the incredibly disparity in the social status (or the lack thereof) that we assign to that role. That is an extension of the lack of social status we assign in general to roles associated with caring and nurturing and that is subsequently reflected in what we pay people. For example, a teacher earns what, late £20k maybe early £30k if they’re ten or 15 years in and yet a similarly qualified sales exec (my chosen profession) can be earning upwards of £60k by that point? That’s crazy. How hard is being a social worker and yet how much do they earn? Teachers, nannies, nursery workers etc, we entrust these people with our children and yet they are paid in the lower or mid quartile. It’s wrong but it reflects the value we put on care giving, nurturing focused people roles.

    Testosterone makes men behave in a way that is status seeking; there’s a need for social dominance built into a lot of men, either at a residual level or a very high level that then massively accounts for behavioural drive. If we denude the value of staying home and looking after children, what kind of behaviour is that going to precipitate? If we then make it financially more beneficial for women to take that responsibility and deny men the same benefits (as we currently do), do you think that is more likely or less likely to solve the problem?

    geetee1972
    Free Member

    You need to show us this data, YouTube videos don’t count

    OK Kimbers – there are a dozen scientific papers on the subject of the differences between men and women in terms of psychological profiling and the big five personality traits linked from the Youtube video. If you click below the video itself you will find them.

    If you want a more general example the robust statistical methodology used to evaluate and understand personality then can I suggset this book (written by my uncle as it happens):

    At every turn I’ve linked to the very data you and everyone else has been asking for.

    nickc
    Full Member

    why do you think there is such disparity in the pay of “nurturing” roles that are filled by women vs “Executive” roles which are better paid and filled mostly by men?

    jimjam
    Free Member

    geetee1972

    Actually I think gender is a social constuct.

    geetee1972

    Testosterone makes men behave in a way that is……

    Sorry which is it?

    nickc – Member

    why do you think there is such disparity in the pay of “nurturing” roles that are filled by women vs “Executive” roles which are better paid and filled mostly by men?

    Never mind that, can we address the much bigger disparity that we see in construction? Females account Less than 1% of labourers and builders.

    Peyote
    Free Member

    Do you mean the idea that male and female brains are different? If that is the case, and if the idea of that is abhorrent, then I guess the question back would be, well why; why is the idea that there might be small but important differences across large population samples of men and women in terms of their make up be so abhorrent?

    Abhorrent? I wouldn’t use that word, too many assumptions behind it. May be uncomfortable. No, I was just under the impression that there was far more variation between individuals than sexes, and that it had minimal impact in terms of capabilities or character traits.

    There are after all clear physiological differences and these directly affect men’s’ and women’s’ abilities to perform certain tasks. The fastest male 100m runners are faster than the fastest female 100m runners for instance. No one quibbles about that.

    Is that brain differences though? I was again under the impression this was due to muscle mass and bone structure.

    When it comes to potential differences in personality and the way that then translates to life experience, why then does that become such a problem? (Let’s for a moment assume that this is irrefutable, i.e. that there are differences and that some (but note NOT all) of the difference in life experiences and outcomes can be attributed to those differences in personality traits. I accept that this is still open to debate on a number of levels but this is a thought question for the moment).

    Because there are, I believe, far wider variations across individuals, and my understanding is that any differences between sexes is more due to socialisation than genetics. Besides which, assuming certain classes (be that sex, race, nationality or whatever) of people are better or worse at one role compared to another doesn’t sit comfortably with me.

    Why is the idea of MRA also so abhorrent? You do know that ‘MRA types’ by and large don’t want to try and halt or reverse the advancements in women’s right, we just want to have the issues that specifically affect men (for example suicide, failing/low educational attainment, lack of parental leave rights, health care and life expectancy etc) to be recognised and addressed. Why treat that with such disdain and spite? (Note that if I met any MRA Type who was motivated to reverse the equality levels we have reached, I would disown them. I also accept that there are MRA types who are motivated like this.)

    Because the only MRA types I have encountered are those you are disowning!

    Your grasp of psychology sounds pretty basic. Mine is not much more advanced and it’s true that a lot of psychology is done in a terribly plebeian way. The highest branches of the subject though use very robust methodologies to try and understand human behaviour though it is also true to say that our understanding of how the mind works is incredibly naive.

    Thank you for the compliment! My knowledge is basic of the science, but I’m well aware of the discussions within the profession. Hence my assumptions previously re: lack of appreciable differences between the outcomes of men’s and women’s brains.

    geetee1972
    Free Member

    why do you think there is such disparity in the pay of “nurturing” roles that are filled by women vs “Executive” roles which are better paid and filled mostly by men?

    I think there are a number of reasons:

    – the IQ needed to perform well in nuturing roles is in general lower than the IQ needed to be a corporate executive (this is well established fact – don’t even think to challenge it). That means you have a much smaller pool of people who could do that work and that pushes up the price.
    – many of the nuturing roles are public sector funded from general taxation rather than from a profit motivated source (thank god). That means you’re working with a degree of inefficiency that will limit the resources available to you. On the other hand, it does make it terribly secure.
    – society tends towards status orientation and our capitalist system places high emphasis on consumerism as a means of expressing that staus; a role that is able to pay more will therefore be seen as being of higher status. This then becomes a circular reference; the more status available, the more competitive the audience, the higher the pay.

    Personally I think we’ve got it very wrong. It shouldn’t be like this. Schools should be palaces for instance, and teachers should be like royalty.

    TheSouthernYeti
    Free Member

    why do you think there is such disparity in the pay of “nurturing” roles that are filled by women vs “Executive” roles which are better paid and filled mostly by men?

    Supply v demand

    geetee1972
    Free Member

    Because there are, I believe, far wider variations across individuals,

    Peyote – YES! this is exactly what the Google engineer and Peterson are saying!

    Is that brain differences though

    Honestly I don;t know and I don’t think anyone does. One of the things we’ve started to explore a lot more recently is the effect of experience on brain structure. For example, we’ve recetly found significant differnces in brain structure and wiring in adults that experienced severe childhood trauma (for example abuse or bullying).

    It could be that differnces in social experiences of men and women are the cause of the real differences in brain structure and therefore the (small) differnces in observed personality traits and expressed behavour. This then becomes a circular reference, sort of like chicken and egg (someone made this argument before; you have no control group until you have a group that can be truly outside of the general problem you’re trying to test for).

    No, I was just under the impression that there was far more variation between individuals than sexes

    Again yes, that is precisely what the paper acknolwedged and what all the research suggests (and it’s been cited in this discussion as well).

    For clarity, the questions I wanted to debate were as follows:

    – To what extent do we see any statistically meaningful difference in personality traits between men and women?
    – To what extent are these differences consistent across cultures?
    – To what degree are we comfortable that these differences, if they do exist, are the result of biology versus socialisation?
    – Does the answer to that question actually matter?
    – If there are small but statistically significant differences in traits, to what extent might these either partially in wholly explain differences in career choices or career outcomes?

    I think these are valid questions. There is data to suggest that some of the suppositions are true. These are the questions and the data that the paper the Google engineer wrote got fired for asking/suggesting.

    The outcome is not that we should ignore equality. The outcome is that perhaps an exact 50/50 outcome might not be possible or desirable. Maybe 45/55 is the right balance of outcome. Again, this is why he got fired, for suggseting this.

    My original question, the reason I wsa concerned enough to start this debate, is as follows:

    At what point does the politics of a subject over ride the science in a justifiable way, i.e. for the betterment of society we choose to ignore the data and penalise those who ask questions in response to that data.

    Don’t forget this guy got fired for asking questions that he, and others, though fairly reasonable. That’s a hell of an outcome. How about if he got jailed for that, would that be acceptable?

    Sorry which is it?

    Gender is a social construct. Maleness, as determined chemically and of which relatively higher levels of testosterone is a defining characteristic, is biologically determined. It’s a scale though so at some point even the biology becomes a bit blurred.

    Cougar
    Full Member

    Somebody earlier said something really interseting that I thought was very telling and gave useful insight into some of the problems we’re grappling with.

    They said that women need to be able to feel that they are able to do far more than ‘just be baby factories or housewives’.

    That’s telling because part of the problem as I see it, is the incredibly disparity in the social status (or the lack thereof) that we assign to that role

    That was me, and that’s not quite what I said.

    Where changes are needed is to allow and encourage girls to grow up believing that they can be something other than just housewives and baby factories.

    It’s a subtle but important difference. I wasn’t suggesting that being a housewife / mother had less merit, rather that it shouldn’t be presented as their only life option.

    It’s perhaps telling in itself (in terms of wider society’s preconceptions) that that’s what you’d inferred from my comment.

    wwaswas
    Full Member

    their only life option

    or the ‘natural’ one.

    or the one that their religion prescribes for them.

    geetee1972
    Free Member

    It’s a subtle but important difference. I wasn’t suggesting that being a housewife / mother had less merit, rather that it shouldn’t be presented as their only life option.

    OK I accept that – I think that you’re statement would be better without the word ‘just’ after ‘other than’. I know that the word ‘just’ in that sentence doesn’t have to be pejorative, but it comes across like that.

    That said, do you agree that society does still under value those roles, i.e. the nuturing care giving, people oriented roles?

    Do you think that nurses, teachers, social workers etc should be paid more?

    jimjam
    Free Member

    Gender is a social construct. Maleness, as determined chemically and of which relatively higher levels of testosterone is a defining characteristic, is biologically determined. It’s a scale though so at some point even the biology becomes a bit blurred.

    Sounds like you’re a transmisogynist biological sex defender.

    geetee1972
    Free Member

    Sounds like you’re a transmisogynist biological sex defender.

    I don’t even know what that means but I think that was the point? 😉

    dissonance
    Full Member

    the IQ needed to perform well in nuturing roles is in general lower than the IQ needed to be a corporate executive (this is well established fact – don’t even think to challenge it).

    Dont suppose you will give the studies providing that information then. Leaving aside the controversy around IQ there is the obvious flaw that being an exec uses a lot more softer skills.
    The actual answer to why they earn more is far simpler. They are in the position of deciding how the cash gets distributed.

    Cougar
    Full Member

    OK I accept that – I think that you’re statement would be better without the word ‘just’ after ‘other than’. I know that the word ‘just’ in that sentence doesn’t have to be pejorative, but it comes across like that.

    Agreed, that was clumsy wording on my part.

    That said, do you agree that society does still under value those roles, i.e. the nuturing care giving, people oriented roles?

    Do you think that nurses, teachers, social workers etc should be paid more?

    I do.

    Despite your (I think, someone’s anyway) correlation between these sorts of roles and IQ, all of those roles are still skilled professions. You don’t drop out of high school with a GCSE in woodwork and become a nurse.

    geetee1972
    Free Member

    Dont suppose you will give the studies providing that information then

    Jeez there is a plethora of papers on the subject and an easy search to make but I’ll do some of the leg work for you:

    Mainstream Science on Intelligence

    Business Insider Article that cites numerous studies and links to them.

    geetee1972
    Free Member

    You don’t drop out of high school with a GCSE in woodwork and become a nurse.

    No this is true. The IQ needed to be a nurse is somewhere around the average of 100 so clearly not even near the lower quartile. But the IQ needed to be a top executive is at least 115 and given that there are many candidates with IQs in the range of 130+ the competition is going to result in the highest IQs rising up.

    That said, the research suggests that above 115, IQ stops being a differentiator for performance and other factors become more relevant, these being:

    – Motivation (otherwise known as conscientousness), do you have the drive and the desire/need to increase your status and are you willing to apply yourself in single minded pursuit of this?
    – Experience – have you had the opporutnity to develop the skills and capaiblities needed at the next level of seniority in either a formal or informal way (usually it’s informal because formal would suggest promotion to the job you’re aiming for).
    – General ‘cometence’ – are you able to model the behaviours that the hiring agent(s) is/are looking for in the role. Note that behaviour is not personality, rather an expression of it and alternatives can be learnt.

    What’s also interseting is that the higher your IQ, the more likely you are to be socially conversant as well. The idea that IQ and EQ are separate seems to be disappearing.

    dissonance
    Full Member

    Jeez there is a plethora of papers on the subject and an easy search to make but I’ll do some of the leg work for you:

    And yet you dont come up with a single paper but just some editorials. The one which is more than a pr release has a one liner on the subject.

    jimjam
    Free Member

    geetee1972

    Sounds like you’re a transmisogynist biological sex defender.

    I don’t even know what that means but I think that was the point? [/quote]

    Nope. The point was that whilst you are obviously being as PC as possible by asserting that “gender is a social construct, but sex is biological”, even this statement is now coming under fire for being transphobic, transmisogynistic and false.

    In line with Google, and all of STW it seems, you’ve ceded the entire idea that gender is anything to do with biology but you are clinging on to the idea maleness or femaleness are somehow biological. Presumably in a year or two your wrongthink will be corrected and you will understand that even biological sex is a social construct.

    geetee1972
    Free Member

    And yet you dont come up with a single paper but just some editorials

    Happy now?

    Who Rises to the Top

    Cougar
    Full Member

    I think we’re all well aware about what rises to the top.

    (-:

    Cougar
    Full Member

    The IQ needed to be a nurse is somewhere around the average of 100 so clearly not even near the lower quartile. But the IQ needed to be a top executive is at least 115 and given that there are many candidates with IQs in the range of 130+ the competition is going to result in the highest IQs rising up.

    Where are you getting this information from, out of interest? It’s very much out of line with my experience of the nursing profession.

    geetee1972
    Free Member

    Presumably in a year or two your wrongthink will be corrected and you will understand that even biological sex is a social construct.

    Ah I see. Well I did indicate that even the notion of chemical maleness gets a bit blurred around the extremes so I think I’ll be OK.

    I’m not a fan of the idea of making stuff up just to suit your own political perspcetives, which I think is definitely happening in some quarters and is reflected in the Bill C16 controversy.

    But, at the same time, based on personal experience of my best friend, it’s also very apparent that the notion of even biological sex is nothing like as black and white as we would like to think.

    My best friend for example measures a level of testosterone so low that despite originally being assigned both male sex and mascuine gender and living like that for 40 years, she is only now coming to terms with the conflict and has transitioned to being female.

    The interesting part is that her measured testosterone (prior to medication that is) was still higher than something like 95% of females. This is only one variable of course and ultimately it makes no difference to her newly identifying as female and living in a feminine gender role. And of course, I really couldn’t care less what expressed gender roles she wants to play, I just love her as my best friend.

Viewing 40 posts - 121 through 160 (of 197 total)

The topic ‘If you got fired for writing an internal memo that was scientifically correct…’ is closed to new replies.