If you learn to stop giving women privilige over men...
If you learn to stop giving women privilige over men...
You mean like never opening a door for a woman?
(More extreme: Jumping into the lifeboat in front of the women and children?)
In which case, you're going to have a lot of trouble with things like basic courtship rituals.
^ Opening a door for somebody indicates that your life is less important than theirs? No. Surely I'm misreading you here. It's just a polite thing to do - for women/ladies (in the case of men/gentlemen), for people carrying packages and/or children, for people who just happen to be behind you, for people who will have trouble with the door for whatever reason, for somebody for no reason at all...there are a lot of reasons to hold a door open for somebody, and absolutely none of them involve valuing one person's life over another's.
I was talking about the lifeboats with regards to valuing life.Yes, I see I should have been clearer.
I was talking about the lifeboats with regards to valuing life.Yes, I see I should have been clearer.
Actually, "women and children first" isn't based on the principle that a woman's life or a child's life has more value than a man's. Jeez, women weren't even allowed to vote and in many cases they couldn't own property back when this principle was established - and children were little more than property.
It is instead based on the principle that the strong have an obligation to protect the weak. Men were supposed to be stronger than women (and usually were, in actual fact) and most were definitely stronger than children. Therefore, they were supposed to protect those weaker than themselves.
And the strong still does have that obligation, in my opinion. It's just that these days, we don't judge weakness merely on the basis of sex, or at least I hope not.
I was talking about the lifeboats with regards to valuing life.Yes, I see I should have been clearer.
Actually, "women and children first" isn't based on the principle that a woman's life or a child's life has more value than a man's. Jeez, women weren't even allowed to vote and in many cases they couldn't own property back when this principle was established - and children were little more than property.
It is instead based on the principle that the strong have an obligation to protect the weak. Men were supposed to be stronger than women (and usually were, in actual fact) and most were definitely stronger than children. Therefore, they were supposed to protect those weaker than themselves.
And the strong still does have that obligation, in my opinion. It's just that these days, we don't judge weakness merely on the basis of sex, or at least I hope not.
I must disagree there. It's not about strength and weakness. Society's insistance that men were strong and women weak was simply a means of justifying the distinct social roles men and women were assigned to.
Actually, "women and children first" isn't based on the principle that a woman's life or a child's life has more value than a man's. Jeez, women weren't even allowed to vote and in many cases they couldn't own property back when this principle was established - and children were little more than property.
It is instead based on the principle that the strong have an obligation to protect the weak. Men were supposed to be stronger than women (and usually were, in actual fact) and most were definitely stronger than children. Therefore, they were supposed to protect those weaker than themselves.
And the strong still does have that obligation, in my opinion. It's just that these days, we don't judge weakness merely on the basis of sex, or at least I hope not.
I must disagree there. It's not about strength and weakness. Society's insistance that men were strong and women weak was simply a means of justifying the distinct social roles men and women were assigned to.
Deranged, I am not talking about what it is about - I'm talking about what it was about back when the principle of "women and children first" was originally popularized, and what it was about was the weak protecting the strong. What exactly do you disagree with there?
To a certain extent, I'd say that's what it's still about now - at least when we are talking about extreme situations such as sinking ships. Sure, that's about social roles - it's about men believing their role is protecting women and children. There is nothing in there about whose life is more valuable, unless perhaps it's the lives of children.
And I would suggest there was never a view of men as naturally and always strong, women as naturally/always weak. Otherwise our literature throughout the ages wouldn't be filled with warnings about women who are "too strong" and why they are supposedly immoral and must be shunned, or "cowardly" men and boys who shame masculinity by allowing themselves to be weak. I myself have even been physically beaten in the past in order to "toughen me up". Men have never been viewed as strong or women as weak, there's only been a demand that society act as though that is the case.
it's a biological fact that the male is typically stronger than the female in many species.
I don't think history agrees with your analysis 100 percent, Deranged. In many times and places where food isn't/wasn't very abundant, it was warriors who got the best food always, because while long-term survival requires a new generation, everybody's immediate welfare depends on strong healthy warriors. Of course, they are also the first ones killed, I realize, but still, saying "women were more valued" depends entirely on your definition of "valuable," and that is highly dependent on circumstances.
I cannot personally think of a single society, though probably one or more exists or has existed, in which warriors weren't highly valued. On the other hand, I can think of plenty, as you no doubt can as well, where women were baby-makers and baby-tenders and nothing more.
Which is more valuable? It depends on whether your primary emphasis at a given moment is on long-term or short-term survival. Short-term, the warriors win, almost always. Biologically (though not emotionally) speaking, if you live through the battle, you can always find yourself a new mate and the tribe/clan/whatever goes on (assuming that it's patriarchal rather than matriarchal). But if the warriors are all gone, so is the tribe/clan/whatever.
It goes beyond warriors, too. In many, many cultures over the millenia, men (who for everybody's sake had to work hard and therefore had to be strong) sat down and ate first, while women (and children, for that matter) waited on them. The women and children ate only after the men finished. And if there wasn't enough food, it was the women and children who did without.
This was the case at times in the history of my own country - Colonial times, for example, and during the expansion into the west. Of course not all families followed it - there were no doubt fathers and brothers who said, "Hell, no, I'm not going to eat the best food - everybody's going to share and share alike," but I assure you it was quite common for men to be fed better than women and children.
And the reason is that the family's welfare depended on a strong man doing hard work, and you can't do hard work if you haven't had enough to eat. Does that really sound as though women were more "valued"?
In cultures where men traditionally have many wives and concubines...do you really think they were considered "more valuable"? 'Cause I don't.
I think that "women and children first" as an active principle is more often found in cultures with more abundance than the ones you describe as "primitive." It's almost a luxury, really - a luxury born of abundance during times when people had enough to eat and therefore had the leisure to worry about things like the strong protecting the weak.
And I would suggest there was never a view of men as naturally and always strong, women as naturally/always weak. Otherwise our literature throughout the ages wouldn't be filled with warnings about women who are "too strong" and why they are supposedly immoral and must be shunned, or "cowardly" men and boys who shame masculinity by allowing themselves to be weak. I myself have even been physically beaten in the past in order to "toughen me up". Men have never been viewed as strong or women as weak, there's only been a demand that society act as though that is the case.
Again, I disagree, at least somewhat. For one thing, I have myself never read any warnings against physically strong women - strong willed, sure. But the physical standard was and still is that generally speaking, men are stronger than women. Which is clearly true, though there are exceptions yadda yadda yadda.
As for the rest of your point, yes, there are warnings against women who are too strong-willed or too intellectual, but...the warnings were necessary, wouldn't you say, because such women were considered unnatural and thus somewhat rare?
The way it was supposed to work - the way that was considered most normal - was a strong man (strong in almost every way) protecting a weaker woman and their weaker children. In some societies, women ("good" women, that is) might be morally stronger, but in terms of physical and intellectual strength, men were supposed to be superior. And its in those societies, I think, that principles such as "women and children first" became widespread.
May I just say, JustKate, it's a pleasure to read such a thoughtful, informed response. Your points about warriors and the high value they were assigned are, I acknowledge, quite convincing, as is your analysis of human gender roles. It's so gratifying to read a response that demands I reconsider a few points on this subject. Thank you very much for taking the time.
You youself have just said it was the family's wellfare that was valued, and it is this that underlies the value placed on the adult male. The man is indeed on the surface more valued, but only because of what he can do for the family- meaning primarily the children, yes, but also the women, whose social role is to care for and raise the children, and be protected and provided for by the men if only because of these tasks. It is no secret that most human societies have, outwardly, insisted males are of higher value, for reasons you have just articulated wonderfully. However, the overall goal of the society is to provide for the women and children. The men would not be valued if there are no women and children for them to provide for and dedicate themselves to protecting. The history of valuing males is as mask which hides a face of placing those other than adult males first. Young men sent off to fight to keep women and children safe are told they have a dignified role in protecting the "weak" and fighting for others, but there is not in fact any dignity in it. It's simply how their role is painted to prevent young men protesting about their mistreatment. That certainly doesn't change what you point out about women being sacrificed "for the greater good" on occassion. However, biologically women are more valuable when it comes to breeding. Breeding is always any species' first concern, and losing males is less troublesome in regards to that concern than losing females. Female lives were usually valued above men's for that simple reason. You're quite right it's not very dignified to the women, either, but as you say women's "purpose" was seen to be producing babies. Dignity and respect for either men or women was not really anyone's concern, as we know. Our ancestors couldn't afford it.
Well, the point about polygamy is that nature produces near 50/50 in terms of biological sex, and if a man takes 6 wives, what about the other 5 men? So, while that patriarch may be highly valued, the majority of men are not. In fact, they might as well not be there at all. A viable breeding population requires considerably less males than females. The majority of lower-status males are excess, and treated accordingly, which is why humans have been able to wage near-continuous war over the millennia. The gains to the patriarch and his harem of women and children from warfare outweigh his losses when lower-status, potential competitor males are lost fighting and pillaging for him.
However, and I'm sorry to stubbonly dig in like this in the face of such a convincing argument (my knowledge of history is not good enough to confirm or refute that last thought), but the phrase "women and children", and the concept behind it is still gravely offensive. In practice it places a woman's life above a man's, even if it is not agreed that the theory originates in such simplistic analysis.
I'll echo you and say that you articulate this very well...but I just can't buy it. I cannot - literally cannot - see how a society (and as you know there are and were many such societies) can at the same "value" women more and still say, "But you still have to go to the back of the food line and if we run short, you're the one who's going to walk away a little hungry" and also "And you have few if any rights." Those two concepts - being both of less value and yet somehow of more value - just don't fit together.
If they are indeed a way to fool men into thinking they are more important, than all I can say is, society is a lot sneakier than I ever gave it credit for.
You say young men's role "has been painted to prevent young men protesting about their mistreatment." But...who's doing the painting? "Society" all by itself is incapable of painting anything. People are - but which people? Women? Older men? Why would older men want to penalize their sons and nephews and grandsons? If women have this power, why can't I see it? This just doesn't fit for me.
You talk about biology a lot here, and of course biology greatly affects how a society and its attitudes are shaped. But it clearly isn't the only thing shaping and affecting societies, and I think you're overestimating its importance. If the only thing that affected your society and mine was biology, would those societies look the way they do now? I say no. If all we cared about was perpetuating the species or perpetuating our own genetic lines, which is what biology demands of us, we'd still be killing "the unfit," as people used to do. And we don't do that, do we? At least we damn well better not, unless we want to go to jail. Nor would we have birth control. And we might very well not have monogamy at all. There are a whole bunch of things that are commonly accepted by both of our societies that are not geared toward propagation of the species.
Another issue I have with your assumption is that women equal "the family/clan/unit," or that they are at least the most important part of it. But...they don't and they aren't, at least not always. The family/clan/unit is everybody, male, female, young, old, middle-aged. That one of men's primary roles historically has been that of protecting and providing for the family/clan/unit is undeniable. But women are just a part of that unit, and depending on the individual society, they might be a pretty small part. I cannot cite a reference so take this with a big grain of salt, but I believe I've heard of societies (and not just one or two) in which men consider their children a far more important asset than those children's mothers. Heck, there are probably societies in which men consider their livestock a far more important asset.
[Well, for one thing, nature doesn't exactly produce near 50/50 in terms of males to females. The U.S., for example, had in 2000 (the latest census) slightly more females than males (50.9% vs. 49.1%), and when you look at females and males over age 21, the ratio widens a bit (38.4% females vs. 35.9% males). But I concede that's a relatively minor matter. I don't know for sure if in polygamous societies it's common for adult men to not have a wife...I wouldn't think so, just because when I hear interviews and so on with Iranians or other people from largely polygamous societies, the men are almost always married and have children, so I would think that so long as a man isn't absolutely poverty striken, he manages to acquire a wife somehow or other. But I must admit I can't find any data that says anything one way or another.
However, and I'm sorry to stubbonly dig in like this in the face of such a convincing argument (my knowledge of history is not good enough to confirm or refute that last thought), but the phrase "women and children", and the concept behind it is still gravely offensive. In practice it places a woman's life above a man's, even if it is not agreed that the theory originates in such simplistic analysis.
Ah, dig in all you want, because frankly I'm about to do the same thing- I'm going to have to disagree with you. I agree that "women and children first" might sometimes indicate an anti-male bias, though I am pretty confident that you're reading more into it than is there in many (though perhaps not all) cases.
But the principle behind it - the principle that the strong should protect the weak - is an important and beneficial one. It's the basis of many of humankind's most charitable, ethical and moral impulses and of our concept of basic fairness. Why are adults not supposed to have sex with children (however "child" is defined in a particular culture)? Because the strong are not supposed to prey on the vulnerable. Why are men not supposed to beat up their wives and why aren't adult children supposed to beat up their aged parents, even if the wives are terrible people or those aged parents are hateful old curmudgeons? Because the strong are supposed to protect the weak, not hurt them. Why do relatively affluent people support soup kitchens and food banks even if it isn't likely that they or anybody they know well will have to use one? Because those who have much should help those who don't have enough.
Why is a 12-year-old bully who beats up little kids told to "pick on somebody your own size"? Because the strong aren't supposed to prey on the weak.
I really think that "women and children first" is based on this rather than some idea that men are less valuable. Of course that's just my opinion. But I hope that even if you can't accept this thesis entirely, maybe you can see that it might be the case at least sometimes.
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