301 11 26MB
English Pages [243] Year 1973
INEVITABILITY
MX
OF
the biological difference
between
men and women always produces male domination
BY STEVEN
GOLDBERG ^M
$6.95
THE INEVITABILITY OF
PATRIARCHY by Steven Goldberg
m
This intricate, rigorously reasoned, inevitably controversial
book advances
human
because of
have dominated,
dominate
will
women,
the theory that
physiology, males always
do dominate, and always
still
in
their
with
relationships
and in society at large. While other works have assumed that biology in the family,
relevant to sexually
is
differentiated
tions, this is the first that
why and how
strate
limitations
on
institu-
attempts to demon-
sexual physiology
social possibility.
—
sets
Beginning with
a difference between and female hormonal systems Steven Goldberg develops a theory that demonstrates why this biological difference is, and must be, manifested in social life and why every society associates leadership and high-status roles with
a simple biological fact
—
the male
why
males,
every society associates authority
in male-female relationships with males, and
why
conforms
socialization always
Steven Goldberg, the City College of tensive
who
New
knowledge of
his
to this.
teaches sociology at
York, draws upon ex-
own
discipline as well
as of biology, anthropology, and,
among
other
things, feminist literature to present a theory
that
He
is
is
as provocative as not,
it is
difficult to refute.
however, a polemicist for a certain (continued on back flap)
Jacket design by
WILLIAM
Appelbaum
MORROW
&
Curtis
& COMPANY, INC.
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The
INEVITABILITY of
PATRIARCHY by Steven Goldberg
William Morrow
New
York
&
Company, 1973
Inc.
Copyright
©
All rights reserved.
No
1973 by Steven Goldberg part of this
book may be reproduced
or utilized in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical,
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without permission in writ-
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Library of Congress Catalog Card
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77 76 75 74 73
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Preface
Perhaps any preface the points
I
make
by
is,
its
nature, superfluous. Certainly
in this preface will
be seen as self-evident
by those readers whose vocation or avocation has brought them in constant contact with theory.
readers that this
book
is
However, while
primarily addressed,
nature of the subject matter
is
such that
it
I
it is
to such
suspect that the
will be read by a
number of other readers who do not usually find theory rewarding enough to justify the energies that must be expended if
one
is
to follow the line of reasoning
documentation such reasoning necessitates. ers that this preface
This work
we may
is
is
invoked and the It is to
these read-
addressed.
a theory.
A
theory,
which for our purposes
define as a systematic network of interconnected hy-
potheses that offer a general explanation of specific observa-
once the most vulnerable and the most persuasive
tions,
is
of
all
types of explanation.
its
persuasiveness are derived from theory's three components
at
Both
a theory's vulnerability
and
of logical integrity, observation, and relevance to the elements
of reality that the theory claims to explain. Since the one most sacred precept of science since a theory
is
is
a scientific
that nature
is
never
illogical,
and
explanation of nature, one need
only demonstrate that a given theory contains fallacious rea-
soning and he has, ipso facto, destroyed the theory. Since a theory's basic purpose
is
to explain reality,
one need only
demonstrate that a given theory misrepresents observations or presents inaccurate or subjectively selected facts and he has, ipso facto, destroyed the theory. If one cannot demonstrate
Preface
that a given theory contains fallacy or that reality,
misrepresents
it
he can nonetheless severely damage the
ability of the
theory to persuade by demonstrating that the theory makes predictions, either explicitly or implicitly, that observation
demonstrates to be incorrect.
And
even
he can severely weaken a theory's
still
if
he cannot do
this,
persuade by
ability to
demonstrating that an alternative theory that explains the
same observations, the same elements of
reality,
has an equal
probability of correctness.
A
theory
persuasive,
vulnerable for
is
when
it
ment, it is
if it
its
it
is
survives these challenges, for the same
reasons. If a theory maintains
accurate in
and
these reasons,
all
its
logical integrity, if
it
is
presentation of observation and factual state-
makes no prediction
that proves incorrect,
and
if
the only available or most reasonable logical explanation
of the reality
claims to explain, then
it
must take prece-
it
dence over any available alternative theory. Even under these conditions the theory has not been proven correct is
ever proven correct
—but
its
—no theory
probability of correctness
be acknowledged to be greater than that of the
less
theory, far greater than that of the theory that
is
false observation or inaccurate factual statements, nitely greater than that of the theory that
or that makes incorrect predictions
is
must
reasonable
based on
and
infi-
internally illogical
(and which, therefore,
could not be correct).
The
theorist's position
cause he must lay
is
all his
a particularly vulnerable
one be-
cards on the table; his position
particularly persuasive because, if his cards are the highest
is
on
the table, no external factor, no attempt to bluff through a
weak hand with weaker position
a
show of strong
to succeed
when
conviction, can enable a
a stronger position exists.
Perhaps every reader will agree with stract,
but
we
we acknowledge flicts
have
all
with wish.
in the I
all
of this in the ab-
way of denying in the reality what abstract when the abstract truth con-
a
write
all
of this because
I
am
well aware
Preface
many
that this theory reaches conclusions that
most unpalatable.
find
plicit
I
readers will
have taken great care
to
make
ex-
of the facts and observations that underpin the
all
theory presented here, and the reasoning that binds these.
have been selective or inaccurate or
If I
faulty, if
I
doubt on the theory presented here or
cast
should come to
But
less.
if
much
sent, I
if
reasoning
if
is
such a society
then the theory presented here
exist,
is
worth-
the reader agrees to examine the evidence
of which
hope, interesting,
I
if
that he
pre-
he agrees to follow the reasoning
would weigh
then
sort,
I
would
I
this theory against all the alterna-
tive theories that attempt to explain the reality. I believe I
I
suspect he will find surprising and,
invoke until he uncovers a fallacy of any
hope
my
have ignored some society whose institutions would
can demonstrate that
same elements of
all alternative
theo-
are either internally contradictory or disprovable with
ries
the evidence provided by anthropological investigation. But
even
the reader finds in favor of one of the alternative
if
theories
he will be
far better off for
grounds discussed here than he
is if
theory merely on the basis of
its
having done so on the
he accepts the alternative
ability to
provide psycho-
logical or ideological rationalization.
As long this
as I
am presuming
to suggest the
book should be approached,
point:
No
doubt the tone of
I
this
readers as being exceedingly strong. tainly stronger than
way
which
in
might make an additional
book will
The tone
is
strike
some
strong, cer-
one finds in most scholarly writing and
even stronger than one usually finds in theoretical essays
(though there says). It this
is
is
a tradition of reasoned passion in such es-
important, therefore, to emphasize that
tone only
when
I
I
invoke
focus on either logical contradiction or
a misrepresentation of empirical data that could not possibly
be defended
as
being merely alternative interpretation. In
scholarly writing there
such disagreement
is
is,
of course,
much
disagreement, but
derived from differing paradigms and
Preface
one find
differing interpretation; rarely does
(which
diction
or a presentation of evidence that
central)
honest.
hope
I
logical contra-
in itself disproves the analysis to is
which
it
is
blatantly dis-
that the reader will note that I reserve the
strong tone for such contradiction and dishonesty in the ternative theories
I discuss.
Tempting
as
it
would be
al-
to expose
the inadequacy of the innumerable peripheral and theoret-
unnecessary fallacies, misstatements, and excesses that
ically
invariably marble presentation of theory
ology,
theories
cannot see
this deal,
how any
an attempt to invoke
I
this
book
less
word
if you'll
("It
will
it
"inevitability"
in the everyday sense
(though, is
strictly
go her way.
an attempt to deny
illogic in the service of the
("It
is is
become
speaking,
I
invoke.
clear to the
used in the
title
of
an inevitability that
there will always be leaders and followers") rigid
ide-
on which the
strong than that which
should mention that
reader that the
only
lift
theorist can react to
good, with a tone any Lastly,
in
founded. Nature makes a deal with
criticize are
I
the theorist; she'll give you a I
grounded
discuss only the central assumptions
I
correct)
and not
in the
deductive sense
an inevitability that in our mathematical system two
plus two will always equal four").
10
Acknowledgments This work would not exist were
number
great to
it
who
of individuals,
acknowledge individually.
A
not for the aid and advice of a
few
who were
particularly helpful
on questions concerning current biological research in the introduction to I
am
numerous
are, unfortunately, too
Chapter Three. In addition
are
mentioned
to these scholars
particularly grateful to the following:
Elizabeth Mayers, Alan Goldberg, Lorin and
and Pamela Joseph
for aid
and support
Margo Hollander,
at every stage
but mostly
and Alan and Lorin and Margo and Pam.
for their being Liz
Jack Winter, Helen Hacker, and Alice Harris for devoting
more time than
I
had
a right to ask for in offering point-by-point
criticisms of this entire book.
As
is
the case with the other indi-
viduals acknowledged here, these three disagreed at
with
my
analysis,
sarily agree
and
it
points
with any specific point or conclusion.
Arafat, Michael Cooperstein, Joan
Ibti
many
should not be inferred that they neces-
Ann Graham, Helen
Downs, Paul
Filmer,
Hans, Hilary Harding, Ian Joseph, Emily
Levine, Michael Mayers, Fay Robin, and
Graham Whitehead for new
the conversation that often proved the most fertile soil for ideas.
Peter Carstens, Lewis Feuer, Irving Kristol,
Howe, Noel
Iverson, Irving
Robert Martinson, Douglas Pullman, Edward Sagarin,
Charles Winick, and Betty Yorburg for aid, encouragement, and helpful suggestions.
Rabbi Robert Gordis for his rendering of
"May
the answer to the final question lead
my him
dedicatory line, finally
home
to
peace."
James Landis of William Morrow for courage and reason
in
an
industry not noted for these qualities.
Steven Goldberg
New
York, 1972
11
—
Contents
Preface
PARTI Section One:
Preliminary Anthropological
and Biological Considerations
21
Chapter One:
A
23
The Question
of
Question and Some Ground Rules
Male and Female
—
Superiority and
Inferiority
Chapter
Two
:
Anthropology and the Limits of Societal
29
Variation
Mode
of
Investigation
—Male
—The
Universality
of
Patri-
Dominance Defined and Discovered Male Dominance Male Attainment of High-Status Roles and Positions Two Hypotheses Tested The Feminist Assumption The archy
The
—
Universality of
—
—The "Amazons" —The Meaning of
Evolutionary Fallacy
and the
The Relevance
—
—
"Prehistoric Matriarchies"
Universality
of Cultural Variation
Chapter Three: The Hormonal Factor
74
Anal—The Dangers of ogy— Human Hermaphrodites —Testosterone and Ag— Human Aggression—The of Introductory
Note
Biological
gression
Irrelevance
Exceptions 13
Contents Section
The Theory
Two:
of the Inevitability of Patriarchy
101
Chapter Four: Male Aggression and the Attainment of Power, Authority, and Status If
103
Male Aggression Were the Only Difference
tion to Biological Reality
.
.
.
Conforma— — Discrimination of —
Aggression and Attainment
Socialization's
a Sort
Fifty-One Percent of the Vote
"Oppression"
Chapter Five: The Societal Manifestations of Male
115
Aggression
Why ity
in
—
—The Mbuti —The Limits of Exaggeration of — —A Diand "Revolutionary"
All Societies Differentiate the Sexes
Pygmies
—Modern
Social
Societies
Possibil-
the Biological
Industrial
gression: Race
Patriarchy
Societies
and Sex
PART
II
Section Three:
Objections and Implications
131
Chapter Six: The Inadequacy of a Nonbiological Ex-
133
planation
— — — Psychobiological Limitations on Human Mal-
The Weight of the Evidence The Environmentalist's Dilemma The Future in Feminist Theory and in Reality
leability
Chapter Seven: Confusion and Fallacy in the Feminist
158
Analysis
—
—
The Necessity of Theory Four Fallacies Vulgarized Marxism The Failure to Ask "Why" A Digression: The Obscurantism of an Inadequate Analysis
—
—
14
—
Contents
Section Four:
Maleness, Cognitive Aptitudes,
Performance, and Genius
185
Chapter Eight: Possible Sexual Differentiation in Cog-
187
nitive Aptitudes
Introductory
Note
in Anticipation of the
Sexual Differences in Types of Cognition:
Deluge Is
Biology
— Some Theoretical Problems with Nonbiological Explanation — The Hormonal of — Feminist Research—MasLogic — An Environmentalist Objection a Totally
Irrelevant?
Basis
Differentiated Intelligence
culine
Chapter Nine: High Genius in the Arts and Sciences
The Relevance The Question
of
Male Biology
211
of Genius
PART
III
Section Five:
Male and Female
221
Chapter Ten: Male and Female
223
Epilogue
230
Addendum Some Additional Comments on
the Universality of
Male Dominance
237
Index
246
15
Numquam est
-Cicero,
naturam mos vinceret;
enim ea semper
invicta
.
.
.
Tusculanae Disputationes, 5.27.78
PARTI
Section
One
Preliminary Anthropological
and Biological Considerations
Chapter One
A
Question and Some Ground Rules
The Question Perhaps
We
of
Male and Female
at the core of
our certainty there are only questions.
can tolerate our lives and our societies can endure be-
cause
we
are rarely forced to encounter the uncertainty that
underlies so
unrest
we
many of our when such
feel
beliefs.
But to acknowledge the
uncertainty
is
exposed
is
not to
prove that our beliefs were necessarily founded on incorrect assumptions.
The
introduction of doubt serves a powerful
function, but
it is
one of raising questions, not of providing
answers. That
is
the job of those for
able than anyone else
when
their
most
challenged, at least they are forced to
them
ideas are central
people are rendered no
to existence; if such
tolerates
whom
at all.
At
less
uncomfort-
basic assumptions are
remember why
this point they
society
must leave the
se-
with which they had been pre-
curity of the esoteric studies
occupied so that they might reconsider the questions that are integral not only to those esoteric studies but to the beliefs
and practices of
all
mankind.
Until recently no one had even questioned the assumptions
from which had flowed our conceptions of man and woman.
We
had, until recently, tended to accept masculinity and
femininity and male and female functions as
somehow
spring-
ing from our male and female natures and were satisfied to
allow the strength of our beliefs to compensate for the depth of our ignorance. If for no other reason than
23
this,
the bi-
Preliminary Anthropological and Biological Considerations ologist, the anthropologist, the psychologist,
new
ogist are in the debt of the
there
any single question that
is
and most it is
this
:
scientific
and the
sociol-
feminist movement. 1 For is
if
at the center of all artistic
thought (to say nothing of our daily lives)
what are men and women and
to
what degree must
male-female differences be manifested in societal expectations, values,
and
institutions? It
myself and that
is
it is
to this question that
that
and
Inferiority
seems that there
is
human penchant
a
perhaps necessary for daily scientist
may
understandable, and
attitudes to color his it
essay that at
is
but
it is
the bane of science.
observe the attitudes of others in an
tempt to explain these Therefore
life,
attitudes, but if
work, then his work will be worthless.
mind throughout
necessary to bear in
no point am
inferior to the other. It
is
superior to the other as
perior to another, and a general
at-
he allows his subjective
I
it is
as it
this
intimating that science can ever
lead one to the general conclusion that
is
for perceiving
is
differences in subjective terms. This
The
addressed
I
found that the theory
I
presented here has developed.
Superiority It
is
from the answers
one sex
is
superior or
meaningless to say that one sex is
to say that
one
society
is
su-
meaningless for the same reason:
judgment of superiority or
inferiority has
only in the context of one's personal value system.
meaning It is
not
surprising that one's appraisal of superiority will usually reflect
one's sex or society, but, for whatever reasons,
some
will
should be emphasized that when I refer to "feminists" I refer to who propose an environmentalist analysis of sexually differentiated behavior and institutions and who deny the determinativeness of sexual biology to individual behavior and social institutions. However, those who would dismiss these theoretical considerations in order to concentrate on pragmatic political and economic policies might note the discussion in Chapter Seven. All political policy is predicated on one or another conception of the nature of men and women and any political policy making incorrect assumptions that ignore behaviorally relevant innate sexual differences will, if such differences exist, be doomed to 1 It
those theorists
failure.
24
A
Question and Some Ground Rules
view the other sex or another society
as superior. In neither
We
can, however, speak of
we
case are
dealing with science.
superiority in a specific area.
height and
American
women
society
Men
have a "superiority" in
are superior at singing the upper register.
superior to that of the Mbuti
is
Pygmy
in
the ability to produce consumer goods, while Mbuti society is
superior to American society in the ability to inculcate
hunting only
if
skills
in
its
one says that
United States
is
members.
men
objectivity
Scientific
is
lost
are superior in general or that the
superior in general, for to do this one must
subjectively select a set of criteria.
The overwhelming number
of
men and women
society realize this intuitively. Anthropologists at
women
length of the areas in which
superior to men.
women
It
on these
is
have written
are unquestionably
abilities
have eternally based their joy
in every
that the world's
just as
men have em-
phasized their singular abilities and identified with their man-
hood. Indeed, while an essay on patriarchy must emphasize the factors that are emphasized here,
would be
patriarchal even if
less-aggressive
whether
we
societies
nothing more than
forced into feminine behavior as response
male aggression, the likelihood
to the fact of that,
men
and while
women were
are referring to
is
overwhelming
woman's response to male woman's universal
aggression or to the emotions underlying role as life creator
and
life sustainer,
feminine behavior and
the institutions that are related to this behavior are as inevitable as patriarchy
Perhaps one
and are inevitable for the same reasons.
who wished
to
examine not patriarchy and male
dominance but woman's universal
role of creator
and keeper
of society's emotional resources could invoke a line of rea-
soning complementing that introduced below.
The author
of such an examination could invoke a line of reasoning identical to that used in this
women
book and could demonstrate
will inevitably hold the
cating emotionality in the
powers necessary for
members of every 25
that
incul-
society and, to
Preliminary Anthropological and Biological Considerations a great extent, determining the very kind of people a society is
to produce.
Even
if
one deals only within the context of "power" (in
male-female and familial relationships), neither male domi-
we
nance nor the other male characteristics necessarily imply that
male aggression
is
discuss
shall
more
effective than
feminine behavior. Male dominance does not necessarily mean that males will achieve their goals
we
will achieve theirs if
more often than females
limit ourselves to dyadic (two-person,
and familial
in this case, male-female)
(The
relationships.
factor that engenders political patriarchy does render impossible a political authority system not ruled
sons
that
we
more
could
on a dyadic or familial
interesting case that,
are
by men, for
One
soon examine.)
shall
men
are at utilizing masculine abilities to
women
achieve theirs. Indeed, the
of every society possess
the emotional skills necessary to "get around"
"get their
(who
feeling that she must "get around" a
acknowledged by individual emotions and
we male dominance. Some
values to have authority)
hallmark of
power cieties
men and
in these terms
is,
authority
is
invested.
societal
sociologists have defined
—women
are
—even
in so-
maintain a high
more powerful
men
situations than are the
The
man
shall see momentarily, a
as the Shtetl that
degree of male dominance
and dyadic
as
and have suggested that
and subcultures such
familial
to
way" despite the male's superior aggression. How-
woman's is
women
level,
successful at utilizing feminine abilities to achieve
their goals than
ever, a
rea-
make an
in
in
whom
line of reasoning supporting this
hypothesis would not necessarily conflict with any statement in
this
book. Such an analysis might conclude that even
though the
women
thority of the
of every society acknowledge the au-
male even on a dyadic
way more often than not by to "get
around" men.
that sees the "real"
An
level,
utilizing their
they get their
feminine
ability
analysis of dyadic or familial groups
power
as controlled
26
by women's superior
A
Question and Some Ground Rules
emotional powers
is
the virtual opposite of the analysis of
the environmentalists, behaviorists, and feminists. For such
an analysis emphasizes the positive, power-engendering pects of femininity
and implies
behavior desired by the feminists would force with
men on male
to a reduction in
as-
that the reduction in fe?ninine
women
to deal
terms and that this ivould inevitably lead
women 's
The
real poiver.
who
feminist
denies the biological basis of femininity, the necessity of
femininity as the only defense against male aggression, and the likelihood that femininity
is
for attaining dyadic or familial
clusion that the
women
power
is
greatest strength
left
with the con-
of every society have acted in a
feminine way out of stupidity. sis
women's
emphasizing the informal,
I
think not.
Though an
analy-
real power of femininity might
take on Strindbergian overtones,
could proceed without
it
theoretical contradiction or obvious factual inaccuracy. This
cannot be said of the feminist line of reasoning, which
we
shall discuss.
appreciate that one
I
who
defines those qualities
which are associated with the male
somehow
as
and
roles
better than
those which are associated with the female will find no solace in the inherent impossibility of the scientist ever declaring
one sex superior
to the other. I realize too that, because this
book concentrates on patriarchy and male dominance, one
who
book
is
biased in a male direction and will react negatively. This
is
reads
it
through feminist eyes will
unavoidable because
we
are focusing
phasized by the feminists. If a to be relatively tall elastic,
who
on the very
woman
and muscular than
feels that
areas it
is
em-
better
relatively short
and
she will ignore the evidence presented by the biologist
demonstrates that height and muscularity will be asso-
ciated with the
can argue that the
feel that the
men
man whether
when
a society
to risk their lives
she likes is
it
or not.
endangered the
The
while they remain safely
and she can argue that the woman's longevity 27
feminist
women is
at
"get"
home,
superior to
Preliminary Anthropological and Biological Considerations
the male's dominance. But to
if
she believes that
rather than with the creation of
perpetual disappointment.
good and what be,
it is
preferable
have one's sex associated with authority and leadership
is
is
bad,
life,
then she
is
To make judgments
doomed
to
of what
is
what should be and what should not
without the realm of science; science can never validate
or invalidate subjective appraisals. Science speaks only of
what
is
ability,
and what, within the
must
be.
28
limits of mathematical prob-
Chapter
Two
Anthropology and the Limits of Societal Variation
Mode
of Investigation
Reassessment of formerly unquestioned assumptions chal-
modes of
lenges the ability of any single discipline's quiry; the
body of
analytic
one large area of
successfully dealing with investigation of reality
is
often taxed
situation obtains to
when
forced to deal with another. This
some extent when the
to investigate the nature of patriarchy
and
is
all his
human
may be
is
For in
biology.
investigations the sociologist deals with social
behavior which
and he
sociologist attempts
and male dominance
faced with the strong possibility that these
inevitable social manifestations of
nearly
in-
methods which has grown by
falls
within the limits of biological possibility
rarely forced to
cal behavior, for
human
possi-
such limits. In his study of
politi-
examine the
bility or the forces that set
limits of
example, the sociologist has always assumed
that leadership in any society will be
male dominated and he
has concentrated on developing the methods of inquiry necessary for investigation within that theoretical a result, in our investigation of patriarchy, utilize the It is
methods and findings of
a
framework. As
we
will have to
number of
important to emphasize that this
disciplines.
not a sociological,
is
anthropological, or economic analysis per
se.
that attempts to demonstrate the limitations
imposed on
possibility
form
its
and the impossibility of
a theory social
a society's failing to con-
institutions to these limitations.
29
It is
Within the
limita-
Preliminary Anthropological and Biological Considerations
considerable
tions
variation
anthropological, or economic analysis
from one
sociological,
would attempt
and explain the configurations of
scribe
A
possible.
is
to de-
factors that differ
society to another in order to discover the differ-
ing etiologies of differing institutions in terms of methods of socialization, the social
dividuals,
economic
meanings attached to behavior by
in-
necessities, the structures of various sys-
tems within various social systems and the connections be-
tween them, and
all
the other considerations which are the
concern of the sociologist, the anthropologist, and the econ-
The
omist.
theory presented here
of analyses in that
—
is
important to these sorts
theory of limits
if this
is
correct
—any
analysis that hypothesizes elements that fall outside the limits
of possibility described here, or that contains the implication that such elements could exist in a real society, to
would have
be wrong. Since every society that has ever existed
falls
within the limits described by this theory, no analysis of any particular society
demonstrated to be incorrect by
is
theory. Furthermore, it
if
the theory presented herein
is
demonstrates that no theoretical analysis which limits the
to
sociological,
level can ever
and
hope
institutions
The
we
anthropological,
cultural
or
this
correct itself
economic
to explain the causation of the behavior shall discuss.
Universality of Patriarchy and male dominance used
The
definitions of patriarchy
this
book, while they are similar to the orthodox anthro-
pological definitions, will be is
stated here. Patriarchy
litical,
is
meant
to
in
connote no more than
any system of organization (po-
economic, religious, or social) that associates authority
and leadership primarily with males and
in
which males
fill
the vast majority of authority and leadership positions. 2 Pa2 In
order to avoid the confusion that could arise from the fact that number of ways, it is
the terms patriarchy and matriarchy are used in a
necessary definitions
here is
to
enumerate the alternative
definitions.
None
inherently superior to the others, though agreement
30
of
the
would
Anthropology and the Limits of Societal Variation triarchy refers only to suprafamilial levels of organization;
authority in familial
and dyadic relationships
the term male dominance. Patriarchy
is
is
described by
universal. For all the
variety different societies have demonstrated in developing different types of political,
economic, religious, and social
systems, there has never been a society that has failed to
be convenient. One is free to favor any of the alternative pairs of definitions as long as he appreciates that the terms will then be irrelevant to this book so that he will be forced to appropriate or invent other terms to substitute for patriarchy and matriarchy as I use the terms. The point is that authority and leadership are, and always have been, associated with the male in every society, and
patriarchy
it
is
to this that
I
refer
when
I
say that
universal and that there has never been a matriarchy.
is
The
and some American anthropologists use the terms patriarchate and matriarchate where I use the terms patriarchy and matriarchy, and all agree that there has never been a matriarchate. They use patriarchy and matriarchy to refer to lineage and residence: a matriarchy is a society which is both matrilineal and matrilocal. It is this usage, combined with the mistaken belief that there have been prehistoric matriarchies and Amazonian societies (discussed below), which accounts for the widespread misconception that there have been societies which have failed to associate suprafamilial authority with the male. In matrilineal-matrilocal British
even within the family, is associated with the male, though occasionally with the mother's brother, rather than with the father. Sociologists often use patriarchy and matriarchy to refer to various aspects of familial authority. As we shall see, the ethnographic evidence demonstrates that, even if we use the terms in this sense, there has never been a matriarchy. The press occasionally uses the term Black matriarchy to describe a situation in which certain economic factors (such as welfare regulations which prohibit welfare for families in which the male lives in the household) force a minority of black women to assume authority in the home. This situation is not matriarchy in the sense we use the term (Black political and religious leaders are nearly always male) nor is it even female familial dominance; the term jemale dominance would have meaning only if the family included a male adult but vested authority in the female. Obviously if there is no male in the household, authority will have to be vested in a female. The question we are dealing with is why no society or group anywhere ever associates authority with a female when an equivalent male is available. Finally, the term gynecocracy
societies, as in all others, authority,
has occasionally been used to describe an
(imaginary) society in which run by women. None of the above uses of patriarchy should be confused with the term male dominance, as I use it. Male
government
is
refers to the feeling of men and women that the male's will dominates the female's. It may be related to patriarchy in any number of ways (depending on which way one uses patriarchy), but it is not the same
dominance
as patriarchy.
31
Preliminary Anthropological and Biological Considerations associate authority
No
and leadership
versal. Indeed, of all social institutions there
whose
universality
fair to say that
it
with men.
in these areas
anthropologist contests the fact that patriarchy
so totally agreed upon.
is
uni-
is
probably none
is
While
think
I
most anthropologists consider the family,
marriage, and the incest taboo universal
—and
believe that,
easy to imagine societies without one or
while
it is
these
institutions,
them
—with each of
no
could
society
real
survive
more of without
these institutions anthropologists debate
problems of definition and borderline
cases.
There
is
nor
not,
has there ever been, any society that even remotely failed to associate authority
and leadership
with
in suprafamilial areas
the male. 3
There have of course been queens societies, is
in a small
number of
but the existence of patriarchy even in such societies
demonstrated by the fact that
in such societies only
when
—
there
England
as in is
—queens
no equivalent man
rule
avail-
able (just as there have been a few societies in which the royal families have ignored their societies' incest taboos in
order to maintain the purity of the blood line). There have
been "Queen Mothers"
in a
few African
societies, but,
while
such "Queen Mothers" did have a measure of autonomy denied other
women
in their societies
and some authority
in
secondary areas, in every case they were subordinate to a male
king or chief
in
whom
the society vested highest authority.
There have even been three
cases of
women
attaining the
highest positions of authority in democracies (Israel, India,
and Ceylon), though
in the latter
was the daughter and the widow,
man and
it
is
woman
hardly likely that either would have otherwise
attained power.
even in such
two instances the
respectively, of a revered
The
point of importance, however,
societies authority has
is
that
continued to be over-
whelmingly associated with the male and the overwhelming 3
We
will discuss the alleged "prehistoric matriarchies" and
later.
32
"Amazons"
Anthropology and the Limits of Societal Variation
number of
positions of leadership have been filled by
men.
In Israel, for example, the other eighteen ministerial positions
men and
are filled by
the proportion of
the hierarchy of political authority in the
United
States,
is
men
at
each level of
roughly the same as
it is
Sweden, Cuba, Communist China, and
the Soviet Union. 4
Male Dominance Defined and Discovered Male dominance emotions of both
refers to the jeeling
men and women
acknowledged by the
that the
woman's
will
is
somehow
subordinate to the male's and that general authority
in dyadic
and familial relationships,
in
whatever terms a par-
ticular society defines authority, ultimately resides in the male. I
realize that this
is
male dominance, but
not the most graceful the most accurate.
it is
with patriarchy, male dominance ever failed to conform
and the ing of
universal;
expectations of
no
defining the case
society has
men and women,
social roles relevant to these expectations, to the feel-
men and women
lead." This ciety'
its
is
way of As was
that
it
book will attempt
the male
is
to
"takes the
demonstrate that every
accepts the existence of these feelings,
their existence by socializing children
every society must.
who
so-
and conforms to
accordingly, because
5
4
See "Patriarchy in Industrial and 'Revolutionary' societies," p. 124. For the sake of convenience I occasionally will use the term male dominance to refer not merely to the feelings of the members of a society, but also to those dyadic and familial institutions in which these feelings are manifested. Thus when I speak of one society's exhibiting more male dominance than another I mean that the society's institutions emphasize or utilize these feelings more than do those of another. Furthermore, it should be noted here that male dominance does not refer to male aggression on an absolute scale. One might be tempted to introduce the hypothesis that differing social conditions have resulted in the women of one society becoming more aggressive than the men of another. Such a hypothesis would be dubious because in every society it is the males 5
who
are the soldiers so that
would be
"aggression" argued to be more aggressive than Aggression," p. 91); more importantly, however, such a hypothesis would be irrelein
such a
way
that
it
difficult
to define
women of any society could be the men of any other (see "Human
the
33
Preliminary Anthropological and Biological Considerations
For
all
but a very few societies the presence of male dom-
inance
is
apparent from the customs of deference so well
documented by the anthropologists.
important to bear
It is
mind, however, that dominance and deference refer to the
in
feelings that
come
into play in male-female
and familial
rela-
tionships. Anthropologists tend to discuss such feelings in
terms of their manifestations in customs of deference because,
among
other reasons, the inconcreteness of feelings makes
difficult to deal
with them in any other way. This
posed to patriarchy, which can be
denned and demon-
easily
authority positions in every society. For nearly
customs of deference relevant to difficulty
all societies
male and female feelings
reflect the
male dominance and
authority,
and there
is
introduced by discussing dominance in terms of
more
manifestation in customs rather than the tions that
is
its
underpin these customs. Emphasizing that domi-
important only
twelve "chivalrous" ceive deference, or
society.
American
is
is
feel-
examining the ten or
women seem
which
society,
when compared
in
to re-
which customs of
to those of virtually
Examination of the ethnographic materials
on these "chivalrous" male deference
when one
societies, in
deference are minimal
any other
no
emo-
abstract
nance and deference refer not to the customs but to the ings
it
as op-
overwhelming number of males who
strated in terms of the fill
is
demonstrates that chivalrous
societies
seen in these societies not as a reversal of
male dominance but
as a
complement
to feminine fragility.
In American society, for example, a man's holding a door for a
woman
is
seen as a symbolic gesture acknowledging not
female authority but masculine strength; a man's walking nearer to the curb acknowledges not the female's dominance
but the male's feeling that the
We
woman
is
to
be protected.
can observe the feelings of male dominance most
vant. Dominance and dejerence are relative terms that refer to the feelings and institutions relevant to dyadic and familial relationships in a single societal context.
34
Anthropology and the Limits of Societal Variation clearly
during an argument, because
that the emotional
is
in times of conflict
male and female consciousness. Most of the time, when
into
men and women and
are performing different roles
their society define as
conflict, is
it
acknowledgment of male authority comes
only
roles, there is
and feelings of authority will not come into
when
to the male,
around
male and female
which they
there
who
conflict that this feeling will
is
utilizes
it,
and
to the female,
no
play. It
be apparent
who must
get
it.
The voluminous
writings of the feminists attest to the fact
that, despite the virtual
American
absence of customs of deference in
and emotional expectations that
society, the feelings
underpin the customs of every other society
affect
our be-
havior as surely as these feelings affect the behavior of the
men and women
Thus the author of
of every other society.
the feminist essay complains that she feels that she has some-
how
lost
an argument with her husband, that somehow she
was wrong, even when she knows
intellectually that hers
was
the better argument, that she was right, and that her husband
was being emotionally dishonest. Thus the feminist novelist objects to the fact that
it is
somehow
who
the male
"takes the
lead" in endless numbers of situations as varied as crossing streets
and choosing
("my husband
told
friends.
me
The husband
to take the
TV
tends to "tell"
to the repair
while the wife tends to "ask" ("my wife asked the
TV to
the repair shop")
.
To
be sure,
women
novelists acknowledge, have a great deal of
they
make
the husband
lets
authority, that is
many areas, but it them make such decisions
decisions in
is
me
shop") to take
do, as these
power
in that
the feeling that
(that he delegates
he "allows") that annoys the feminist and that
the evidence of the presence of male dominance. Likewise
the feminist points out that nearly
all
women
associate authority with the father, save those
grudge
their fathers their refusal to
Our acceptance of
(and men)
few who
be-
invoke male authority.
the feminist's description of her feelings
35
Preliminary Anthropological and Biological Considerations
and observations does not require sumption that
we
that
and observations or
to these feelings
that
attach a
we
judgment
accept her as-
this manifestation of sexual difference has its
roots only in social factors. It
should be reiterated that
bility that in
may
I
dyadic relationships
am not women
rejecting the possi-
using female means
more often than do men using male universally or in some societies, perhaps the
attain their ends
means
(either
chivalrous ones), nor
am
denying the obvious
I
fact that,
whatever qualities one considers masculine or feminine, every
member
of each sex will occasionally exhibit the behavior of
the other.
I
am
saying only that every society recognizes a
particular emotional difference this difference
society's
feel that
it
6
The
different
is
the ivoman
women
(i.e.,
no
"allows"),
with men. 6 In other
meanings of male dominance, male authority, and power feeling acknowledged by both
Male dominance refers to a male and female emotions. Male authority clear.
who
that
society associates authority in all areas that are
not specifically delegated to
should be
men and women,
always works in the same direction
members
and that every
between
refers to society's
associating
general authority in dyadic relationships with the male. Both male dominance and male authority are universal. In every society authority is
delegated to women in a number of areas; there is no conflict as long as each sex stays in its own area. When there is conflict, the feelings of male dominance will always come into play and general male authority will sometimes be invoked in some societies and will always be invoked in others.
Power
is
the ability to influence the actions of others and to attain
Women
in dyadic situations often have the power advantage, but this advantage does not flow from their invoking authority and it is attained by overcoming the feelings of male dominance through feminine means, intelligence, etc. The importance of these distinctions is apparent
one's end.
when we examine Robert O. Blood and Donald M. Wolfe's seminal study power in America, Husbands and Wives (New York: Free Press, I960). For this study 731 wives in Detroit were interviewed. After assessing dyadic power in eight areas of decision making (decisions concerning husband's job, family car, insurance, vacation, house, wife's work, family doctor, and food), the authors conclude that, while husbands do maintain a significant power advantage overall and a complete advantage in decisions relevant to their jobs, all in all we can say that the American family is roughly equalitarian rather than "patriarchal." This is an important point if one is, like the authors, interested primarily in power, but its meaning is not clear. The increasing degree to which women of dyadic
36
Anthropology and the Limits of Societal Variation
words, the male strength and aggressiveness and the female gentleness and endurance portrayed in our novels and movies
mirror not merely our society's view of the emotional natures of
men and women,
but the views of every society that has
ever existed.
For our purposes, one's attitude toward male dominance irrelevant;
male dominates and protects the female or de-
idea that the tests
it.
The
is
does not matter whether the reader enjoys the
it
made here is that, men and women of every
point being
momentarily, the
as
we
shall see
society feel this
way and acknowledge this feeling in the society's institutions. The question that is of theoretical importance is why this is the case and why,
if
male dominance
some element
is
either suprasocial or inherent in the very
that
is
not conformation to
nature of society, does no society reverse this or fest sexual
dominance
at all?
As we
shall see,
share in the decisions that the authors examine
may
fail to it
well, as
is
we
mani-
virtually
shall see,
represent a male abdication of the husband-father role in favor of supra-
would seem
familial pursuits, a delegation of familial authority; this
to
be indicated by the authors' finding that, of all wives, wives in wifedominant marriages (marriages in which wives have the power advantage in these decisions) are the least satisfied with their marriages. The feelings of male dominance of which we speak in this book, while they are always present and while they invest all male-female interaction, become manifest only when there is conflict. Most of the time, when men are dealing with decisions that the society sees as "male" and women with
That women what to serve for dinner in no way represents an absence of the feelings of male dominance. Male dominance will manifest itself, in the feelings of husband and wife, in this area only if, for example, a wife insists on serving a food that the husband does not like. If conflict ensues the feelings relevant to male dominance will come into play. The wife may well end up getting her way, but it will be through her "feminine" approach which gets around her (and her husband's) feelings that authority resides in the male and not because either she or her husband failed to experience the feelings of male dominance. That the equalitarianism that Blood and Wolfe find is irrelevant to the feminist analysis is apparent for two reasons. First, authority in the household is scarcely the prime feminist goal. Second, where the authors see equalitarianism, the feminists see male dominance. Both the authors and the feminists are correct; the former are looking at decision making and the latter at male dominance and its manifestations. those that society sees
make
as
"female,"
there
is
no
conflict.
the decisions relevant to choice of family doctor or
37
Preliminary Anthropological and Biological Considerations
impossible to answer this question without invoking the evi-
dence presented in Chapter Three unless one accepts a number of assumptions that are logically possible but absurd.
One might
be tempted to argue that either patriarchy or
male dominance has in
some element
its
that
that, since either
is
roots in
from the suprasocial or might argue that
suprasocial element or
of these institutions might inevitably gen-
we need
erate the other,
some
inherent in the nature of society, but
not assume that both flow directly inherent-societal element.
Thus one
either a suprasocial or inherent-societal ele-
ment generates patriarchy and
that, since political authority
will be associated with males, authority in dyadic relationships will be associated with the
view would
cess; this
male through
see
still
a filter-down pro-
male dominance
as inevitable,
but not as a direct result of the suprasocial or inherent-societal element.
Or one might
male dominance
see
as a result of a
suprasocial or inherent-societal element, but argue that patriarchy
a generalization of
is
these lines of reasoning
we
male dominance. Neither of
very persuasive.
The evidence we
Chapter Three, a great deal of primate
shall discuss in
search that
is
shall not discuss in this book,
re-
and our ob-
servation of small, isolated societies with minimal political differentiation all lead to the conclusion that there
male dominance even
The argument
that
if
would be
there were no political stratification.
male dominance
is
a direct result of a
suprasocial or inherent-societal element but that patriarchy
merely a generalization of male dominance which inevitable but
which does not flow
or inherent-societal element
merous reasons short:
we
we
shall
shall see that
is
directly
from
is
may be
a suprasocial
equally unconvincing for nu-
discuss throughout the book.
In
both patriarchy and male dominance
are direct results of a suprasocial element and that one need
not refer to patriarchy to demonstrate the inevitability of male
dominance or bility
to
male dominance
to demonstrate the inevita-
of patriarchy (or male attainment).
38
: ,
Anthropology and the Limits of
The
Societal Variation
Male Dominance
Universality of
Cross-cultural compilations of ethnographic materials
clusiveness with
which they demonstrate the universality of
While
patriarchy.
demon-
male dominance with the same con-
strate the universality of
the greater subtleties of definition and dis-
covery have led some of the anthropologists
who have
au-
thored cross-cultural compilations to use slightly qualified
terms ("universality for
all intents
and purposes") when
re-
ferring to the universality of male dominance, this scientific tentativeness does not indicate a belief that there
any
so-
which the members do not demonstrate the feelings
ciety in
relevant to male
dominance or
and familial relationships
With one that there it)-
is
exception, is
all
in
which authority
in dyadic
not associated with the male.
is
of the authors indicate quite definitely
no exception
male dominance
to
(as
we
define
7
The
exception
is
Dr. William Stephens. Dr. Stephens does
not deal directly with male dominance, but with authority in specific areas relevant to the
children.
However, even
if
household and the rearing of
we
accept Dr. Stephens's focus,
the universality of male dominance and in the expectations
every society
is
its
acknowledgment
and customs of the men and
women
of
not brought into question. Dr. Stephens sug-
gests five possible exceptions to universality (in his terms)
the Tchambuli (which
made and
case can be
the people of
and the
Nama
is
the society for which the strongest
the one
we
will look at
more
closely)
Modjokuto (Java), the Berbers, the
Jivaro,
Hottentot. Recourse to the original materials
7
For extended discussion of the anthropological data relevant to the male dominance, the reader might wish to consult: Gerald Leslie, The Family in Social Context (New York: Oxford University Press, 1967) M. F. NimkofT, Comparative Family Systems (Boston: Houghton-Mifflin, 1965); Ira L. Reiss, The Family System in America (New York: Holt, Rinehart, and Winston, 1971); and William N. Stephens, The Family in Cross-Cultural Perspective (New York: Holt, Rinehart, and Winston, 1963). universality of
;
39
Preliminary Anthropological and Biological Considerations
on which Dr. Stephens bases
his assessment does indeed sup-
port Dr. Stephens's contention these societies delegate to
women a certain authority in specific matters concerning the home and children, but by no stretch of the imagination could the men and women of these societies be said to fail to demonstrate the feelings relevant to
male dominance. In
every case the same ethnographic study that
is
the assessment of "exception" explicitly states
Modjokuto
ple: the study of
that
is
used to support
For exam-
this.
used to support the con-
tention that these Javanese people comprise an exception
expected to be, above
states that the father "is
and dignified (sabar) with lead
them with
a gentle
his
patient
all,
wife and children; he should
though firm hand.
.
.
." 8
Similar acknowledgments of the presence of male domi-
nance can be found in every ethnographic study invoked by
any author
as
demonstrating the absence of male dominance
any particular
in
society.
For example, one often hears the
work on the Iroquois dem-
claim that Lewis Henry Morgan's
is
apparent
fill
positions
onstrated that, while patriarchy in Iroquois society
from the
fact that
women were
not permitted to
of leadership, the Iroquois did
fail to
nance. That this was not the case
is
"The Indian regarded women
clear
manifest male domi-
when Morgan
and the servant of man, and from nurturance and actually considered herself to be so."
In the
addendum
the reader will find similar ethnographic
not that male dominance necessitates that
may be
themselves inferior (while this
is
it is
8 p.
not with
many
not that male dominance
and habit."
We
is
Henry Morgan, League
point
is
consider
the case with the it
attributable to only "nurturance
shall discuss causation later.
(New York: Dodd, Mead
The
women
other societies) and certainly
Hildred Geertz, The Javanese Family
107. 9 Lewis
habit, she
9
quotations on every alleged societal exception.
Iroquois
writes
as the inferior, the dependent,
of the
(New
York: Free
I
am
in-
Press, 1961),
Ho-De-No-Sau-Nee or Iroquois
and Co., 1901),
40
Here
p. 315.
Anthropology and the Limits of
Societal Variation
terested merely in noting the universality not only of
male
and female feelings of male dominance, but the universality of the institutionalization of these feelings in the formal value
system of
societies.
Even
if
one wishes
the universality of societal
that
to
emphasize women's
around the formal system he
ability to get
still
must admit
acknowledgment of male
dominance demands an explanation. Moreover, whatever can be said about any alleged
societal
exception to the universality of male dominance can also be said about
American
society. Indeed,
any other society delegates to the
the
it
women
is
doubtful whether
the authority even in
home that American society delegates and, in any case, demand of the feminist is hardly that American society
should increase women's authority and responsibility in the
home. In our
women
society
(by standing
men show chivalrous deference to when a women enters the room, for
example), acknowledge female authority in most decisions concerning the household to such an extent that
many women
complain that the American male has abdicated his role father in order to concentrate
women
on suprafamilial
as
pursuits, give
equal rights in selecting the leaders of the society and
equal rights to attain leadership, and, with a few exceptions
which are of primarily symbolic importance, equal rights of ownership and participation
in
economic
life.
Moreover, with
the exception of land ownership in certain matrilineal societies
—
a female
ownership that does not lessen male control of
suprafamilial or dyadic situations authority in any area in
United It
—no
which she
is
society gives to
women
not given authority in the
States.
will not be necessary to review the materials
on each of
Dr. Stephens's societies in order to make the point that he has not discovered any exception to male dominance as use the term here (though the reader will find the relevant material in the
who
desires to
Addendum).
we
do so
In speak-
ing of wives in American society Dr. Stephens states that,
41
Preliminary Anthropological and Biological Considerations
"If there are any exceptional societies (in which each family
may
freely choose
what) our own ,
that,
—
or fight
—
out
it
society probably
to
comes
determine as close as
who
any"
does
10
and
"In the allocation of power and privilege, our society
compared with other
societies
n The
who
ously."
feminist
—
treats its
wives most gener-
wishes to demonstrate that male
10 All references to Dr. Stephens's
work
refer to Stephens, op.
cit.,
pp.
300-306. 11 Two interesting points emerge when we examine those societies in which there is a relatively low degree of male dominance. The first is one that we would expect if we view dyadic relationships in the terms
of this book:
women
in these societies are successful because they utilize
counter the societal expectations which conform male aggression or, to use Dr. Stephens's words, "In the face of if she wishes to fight back [the male power advantage] ... a wife must employ characteristically female weapons." The second point of interest is that a low degree of male dominance seems to occur when there is a strong societal emphasis on some suprafamilial male function. This is not to say that societies that emphasize some such factor will necessarily demonstrate a relatively low male dominance (i.e., will give the
"feminine"
abilities
to
to
women
.
—
.
.
authority in certain familial areas, Dr. Stephens's "exceptions"),
but that societies which do demonstrate a relatively low male dominance, which do give women authority in these familial areas, will place an un-
on some suprafamilial area. For example, the male obsession with work and career in the United States has been documented by sociologists since Weber; the Jivaro male sees warriorship as the purpose of life. Perhaps this implies that a relatively low degree of familial male dominance and authority may result from a society's seeing the paternal role as not contributing to high status and a resulting male lack of interest in the paternal role. This is analogous to a situation we
usually strong emphasis
when a suprafamilial position is given high status by a society, men will use their aggression to attain the position. When it is given low status, men will attempt to attain other (high status) positions. This would explain the fact that the relatively low degree of familial male dominance in the American family is correlated with a moderately high degree of patriarchy in the political and economic will observe shortly;
We might expect that a decrease in the strength of the work ethic and a resulting increase in the American male's interest in the paternal role may result in an increase in familial male authority. This increase will result from the male's using his aggression in the familial area he had formerly ignored in favor of his work. In other words, it is likely that the increased emphasis on women's filling suprafamilial roles, and the deemphasis of maternal roles urged by the feminists, may combine with a weakening of the male work ethic not to increase women's authority in suprafamilial areas (where the positions of authority will be attained by male aggression as they have in every society even those without a strong emphasis on suprafamilial male functions), but only to increase the degree of male dominance at home. areas.
—
42
Anthropology and the Limits of
dominance but
not universal need not even mention Stephens,
is
she does not she
if
do not
pilations that that she see,
Societal Variation
is
left
offer
with only cross-cultural com-
even a hint of an exception so
must find an exception on her own and
this,
we
shall
she will not be able to do. If the feminist does invoke
one of Dr. Stephens's versality of
none of these
an exception to the uni-
societies as
male dominance she
faces not only the fact that
societies are exceptions (see the
Addendum),
but that, as Dr. Stephens's words indicate, she must invoke the United States (because none of Dr. Stephens's societies
manifest male dominance any this
her cause
an exception
is
is
dominance and inist
less
lost at once: to
)
.
But
if
the feminist does
invoke the United States as
to assert that this .society does not to
have male
admit the incorrectness of the central fem-
premise. Since she will obviously not want to do
this,
she must acknowledge that none of Dr. Stephens's societies
acknowledge male dominance.
fail to It
New
is
worthwhile to consider
Guinea not only because
briefly
the Tchambuli of
this society is the
one of Dr.
Stephens's societies for which the strongest case (as a society
not acknowledging male dominance) can be made, but because a
number of popular
writers have repeated Margaret
Mead's questionable conclusions
Mead
TchamWhile Dr.
to her study of the
buli without repeating her qualifying statements.
did not claim that the Tchambuli failed to acknowl-
edge male dominance, she did imply that sex roles and sexual temperament for these people were so different from
the roles and temperaments exhibited in every other society that the study caused
something of an uproar. 12 The excellent
ethnographic data Dr.
Mead
presents
enables the careful
reader to see that Dr. Mead's conclusions concerning the plasticity of sex roles
do not follow from the observations
she describes. For example: Dr. 12 See cieties
Mead
Margaret Mead's Sex and Temperament
(New York: William Morrow,
43
1935).
points out that the in
Three Primitive So-
Preliminary Anthropological and Biological Considerations
Tchambuli boy's
initiation consisted of the boy's killing a
victim and hanging the head in the ceremonial house as a
trophy;
difficult
is
it
to
see this
as
of
indication
"male
femininity." Indeed, in response to one of her critics Dr.
Mead
wrote,
"Nowhere do
I
suggest that
I
have found any
material which disproves the existence of sex differences. .
.
.
This study was not concerned with whether there are
or are not actual and universal differences between the sexes, either quantitative or qualitative."
13
Male Attainment of High-Status Roles and Positions Occasionally one who attempts to deny the universality of male dominance will mimic those who claim the existence of a matriarchy: he will not actually institutions
name
merely make vague reference to unnamed
he were
that, if
materials
a society
societies.
or
as,
on the
society he
conformed
more
More
than,
often,
He knows
to be specific, reference to the ethnographic
named would show
was perhaps matrilineal or matrilocal, the
it
tutions
whose
do not acknowledge male dominance but will
to patriarchy
do
that,
while
society's insti-
and male dominance
as
much
ours.
however, he invokes societies such as the
Bamendas, the Hopi, the Iroquois, the Mbuti Pygmies, the 13 Letter,
The
The American Anthropologist, 39:558-561
(July-September,
who
wishes further evidence that Dr. Mead's implication (that the Tchambuli sex roles do not conform to the limits demonstrated by every other society) is supported only by her own choice of adjectives and not at all by the data she presents should consult the following analyses of Sex and Temperament: Jessie Bernard, "Observation and Generalization in Cultural Anthropology," The American Journal of Sociology, 50:284-291 (January, 1945); Richard Thurnwald, "Oceania and Africa," The American Anthropologist, 38:663-667 (October-December, 1936); Victor Barnouw, Culture and Personality (Homewood, 111.: 1937).
Dorsey
reader
Press,
The Rise
1963), pp.
85-91; and Marvin Harris's brief criticism in Theory (New York: Crowell, 1968), pp. 413-
of Anthropological
414.
44
Anthropology and the Limits of
Societal Variation
Nayar, certain Philippine groups, the people of the Kibbutz, or even the fictitious Amazons. 14 These alleged exceptions
women
merely societies that associate with
are
j mictions that
we
associate with
tions to the universality of
tasks
or
men. These are not excep-
male dominance, for
—
in addition
to the fact that dominance-deference refers to the feelings
of
men and women
in every society that authority resides in
the male, feelings that are reflected in the expectations of
male and female behavior in
no way precludes the
which we size
(as uninvolved outsiders)
As was the
important here
may choose in
one
empha-
to
society or
case with customs of deference,
the attitudes of the
is
society in question. In every society,
tasks
—male dominance
any task or function
women
can be seen to be served by
another. is
in every society
possibility that
members of the
whatever the particular
performed by women, the members
do "women's tasks"
what
women
feel that
(as defined by the particular society)
women men serve
either because only
are biologically capable of the
tasks or because
functions that are
to the society's survival.
male roles than it
to the
another, and
I
crucial to
nonmaternal roles of females. To put more illuminating, way: in every
believe
society males attain the high-status
positions
more
Every society gives higher status
and perform the
(nonmaternal) roles and
high-status tasks, whatever those
tasks are.
Margaret
Mead
In every
has written:
known human
society,
achievement can be recognized.
weave or dress activities are
whole
Men may
or
cook,
hummingbirds, hut
if
such
appropriate occupations of men, then the
society,
important.
dolls or hunt
the male's need for
men and women
When
alike,
votes
them
as
the same occupations are performed
14 For a more extended discussion dominance see the Addendum.
45
of
alleged
exceptions
to
male
Preliminary Anthropological and Biological Considerations
by ivomen, they are regarded as
less
important. 1 * [Em-
phasis added]
A woman who particular
older, wealthier,
is
more
may even
perhaps she
will have less status
and she will
feel
dominance over him, but she
and authority than an equivalent male toward him. Thus in some
woman whose husband
so-
has died rules the
and the presence of an educated, wealthy
family,
make
a higher class or
intelligent, or
feel deference
the older
cieties
from
more educated than a male may be given authority over that male and
"better" family,
woman
will
the less wealthy and educated male experience feelings
of insecurity. But ivhatever variable one chooses, authority, status,
and dominance within each stratum
rest
with the male
in contacts with equivalent females.
Men
do not merely
areas, they also
The higher or position
fill
fill
most of the
roles in high-status
the high-status roles in low-status areas.
the level of power, authority, status, prestige,
—whether the —
political, or religious
area be economic,
occupational,
the higher the percentage of males.
Thus the percentage of women
work
in the
force in the
United States has risen by 75 percent since 1900, but the percentage of
women
in the high-status
area of medicine
has declined during this period. In the Soviet Union, where
medicine has a far lower status than States,
the majority of
all
it
doctors are
does in the United
women, but
as
one
ascends from the level of practical medicine to the levels of authority the percentage of males rises until,
at
the top,
males constitute the overwhelming majority. 16 15
Margaret Mead, Male and Female (New York: William Morrow, As we shall see, one need not postulate a male "need to achieve" any greater than that of the female to explain why men attain the high-status roles in every society; the male aggression advantage (discussed in the next chapter) is enough to explain why high-status roles and positions are always attained primarily by men and why every society associates its (nonmaternal) high-status roles with men. 16 See William J. Goode, World Revolution and Family Patterns (New York: Free Press of Glencoe, 1963), pp. 57-66. 1949), p. 168.
46
Anthropology and the Limits of
Of
all
the tasks one might think of or choose to
and
to protection, fighting,
women
of
one
in
this,
who
political authority,
society or another,
the roles filled by
it is
empha-
every one, with the exception of those related
size, virtually
with
Societal Variation
men
17
is
associated
but in every society
None women
that are given high status.
of course, denies that in every society
are responsible for the care
it
is
and rearing of the young,
the single most important function served in any society or in nature itself. Just as patriarchy,
male dominance, and male
attainment of high-status roles and positions are universal, so is
the association of nurturance and emotional socialization
with the
some
woman
societies,
Two
universal,
to test
light
in
on universal
which, while their purpose
societal manifestations of sex differences.
these
aspects of the theory
While
18
other theoretical constructs, shed considerable
While each of
17
roles are,
status.
Hypotheses Tested
There are two major works
was
and these female
given the highest of
works called into question certain it
was
testing,
both indicate the cor-
there are no exceptions in these three spheres (every society's
military and leadership functions are served primarily by men),
it should be noted for the record that in the mid-nineteenth century the army of Dahomey included a corps of female warriors (different authors estimate their percentage of the total number of warriors as being between 5 and 15 percent) and that at one time Iroquoian women served a vital political function in selecting male leaders (though women were not permitted to
lead).
18
The
interested reader might wish to consult: Bronislaw MalinowSex and Repression in Savage Society (New York: Harcourt, Brace and World, 1927), and Morris Zelditch, "Role Differentiation in the Nuclear Family: A Comparative Study," in Talcott Parsons and Robert F. Bales, eds., Family, Socialization, and Interaction Process (New York: Free Press, 1955). Dr. Zelditch's definition of "instrumental role" differs in some respects from our definition of "male dominance." As a result he lists the Manus (alone among fifty-six societies) as giving the father a slightly less instrumental role than the mother. That this does not indicate that the Manus male is not dominant is apparent when Zelditch ski.
writes
(p. 337): "Father holds the authority in the family, but it is through the mother evidently that he disciplines the child that is he disciplines the mother and she is responsible for the child's behavior."
—
47
Preliminary Anthropological and Biological Considerations rectness of the description of sexual role distinctions dis-
cussed here. Bronislaw Malinowski's study of the Trobriand Islanders suggested that Freud, in explaining the son's rage,
had overemphasized the importance of the
father's role as
sexual mate of the mother, and underemphasized the im-
portance of his role as powerful constrictor of the son's
freedom and autonomy. In Freud's Vienna, cieties,
the
both of these roles were played by the father.
people
Malinowski
however,
studied,
brother played the authoritarian role to his
so-
Among
mother's
the
sister's
he, not the son's biological father was, according to ski,
most
as in
son and
Malinow-
the recipient of the son's rage. Likewise, a theory of
Talcott Parsons suggested that to the father an
all
possible societies will give
"instrumental" role (solves tasks of the
society at large, serves as source of authority
receives respect
and
hostility)
and
to the
and
discipline,
mother an "ex-
pressive" role (is source of care and guardian of emotional
development,
found that
warmth). Morris Zelditch
acts as receiver of
in ten of a
sample of
fifty-six societies
the instru-
mental role was played by a male other than the father
(though even
in these the father
seemed
relatively "instru-
mental" and the mother relatively "expressive"). The Freud-
Malinowski "debate" and the Parsons-Zelditch works are still
the subject of
oversimplification.
much argument, and I
I
apologize for the
raise all of this only to indicate that,
whatever other disagreements these theorists may have, their data has led
them
all
to the conclusion that, if a
male
is
included in the family, the dominant role will be played
by a male
— even when
19 It should be noted that
that every society includes a
it is
I
am
male
not played by the father. 19
Is
it
not at any point in this chapter saying in the family unit. I think that this
is
does not matter for our purposes if there exist societies in which the family consists of only the mother-child dyad. My point is only that if a male is included in the family, authority will be associated with him by both male and female feelings and societal expectation. Male dominance can manifest itself only when males and females come the case, but
it
48
Anthropology and the Limits of not likely that there
Societal Variation
some underlying imperative
is
ing authority with the male
associat-
even matrilineal and matri-
if
local societies pass over the obvious selection of the
mother
as authority figure to give this role to the mother's brother?
The Feminist Assumption The view of man and woman in lies
all
society that implicitly under-
of the arguments of the feminists
nothing inherent in the nature of
human
is
this:
there
is
beings or of society
that necessitates that any role or task (save those requiring
great strength or the ability to give birth) be associated with
one sex or the other;
20
there
is
no natural order of things
is no adult male in the family unit then, obviously, no male dominance. If a role does not give males high status or some other reward (or if a high-status role is one for which males are
into contact. If there
there will be
at
a
disadvantage) then the role will not attract males and,
biological
be no males, there will be no male dominance. One need not even look to a society with a dyadic family; both a number of matrilineal societies and American society indicate that when male time and energies are devoted to the pursuit of suprafamilial status the since there
will
(the familial authority role) will, in prac-
role of familial disciplinarian tice,
be delegated to the mother,
who
will
fill
this role in addition to
her
expressive role; in the matrifocal family type which marks such societies the male familial role
may be
male dominance whenever males and females do meet; it the individuals' feelings and the society's exrelatively unimportant, but
will nonetheless be manifested will be manifested both in pectations.
I
make
this
the family in British
point in response to R. T. Smith's suggestion that as a nuclear family, but soon de-
Guiana begins
velops into just the mother-child dyad. For reasons too numerous to go into here I do not consider Dr. Smith's illuminating study a refutation of the
argument that
a permanent, stable society
must be
built of a family
consisting of at least mother, child, and one adult male, but even if one did accept the possibility of a society's family system being based on only
would cast no doubt on the unimale-female encounters and relationships. See R. T. Smith, The Negro Family in British Guiana: Family Structure and Social Status in the Villages (London: Kegan Paul, 1956). 20 "It is time that we realized that the whole structure of male and female personality is entirely imposed by social conditioning. All the possible traits of human personality have in this conditioning been arbitrarily the mother-child dyad such a society
male dominance
versality of
assigned
into
in
two categories;
thus
."
aggression
is
masculine,
passivity
[Emphasis added]. (Kate Millett, Barnard Alumnae, Spring, 1970, p. 28.) This statement expresses the assumption which underpins all of Dr. Millett's Sexual Politics (New York: Doubleday, 1970). In the feminine.
.
.
49
Preliminary Anthropological and Biological Considerations four hundred pages of Sexual Politics Dr. Millett offers only four bits of evidence in support of this crucial assumption: (l) Dr. Millett quotes Dr. definitional distinction between biological "sex" and "gender" and leaves the strong impression that Dr. Stoller believes that "sex" need not be relevant to behavior. The true flavor of Dr. Stoller's thesis is better summarized by Dr. Stoller himself a few pages past the point where Dr. Millett stopped quoting: "A sex-linked genetic biological tendency towards masculinity in males and femininity in females works silently but effectively from fetal existence on, being overlaid after birth by the effects of environment, influences working more or less in harmony to produce a preponderance of masculinity in men and femininity in women." [Robert Stoller, Sex and Gender (New York: Science House, 1968), p. 74.] The point here is not whether Dr. Stoller is correct in his assessment, but that, if scientists are in the kind of disagreement over the importance of sexual biology to behavior which Dr. Millett claims they are, one would think that she would not find it necessary to misrepresent the views of a scientist who does believe that sexual biology is crucial. (2) Dr. Millett includes a footnote that refers the reader
Robert
Stoller's
societal
to a Rockefeller University publication
that
is
only tangentially relevant
There is an out-of-context quotation from a work of Dr. John Money. We need not examine this here because we will see shortly that it is Dr. Money's own work, more than that of any other scientist working with humans (as opposed to experimental animals), which indicates the crucial importance of sex hormones to behavior. (4) Finally, Dr. to this issue. (3)
Millett states that "the best medical research points to the conclusion that
sexual stereotypes have no bases in biology."
ment
is
As we
shall see, this state-
absolutely indefensible unless one defines stereotype not in the
terms of probability that the biologist uses but in terms so rigid that the point becomes irrelevant and unless one defines best medical research as "research
no bases
which points in biology."
the conclusion
to
that
(This assumes that there
sexual is
stereotypes
have
some medical research
my
investigations have uncovered none.) If an uncontroversial area to a graduate department in the social sciences or the physical sciences and attempted to get away with this kind of intellectual dishonesty he would receive ridicule rather than a Ph.D. in literature from Columbia University. When Dr. Millett is not energetically planting fallacies among the wild inaccuracies she is dressing discarded conspiratorial and evolutionary theory in drag and presenting it as new. Her entire analysis is predicated on the belief that stating a disagreeable fact or argument in derisive terms results in alteration of the fact or refutation of the argument. Much of Dr. Millett's book consists of an analysis of D. H. Lawrence and other male authors. I would not presume to question the accuracy of Dr. Millett's presentation of these authors' representations of women. One wonders, however, whether Dr. Millett intends to imply that these views of women are representative of those held by nearly all male authors (or nearly all men). If not, then why are they relevant? One could "prove" oppression of the whale by using only Moby Dick as evidence. If these representations of women are invoked as representative of those of nearly all male
pointing in
this
direction;
anyone presented a
authors,
then
knowledged
thesis in
why do
to see
so
many
of those very
individuals
most deeply into the nature of things
50
all
who
are
see the
ac-
same
— Anthropology and the Limits of
Societal Variation
decreeing that dyadic and social authority must be associated
with men, nor
is
there any reason
why
must be men
it
rule in every society. Patriarchy, matriarchy,
are
equally possible and
all
—while every
"the natural order of things" to justify
we have
the expectations
all
ally
of
its
and "equiarchy"
may invoke
society
particular system
men and women
are cultur-
determined and have nothing to do with any sort of
male or female nature. 21
basic
There
is
nothing internally contradictory in such a hypoth-
indeed,
esis;
it
is
an ideal place from which to begin an
empirical investigation into the nature of man,
However, the feminist does not use
society. first
who
step but unquestioningly accepts
it
to explain the universality of patriarchy in the
woman, and
this as a heuristic
as true.
She attempts
and male dominance
economic terms of Engels's work on the family and
thing? Dr. Millett realized that these questions would arise and this is why she has gone to such lengths to confuse and misrepresent the relevant biological and anthropological evidence. 21 The best presentation of the feminist assumption
is
unquestionably
John Stuart Mill's The Subjection of Women. As an impassioned plea for women's rights Mill's essay is both moving and illuminating. As an attempt to explain the etiology of sexually differentiated behavior and institutions
it is
the essay
indefensible.
was Mill,
One
is
tempted, given the fact that the author of
to ascribe its inadequacies to the fact that little of the
relevant anthropological evidence, and
none of the relevant hormonal
evi-
dence, was available at the time. But the weakness of Mill's analysis
more to the fallacious reasoning conclusions demanded. For example, Mill argues
attributable even
is
that his preconceived
that we can have no conception of the limits of possibility imposed by innate sexual differences, or even of whether such limits exist, because no society has been composed of one sex; thus he does not even attempt to explain why the conceptions of male and female held by his society are not reversed in any other society. Similarly Mill attempts to dismiss the possibility of the
determinativeness of innate sexual differences by invoking the irrelevant fact that slave owners defended slavery with the invocation of physiological
do not exist; this fact is correct, of course, but it no more doubt on the likelihood that innate sexual differences are determinative to sexual differences in behavior and institutions than it does on the certainty that physiology is determinative to the ability to give birth. Mill's reasoning has been accepted without question by modern feminist writers. We shall examine this reasoning at length throughracial differences that
casts
out this book.
51
Preliminary Anthropological and Biological Considerations
attempts to demonstrate that patriarchy
is
not inevitable by
invoking theories hypothesizing the existence of ancient ma-
While Engels's The Origin of the Family, Private Property and the State may have a certain tangential validity when one is exploring certain economic junctions of the triarchies.
family in certain societies,
regarded by virtually
is
it
all
anthropologists as worthless as a description of the causes
of the family's existence; like other social-evolutionary theories,
it
fails to
explain the universality of patriarchy and
the near or complete universality of the family in a world
of thousands of (formerly)
unconnected
isolated,
societies
that demonstrate nearly every conceivably possible configura-
and familial systems
tion of religious, economic,
at nearly
every conceivably possible stage of development. Moreover, it
the development of every society onto a single
forces
continuum of linear evolution when great
many
lines of social evolution.
The Evolutionary Before abled
in reality there are a
Fallacy
this century the dearth of
some
theorists
to
ethnographic studies en-
maintain the contention that
developed along a single evolutionary
societies
belief in universal
societal
line.
when
evolution, particularly
all
This it
confused the economic functions that an institution came to play with the institution's cause (the factor that necessitated the institution
)
,
made
that those institutions
owed
at least
their existence to
cessities
vaguely credible the argument
which had existed
"all
through history"
economic and temporary
social ne-
and that they would decay when economic and
technological change rendered
them
anachronistic.
Some
evo-
lutionary theory could not pass even the test of internal logicality.
For
example,
theories
postulating
that
before
males learned of their biological importance to conception there
was
a "matriarchal stage"
52
of history were unable to
,
Anthropology and the Limits of Societal Variation explain what force enabled men, once they learned of their
own
biological role, to "take over." Since
cally
know
women
automati-
of their importance, the males' discovery of the
mechanisms of conception should enable them merely
come is
power equally
to share
if
knowledge of
determinative. However, while there
to
biological role
would seem no
rea-
son to attach any relevance of paternity to patriarchy once
one that
is
forced to invoke
some other
one could, logically
if
factor,
it
must be admitted
not credibly, argue that knowl-
edge of biological importance
is
precondition
a
attainment of power, but that once this precondition
then some other factor terminative.
As long
—
say physical strength
was
as there
the
for
met
is
—becomes
de-
relevant ethnographic
little
data the question of evolution was forced to remain on this theoretical level. Evolutionary theory
was not doomed
until
ethnographic studies demonstrated that every institution was either, like slavery, absent
from some
societies
and therefore
(unless one invokes an unre-
not evolutionarily necessary
corded antecedent stage that had the institution for every society
—
in
which case evolutionary theory
metaphysics)
when
the
found
a
or,
if
alleged
number of
cause
is
not theory, but
found even
like patriarchy,
universal,
was
The ethnographers which males did not know
absent.
societies in
of their biological importance yet which were as patriarchal
This demonstrates beyond question that knowledge of paternity has nothing to do with patriarchy. There are other problems with social evolutionary theory:
as all other societies.
one
is
attempting
which case the term evolution
is
grandiose;
unless a particular characteristic to explain
(in
is all
that
one can legitimately say that a
literate society is
vanced than a primitive one
he
if
specifies that
more he
is
addis-
cussing only urbanization and not implying that urbanization is
a sign of
advancement on some general evolutionary
evolutionary theory
is
by
its
scale)
very nature ethnocentric and
53
Preliminary Anthropological and Biological Considerations
often
For the decision
racist.
the measure of advancement
as to
which
factor to consider
—with
subjective
is
the possible
exception of the factor of survival, in which case
viving societies are equal.
saw any
tionary theorists
It is
sur-
all
not accidental that few evolu-
own
society but their
as the
most
advanced. Perhaps one would defend this by saying that the ability to
propose evolutionary theory
vancement, but
this criterion is
value system of the theorist. Lastly, the
power of
increased
is
the measure of ad-
most obviously based convince
social evolutionary theory to
when we
is
not
observe that primates demonstrate be-
havior that seems not unlike that which
dominance and
in the
should be noted that
it
we
that certain institutions
refer to as
male
have made mock-
attempt to change them and every
eries of every political
theoretical attempt to explain their etiologies in the terms
of environment and economic function.
The
"Prehistoric Matriarchies"
and the
"Amazons" Likewise, before this century, theories that hypothesized a matriarchal form of society that prevailed at "an earlier stage
of history"
made
a certain, if tortuous, sense until findings
gathered in the past
fifty
years
both failed to uncover a
single shred of evidence that such matriarchies isted
and demonstrated the
deal with reality.
when
constructs imaginary elements only
such an hypothesized reality helps to better explain
an observed size a
One
reality.
For example,
male "aggressive
of an observed reality
it
made
this
(men
made
possible an explanation
rule in every society) that
plausible and logically tighter than
preceded
it.
There
is
sense to hypothe-
instinct" (before the discovery of the
male hormone) because
more
had ever ex-
inability of all such theories to
was
any theory that
no reason whatsoever
to hypothesize
the existence of an as yet undiscovered matriarchy. Observation of empirical reality not only gives
54
no reason
to construct
Anthropology and the Limits of Societal Variation such an hypothesis but indicates with virtual certainty that this hypothesis
would be
For the reasons
incorrect. 22
we have
discussed
matriarchal
credited
it is
not surprising that,
by feminists, the totally
until their recent resurrection
and evolutionary theories of
dis-
Lafitau,
Bachofen, Ward, McLennan, and BrifTault (and a host of popularizations of their theories by Helen Diner and others)
have long been buried beneath
There
no reason
is
to detail yet
a
merable factual errors and logical to each of these works; suffice
well-deserved obscurity.
once again the nearly innu-
it
fallacies that are specific
to say that they all share
we have discussed Panos Bardis's observation that "... these
the contradictions and empirical disproof
and
to reiterate
theories
This
were soon rejected by is
all social scientists."
^
not to say that matriarchal myths and legends have
not served valid exaggerative and metaphorical purposes for writers
from the time of Homer, Diodorus, Herodotus, and
As
literary devices they
have often been used with devastating
effect to ridicule the
Plutarch to that of Robert Graves.
22 I have consulted the original ethnographic materials on every society have ever seen alleged by anyone to represent a matriarchy, female dominance, or the association of high-status, nonmaternal roles with women. Like the authors of the compilations cited in this chapter, I have found no society that represents any of these (see the Addendum). Furthermore, I believe that the evidence advanced in Chapter Three renders the concept of matriarchy and an absence of male dominance as absurd as the possibility that there was a society that associated childbirth with males. But it must be admitted that one cannot prove that matriarchy or anything else has never existed. If one wants to demonstrate that there has never been a centaur he can merely invoke the realities of physiology and evolution to indicate the biological improbability of a centaur's ever having existed and demonstrate that the evidence alleging the past existence of a centaur is worthless. If the reader insists on maintaining a belief in a once-existent matriarchical society all we can do is demand from him some evidence more convincing than his desire for there to have been one. 23 Panos Bardis, "Synopsis and Evaluation of Theories Concerning Family Evolution," Social Science, 38:50 (January, 1963). Interested readers might further consult virtually any introductory text in anthropological theory and M. F. Ashley Montagu's introduction to Marriage Past and Present: A Debate Between Robert Briffault and Bronislaw Malinowski (Boston: Porter Sargent, 1956 the debate took place in 1931). I
—
55
Preliminary Anthropological and Biological Considerations
men
of societies in which male dominance was institutional-
ized less than in that of the authors. reflect
As myth
they
may
well
the most basic male fears; every infant does indeed
live in a matriarchy.
As symbol
they represent the matrilineal
woman
does "carry the throne" that
which the
society in
will hold succeeding generations of
men. But
as
anthropo-
logical descriptions of real societies these are total nonsense.
When
such descriptions are not so metaphysical as to be
unfalsifiable,
they prove, without exception, to be totally
fantastical. It is
these myths and legends that provide the "evidence"
advanced
in a
number of books
that imply the
former ex-
istence of matriarchies for the (usually unstated)
purpose
of casting doubt on any biological explanation of sexual differentiation in social institutions. 24
The
authors of these
name
a society that was not patriwhose institutions did not conform to male dominance. They are aware that when they do, mere reference
books
rarely, of course,
archal or
any history book, to say nothing of the original source
to
materials which these authors avoid as
if
they were con-
taminated, would immediately demonstrate that the specified 24
As we
our discussion of cultural variation, serious Marxist that no matriarchy has ever existed. While such anthropologists place far greater emphasis on the economic factor than I do, there is no direct conflict between their work and the theory presented here; they do not maintain that there has ever been a society that lacked patriarchy, male dominance, or male attainment of high-status suprafamilial roles and positions. I am bothering to discuss the presentations of works alleging the former existence of matriarchies not because they deserve discussion on their intellectual merit they are uniformly inaccurate and incompetently done but because they are occasionally invoked by laymen. The works are: Elizabeth Gould Davis, The First Sex (New York: Putnam, 1971); Helen Diner, Mothers and Amazons (New York: Julian Press, a 1965 translation of a work originally published around 1930); M. and M. Vaerting, Dominant Sex (London: Doran, 1923); Nancy Reeves, Womankind (Chicago: Aldine, 1971); Evelyn Reed, Is Biology Woman's Destiny? (New York: Pathfinder shall see in
scholars like Kathleen
Gough have acknowledged
—
Press,
day,
—
1972); Phyllis Chesler, Woman and Madness (New York: DoubleEmanuel Kanter, The Amazons (Chicago: Charles Kent,
1972), and
1926).
56
Anthropology and the Limits of
was ruled by men,
society
conformed
that expectations
male dominance, and
to
nonmaternal
high-status,
evidence so selective that so ineptly handled.
A
Societal Variation
institutions
that males attained the
roles. Instead these it
and
authors advance
would be dishonest were
it
not
marriage contract from one society
is
advanced along with a female holiday from a second and a
goddess from a third. Using myths, one could
the existence of a society of centaurs.
need not even
select
With
this
as well
imply
approach one
evidence from more than one society;
the story of "Jack and the Beanstalk" and the celebration of
Mother's Day would be enough to "prove" that America is
a society ruled
There
a
is
by giant women.
problem with these books that
serious than their totally uncritical mixtures isolated facts about real societies.
is
even more
of myth and
They do not make even
theoretical sense. This enables us to avoid the necessity of
demonstrating the inadequacy of the empirical evidence provided by each individual book. in these
books
are,
thors, predicated
The arguments advanced
often without the awareness of the au-
on the assumptions that underpin Engels's
and empirically disprovable evolutionary theory.
fallacious
There are three assumptions that are implicit ysis
and
analysis
any one of the three
if is
incorrect.
in Engels's anal-
incorrect then Engels's
is
The assumptions
are that matrilineality
precedes and must precede patrilineality, that the transformation
from
matrilineality to patrilineality
is
engendered by
the advent of private property and class differentiation, and that the early stages of societal
various matrilineal societies
due of an stage.
development are not merely
The
matrilineal, but matriarchal. is
matrilineality
earlier matrilineality, but of
This matriarchal stage
is
we
find in
alleged to be not only a
an
resi-
earlier matriarchal
pictured by
some
as a reversal
of patriarchy and by others as an equalitarian situation in
which first
women
version
is
received high status.
We
simply incorrect; there
57
is
have seen that the
no evidence
that at
Preliminary Anthropological and Biological Considerations
men
any time there has ever been any society in which not rule and there that
is
great reason, as
none could have ever
not necessarily incorrect
women
(as long as
we
discuss in this
irrelevant to patriarchy,
ment of it
shall see, to believe
The second asserts
it
version
high-status,
book were not present), but
male dominance, and male
nonmaternal
roles.
We
attain-
shall see that
women men
true that certain matrilineal societies do give
is
is
merely that
received high status and does not imply that the
universals it is
we
existed.
did
very high status by giving very high status to roles that are incapable of playing. This to those
of far greater significance
is
who would deemphasize
the female role than
to our discussion of institutions for
to female roles this
is
which the
status
it
is
given
The ideological component of when we reflect on the fact that,
irrelevant.
reasoning can be seen
rather than invoking a matrilineal society that does at least
give
women
status, these
high status by giving their female roles high authors continue to invoke Lewis
Henry Mor-
gan's Iroquois as a roughly equalitarian society despite the fact that, as
we have
the Iroquois prohibit
seen,
Morgan
women from
states that not
only do
ruling, but that they also
consider them "servants."
Some
of these authors have not even considered the ethno-
graphic materials that are available;
have seen the absurdity of looking for a matriarchy
if
when none can be found among
sands of societies to which
we
The
would
the thou-
are not related and
are at "earlier stages of development" stick)
they had they
to our antecedent societies
which
(whatever the yard-
than those invoked and invented by these authors.
authors would not have even had to refer to the original
ethnographic
studies.
George Murdock's
definitive
cultural analysis, Social Structure, 2 * exposes the three
cross-
assump-
tions of Engels as not merely unjustified by the evidence, 25 See
George Murdock, Social Structure (New York: Free
pp. 184-207.
58
Press, 1949),
Anthropology and the Limits of but as inarguably incorrect. are a great is
number of
no evidence
lineality;
Societal Variation
Murdock demonstrates
patrilineal societies for
that patrilineality
that there
which there
was preceded by matri-
other words even an evolutionary theory of
in
lineage that does not imply a concomitant evolution of
second variable matrilineality
dependence theory.
is
refuted by the evidence.
is
is
More
some
importantly,
not dependent on any other variable; such
what gives meaning
Matrilineality
is
found
in
to Engels's evolutionary
with
thriving societies
highly developed rights of private property, with elaborate stratification systems,
with extensive
political integration,
even with systems of feudal land tenure. Matrilineality
is
and also
the lineage system in societies in which these institutions are
absent or as minimally developed as possible. All of this can
be said of patrilineality fact that
no change
in
any society significantly
The
fact that
also.
Most
crucial, of course, is the
any direction of any variable renders less patriarchal
than any other society.
none of the alleged Amazonian
ever existed has been demonstrated by a pologists, 26 but
it
is
societies has
number of anthro-
nonetheless interesting to examine the
26 "Since the Amazons never existed, but are a mythical group first mentioned by Herodotus and soon doubted by Strabo, their social organization need not further detain us, except perhaps as an enduring example of the will to believe." (Montagu, op. cit., p. 88.) "The fabled Amazon women are just that a fable. Even in societies which are organized about women, in societies which follow matrilineal descent and inheritance and matrilocal residence, power tends to be held by males in the female lineage. Power is usually held by the mother's brother from the viewpoint of ego, by the maternal uncle. Male dominance, or at least a tendency towards it, appears to be one of those basic features of human existence that culture cannot completely contradict. A minority of societies are organized around female lineage, but even among them, power, status, and property tend to be held by males." (Leslie, op. cit., p. 52.) Marvin Harris (Culture, Man, and Nature, New York: Thomas Y. Crowell, 1971) writes: (p. 328) ". certainly there was never any matrilineal 'stage'
—
.
.
The basic reason for this is that men have always been politically and economically dominant over women. Despite the persistent popular notion that the presence of matrilineal descent groups reflects the political or economic domination of men by women, it is the men in these societies no less than in patrilineal societies in this general evolution of culture.
.
59
.
.
Preliminary Anthropological and Biological Considerations internal
On
of a report of the discovery of
logic
Amazons"
"the
first
that recently appeared in a popular magazine. 27
the evidence of a few ideograms, a photographer devel-
oped
a
theory of the existence of an all-woman lesbian
ago in the wilds of Brazil. The
society that existed long
was supposed
society
cally raiding
and killing
to
have perpetuated
neighboring
all
the males and
male offspring. This
all
taken seriously by any anthropologist, but
ment imagine
by periodi-
itself
mating with captured males,
tribes,
let
that this "society" did exist. If
is
us for the
it is
not
mo-
advanced
as
evidence for the possibility of a nonpatriarchal society, certain questions arise.
caves?
Why
Why
did these
women
have
to hide in
did they not merely attain positions of authority
in the societies
from which they came
in the
same manner
men have done in every society? More generally, we might ask all those who claim that there has ever been a matriarchy or an Amazonian society of any type why they are unable as
to provide a single
example from ethnographic materials
that include societies of virtually every conceivable type at virtually every conceivable stage along virtually every con-
ceivable line of development;
who
socialization explains
if
why
the corporate kin group's productive and reproductive reand (p. 582) "Matriarchy has never existed," and (p. 585) ". anthropology lends no support to the view that there are no innate differences between males and females." Lastly we should note that Kathleen Gough, a leading anthropologist who certainly looks favorably control
sources," .
.
upon the feminist movement, has written:
".
.
.
matriliny does not in-
volve 'matriarchy' or female dominance, either in the
home
or in society,
Engels tended to believe. Matriarchy, as the reverse of patriarchy, has in fact almost certainly never existed men predominate as heads of households, lineages and communities in matrilineal as in patrilineal societies, and women experience greater or less authority from their mother's brothers, elder brothers, or even their grown sons. Some degree of male dominance has, in fact, been universal to date in human society, although matrilineal systems are usually kinder to women." "An Anthropologist Looks at Engels," in Nona Glazer Malbin and Helen Youngelson Waehrer, eds., Women in a Man-Made World (Chicago: Rand McNally, as
.
.
.
—
1972), p. 115. 27 Time, December 27, 1971, p. 54.
60
Anthropology and the Limits of societies are patriarchal there
Societal Variation
should be any number of
which leadership and authority are associated with
cieties in
women, and one should not be forced
to
invoke examples
of nonpatriarchal societies that exist only in myth and erature.
lit-
28
The Meaning of Universality An institution is universal if it plays
a crucial role in every
which we have any knowledge; the
society of
of such societies (societies that
is
were
over four thousand
total
number
between approximately twelve hundred relatively isolated
and that have been studied
from other
societies
by anthropologists) and
directly
(groups that are definitely
known
to
or to have existed, but that have not been studied
exist,
by anthropologists).
directly if
so-
there
is
have (or
An
institution
is
not universal
(or ever has been) a single society that does not
at
one time did not have) the
institution.
Univer-
need not, indeed usually does not, mean that every
sality
individual in every society exhibits the behavior that leads to (or tution.
is
generated by), and which
Marriage
is
is
regulated by, the
a universal institution
(if
the anthropologists to worry about the one or that 28
some
see as exceptions), even
One may,
we
insti-
leave for
two
societies
though some members
perhaps, speak meaningfully of "masculine" and "feminine" "masculine" and "feminine" periods in a particular society's development if he uses these merely as relative terms and speaks of relatively aggressive values as "masculine" and relatively nurturant values as "feminine." will come close to doing this in Chapter Five when we discuss the factors that determine the extent to which male aggression is manifested in any given society. But such relative terms are applicable only within the limits described in this book. No society was ever so "feminine" that authority and dominance were not associated with males and no society was ever so "masculine" that child-rearing was primarily the responsibility of males (except, as with the Marquesan Islanders, who practiced female infanticide, when there was a great shortage of women). Some historians, using this terminology, have referred to societies which would be "feminine" as "matriarchies." Since they do not imply that the societies were not patriarchies (in my terms) or that they did not exhibit male dominance, this does not conflict with the analysis presocieties or
We
sented here.
61
Preliminary Anthropological and Biological Considerations
of every society remain unmarried. Universality means that the general population of every society predicates ior
and expectations on the universal
behav-
It
means
which we could have
that thousands of "experiments" for
imagined a great number of other
its
institution.
results all
turned out the
same way. Let
me make
it
cause an institution
There are
do
all
clear that is
I
universal
not implying that be-
is
it
necessarily inevitable.
different reasons for universality,
imply
inevitability.
and by no means
Perhaps the most obvious reason
for universality, and the one for
ment
am
which no reasonable argu-
for inevitability could be made,
is
technological igno-
rance or economic scarcity; certainly no one would argue that
because no society has a two-hour work week such a work
week could never be achieved by any
society.
However, while
universality can never, by itself, prove inevitability, there are
times
when
it
combines with other evidence to strongly sug-
gest inevitability.
The
inevitability
may
flow from the nature
of society in general, as opposed to the particular nature of a particular society, or from the very nature of biology.
An
example of the former
is
can imagine a society in which parent-child incest
mon form effects
human One
the incest taboo.
of sexual activity, but what
we know
is
a
com-
about the
of incest on social structure has led us to the con-
clusion that these effects alone
of such a society even though
would preclude the
it is
logically
and
survival
(let us
agree
for argument's sake) biologically possible that such a society
could survive. Even
when we
deal with the most basic type
of limitation on societal possibility, the limitations imposed
by
human
physiology, universality alone does not prove in-
One would not say that in every future society (composed of men and women who are biologically constituted as they are now and disregarding for now the possibility of new forms of childbirth) women will be the evitability.
ones to give birth because they have always been the child-
62
Anthropology and the Limits of Societal Variation bearers in ever)- society in the past, but here the biological factor
that
so apparent that the implication of inevitability
is
inherent in universality cannot reasonably be ques-
is
tioned. Universality indicates that there has never been an
(which would, of course, immediately disprove
exception
inevitability).
human
Given the seemingly unlimited
plasticity
societal institutions, the universality of
an institution
alerts
the objective investigator to the possibility that there
underlying factor engendering universality and factor
of
of
beings and the seemingly endless variety of their
is
is
an
that, if this
inseparable from the general nature of society or
human
biology, the institution, or
some equivalent
tutional channel for
meeting the requirements of
may be
If
inevitable.
relevant to patriarchy,
insti-
this factor,
were no biological evidence
there
male dominance, and male attainment,
then one might argue that the inevitability of these institutions
was merely
the anthropologist,
he finds and that
is
is
a fairly likely probability.
who
is
more impressed when he
suspect that
finds
an institution
capable of overriding this diversity, would tend to
believe strongly that there that
I
impressed by the cultural diversity
makes these
an as yet undiscovered factor
is
universal.
institutions
The
analysis
that
explains these institutions in terms of the specific social values
of each specific society, while
it
is
fairly satisfactory if
one
has only a single society or a few related societies to study
(though even for a single society the etiology and purpose of the institution must be explained), loses
powers
as
more and more unrelated
highly varied value systems
societies
its
persuasive
with unrelated,
demonstrate only one of a
all
number of
logically possible institutional alternatives.
sociologists
on the other hand,
ourselves with societies in the I
who more
Western
believe, too often see ourselves as
in a totally
We
often concern
tradition
and who,
having a vested interest
environmental approach to social
reality,
would
hold out more strongly for an explanation that did not imply
63
Preliminary Anthropological and Biological Considerations inevitability.
But universality
is
only one element of the evi-
dence to be presented for the line of reasoning that sees patriarchy,
male dominance, and male attainment
table. It
important because
is
it
as inevi-
demonstrates that there has
been no exception to disprove the inevitability of these tutions, because
that
may
points the
it
way
insti-
to other sorts of evidence
may
explain such universality and
indicate reasons
for inevitability, because universality represents an astonish-
ing regularity in a world of variation, and because
it
is
for
the explanation of such regularity that the scientist searches.
For the cultural anthropologist nothing admirable
conservatism leads
scientific
is
him
when an
lost
to describe in
slightly qualified terms the universality of a universal institution.
However,
I
am
advancing the hypothesis that
archy, male dominance, and male attainment are
and
it
is
important to emphasize that the conservatism of
some anthropologists does not
indicate their belief that there
Throughout
are any clear exceptions to total universality. this
book
societal
I
accept the assertion that one need find only one
exception to the universality of an
prove that not only that
its
logical
patri-
inevitable,
presence in factors.
theory and
I
am
all
do
I
is
institution
the institution not inevitable,
other societies
this
to
is
to
but
not related to bio-
increase the tightness of the
able to do this because there
is
not a single
exception to the universality of patriarchy, male attainment,
and male dominance. it is
It is
worth mentioning, however, that
quite possible that there are a
number of secondary and
tertiary biological factors that will nearly
fested in a particular institution but that in rare situations
always be mani-
may be overridden
when complemented by extreme
institu-
tions that act as counterpoise only at the cost of introducing
tension into the system by unusual suppression of the biological or that
may be overridden only by rendering
the com-
ponents of the system very different from the components of nearly
all
other social systems. For example, polyandry
64
Anthropology and the Limits of
Societal Variation
woman and more
(marriage consisting of a
than one
man)
is
the primary form of marriage in only about one-tenth of
1
percent of
In
societies.
all
(the evidence
societies
all
or virtually
all
of these
unclear and the methodological
is
problems are complex) female infanticide
widely prac-
is
more adult men than there are adult women. Therefore, while the existence of a single society in which polyandry is the primary form of marriage does ticed so that there are
prove that
it
monogamous that
polygyny
not inevitable that every society must be
is
or polygynous,
common
is
it
does not prove that the fact
while polyandry
is
rare
un-
is
related to biological factors.
The Relevance
of Cultural Variation
All social scientists agree that there are both unchanging preconditions that must be met by any society that
is
to
survive and also great variations from one society to another.
Whether
a social scientist
or variations
is,
is
more impressed by
similarities
perhaps, a reflection of his personality, a
question of whether he sees the glass as half empty or half
he
full. If
sees the glass as half empty,
he will be sustained
by the fact that no society has ever failed to develop games; if
he sees the glass
as half full,
he will stand in awe of the
wonderfully varied types of games the members of different
have developed.
societies
If
he sees the glass
as half empty,
he will note that man's emotions and the biological materials that
underlie
at all, since
half
full,
cieties
them have changed only very
our species
evolved. If he sees the glass as
his attentions to the ingenuity so-
have demonstrated in developing the various
tutional
mechanisms for
the societies' members.
water equal to half is
first
he will devote
slightly, if
threatened only
empty (or half
its
The
reality is that the glass contains
capacity; the correctness of an analysis
when one who views
full)
insti-
satisfying the emotional needs of
the glass as half
argues that the glass
65
is
less
than (or
Preliminary Anthropological and Biological Considerations
half full. This is what many social scientists do when discussing the institutions we discuss in this book. The nature of sociology is such that the sociologist often sees the glass as half full and emphasizes variation among
more than)
societies;
he analyzes variations in
and economic con-
social
an attempt to explain cross-cultural variations
texts in
vant to particular institutions.
women's
roles in
He
America and India
differing etiologies of differing roles
anisms that sustain these
roles.
rele-
might, for example, study in order to discover the
and the
differing
This approach
is
mech-
fertile be-
cause the differences proposed in the analysis of these two societies
plain.
is
sociological
is
real differences they
is
attempt to ex-
the danger, however, that this customary
perspective
variation that
may
found from
more than
glass as
by
justified
There
lead
overemphasizing the
to
society to society, to seeing the
many
half full. Indeed,
sociologists
who
are not aware of the universality of patriarchy, male domi-
and male attainment invoke cultural variation
nance,
as
"proof" that these institutions could not be inevitable. There is
no such cultural
As we have virtually
variation.
seen,
no variation
tions of leadership
when at all.
patriarchy
is
considered, there
The number
and authority
varies, as
is
women in posiwe shall see, from
of
zero to perhaps 6 or 7 percent as one spans the entire range
of
all
human
societies
in
societies including,
which
women
it
should be noted, those
comprise half the work force.
how
Calculation of the exact upper figure depends on
down from
far
the top one considers "leadership" and whether
one includes appointed positions of leadership such net members. In any case, the point
is
as cabi-
abundantly clear: no
society fails to associate suprafamilial authority with males
or fails to
fill
its
authority positions with males.
even some empirical and, rect,
if
There
the theory presented here
is
is
cor-
strong theoretical evidence that modernization (speciali-
zation, division of labor, bureaucratization,
66
and the removal
Anthropology and the Limits of of hereditary barriers to mobility)
Societal Variation
limits the possibility of
female attainment of leadership positions, even within the slight variation that
male
possible, by giving freest play to
is
aggression.
Likewise, there
very
is
among
variation
little
societies in
the degree to which males attain the nonmaternal roles that are given high status (whatever the particular roles given
high status in any particular society). If male attainment of nonmaternal, nonleadership roles as
in a
is,
few
apparent as male attainment of leadership
we
cause, as societies
Since
it
is
be-
our discussion of the Mbuti, such
shall see in
have few such roles to
we have
not
societies,
roles,
attain.
defined "male dominance" in terms of the
feeling of a society's
men and women
that an element of
we have
general authority resides in the male and since
seen
that the ethnographic studies of every society that has ever
been observed explicitly ent,
there
literally
is
state that these feelings
no variation
variation in the degree to in dyadic
and familial
all.
If
were
we
pres-
consider
which such feelings are manifested
institutions,
becoming mired
in
which aspects
emphasize.
to
at
subjective
we
are threatened with
considerations
concerning
have suggested
I
(Footnote
Eleven) that the degree to which male dominance will be manifested will be lowest
when
a society's males are
most
preoccupied with suprafamilial pursuits. Even in such societies authority
within the family will be invested in the
male (usually the
father, but the mother's brother in the case
of some matrilineal-matrilocal societies), but male disinterest
and female
means"
ability
to
"get around"
will serve to give
women
males by "feminine
a great deal of real power,
though not authority, within the family. Apart from the observation that male
dominance will be
dyadic and familial institutions
when
least
given high status and the paternal role low
we
manifested in
a suprafamilial area status,
about
is
all
can say about variation from society to society in the de-
67
Preliminary Anthropological and Biological Considerations
gree to which male dominance familial institutions
every society.
The
manifested in dyadic and
Male dominance
this:
is
is
societies that least
present in
is
manifest male domi-
nance are the United States and a few matrilineal
societies. If
one considers male dominance in the United States extreme, then he must agree that there
very
is
little
variation in the
degree to which different societies manifest male dominance (relative to the logically possible variation), because nearly all
other societies manifest
argue
that,
it
He
to a greater degree.
within the variation that
we do
cannot
find, industrializa-
tion necessarily decreases the manifestations of
male domi-
nance, because the other two or three societies (besides the
United States ) that
While
tive societies.
manifest male dominance are primi-
least it is
true that modernization has tended
to reduce the manifestation of
two
centuries in America,
dominance are
tral to
is
now
able to consider a point that
the confusion that
women,
we
shall discuss
a phrase
we
is
is
whose
not only cen-
more
momentarily, but one
and needless confusion. This
engendered by the phrase
status of
shall attempt to avoid in this book.
Confusion develops because
this
term
is
used to include two
factors that are not only not necessarily positively
correlated, but which, if the suggestions offered in
male
the question of alleged cultural variation and to the
that enables us to avoid endless
or
in the past
increase
low male dominance.
evolutionary fallacies
is
male dominance
would no doubt
in a matrilineal-matrilocal primitive society
starting point
We
it
above and
Footnote Eleven are correct, will often be inversely cor-
related.
Some
authors use this phrase to refer to rights and
find that there
is
a great deal of variation
from
society to
women; some societies give women virtually no rights at all while in modern societies such as America women have virtual equality of rights. The feminist may abhor the few remaining laws that differentiate society in the rights given to
between the
sexes, but surely she will
68
admit that such laws
Anthropology and the Limits of Societal Variation are not a
major cause of the disparity
women
and
in the
power and
in positions of
numbers of men
that they are not the
primary focus of her criticism of contemporary
society. If she
will not admit this, then she will have to admit that passage
amendment would satisfy all her criticisms. when they used the phrase a omen, then there would be no problem; we could
of an equal rights
If all authors referred to rights
status of
admit that there is
is
great variation here, but that such variation
irrelevant to this
archy,
book because
it
has no bearing on patri-
male dominance, or male attainment.
However,
number of anthropologists have suggested
a
the "status of
means
all,
women"
is
we
respect,
to society
Here these anthrowomen. If we focus
matrilineal-matrilocal societies.
pologists refer to the respect given to
on
that
highest in certain, though by no
is
see,
once again, that variation from society
very great. But once again this
is
our purposes because the great respect given to
irrelevant to
women
does
not reduce the degree of patriarchy, male dominance, or male
attainment of high-status suprafamilial positions; this respect reflects
the high status
related roles that in
and
is
of maternal
and female lineage-
perfectly congruent with the suggestion
male dominance will be somewhat subdued
in societies
which male time and energies are directed toward supra-
familial pursuits to an unusual degree. In these societies
men
are typically outsiders in the matrilineal household, and interaction society.
between the sexes
When
is
far less frequent than in our
these societies give high status to
women's
female
roles,
strong.
Women
position
women's
in a very real sense, quite
are given great respect and a considerable
degree of familial power. that such respect
is,
It is
important to note, however,
and familial power
is
made
possible by the
male suprafamilial orientation and emotional detachment
from the family. triarchy
is
Women
as strong as in
have few suprafamilial any other
society,
rights, pa-
males attain
all
the suprafamilial high-status positions, and male dominance,
69
Preliminary Anthropological and Biological Considerations
while
may be somewhat subdued
it
"visitor" status
because of the male's
and the infrequency of male-female encoun-
unmistakably present in both the feelings of
ters, is
women and The
men and
the formal expectations of the society.
reader can no doubt already see the confusion that
when one
ensues
uses the phrase status of
women
to include
Women
even two discrete factors, rights and respect.
receive
great respect in certain matrilineal societies that give
few
rights; the respect derives
high-status roles
for
from the
them
fact that they
fill
which men are incapable of playing and
which male aggression
is
useless.
(There
nothing in
is
the theory presented here that precludes the possibility that a society will give higher status to
female roles which
are incapable of filling than to the roles
Women
which males
receive equality of rights in societies in
compete with men and
in
which the female
men
attain.
which they
roles
men
are
incapable of playing are given relatively low respect. In both
female attainment of high-status, suprafamilial po-
societies
sitions
is
insignificant, so
which
society gives
women
"higher
status"?
Were
this the limit of the
confusion engendered by the
phrase status of women, the problem would be irrelevant to
we discuss; we could merely sugwho are interested in the rights or women discard the confusing phrase and
the universal institutions gest that those authors
the respect granted
specify the variable they wish to discuss.
lem
more
is
serious than this.
However, the prob-
Some Marxist
anthropologists
acknowledge that there has never been a matriarchy,
but,
invoking variations of Engels's reasoning, imply that there
were once than
it
societies in
which women's position was
have existed since the dawn of 29 See Kathleen
Gough,
op.
cock's introduction to Engels's
and the
far higher
has been in any of the thousands of societies that
State
(New York:
cit.,
history. 29 It
is
not clear from
pp. 107-118, and Eleanor Burke Leaof the Family, Private Property,
The Origin
International Publishers, 1972), pp. 7-67.
70
Anthropology and the Limits of Societal Variation
what these authors believe
these authors' writings exactly
the prehistoric societies were like. If that these societies
were
have
then there
just discussed,
tween the theory presented here and
conflict be-
their works; for if
now
are willing to admit that such societies
nothing by admitting that they did long ago
is
we
societies
no necessary
is
mean
they
all that
like the matrilineal
we
exist
also.
The
we lose
prob-
lem derives from these authors' implication, quite possibly an unintended implication, that these societies did not manifest
male attainment of high-status, nonmaternal
male dominance. This implication
positions or
incorrect, but ties
modern
such a society ciety that
societies,
which we
live.
A
nonfeminist
well prefer life in a matrilineal society, but a feminist's nightmare.
is
A
technological so-
was matrilineal could not develop for
of reasons, but historic
if
one did
matrilineal it
not only
is
closer to the feminist ideal than are the
industrial societies in
woman might
and
leaves the impression that matrilineal socie-
it
somehow
are
roles
would
exist
number
or contemporary matrilineal
societies" differ
a
and did resemble the "pre-
most notably from our
society in
the total separation of male and female roles and the prohibitions against
men
women
even entering the areas from which
derived their status, in the impossibility of women's
attaining status in any related roles,
and
way but through maternal and
in the lesser degree to
even think about women.
It
is
lineage-
which men would
true that
male dominance
would be somewhat diminished, but only to the extent that males were absent from the family setting. This setting would still
be dominated by a male, though the male might be the
mother's brother.
woman who archy,
This might
all
be satisfactory for the
did not care that the society manifested patri-
male attainment, and male dominance because
would be dreadful
it
gave
her female roles high status, but
it
woman who
in terms of the suprafamilial
sees
high-status roles
women's value
and positions that males 71
attain.
for the
Preliminary Anthropological and Biological Considerations
The
from
lesson to be learned
real
women
equality of rights
great respect
compete for
A
B.
woman
only a
what the
can
fill
women who
forces
given to women. As
we
desire status to
which male aggression
attainment while
for
rights given
reduction of the status given to the roles
status in areas in
precondition
it
shall see, this
reduces the
means
tion of the status given to the roles only a
women
cannot lose to one in which
woman
a
can play
women
cannot win. The mean-
movement and
ing this holds for the feminist
is
respect
that a reduc-
changes a woman's situation from one in which
attempt to
its
improve women's situation by deemphasizing the
men
women
twofold: A. Males attain the positions of
is
authority and high status no matter
women, and
that give
societies
and from those that give
roles that
are incapable of playing are manifold.
women
In every strata of every society the status of
is
derived in part from the status accorded the roles only a
woman or,
can play and in part from the status of the husband
in the
The
few polyandrous
highest-status
status
from
There
is,
male
their
of course,
and
status
status than there
only
roles
women
husbands
women
much lower
in every society derive their (or, in a
much more
status
few by
in the status derived
can play
(i.e.,
a
women from male women from the
by
wife derives
janitor's
from her husband than does
wife, but the janitor's wife derives as
much
roles only she can play as does the doctor's
a doctor's
status
—
wife
of status so derived being determined by the
from the
amount amount of
the
status her particular society gives to the roles only a
can play ) only a (a)
.
Thus
woman
woman
a decrease in the status accorded the roles
can play will result in a situation in which:
There will be
Males
high
cases, their sons).
variation within a society in
in the status derived is
primary husband.
societies, the
a net loss of status accorded
will, for all the reasons
we
women; (b)
shall discuss, continue to
be the attainers of status and positions of authority; (c)
72
The
—
Anthropology and the Limits of
Societal Variation
(whose feminine
wives of such attainers
abilities
are pri-
marily responsible for their attaining the marital positions
from which they derive high
status) will continue to be the
highest-status females; and, (d)
women
Other
will see their
lowered to the degree that the status accorded the roles
status
only a
woman
In any case: chologists,
can play
lowered.
is
Numerous
anthropologists, sociologists, psy-
and even psychoanalysts have attempted
to
invoke
cultural variation to reject the possibility of a biological basis
of the universal institutions
we
discuss.
These scholars are
free to invoke cultural variation as refutation of a biological
explanation of institutions that do vary and they are free to argue that the theory
there could
someday
one of the universal
institutions.
voke variation among or
proposed here
is
incorrect, so that
exist a society that failed to
But
if
manifest
they attempt to in-
societies that exist or
have existed
they attempt to invoke the real variation that exists on
if
the superficial level of tasks performed in order to counter the implications of an analysis based on the absence of variation
found on the deeper
status
—then
level of the association of sex
and
they are, to be quite blunt, ignoring the evi-
dence and they are wrong. By focusing on patriarchy, male
dominance, and male attainment of high-status suprafamilial roles
and
positions, three criteria that avoid the confusion
engendered by vague and misleading paradigms status of
women," we
discover that there
is
"the
like
not now, nor
has there ever been, any variation large enough to cast the slightest
on the
doubt on the universality of these institutions or
possibility that they represent three inevitable
festations of biological sexual differentiation. This in essence,
an attempt to discover
why
mani-
book
is,
these three institutions
are universal and to assess the possibility of their being inevitable.
73
Chapter Three
The Hormonal
Factor
Introductory Note: This chapter tion,
meant
hormonal
were
I
is
by any stretch of the imagina-
not,
be a definitive discussion of the
to
Even
basis of sex-associated behavior.
qualified to undertake such a
task,
nearly infinite complexity of this subject
the
would
preclude detailed discussion within the confines
My
of a single chapter.
purpose in
this chapter is
merely to demonstrate that the hormonal evidence fully justifies our hypothesizing the determinative
(to patriarchy,
nance)
male attainment, and male domi-
biological difference between males
and
females in "aggression" (as operationally defined in this chapter)
which the anthropological
dence forces us to hypothesize. The institutions
we have
discussed to manifest them-
selves whatever the environmental text of a society
evi-
ability of the
would
justify
and
social con-
our hypothesizing
innate sexual differences relevant to these institutions even if there all.
Likewise,
I
presented here
were no hormonal evidence
believe that the is
at
hormonal evidence
so strong that
it
would be
ex-
tremely persuasive in explaining the presence of patriarchy,
male dominance, and male attainment
in our society
even
evidence at
All that
all.
if
we had no is
74
cross-cultural
necessary for the theory
The Hormonal
Factor
of limits advanced in this book is that there be a hormonal factor which gives males a greater capacity for aggression; this
it
iv ill
lead to success. This
meant by reference no implication in "male need
is
all that is
to the "biological"; there is
book that there
this
exists a
dominate," a male "aggres-
to lead or
sive instinct"
an advantage in
invoked in any area for
that the capacity can be
which
is
which generates any
sorts of ideas
or behavior, a "killer instinct," a male "bonding factor," a "territorial imperative,"
or any other
innate or "natural" factor which directs or pat-
Whether such
terns thoughts or behavior.
factors
exist or not is irrelevant here.
Likewise, the fact that there
may
also be en-
vironmental elements involved in the etiology of sexual behavior or "aggression"
is
irrelevant un-
one can demonstrate that the hormonal factor
less
conforms to the environmental
factor. If the en-
vironmental elements merely conform to the limits set
by the hormonal elements then the sexual
directions determined by the
and the
are irreversible
to these directions are, inevitable.
ments of here
is
This
is
hormonal elements
institutions that if
conform
this theory is correct,
not to deny that there are ele-
interaction, but, if the theory presented
correct, these can
be seen to be
as insignifi-
cant to the development of the institutions dis-
cussed as fetal nutrition
is
to the difference in
physical strength between the sexes or to the institutions that
man
conform
to this difference. (See
"Hu-
Aggression," p. 91, and "The Irrelevance of
Exceptions," p. 94.")
Needless to pared
say, I
this chapter
could not possibly have pre-
without the advice of biochem-
75
Preliminary Anthropological and Biological Considerations ists,
who
biologists, endocrinologists,
edge individually. ever, to Drs.
am
I
and psychologists
numerous
are, unfortunately, too
to
acknowl-
how-
particularly grateful,
Frank Beach, David Blizard, David
Edwards, Bruce McEwen, John Money, and Geoffrey Raisman. If any errors are contained in the
chapter they are, of course, mine. Because
of the evidence included here
and exceedingly complex
much
based on recent
is
research, there are
doubt instances where some
who
no
specialize in the
would have worded a senwould have made a distinction
disciplines discussed
tence differently or
—while —would be necessary
which here
irrelevant to the points being
made
in other contexts.
example: when discussing hormonal factors vant to universal institutions the
word environment
as
I
I
synonymous
am aware
special environmental conditions such as trition,
shock,
hormone
some
that
malnu-
therapy, or fetal trauma
are neither heredity nor socialization. crucial for
rele-
occasionally use
virtually
with socialization, even though
For
These are
areas of study, but are obviously
irrelevant to the discussion of differences in sexual
behavior and of institutions that are universal (except insofar as environment affects biological adaptation, and this
The Dangers As
is
discussed in Chapter Six).
of Biological Analogy
the reader must have suspected, the theory of the in-
evitability of patriarchy rests
on
a foundation of biological
reasoning. For the universality of patriarchy and male domi-
nance offers only circumstantial evidence of patriarchal evitability
and,
though
sufficient for conviction,
circumstantial
evidence
is
in-
often
for the case to be airtight direct
76
The Hormonal evidence
The
needed.
is
total
to consider biological evidence
Factor
many
refusal of
sociologists
a result of not only the
is
"vested interest" mentioned above nor the feeling on the left that biological considerations are implicitly "racist" but also
on absurd
a reaction to early sociological theorists' reliance
analogies to nature and to the horrors that have been per-
name
petrated in the for example,
some
of nature. In order to justify slavery,
theorists
had hypothesized
a
biological
made slavery inevitable despite the fact that the number of societies that did not have slavery indicated
element that large
that such a hypothesis
was not only uncalled for but obviously
incorrect.
Racists
do
not, of course, care about biological truth,
the early sociologists lived in a time logical fact
was
when knowledge
relatively nonexistent.
So
reluctance to consider biological evidence
points
made by
less,
mind
in
are intellectually worse than worth-
mological misuse. While
is
it
that even vaguely resemble
in
its
potential for episte-
true that in all the primates
man, probably
related primates (see Footnote Thirty-Six),
mammalian
hamster, below ) males,
it
,
if
more aggressive than the
ciated with the
a
fe-
difference to the line of reasoning
only for
humans was the male more
aggressive than the female and in
was primarily
in all the less
and perhaps even
species (see the discussion of the
the males are
would make no
used in this book
sion
overreactive, the
is
and teleological arguments about
and nature exceeds the Bible
in all the other
the sociological
the sociologists are not without considerable
merit. References to nature
what God had
if
and
of bio-
all
the other species aggres-
female quality. Aggression
male because there
says that the males of every species
is
is
not asso-
a universal
law that
must be more aggressive
than the females. Each species' biology develops in accord
with environmental necessity. While the biological association of aggression with the male serves obvious survival functions,
77
Preliminary Anthropological and Biological Considerations
and while
it
would not be
likely that this
a species unless the species developed
nary environmental conditions, there
would be
left
out of
under very extraordi-
no reason
is
to dismiss
the possibility that a unique environmental situation could
engender even in a mammalian species a biochemistry in
which the neural
effects of the
of those in man.
We
hormones were the opposite
should no more expect this to have a
human biology on temperament and we should be surprised to learn that men canwe learn that birds have wings. When I say that
bearing on the effects of
behavior than not
fly
after
patriarchy and male attainment are inevitable for biological
reasons bility
mean only that human biology human social system whose
I
of a
not dominated by males and
in
precludes the possiauthority system
which male aggression
is
is
not
manifested in dominance and attainment of positions of status
and power. Therefore, while evidence provided by primate studies
would no doubt provide considerable additional sup-
port for the theory advanced here, 30 such evidence sary
and
—
so that
evidence invariably
we may elicits
—
is
unneces-
avoid the criticisms that such
it
will play
reasoning developed here. Likewise,
it
no part
in the line of
will not be necessary to
invoke the well-documented studies of the feminizing of castration on primates (including
man) and on
other
effects
mam-
mals.
Human It
Hermaphrodites
should not be necessary to say that there have not been
planned experiments in which hormones of the other sex have 30 For example:
Harry F. Harlow and Stephen J. Suomi have demonmonkeys reared in isolation will, when brought together, exhibit the play behavior expected of normal monkeys; male play behavior is far more aggressive than female play behavior (as is the case with human children). Since the monkeys were reared in isolation they could not have learned this mode of behavior from other monkeys. The indistrated that
cation
is
very strong that the aggressive play
is a
behavioral manifestation
See Harry Harlow and Stephen J. Suomi, "Social Recovery by Isolation-Reared Monkeys," Proceedings of the Na-
of
innate male aggression.
tional
Academy
of Science, 68:1534-1538 (July,
78
1971).
The Hormonal been introduced into normal
Factor
human embryos
experimentation would not be
ethical,
or fetuses. Such
but biological accident
has provided the researcher in this area with the hermaphrodite.
Ironically, until a very
few years ago hermaphrodites
provided the strongest argument for the
environmental
totally
theory of sex-role development; for there was a type of
hermaphrodite
who
is
sex-chromosomally male but
who
is
born without external male genitalia. Such hermaphrodites are often raised as girls
and develop into normal, though
infertile,
women. This seems strong evidence indeed
biology
unimportant to the development of sexual tempera-
is
ment and behavior. However, research
in the past
few
that
years,
John Money of Johns Hopkins, has demonstrated beyond question that such hermaphrodites do
particularly that of Dr.
not merely lack male genitals; they also never have received the hormonal stimulation of the brain by the male hormone,
which
all
puberty.
by the
normal males receive
The
testes
fetally
and
(later again)
masculinization of the fetal brain
is
programmed
XY
(which develop on instruction from an
chromosomal program )
.
If a mistake causes a
chain so that fetal testes do not develop, as the genetic male hermaphrodites genitals, there will
who
is
lack
in
break in the the case with
external
male
be no masculinization of the brain (no
generation of testosterone, the male hormone) and
it
will be
possible to raise the genetic male as a female. In other words,
the genetic male hermaphrodite with female external genital
morphology can be
raised as a female
and will have no
cordance from sexual pathways in the brain.
It
dis-
would not be
possible to raise a normal male in this way.
We
need not attempt to negotiate the complexities of
hermaphroditism and ambiguity of sexual development here.
The
issue
which
is
relevant to this
book
is
not gender identity
per se and certainly not the gender identity of rare individuals in
whom
sex.
It
hormonal development
would not matter,
conflicts
to this theory,
79
with chromosomal if,
in individuals
Preliminary Anthropological and Biological Considerations
whose physiological development is
ambiguous, socialization
is
determinative to gender identity and behavior; the fact
grow
that hermaphroditic females can
change the
grow
facial hair. It
women
normal
fact that
does not
facial hair
cannot be socialized to
does not matter, to this theory, that a
chromosomal male can be exogenously hormonalized female gender identity (and vice versa); indeed, serve only to indicate the importance of hormones. portantly,
it
would not even
matter,
normal male could be socialized
to a
to
to a
this can
Most im-
theory,
this
if
a
female gender identity
(or vice versa). All questions of gender identity are irrele-
vant to this theory. All that
relevant here
is
one aspect
is
("aggression") of the differentiated behavior which sociated with the differentiated hormonalization of
we
males and normal females. As
shall see,
even define or describe the aspect which
is
is
as-
normal
we need
associated
not
more
with the hormonalization of the normal male than with the hormonalization of the normal female; this aspect the operational designation
we need merely
give
"aggression" and pro-
ceed in the attempt to demonstrate that only the explanation
which invokes
this factor is capable of reasonably explaining,
without contradiction by
own
its
internal logic or disproof
by the ethnographic evidence, the universality of the social institutions
ferred
my
"political
we have
The
discussed.
using, instead of
reader might have pre-
"aggression," terms meaning
dominance behavior,"
"status attainment behavior,"
and "dyadic dominance behavior"; however, while
it is
quite
true that the behavior which leads to political dominance, status attainment,
and dyadic dominance
male hormonalization monalization
—
(i.e.,
dominance and
monal systems), plied
that
types
of
—whatever
those
who
attain
every
status
in
my
using
such
male hormonalization behavior
and,
while
80
is
associated with
the relevance of the horpolitical
society
terms directly this
is
and dyadic
have male
hor-
would have imengenders these quite
likely
the
The Hormonal
we do
case,
Factor
not have the right to assume this and this need
The mere
not be the case for this theory to be correct.
presence of a male-female difference in physiologically en-
gendered, but physiologically undirected, "aggression" that
is
is all
necessary for this theory.
Thus the following paragraphs from Dr. Money's works are presented not for the light they shed on individuals whose physiological development is ambiguous or for the light they
shed on normal individuals' gender identity per
The paragraphs
are presented for the light they shed
se.
on the
hormonal development of normal males and normal females and
to demonstrate that the
hormonal evidence does not give
hormones
us the right to deny the possible relevance of
the one and only aspect
("aggression")
which there need be a male-female difference
in order to
explain the universality of the social institutions discussed.
book to
The only
to
of behavior for
we have
biological hypothesis included in this
states that those individuals
whose male anatomy leads
a social identification as "male" have hormonal systems
which generate a greater capacity for "aggression" (or a
—
lower threshold for the release of "aggression" for our is the same thing) than those individuals whose
purposes this
female anatomy leads
and
that socialization
to a social identification as
and
institutions
of hormonal sexual differentiation
and
conform
to the statistical reality
of the "aggression advantage" which males derive
hormonal systems. All questions of gender are irrelevant to this
book
"female"
to the reality
from
their
identity per se
since, in every society, virtually
every individual will have congruence in social gender identity,
individual gender identity, anatomy, and hormonal sys-
tem. This point
is
important because a number of authors, in
attempting to demonstrate the irrelevance of hormonal differentiation to the institutions
we
discuss,
have focused on
the irrelevant question of gender identity rather than on the differing
behavior which
is
associated
81
with the differing
Preliminary Anthropological and Biological Considerations
hormonal systems of normal males and females. In the next
we
section that
it is
shall discuss evidence
which suggests not merely
possible that sexual differences in "aggression" are
related to sexual
hormonal
hormone does give
but that the male
differences,
the male a greater capacity for "aggres-
(or a lower threshold at which "aggression"
sion"
While
the purpose of this book
is
re-
is
not to attempt to
describe the forms of behavior which are
subsumed under
leased )
.
the hypothetical "aggression," but only to demonstrate that sexual hormonal differences render certain institutions and certain directions of socialization inevitable, the evidence ad-
vanced in the next section and the discussion in the section
"Human
titled
Aggression" and Footnotes 32 and 40 are
quite suggestive of forms of behavior in which "aggression" is
manifested.
Dr.
Money
Gender
writes: identity in adulthood
the end product not of
is
an either-or determinism of heredity versus environment, but of the genetic code in
serial interaction
environment.
From
code unfolds
itself in interaction,
with
the time of conception, the genetic first
with the
intra-
uterine environment, then the perinatal environment, the
family environment, and eventually the more extended social, biological,
Interactionism
key
is
is
and inanimate ecological environment. a key principle, but an even
more
basic
the principle of serial sequence of interaction.
Serial interactionism
the genetic code and
means
its
that interaction
environment,
at a
between
critical
or
sensitive developmental period in an individual's existence,
from conception
ineradicable residue built.
This residue
to death,
upon which
may be
may
leave a permanent
all else is
subsequently
so indelible or insistent in
its
influence as to resemble the potency of the genetic code itself.
Moreover, such
indelibility or insistence
82
may be
The Hormonal residual to
learning
—
what has in
Factor
traditionally been referred to as
which case learning should be referred
as imprinting, in recognition of the persistence
to
and dur-
31 ability of its influence.
The sequence code
begins with the dimorphism of the genetic
manifested in the
as
XX
and
XY
chromosomal
dimorphism. From the genetic code, sexual dimorphism is
translated into the
dimorphism of embryonic
entiation of the gonads, which, through their secretion, in turn differentially regulate the
of
first
differ-
hormonal
dimorphism
the internal reproductive structures and then the
external genitalia.
At the same time
in
embryonic
life,
gonadal secretion dimorphically regulates the differentiation of structures in the brain, specifically the
thalamus,
that
in
turn will
regulate the
functioning of the pituitary. In secretion at this
same time
all
hypo-
sex-related
probability gonadal
also dimorphically regulates
other structures of the brain that will eventually be in-
volved in the regulation of certain aspects of sexually
dimorphic behavior, namely, those aspects that are phyletically
to the
widely distributed (like motherly attentiveness
newborn or
coital postures
and movement)
32> 33 .
31
John Money, "Matched Pairs of Hermaphrodites: Behavioral Biology Sexual Differentiation from Chromosomes to Gender Identity," in Engineering and Science (California Institute of Technology), 33:34, 1970. Special Issue: Biological Bases of Human Behavior. 32 John Money, "Sexually Dimorphic Behavior, Normal and Abnormal," Environmental Influences on Genetic Expression: Biological and Behavioral Aspects of Sexual Differentiation (Fogerty International Center Proceedings No. 2, U.S. Government Printing Office), 1971, p. 209. Because Dr. Money does not use the term "aggression" as I do, and because I use the term to refer to unspecified (for the purposes of this theory) of
dimorphic behavior, it is difficult to relate his work to this theory. I would it relevant, however, that Dr. Money does describe certain types of behavior that are associated with pathological hormonalization which would seem related to sexual differences in "aggression" as I use the term. For example, Dr. Money finds that fetally androgenized genetic females who are not additionally androgenized postnatally demonstrate think
83
Preliminary Anthropological and Biological Considerations what Dr. Money terms "tomboyism." Dr. Money states that the hallmark of tomboyism is a "high level of physical energy expenditure, especially in vigorous outdoor play, games, and sports commonly considered the prerogative of boys." These individuals were socialized as girls. Dr. Money mentions that these individuals were no more "aggressive" than normal girls in picking fights with playmates and that the correct variables to describe gender-dimorphic behavior are more likely dominance assertion and striving for position in the dominance hierarchy of childhood. These, rather than anything having to do with picking fights or gender identity per se, are the types of behavior which would seem relevant to "aggres-
my
paradigm. Dr. Money points out that these androgen"male" toys (cars, guns) to "female" toys (dolls), lacked the enthusiasm for motherhood which marked the control group with which they were compared, and demonstrated a greater interest in career and lesser interest in marriage than the control group. It should be noted that these individuals were not, as are normal males, further androgenized postnatally. Dr. Money writes: "The most likely hypothesis to explain the various features of tomboyism in fetally masculinized genetic females is that their tomboyism is a sequel to the masculinizing effect on the fetal brain." I do not advance this as evidence for the correctness of the theory presented here because I do not include in the theory an attempt to describe the behavior which I subsume under the hypothesized "aggression" which is greater (or more easily released) in males than in females I mention all this only to point out that Dr. Money's work does not cast doubt on the relevance of hormonal sexual differentiation to the institutions whose universality I am attempting to explain. Indeed, to the extent that this evidence is relevant at all, it suggests that, while hormonal masculinization of the genetic female does not necessarily lead to a male gender identity, it can lead to certain types of behavior which are associated more with normal male hormonalization than with normal female hormonalization. It is such behavior, behavior which is included in my term "aggression," and not gender identity per se, which is relevant to this book. See John Money and Anke A. Ehrhardt, Man and Woman, Boy and Girl (Baltimore, Md.: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1972), sion" as used in
ized
girls
preferred
;
pp. 98-103. 33 In an attempt to counter the implication that fetal hormonalization
determinative to gender identity, Jessie Bernard {Women and the Public [Chicago: Aldine-Atherton, 1971], pp. 17-18), has prepared a matrix based on the case studies in Stoller's book {op. cit). After examin-
is
Interest
cases in terms of genetic sex, internal anatomy, external anatomy, gender assignment, and gender identity, Dr. Bernard concludes independence of gender identity from either that there is an ". heredity or anatomy." The conclusion that flows from Dr. Bernard's material is just the opposite of this; excluding the category of individuals for whom all variables save gender identity were female, we see that a male gender identity never developed in the absence of fetal male hormonalization, but that it did develop even when a fetally masculinized male
ing Stoller's
.
was socialized
as
.
a female.
(Technically, of course, accidental fetal hor-
monalization of a female is not "heredity," but the implication for the development of gender identity in normal humans is that hereditary male hormonalization is determinative to male gender identity.) The one
84
The Hormonal
Factor
Testosterone and Aggression Only human biology is relevant to aggression: vague ence to other species
However, there
is
fraught with potential for abuse.
one area of inquiry that
and the
logical data
is
refer-
direct study of
between etio-
falls
human
biology; this
is
humans
in
the experimental study of animals that resemble
Those who
the physiology of the system being studied.
gorically dismiss the possibility of the relevance to
of such research should ignore this section. discussion of hermaphroditism
is
humans
trust that the
I
sufficient to
cate-
convince them
of the importance of hormones to sex-associated behavior in
humans. Other readers might consider, however, that nearly all
of
medical research proceeds in this way and that knowledge
human
physiology
is
often
made
possible by
what we learn
about animal physiology.
The hormonal plex. It
in terms of
is
exceedingly com-
hormone levels. The male hormone is not, in The biological aggression of which we
"aggressive."
itself,
shall
etiology of aggression
a gross oversimplification, at best, to speak merely
is
speak
is
a function of an interaction
between the
fetally
prepared central nervous system and the
later
endogenous testosterone. This explains the
possibility of the
rare exceptional species in
the male
female
which the
presence of
effect of testosterone in
the reverse of that in humans and in which the more aggressive than the male. It is by no means
is
is
clear that there are
any such exceptions
at all
among mam-
mals. Certainly there are none in the species closely related to
man.
It
has been suggested that the golden hamster
is
the
excluded category must contain an error, for the claim that a male gender when a normal female is socialized as a female implies that the male gender identity in this case has no cause at all; this is not
identity develops
What this category most strongly indicates is that socialization not determinative to gender identity. It is possible that some rare psychological factors proved capable of overriding both heredity and possible. is
socialization for this category, but
was an undetected
fetal
it
would seem more
hormonalization.
85
likely that there
Preliminary Anthropological and Biological Considerations single experimental exception to the development of sexual differences in aggression outlined here, 34 but this has recently
been brought into question. 35 Even
if
more aggressive than the male,
does not indicate an un-
warranted the
rat,
selectivity
and
this
the female hamster
on our part when we consider the mouse,
the other animals for which aggression
all
associated primarily with the male, as analogues of the
and other experimental animals, the hamster female larger than the male. This
CNS
would seem
a
is
human
male and exclude the hamster. For, unlike the mouse,
the entire
is
rat,
is
also
good indication
that
(Central Nervous System ) -hormonal develop-
ment of the hamster
is
experimental animals so
the reverse of that in the other that,
if
one wants
to consider the
hamster, rather than the other animals, as analogous in
its
development to humans, he must indicate not only that the
human female also that she
is
is
more aggressive than the human male but
larger. 36
34 C. H. Phoenix, et Androgenic Stimulation," havior,
M.
"Sexual Differentiation as a Function of Reproduction and Sexual BeDiamond, ed. (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1969), al.,
in Perspectives in
pp. 33-49. 35 Leonore Tiefer,
"Gonadal Hormones and Mating Behavior in the Adult Golden Hamster," Hormones and Behavior, 1:189-202 (1970). If Dr. Tiefer's suggestion is correct and the hamster differs only in mating behavior but not in fighting, then our discussion of hamsters is irrelevant and there are no genuine exceptions at all. 36 Not coincidentally, this is exactly the situation one finds when he searches for a primate exception to male aggression. While none of the three primate species for which it has been suggested that the males are not more aggressive than the females are even vaguely homologous (indeed, these are among the primates furthest removed from man), species Saguinus, Aotus, and Callicebus have been suggested as exceptions to the association of aggression with the male in all primates. As with the hamster, this is quite likely to be an incorrect assumption that because the male of these species behaves in a "female" way in some other areas he is less aggressive than the female. In these three species, and in these three species alone, the male does play a dominant role in caring for the young (though the female, of course, suckles the young). This does not necessarily imply that even for these species fighting is not primarily male behavior [see Adolph Schultz, The Life of Primates (New York: Universe Books, 1971)]. But, for argument's sake, let us assume that these species do represent exceptions. If they have taken evolutionary paths somewhat
86
The Hormonal
With
all this in
mind,
I
Factor
refer the reader to a
number of
experiments that indicate beyond a shadow of a doubt
among
at least
terone
is
gression
rats,
many
mice, and
other
mammals,
that,
testos-
related not only to sexual differentiation but to agitself.
In paired
females treated with exogenous
tests,
testosterone during the crucial neonatal period will develop
an aggression as adults,
if
appropriately hormonally treated
male who receives neonatal
as adults, equal to that of the
testosterone stimulation of the
own
testis.
CNS
endogenously from his
Females treated with androgen on the tenth day
following birth will, as adults, demonstrate an aggression,
dominance, propensity for fighting, and willingness to fight greater than that of the normal female, but less than that of
neonatally treated females or normal males. Neonatal experi-
divergent from the paths taken by all other primates, if they differ from the other primates as the hamster differs from the other experimental anithe etiology of CNS-generated aggression for these species differs
mals,
if
from
that in all other primates as that of the hamster differs
the other experimental animals, in short, these three species as not
we
consider
all
if
we have
homologous with respect homologous
the other primates as
from
that of
a right to consider to aggression (as
we
while
consider the
homologous while the other experimental animals are acwe might expect that, as was the case with the hamster, for these three species, but for none of the others, the female would be larger than the male. This is precisely the case. Of the thirtytwo species of primates listed by Napier, only for Saguinus and Aotus is hamster
as not
cepted as homologous), then
the female larger than the male.
No
Callicebus female has been measured,
but, because Callicebus is so closely related to fair to
Saguinus and Aotus,
Handbook
it
is
A
assume
that this holds for Callicebus also. [See J. R. Napier, of Living Primates (New York: Academic Press, 1967).] Even
I am not including primate evidence in the line of reasoning I use in this book, this point is worth making. Those who would deny the relevance of primate studies to an understanding of human aggression often imply that those who advance primate evidence pick and choose
though
their subject species in order to support their case for a biological basis
male aggression and the implication this may hold for humans. I have show that this criticism is without merit. Even if we assume that the females of the three primate species mentioned are more aggressive than the males, even if we do not consider them so little homologous as to be irrelevant, even then we see that there is complete justification for confor
tried to
sidering the sexual differentiation in aggression for these three species as not analogous to that of man while we consider the differentiation found in all other primates as analogous to that
87
found in man.
Preliminary Anthropological and Biological Considerations
ments, particularly a series by David Edwards, demonstrate that testosterone does not create the neural
mechanisms for
female would be
totally incapable
aggression (if
it
did, the
of aggression and would be passive rather than merely less aggressive than the male), but that such fetal or neonatal stimulation affects the ultimate sensitivity of the
androgenic stimulation
later in
life,
CNS
to
thereby rendering the
postpuberal male more capable of aggression and more aggressive than the female. Dr. .
.
.
the
Edwards concludes
that:
commonly observed male-female dimorphism,
with respect to fighting in mice, has as that males develop with testes
its basis,
the fact
and females do
not. In
the male, early testicular secretions probably effect
some
change in brain mechanisms for aggression such that
most adult male pairs will
fight
in the presence of
endogeneous or exogeneous testosterone. In females change
is
this
not effected due to the absence of testes and
correlated testicular secretions.
In addition, there appears to be a critical period for the androgen influenced organization of a neural substrate for aggression.
This period may be tentatively
characterized as a period of time, in the development of
the mouse, during which endogeneous or exogeneous
androgen stimulation will enhance adult
sensitivity to
androgens with respect to the arousal of the tendency to display aggression. Furthermore, the data indicate that
the period of development during which androgen stimulation will produce
occurs in the
first
maximal
Androgen stimulation before will
enhance adult
sensitivity in the adult
few postnatal days of development. or after this optimal period
sensitivity to
androgens but to a
lesser
extent. 37
37
David A. Edwards, "Early Androgen Stimulation and Aggressive in Male and Female Mice," Physiology and Behavior, 4:338
Behavior
88
.
The Hormonal
Factor
Dr. Edwards's findings and those of other behavioral ologists,
bi-
endocrinologists, developmental psychologists, and
researchers in related fields demonstrated with a high degree
of certainty that sexual differences in aggression are a function of testosterone
The
specific
and the hormonalization of the
morphological changes in the
CNS
fetal brain.
engendered
by this hormonalization, however, had never been seen and
"some change in brain mechanisms" ) Recently, however, Drs. Geoffrey Raisman and Pauline M. Field of Oxford's Department of Human Anatomy photocould be only inferred
(
graphed the preoptic area of the male and female central nervous systems and demonstrated that in this area, which
known
to be crucial to sexual behavior, there
is
is
an extensive
sexual dimorphism; the sexes differ in the distribution of
synapses on the dendritic spines. Having seen that testosterone
was
directly related to aggression
and
that the central nervous
systems of the sexes differ morphologically in an area of the brain necessary for male behavior, direct demonstration that
it
all that
was needed was
was testosterone
morphological changes. That testosterone
is
the determining
factor here has been inferentially demonstrated in the past
dozen
years, as
we have
There
Amygdala
many
times
seen. Direct evidence has
—
at the
in
Bar Harbor,
been provided only in the past year the Neurobiology of the
a
that effected the
Conference on at
which
an abundance of evidence leading to the conis determinative to CNS development and to aggressive behavior that it is possible here to give merely a sampling; these will lead the interested reader to hundreds of similar studies. General discussions of the relevant research can be found in: Richard E. Whalen, "Differentiation of the Neural Mechanisms Which Control Gonadotropin Secretion and Sexual Behavior," in Diamond, op. at., pp. 303-340, and the contribution of C. H. Phoenix, R. W. Goy, and W. Young to Neuroendocrinology : Volume II, L. Martini and W. F. (1969).
is
such
clusion that sexual hormonalization
eds. (New York: Academic Press, 1967), pp. 163-196. Somewhat but more accessible to the general reader are Seymour Levine's "Sex Differences in the Brain" and Alan Fisher's "Chemical Stimulation of the Brain," both in Psychobiology (San Francisco: W. H. Freeman
Ganong,
dated,
and Co., 1967). The journal Hormones and Behavior provides the ambitious reader with over a hundred similar studies.
89
Preliminary Anthropological and Biological Considerations
Dr. Raisman delivered his findings that testosterone does generate specifiable morphological sexual dimorphism in the brain. 38
To be sure, human beings
the Raisman-Field photographs were not of
and, certainly, there
yet to learn about the exact
much
is
manner
in
that science has
which sexual
differ-
ences in the arrangement of the central nervous system are
manifested in differences in aggression. Moreover, there are
many ways of viewing
the factor that
I
term a "male- female
difference in the capacity for aggression" (but this
vant for our purposes because
all
is
irrele-
such paradigms, whatever
the other differences between them, acknowledge a physiologically
based difference between
parable to what
I
men and women com-
term a "male-female difference in the
capacity for aggression"). Nonetheless,
terous to attempt, as have
many
it
is
simply prepos-
feminists, to paint the over-
whelming evidence that testosterone is crucial to aggression as mere isolated findings that have no apparent significance to sexual differences in behavior. Only the most fanatic purist or the behaviorist for whom such a conclusion would be intolerable would deny us the right to suspect strongly that the same central nervous system differences found in experimental animals will be found in the brains of
women
who now
within ten years. Those
men and
refuse to admit the
persuasiveness of the considerable evidence provided by the
hermaphrodite and the voluminous amounts of evidence provided by the studies of experimental animals will continue to
do so when our knowledge of hormones has doubled or
tripled. Nonetheless,
even
at this
web human
point the tightening
of evidence allows no escape from the conclusion that
sexual differences in aggression are strongly related to irre38 Geoffrey Raisman and
Pauline
M.
Field,
"Sexual Dimorphism in
Area of the Rat," Science, 731-733 (August 20, 1971). As I write, the findings that Dr. Raisman delivered at Bar Harbor have not yet been published. They no doubt will have been by the time the reader the Preoptic
reads this.
90
The Hormonal
Factor
versible differences in the central nervous systems of
men
that are generated before birth. 39
and women
Human Aggression human
Aggression in scribed as
no
is
it
difficulty; this
nature of
cific
strate that the
beings
is
not, of course, as easily de-
in rats, but for our purposes this fact offers
book does not purport
human
to describe the spe-
social aggression, but
merely to demon-
hormonal differences between men and
women
will inevitably manifest themselves in certain societal institutions. I use aggression
societal institutions
the
only as a convenient hypothetical term,
which flows from hormones and
a nexus
X factor,
conform. The reader
is
to
which
certain
free to substitute
male behavior, or any other term that represents
an element that flows from specifiable hormonal factors and that determines the limits of specifiable social institutions
(patriarchy,
male dominance, and male attainment of high-
status roles
and positions )
perceive the reality
I
.
Likewise, the reader
is
free to
refer to as a "male-female difference in
the capacity for aggression" as a difference in the level of the
threshold at which "aggressive" and "dominance" behavior is
released. (In
one respect the paradigm which envisions
sexual difference in threshold
which
is
a
superior to the paradigm
sees a difference in capacity:
one might suggest that
the ferocity with which a mother defends her endangered infant demonstrates that the female has a capacity for aggression equal to that of the male.
behavior if
it
is
is
I
do not think that such
"aggression" in any meaningful sense, but even
the same thing as aggression such female behavior
demonstrates only that the environmental threat to her child 39
While
the evidence
not as extensive as that demonstrating the is considerable evidence that estrogen ("the female hormone") reduces aggression (i.e., increases submission behavior). See: Murray S. Work and Hilliard Rogers, "Effect of Estrogen Level on Food-Seeking Dominance Among Male Rats," Journal effects
is
of testosterone on aggression, there
of Comparative
and Physiological Psychology, 79:3 (1972).
91
Preliminary Anthropological and Biological Considerations
high threshold
sufficient to reach the
is
aggression
is
We
released.
at
which a female's
would then ask why,
if
there
no physiological difference between males and females relevant to aggression, male aggression
is
much lower
level,
why
i.e.,
does a
stimulus release male aggression so
any
case, all that
is
released at a
much less much more
threatening
In
easily?)
necessary for the theory presented here
is
is
that
that there is a physiologically generated difference
is
between
males and females which engenders in males, to a greater degree or more easily than in females, the behavior to which
we
the social institutions
This
is
not, as
it
discuss conform.
might seem
quick glance, tautological,
at
because each of the two elements social)
is
to the other.
Thus
use aggression as one might use strength
I
why young
an explanation of
in
(the biological and the
and described without reference
specified, defined,
boxing prowess and young
boys are socialized toward
away from
girls
it.
Greater adult
male muscularity engenders greater male "strength," which
makes the male
a better boxer than the female, so that
it
is
champions will be men, boxing will
inevitable that boxing
be associated with men, and small children will be socialized accordingly. Similarly,
it
will be argued, the
male hormonal
system engenders a greater male "aggression" that results in a
male superiority
high status (except playing a role)
at attaining roles
when men
so that
roles of leadership
and
it
and positions given
are biologically incapable of
inevitable that positions
is
status will
and
be attained by men, and
small children will be socialized accordingly. In other words, for the line of reasoning used in this essay
we need know
nothing
about "aggression"
at all
itself.
40
No
40
Some
sion
with
(i.e.,
sexual dominance, aggression as response to fear, male aggression
physiologists speak of different, but related, types of aggresdifferent,
against other males,
but etc.).
connected
or
Aggression
is
overlapping
physiological
bases
thus used as a general term com-
parable to consumptory behavior, a general term under which are subsumed different types of behavior (eating, drinking), which have different,
92
The Hormonal
women
one can doubt that
not matter
are capable of aggression
that "female aggression"
some have even argued tatively equal to
Factor
"male aggression." For our purposes
if this
were
Likewise
true.
it
and
quanti-
is
it
would
does not matter
if
one perceives aggression to be a continually generated force or a potential that manifests itself only in response to en-
vironmental stimuli. For even altogether differently
one perceives aggression
if
from the way
irrelevant to the reasoning
I
do, such differences are
use as long as he sees "male
I
aggression" as different from "female aggression" in either quantity or kind. differ in their
What
is
crucial here
hormonal systems and
strates patriarchy,
titatively
that
men and women
that every society
demon-
male dominance, and male attainment. The
thesis put forth here is that the
inevitable.
is
One may
hormonal renders the
believe that "female aggression"
is
social
quan-
equal to "male aggression"; but then, unless he
to argue that the
differences have nothing to
hormonal
is
do
which case he must explain the some other convincing way and, he cannot do this) he must admit that "male
with the social differences
(
in
universality of patriarchy in as
we
shall see,
,
aggression" differs from "female aggression" in either quantity
or kind because the former always leads to patriarchy and
the latter has never led to matriarchy. It is
possible that using the term aggression, rather than
a neutral term, risks confusion. Trusting that those readers
who
are primarily interested in the tightness of the theory
presented here will keep in use aggression because
it
mind
the limited definition,
I
seems quite likely that many of the
but connected or overlapping, physiological mechanisms. This approach undoubtedly mirrors the complexity of human aggression far more accurately than does our use of aggression; quite possibly as more is learned about the types of behavior we are subsuming under the term aggression the general term will be discarded. As long as males and females differ in the specific physiological
mechanisms, however,
chapter will remain valid and accurate. For
all
that
more on
this
is
said in this
approach see: The Physiology of Aggression and Defeat, Eleftheriou, Basil, and John P. Scott, eds.
(New York-London: Plenum
93
Press, 1971).
Preliminary Anthropological and Biological Considerations
"aggression" are known. Readers
specific aspects of social
who
are interested in specific aspects of aggression (or
the terms
I
use
—
specific correlates of aggression
)
—
in
are strongly
advised to consult Judith Bardwick's excellent Psychology of
Women. 41
Dr. Bardwick discusses the findings of physiolo-
who have
biochemists, and psychologists
gists,
studied the
behavior of infants from birth (when explanations of be-
make no
havior in terms of socialization
sense) to thirteen
months. Such research has already indicated sexual differences (a measure of attention),
cardiac deceleration
in activity,
sensitivity, fixation
ferentiation. If
on visual
one desires
and figure-ground
stimuli,
dif-
be more speculative he might
to
consider the possibility that adult male aggression manifests
the satisfaction of
itself in
many
needs: dominance behavior,
competitiveness, a single-minded
— endurance
—
times virtually obses-
at
directed at attaining
sive
some goal
in the larger
society outside the family, a desire for control
and power,
and many other impositions of will on environment. But again
we need know
emphasize that
I
nothing
at all
about
aggression for our purposes here.
The
Irrelevance of Exceptions
Whenever
a biologist speaks of
men and women he
ing in virtually absolute terms. For every
human being
genetic female.
begins
When
ability
is
When
of any sort he expects
some women
is
41
New
genetic male or a
and
one deals with prob-
exceptions.
The
biological
not brought into question by the fact
are taller than
some men
within-sex differences in height are
between-sex
speak-
almost always speaking in the
terms of probability.
nature of height that
life as either a
is
and purposes
a biologist speaks of masculine
feminine characteristics he statistical
all intents
differences
in
height.
York: Harper and Row, 1971.
94
much Few
or by the fact that greater than the
genetic
females
The Hormonal
Factor
have testosterone levels approaching that which would be
normal for
woman whose
a male; a
testosterone level
even
is
half that of a normal male displays undeniable signs of hir42 But even suteness and general virilization.
women had higher testosterone all men one would not be led to
all
of
levels
if
10 percent of
than 10 percent
the conclusion that the
parameters of hormone distribution by sex are irrelevant any
more than he would
women and
six-foot
nature of
human
some
say that the fact that there are five-foot
men
disproves the biological
height. Exceptions are expected in situations
where probability
is
the determinative factor; they in no
way
lessen the inevitability of biological probabilities manifesting
themselves (unless, of course, there are so
between factors
that correlations tistical
significance). It
many
below the
fall
exceptions
level of sta-
on the observation of such mani-
is
festations of biological probability that both biologists
other
all
reality.
we
members of any
We all
society base their conceptions of
being
speak of
observe that
would
men most men
and
taller
than
women
because
women. This mention, but so many
are taller than most
seem too obvious even
to
authors have pointed to exceptions to male-female differences in attempts to
deny the importance of biology that
it is
worth
introducing this point here.
Thus: even
if
one could demonstrate that certain extreme
environments could lower the male adult's testosterone level to that of the
normal female,
this fact
would be
irrelevant to
the theory advanced in this book unless one wanted to ad-
vance the absurd hypothesis that the reason that virtually
men
in every society
tually all 42
women
is
have higher testosterone levels than that
some environmental
all
vir-
factor, rather
The
concentration of plasma testosterone in young adult males ranges to 0.96 meg. per 100 ml. (mean 0.65 meg. per 100 ml.) and the concentration in women varies from 0.034 to 0.101 meg. per 100 ml. (mean 0.054 meg. per 100 ml.). Textbook of Medicine, Paul B. Beeson
from 0.44
and Walsh McDermott, p.
eds.
(Philadelphia:
1805.
95
W.
B. Saunders Co.,
1971),
Preliminary Anthropological and Biological Considerations
than genetic biological differentiation, explains the male's
higher testosterone
level. It
behooves one
who would advance
such an hypothesis to specify the environmental factor which serves to limit the testosterone level of virtually all
We shall see in Chapter Six that there
women.
no universal environ-
is
mental factor which can reasonably be thought to be capable of doing
The difference between male and female testosmuch greater than the difference between male
this.
terone levels
is
and female muscularity and there are
testosterone level surpasses that of even a
are
women whose
women whose few men than there
far fewer
muscularity surpasses the muscularity of
even a few men; yet even when discussing muscularity, and even when considering the fact that environmental and social factors unquestionably can increase the sexual disparity in
muscularity, no one argues that biology
is
not the primary
factor generating sexual differences in muscularity or denies
that
men
cieties in
more muscular than women even
are
which
women do
in those so-
far heavier physical
work than
do men.
The question of exceptions becomes more important when we consider that social aggression (aggression defined in any way
other than that in this book
—
i.e.,
operationally)
is
not
a function of only biological factors but of specific social
and unique psychological engender
in
factors as well.
some women
These will no doubt
a social aggression greater than
some men. Likewise, we would expect that such nonbiological factors will render some men perhaps some of those who commit violent crimes more socially aggressive than any other men and all women. Because social aggression and dominance are the results of both hormonal that
found
in
—
and social-psychological 43
—
factors 43 every society will
have a
elements of aggression will render some some men, such elements will far more often increase the disparity in aggression between the sexes. This is because the "nonbiological" elements of aggression are not unrelated to the biological elements. Perhaps when biological aggression meets environ-
While
the nonbiological
women more
aggressive than
96
—
The Hormonal minority of
man and
women who
a minority of
the average
woman.
44
are
more aggressive than the average
men who
When
are less aggressive than
a particularly aggressive
and a particularly unaggressive ship, such
Factor
man form
woman
a dyadic relation-
may be dominated by
an exceptional relationship
the female even to the point where both the feel that authority resides in the female.
man and woman
There
is
nothing
inherently dysfunctional in such a relationship viewed in the abstract,
but such a relationship will be the exception in
every society (because most
mental resistance there
is
men
are
a feedback process
more
aggressive than
and the biological mechanisms male is more
for aggression are further irritated. For example, because the
aggressive the frustration that results
when
his
biological aggression
is
thwarted by social sanctions will be greater than the frustration of the female (whose original aggression is less so that her frustration is less). The greater frustration of the male will engender in him a greater increase in aggression than the frustration of the woman's aggressiveness will engender in her. Therefore, in most cases the real aggression disparity between men and women will be even greater than that necessitated by biological factors viewed in the abstract. I think that the correctness of this analysis is indicated by the fact that the prison population of every society no matter what the particular values of any specific society is overwhelmingly male. I am not saying here that criminality, a social concept, is inherited, but that individuals may, and the sexes certainly do, differ in the biological component of the aggression that is a precondition for many types of crime. If the male's aggression advantage is relevant to male success in so many other areas, why should we doubt that it is relevant to criminality ? This sort of analysis serves the positive function of focusing our attention on the necessarily restrictive function of society.
—
this function, among others, no society could survive and without society our species could not survive. 44 Within one sex (i.e., if we are speaking just of men or just of women) where differences in hormonal levels are quite small and where, possibly, all members are above or below a threshold past which an increase in testosterone no longer engenders an increase in aggression the importance of the social-psychological component of aggression is far greater than the importance of this factor in a comparison of the two sexes with their differing fetal preparations, their differing CNS structures, and their differing adult testosterone levels. Thus, aggression can be compared to boxing prowess. One can sufficiently explain between-sex difference here by pointing out that one sex has passed the threshold of physical strength that is a precondition of boxing competence. Nearly all men have physical strength above this threshold; hardly any women do. However, within one sex the crucial factor will not be pure physical strength, but other components of boxing prowess (skill, courage, endurance, etc.).
Without serving
—
97
Preliminary Anthropological and Biological Considerations
most
women
in every society )
Such relationships will always
.
face problems because the expectations of the society
which are part of the
pectations
—
dividual, including those in such relationships
—conform
the reality of male aggression and must so conform reasons
we
shall
Aggression
to
(for
soon examine).
comparable to physical strength in that
is
ex-
socialization of every in-
affected by both sexual-genetic
and cultural
factors.
it is
However,
men maintain physical superiority even in societies which women do heavier physical labor, so, statistically, just as
in is
the male's advantage in aggression insurmountable. In the last
for
century there was an impressive minority of individuals
whom
unique factors engendered a denial that there was
any biological "sex drive"; there was no
less probability that
they could have brought about a society in which there were
no
institutions for channeling
there
is
of the minority of
than the average
Furthermore, as
human
sexual emotions than
women who
are
more aggressive
man bringing about a nonpatriarchal society. we shall see in Section Two, the overall male
"advantage" in aggression would render patriarchy and male
dominance inevitable even
if
bility that their physiologies
we give
did not consider the possi-
men and women
and complementary propensities (which lead them ent,
different in differ-
noncompetitive directions). The male hormonal system
gives
men
them
to better deal
a
head
start (in
terms of probabilities) that enables
with those elements of the societal en-
vironment for which aggression leads
to success.
This "head
start" will manifest itself in all institutions that utilize aggres-
sion and in the sexual expectations that the society attaches to those institutions.
that this eties,
head
start
It
is
theoretically possible, of course,
could be overcome, even for whole soci-
by an overwhelming environmental situation;
true of any biological difference that abilities rather
is
this
is
manifested in prob-
than absolutes. Even the male physical strength
advantage could be reduced or eliminated
98
if all
the world's
The Hormonal
women performed
hours of calisthenics each day while
we
remained sedentary. Here
tempt
to
Factor
men
see the difficulty with the at-
invoke "interaction" and "feedback" in order to
dismiss the determinative importance of sexual biological differentiation to social reality.
we need
length below; here
and
all
We
shall discuss this point at
point out only that male strength,
other sexual biological differences, are modified or
exaggerated by cultural factors; however, few would argue that because of this a society could develop in
strength was not associated with
men
which physical
or in which males
did not attain those rewards for which physical strength is
a precondition.
ward
One
can argue that a society need not
physical strength at
all,
but he cannot argue, for
re-
the
all
reasons given in this book, that a society could develop in
which male aggression did not lead
may
It
ways than they are
to attainment.
men and women
be true that
different, but they
do
are similar in
logical areas that are relevant to aggression
The
nature of probability
is
more
differ in those bio-
and dominance.
such that even minute differences,
reverberating through large numbers of cases, inevitably manifest themselves. It
to
is
understandable that
emphasize exceptions
siderations as being of
little
social factors, but there
is
there
is
many would
like
in order to dismiss biological con-
importance
when compared
to
no more reason for doing so than
for assuming that the successful celibate or suicide
disproves the inevitable necessity of any society's providing
channels for the "sex drive" or the will to least,
biological considerations
would seem
live.
At the very
sufficient to ren-
der forever impossible a nonpatriarchal society. Societies are
composed of large numbers of individuals and biology deals in inexorable probabilities to which all social systems must conform.
99
Section
Two
The Theory of the Inevitability
of Patriarchy
Chapter Four
Male Aggression and the Attainment of Power, Authority, and Status
// Male Aggression Were the Only Difference Having discussed the universality of patriarchy, male dominance, and male attainment of high-status roles and the bio.
logical factors that are relevant to these universals,
now
.
we
.
are
prepared to examine the mechanisms that require these
biological factors to be manifested in these social institutions.
In discussing these mechanisms
only inherent difference between different
we shall proceed as if the men and women were their
hormonal systems, which leads
to
an inherent aggres-
sion advantage for the male. This does not imply that
I
doubt
that there are positive female biological forces underlying the
woman's extraordinary
sensitivity
and emotional powers or
the mother's attentiveness to her infant and her protective reaction to
her infant's vulnerability. Eleanor Maccoby has
suggested that "if you try to divide child training
males and females
do
it
we might
and males don't."
45
among
find out that females need to
Such biological imperatives would
have enormous significance in the development of male and female
roles.
Every society must care for
need to care for and protect the young
male than the male, pectations
45 Eleanor
its is
young and,
if
the
greater in the fe-
would be reflected in the social exof men and women. If one accepts this female E.
this
Maccoby,
Women, Seymour M. McGraw-Hill, 1963),
"Woman's
Intellect,"
in
The
Farber and Roger H. Wilson, eds. p. 44.
103
Potential
of
(New York:
The Theory of
the Inevitability of Patriarchy
he could
biological factor,
sex-role differences
utilize
it
to explain the universal
explain by differences in aggression and
I
could use the same lines of reasoning tioning
Likewise
aggression.
it
I
not
is
do without menunlikely
the
that
neural factors underlying the male's sexual dominance
come
men and women;
there
into play in social contacts
may even be lead") that
between
men
a female desire for
is
to
dominate ("take the
a secondary manifestation of the neural factors
directly relevant to
female sexuality. Biological evidence
dicates that there
a strong possibility that such
and submission
is
factors exist in
but, since such factors
here to be correct,
do
If they
exist,
male and female physiologies,
need not
we
in-
dominance
exist for the theory presented
will assume that they
do not
exist.
of course, the theory presented here can
be only strengthened.
Quite possibly institutions
all
we have
of these factors lead to the universal discussed. Aggression, however,
only sexual difference that
opposed
we
is
the
can explain with direct (as
to convincing, hut hypothetical) biological evidence.
Nothing
is
because the inevitable social manifestations
lost
of sexual differences in aggression are sufficient to explain the inevitability of patriarchy, male dominance, and male
attainment of high-status roles. If the other biological rectives
do
a factor
we have an example
exist
(hormonal aggression)
is
di-
of a situation in which sufficient to
reality (institutionalized sex differences),
describe a
but not necessary.
Maternal attentiveness, a male need to dominate, or a female desire for if
male
political
dominance would be
sufficient
even
there were no hormonal aggression differences, but none
of these need exist for the theory proposed here to be correct.
Therefore,
we
are assuming throughout this chapter that
there are no differences betiveen
men and women except in man more aggressive.
the hormonal system that renders the
This alone would explain patriarchy, male dominance, and
104
Male Aggression, the Attainment
of Power, Authority, and Status
male attainment of high-status
roles; for the
system gives
men
male hormonal
an insuperable "head start" toward attain-
ing those roles which any society associates with leadership or high status as long as the roles are not ones that males are biologically incapable of filling.
Aggression and Attainment In other words,
ing in the
why it
I
wrong
we
believe that in the past
have been look-
direction for the answer to the question of
every society rewards male roles with higher status than
does female roles
(
even
when
the male tasks in one society
are the female tasks in another).
While
it
are always in the positions of authority
true that
is
from which
men
status
tends to be defined, male roles are not given high status pri-
marily because
men
fill
these roles;
men
fill
these roles be-
cause their biological aggression "advantage" can be manifested in any non-child related area
rewarded by high
status
in any society. (Again: the line of reasoning used in this
demonstrates only that the biological factors
make
we
the social institutions
we
discuss
discuss inevitable
book
would
and does
not preclude the existence of other forces also leading in the
same
direction; there
may be
a biologically based tendency
for
women
for
male attainment of leadership and high-status
inevitable.)
to prefer
As we
male leadership, but there need not be
shall see, this aggression
be most manifested and can most enable
roles to
be
"advantage" can
men
to reap status
rewards not in those relatively homogeneous,
collectivist
primitive societies in which both male and female must play similar economic roles if the society
is
to survive or in the
monarchy (which guarantees an occasional female leader); this biological factor will
relatively
individualistic,
be given freest play in the complex, bureaucratic,
democratic
society
which, of necessity, must emphasize organizational authority
and
in
which
social mobility
is
105
relatively free of traditional
The Theory of
the Inevitability of Patriarchy
barriers to advancement.
There were more female heads of
state in the first two-thirds of the sixteenth century
the
first
than in
two-thirds of the twentieth.
The mechanisms
involved here are easily seen
if
we exam-
ine any roles that males have attained by channeling their
We
aggression toward such attainment. that equivalent
well as
men
if
women
will
assume for now
could perform the tasks of roles as
they could attain the roles. 46
Here we can
speak of the corporation president, the union leader, the governor, the chairman of an association, or any other role or position for which aggression
Now
ment.
a precondition for attain-
is
the environmentalist and the feminist will say
that the fact that all such roles are nearly always filled by
men is attributable not women have not been
to
male aggression but
to attain these positions, that they
positions are in
male
areas,
from competing with boys in this
way, but again
to the fact that
allowed to enter the competitive race
have been told that these
and that
girls are socialized
in general.
we must
Women
away
are socialized
ask why. If innate male aggres-
sion has nothing to do with male attainment of positions of
authority and status in the political, academic, scientific, or financial spheres, if aggression has
reasons areas
why
nothing to do with the
every society socializes girls
which are given high
in general, then
why
is it
status
away from those
and away from competition
never the girls in any society
who
46 I assume this for the present in order to demonstrate that these will be male roles even if women can perform these roles as well as men when they can attain them. It should be pointed out, however, that the line between attainment and performance is not always clear in a bureaucratic society or in leadership in any society; much of the performance of an executive or leader concerns his ability to maintain the authority which his position gives him. Therefore, it is possible that the greater innate male aggression,
particularly
when opposed
to
the lesser innate
female aggression, leads to performance by the male which is superior to that of the female. This does not, of course, mean that the male at any level of the hierarchy has an advantage over the exceptional woman who was aggressive enough to attain a comparable position, but it might indicate that men in general have an innate advantage over women in general
which
is
relevant to the performance of bureaucratic and leadership roles.
106
Male Aggression, the Attainment of Power, Authority, and
why
are socialized toward these areas, biological roles played by is it
is
never the non-
why and why do women
women
that have high status,
who are told to compete, men into the low-status, nonmaternal
always boys
never "force"
women
it
Status
roles that
play in every society?
These questions pose no problem
male aggression
men
that enables
if
we acknowledge
to attain
role given high status by any society.
For one need merely
consider the result of a society's not socializing
from competitions with men, from
women
a
any nonbiological
its
women away
not directing girls
more capable of playing than are men or roles with status low enough that men will not strive for them. No doubt some women would be aggressive enough to succeed in competitions with men and there would be contoward roles
siderably
are
more women
in high-status positions than there are
women would lose in such competitive strugmen (because men have the aggression advantage) most women would be forced to live adult lives as
now. But most gles with
and so
society had ivanted them to sucmore than men, who would never allow a situation in which girls were socialized in such a way that the vast majority of them were doomed to adult lifetimes of failure to live up to their own expectations. Now I have no
which the
failures in areas in
ceed. It
is
women,
doubt that there
far
is
a biological factor that gives
desire to emphasize maternal
point here there
is
society attain
is
that
we
and nurturance
socialize
but the
this sort
and
still
see that a
women away from roles that men will if women did not develop
through their aggression. For
an alternative
set
of criteria for success their sense of their
own competence would
suffer intolerably.
that the resulting different values
attached to
aggressive
more
roles,
the
can accept the feminist assumption that
no female propensity of must
women
It
is
undeniable
and expectations that are
men and women will tend to work against the woman while they work for the man who is no
aggressive.
But
this
is
the unavoidable result of the fact
107
The Theory of
women
most men are more aggressive than most
that this
the Inevitability oj Patriarchy
woman, who
as aggressive as the
is
aggressive than most
even
women,
so that
average man, but more
an exception. Furthermore,
is
the sense of competence of each sex did not necessi-
if
tate society's attaching to each sex values
and expectations
based on those qualities possessed by each sex, observation of the majority of each sex by the population would "automatically" lead to these values and expectations being attached to
men and women.
Socialization's
Conformation
to Biological
Reality Socialization
is
for adulthood. reality
the process by which society prepares children
The way
of biology
method
is
which
in
its
seen quite clearly
goals conform to the
when we
which testosterone generates male aggression
in
girls
have roughly equal testosterone
boys are far
used
(tes-
Preadolescent boys
tosterone's serially developing nature).
and
consider the
more aggressive than young
yet
levels,
young
Eva Figes has
girls.
this observation to dismiss incorrectly the possibility
a hormone-aggression association. 47 that the
boy
is
logical reason.
more aggressive than
We
have seen that
Now
it
is
of
quite probable
the girl for a purely bioit
is
simplistic to speak
simply in terms of hormone levels and that there
is
evidence
of male-female differences in the behavior of infants shortly after birth
(when
differential socialization
explanation of such differences )
.
The
boy's brain by the testosterone that testes has
probably
left
him
far
is
not a plausible
fetal alteration of the
was generated by
more
sensitive to the ag-
gression-related properties of the testosterone that
during boyhood than the alteration.
But
let
47
Eva
1971), p.
is
present
who did not receive such moment assume that this is not
girl,
us for the
the case. This does not at
his
all
reduce the importance of the
Figes, Patriarchal Attitudes (Greenwich, Conn.: 8.
108
Fawcett World,
Male Aggression, the Attainment of Power, Authority, and
hormonal
For even
factor.
socialization ical reality.
if
the boy
more aggressive than him to be, the boy's
is
because the society allows
the girl only
flows
still
from
acknowledging biolog-
society's
Let us consider what would happen
the same innate aggression as boys and socialize girls
girls as
if girls
have
did not
if a society
away from aggressive competitions. Perhaps
half of the third-grade baseball team
many
Status
would be female. As
boys would frame their expectations in mascu-
would develop not their feminine abilities but their masculine ones. During adolescence, however, the same assertion of the male chromosomal program line values
and
causes
that
girls
grow beards
boys to
the
raises
their
testos-
terone level, and their potential for aggression, to a level far
above that of the adolescent woman.
teach
young
girls that beating
boys
at
If society did not
competitions was un-
feminine (behavior inappropriate for a woman),
if
it
did
not socialize them away from the political and economic
which aggression leads
areas in
would grow
to attainment,
these girls
into adulthood with self-images based not
on
succeeding in areas for which biology has left them better
women
prepared than men, but on competitions that most could not win. If
women
did not develop feminine qualities
(assuming that such qualities do not spring automatifrom female biology) then they would be forced to deal with the world in the aggressive terms of men. They
as girls cally
would
now there
lose every source of
power
is
a physiological difference
between
which generates dimorphic behavior by an infant, this
their
feminine
abilities
give them and they would gain nothing. (Likewise,
fact.
social values
They
will
the population of
and
in the feelings elicited
socialization will
conform
to
conform both because observation by
men and women
will preclude the de-
velopment of values which ignore the physiological ence and because, even
would make
if
men and women
if
differ-
such values could develop, they
life intolerable for
109
the vast majority of males,
The Theory of
who would
the Inevitability of Patriarchy
feel the tension
between
social expectation
and
the dearth of maternal feelings, and the vast majority of females, infant
whose
physiologically generated feelings toward the
would be
frustrated.
Discrimination of a Sort If
one
is
convinced that sexual biology gives the male an
advantage in aggression, competitiveness, and dominance, but
he does not believe that
it
and
ception,
if
men and women
engenders in
different propensities, cognitive aptitudes,
he considers
and modes of per-
sion
is
when male when aggres-
discrimination
it
aggression leads to attainment of position even
not relevant to the task to be performed, then the
unavoidable conclusion unavoidable. Even
if
that discrimination so
is
one
is
denned
is
convinced from the discussion in
the following sections that the differing biological substrates that underlie the mental apparatus of
engender
different
modes of perception, he vance of
this to
compared
to the
men and women do
cognitive
propensities,
and
aptitudes,
will probably agree that the rele-
male attainment of male
roles
is
small
when
importance of male biological aggression to
attainment. Innate tendencies to specific aptitudes
more men than women
come from
in-
(depending on the
or vice versa
and that the very best
qualities relevant to the task) in all probability,
would
competence there will be
dicate that at any given level of
the sex
whose
will,
potentials are
relevant to the task. Nonetheless, drastic sexual differences in occupational
and
society's
and authority
roles reflect
acknowledgment of
it
differences in aptitudes, yet they are
In addition, even large
if
artificial
numbers of women
far still
male aggression
more than they do inevitable.
means were used
in authority positions,
that stability could be maintained.
Even
it is
to place
doubtful
in our present
is more more aggressive execu-
bureaucracies problems arise whenever a subordinate
aggressive than his superior and,
110
if
the
male
Male Aggression, the Attainment of Power, Authority, and tive
not allowed to rise in the bureaucracy, delicate psycho-
is
must be made. Such adjustments are
logical adjustments
necessary
When
when
male bureaucrat has
a
a
also
female superior.
such situations are rare exceptions adjustments can be
made without any the
Status
woman
great instability occurring, particularly
in the superior position
complements her aggres-
sion with sensitivity and femininity.
however, that
if
women
if
It
would seem
shared equally in power
at
likely,
each level
of the bureaucracy, chaos would result for two reasons. Even if
we
consider the bureaucracy as a closed system, the excess
would soon manifest itself either in men moving quickly up the hierarchy or in a male refusal to acknowledge female authority. But a bureaucracy is not a closed system, and the discrepancy between male dominance in private life and bureaucratic female dominance ( from the point of male aggression
of view of the male
whose superior
is
a
woman ) would
soon
engender chaos. Consider that even the present minute minority
women
of
high authority positions expend enormous
in
amounts of energy trying not thority that is
is
seen as the
true that the
manner
to project the
mark of
commanding
good male
a
which aggression
in
au-
executive. It
is
manifested
will be affected by the values of the society in general
and
the nature of the field of competition in particular; aggression in an academic environment
is
camouflaged far more
than in the executive arena. While a desire for control and
power and
a single-mindedness of
vant, here aggression
is
purpose are no doubt
not easily defined.
the theoretical argument that
women
One might
rele-
inject
could attain positions of
authority and leadership by countering the male's advantage in aggression
with feminine
abilities.
Perhaps, but the equiva-
lents of the executive positions in every area of suprafamilial life in
every society have been attained by men, and there
seems no reason to believe
that,
will be capable of neutralizing
And,
in
any
case,
suddenly, feminine means
male aggression
an emphasis on feminine
111
in these areas.
abilities
is
hardly
The Theory of
what the feminists
the Inevitability of Patriarchy
desire. All of this
can be seen in a con-
more optimistic light, from the point of view of most women, if one considers that the biological abilities siderably
possessed only by
women
complemented by
are
generated propensities directing filled
only by
women. But
it
is
women still
biologically
to roles that can be
the same picture.
Fifty-One Percent of the Vote Likewise, one a society
is
much by
on
faces the insuperable task of
male dominance that has forced every
nomic system as
predicates political action
women
are filled by a
who
a belief that
oppressive until half of the positions of authority
to
conform
the refusal of
to
it
overcoming
and
political
eco-
and that may be maintained
women
to elect
widespread female
leadership as by male aggression and ability.
No
doubt an
exceptional configuration of factors will someday result in a
woman's being
elected president, but if
ciety "sexist" until
with
men and
it
until a
no longer
woman
one considers a
leader
is
no longer an exception,
then he must resign himself to the certainty that will be "sexist" forever. 48 Feminists that
so
women
make
so-
associates authority primarily
all societies
make much of
the fact
constitute a slight majority of voters but in doing
the assumption that
women who
it
is
possible to convince the
constitute this majority to elect equal female
leadership. This
is
a
dubious assumption since the members
of a society will inevitably associate authority with males
if
patriarchy and male dominance are biologically inevitable.
It
would be even more dubious
if
there
is
an innate tendency
48 I grant that, since we have not hypothesized a direct male biological need to lead (but only an aggression advantage that can be manifested in this area), theoretically a situation could develop in which all leadership were given low status so that men chose not to use their aggression to attain positions of political leadership; in such a situation a nonpatriarchal society could develop. It is inconceivable that such a situation could ever develop, but if it did those who now complain that males fill the positions of leadership would then complain that women did not attain whatever roles males chose to attain by virtue of their superior aggression.
112
Male Aggression, the Attainment of Power, Authority, and Status for
women
men who
to favor
"take the lead." However, pro-
ceeding from this assumption and assuming that the feminists
were
obviously is)
successful,
it is
—would be eliminated
for the relatively small
which the
rules that
society, of course,
electing those
as large
numbers of males battled
numbers of positions of power from
govern the battle are made. In any
women power
bilizing political
men who
crucial effect of coloring
real
can have the crucial effect of mo-
to achieve particular goals
are motivated by relatively
sustaining values than other
male
—which
democracy
a sure bet that
not biologically inevitable (not patriarchy, which
is
men
and of
more
life-
mothers have the
just as
and humanizing the values of future
leaders.
"Oppression" All of this indicates that the theoretical model that conceives of male success in attaining positions of status, authority, and leadership as oppression of the female
because
females
from
it
and
the
is
male aggressive energies
sees
sees
fact
of
the
institutional
male
incorrect if only
as directed
mechanisms
aggression
as
toward
that
directed
flow
toward
"oppressing" women. In reality these male energies are rected toward attainment of desired positions
di-
and toward
succeeding in whatever areas a particular society considers important.
The
fact that
women
lose out in these competi-
would have men and women even if they were
tions, so that the sex-role expectations of a society
to
become
different for
not different for other reasons,
is
an inevitable byproduct of
the reality of the male's aggression advantage and not the cause, purpose, or primary function of
who
attain the
more desired
roles
it.
In other words,
men
and positions do so because
they channel their aggression advantage toward such attain-
men few women
ment; whether the losers in such competitions are other or
women
is
important only in that
succeed in these competitions
—
—because
so
the society will attach different
113
The Theory of
the Inevitability of Patriarchy
men and women (making it more difficult for the exceptional, aggressive, woman to attain such positions even when her aggression is equal to that of the average man ) expectations to
Perhaps one could
begin to defend a model that
at least
stressed "oppression" if
he dealt only with male dominance
in dyadic relationships; here
ward the female, but
male energies are directed
to call that
which
to-
inevitable "oppres-
is
would seem to confuse more than clarify and, if one male dominance is "oppressive," this model offers an illusory hope of change where there is no possibility of change. Male dominance is the emotional resolution (felt by sion"
feels that
both the
man and sion;
man and the woman) of the difference between a woman in the biological factors relevant to aggres-
a
male authority
tion of boys
and
conformation to ciety's
toward
girls
this
male authority,
this biological difference
and a
socializa-
societal
is
result of so-
attempting to most smoothly and effectively utilize this
Note
difference.
book
in this
—
do not follow
that all that
I
say in this paragraph
—
accepts the feminist assumption that their
which are eternally in
and the
in dyadic relationships,
own
indeed,
women
biologically generated imperatives,
different
from those of men.
I
do
this
an attempt to show the inadequacy of the feminist model
and not because
women do
it
is
less
not hear their
than ludicrous to suppose that
own drummer.
This book does not
pretend to explain female behavior, but merely to show that
women would ing
as they
do
aggressive men.
If
have to behave
more than
less
if
they were noth-
one reversed the
feminist model he could view the desire of the vast majority
of
women
to
have children
succeeding in an area in which biology to
fail.
Such
a theoretical
desired.
114
as
men
oppressing are
model
men by
doomed by much
leaves
their
to be
Chapter Five
The
Societal Manifestations
Male Aggression
of
Why No is
All Societies Differentiate the Sexes and
society has ever failed to differentiate sex roles,
it
inconceivable that any society could "view everyone as
an individual"
if
by
this
we mean
that the society's value
system does not attach different expectations to
women and
men and
does not consider certain roles male and certain
roles female.
This
is
why
the feminist refusal to acknowledge
the importance of biological differences until
environmental differences are removed evasive action.
By ignoring the
all
cultural-
no more than an
is
biological
and refusing
to
admit differences that every society must take into account until there
differences,
is
a society that does not take into account such
one could say that we will not know
if
the "sex
drive" has a biological component until a totally celibate society develops. If there are biological elements that will
inevitably manifest themselves, then a society without sexrole differentiation can never develop.
a society without such differentiation cally
society
would be
probably unimportant since
it
is
have seen that
not even theoreti-
conceivable because the psychological
members of the is
We is
effect
intolerable.
most
on the
This aspect
likely that
women
are led to performing the roles only they can play by their
own
biological propensities. Furthermore, even if neither of
these elements still
came
into play, social value systems
differentiate as they
would
do now simply because for them 115
The Theory of to
do otherwise would require that
identical if
the Inevitability of Patriarchy
ways and demonstrate
men and women seem
men and women
act in
identical temperaments; for
different (as they will if biological
differences engender differences in aggression, temperament, ability,
members of the
or propensity), then the
society will
"automatically" attach different expectations to them. Feminist
political
analyses
unknowingly incorporate the
often
incorrect belief that a society's values lineate ensue
from plans when
observations of the
and the
roles they de-
in reality they represent the
members of the
As
society.
is
with the white's perception of the black, what can be changed
if
is
the case
observed
the actions and temperament of those
being observed are determined by factors that can be changed.
The
white's perception of the black as ignorant will con-
tinue to change as the black
allowed equal education and
is
economic equality; the values,
roles,
and expectations that
white society attaches to the black will become increasingly similar to those
it
attaches to itself until a point
is
reached
where the black population's own self-image and own unique-
Somewhat
ness resist a further closing of the gap.
different
expectations will continue to be attached to blacks (as they
now
are to
superiority
all
minorities)
of those black
because the black view of the institutions
which remain will
engender behavior and attitudes different from those of the majority. Unless a
group
totally assimilated,
is
be considered different, but be considered, or consider
Most of
the world's
it
is
not
at all
women
necessary that
it
have never considered them-
moment
accept the implicit
feminist assumption that they should have. is
will always
itself, inferior.
selves inferior, but let us for the
the blacks will follow
it
The path
that
women because the view of women is not eco-
not open to
factor underlying the universal
nomic or educational discrimination but
a biological fact that
will manifest itself in, at the very least, a lack of aggression
that will be observed in every society
116
and that will determine
The ever)
7
it
is
view of women.
society's
not at
It
is
worth repeating that
male
inevitable that the
all
be accorded more
roles in
status than the roles that
more capable of
logically
Male Aggression
Societal Manifestations of
any society
women
are bio-
playing; the status given by the
society to these biological female roles
is
a function of
many
factors that are outside the scope of this book. All that
on a suprafamilial
inevitable
level
is
that biology requires
that certain aggressive roles be associated with the that the leadership is
and high-status
is
male and
which the
roles for
not biologically better equipped (than the
woman
man) be
at-
tained by men.
The
behavioral manifestations of sexual biological differ-
ences are,
be sure, quantitatively and
to
statistically,
qualitatively
and absolutely, different for the two
Women
no more
are
totally
not
sexes.
without aggression than they
woman is less aggressive man any more than every woman is shorter than every man. The quantitative becomes, and must become, qualitative only when the members of a society develop expectations for men and women based on the male and female are totally without height; not every
than every
biological realities they observe. If
humans were
totally instinctive
had no aggression potential
at all,
animals and
if
women
then there would be no
men and women in masculine and feminine women are not without aggression it is the reasons we have discussed, that they be
need to socialize directions.
Since
necessary, for socialized
ends.
away from depending on aggression
There
is,
why men and women
are socialized in masculine
nine directions and this
Men
are
because
to attain their
however, another, equally important reason
is
and femi-
the need for societal efficiency.
not stronger and more aggressive than
men
are trained to be soldiers, nor
do
women
women nurture
children because girls play with dolls. In these cases society is
doing more than merely conforming to biological neces-
sity; it is utilizing
it.
Because the
117
initial
masculine and femi-
The Theory of
the Inevitability oj Patriarchy
nine directions are engendered only by sexual differences in capacity and, perhaps, propensity
and
women must
The
society functions.
and not by
learn the specific
manner
instinct,
men
which
their
in
male's aggression advantage and the
female's maternal feelings are not social in origin, but no
one
is
born knowing
how
to fire a rifle or
change a diaper.
In other words, the purpose of a society's sexually differen-
and sexually
tiated institutions
differentiated socialization
is
not to cause male and female qualities; physiology alone
would
suffice for that. Societies
conform
their institutions
and
socialization to the sexual directions set by physiological dif-
must and second
ferentiation, first because they
function most
efficiently.
The members of
all this.
they
ing
of a society are, of course, often unaware
Parents
would not is
in order to
who
when may do so only because fightThey may not even be aware that in chastise a daughter for fighting
chastise a son
"unladylike."
so treating their daughter they are directing her toward success as
an adult and enabling her to deal from strength rather
than preparing her for consistent defeat. Nonetheless, the social value that sees "fighting as unladylike"
is
the social
conformation to the biological fact of male aggression. There are even cases where, for the psychological health of the individual, societies must, through the parents as agents of socialization, dissuade identification
with a role even
when
the individual could never attempt to play the role; young
boys are socialized away from identifying with the maternal role even
though they will never be able to give
birth.
The Mbuti Pygmies The
process by which biological
societal value systems
is
forces are manifested in
perhaps most clearly seen by exam-
ining a society in which biological sex differences are only
minimally exaggerated by the
society's
118
Some more popular
value system.
authors, having misconstrued Colin Turnbull's
The
Male Aggression
Societal Manifestations of
works on the Mbuti Pygmies, have
stated that the
Pygmies
demonstrate male dominance or even sex-role
fail to
differ-
Reference to Dr. Turnbull's definitive work on
entiation.
the subject leaves no doubt that male dominance and patri-
archy do exist in the Pygmy's society. 49 Authority, is
invoked,
is
when
men
male; disputes are settled by discussions of groups of
(though
women do
hunting
to
performed
skill;
play an advisory role); status
most importantly, the molimo
in times of great crisis
—
is
—
the reserve only or
is
may
conceivably be true
it
that sex role
suprafamilial areas
differentiation
in
pronounced among the Pygmies than
in
related
the ritual
primarily of males. Nonetheless,
may
it
hands of the best hunter or an elder
in the
less
is
any other society and
well be not far above the minimal threshold necessi-
tated by the
hormonal differences between men and women.
Before concluding that the degree of sex-role differentiation
demonstrated by the Pygmies biological factor, however,
biology on
behavior
environmental
As is
have
I
in
is
required by the
all that is
we must examine
the
contexts
of
the effect of
different
social-
realities.
said, the
male advantage
crucial to social sex roles not
and deference, but
in biological aggression
merely in terms of dominance
in the channeling of aggression into
any
area given high status by the society. This factor will be
present in every society, but will be least important in a society,
such as that of the Pygmies, where survival neces-
sitates that
everyone, male and female, must
the same economic role; if
the
game
is
when
all
fill
more or
must take part
to be caught, the fact that a
in the
man
less
hunt
holds the
net will not result in a great deal of extra status. Status for
the
fittest is relatively
same economic
unimportant when
role if the society
is
all
must play the
to survive.
However,
if
49 See Colin M. Turnbull, The Mbuti Pygmies: An Ethnographic Survey (New York: The American Museum of Natural History Anthropological Papers, Volume 50: Part 3, 1965).
119
The Theory of
the Inevitability of Patriarchy
a change in the environment brought about a situation in
which only half of the population was needed pate in the hunt,
we
attained these roles, that
male
status
to partici-
would be men who would tend to increase,
can be sure that
it
and that sex-role differences would widen. Indeed, among the Pygmies
we
who
are archers (as opposed to the net hunters
are discussing)
only half the
would be freed
Moreover,
this is precisely the case.
men were needed
for the hunt the other
to use their aggression for the attainment of
any nonmaternal roles that the society gave high
would quickly come
to "automatically" associate
men and men would
such role with
women away from
remain a male role
until, for
Then men would use that
had gained
While
any
the role
would begin and the role would
society
whatever reason,
it
lost status.
their aggression in pursuing other roles
in status.
in every society
fest itself in
even
not even need to use
The
their aggression to attain the role. to socialize
status,
women. The
those which could be performed as well by society
if
men
male aggression
dominance and
authority,
it
will tend to mani-
can be least impor-
tant in a society, again such as that of the Pygmies, in
which
the existence of small, fluid hunting bands results in a mini-
mal
necessity
of
ties,
is
a function of social reali-
so that sex-role differentiation greater than that of the
Pygmies evitable to
The
formal organization and authority.
importance of biological factors
exaggeration, but
is in-
under conditions that enable such factors more
easily
is
not necessarily
artificial
manifest themselves or for which such factors have a
positive value for survival
Modern
success.
Societies
Unlike Pygmy
society, industrial societies in a
cannot (no matter effect
and
how much
they
would
modern world
like to)
of biological aggression on social values in a
an isolated forest people can. In an industrial
120
limit the
way
society,
that
mem-
The bers
do not
Societal Manifestations of
Male Aggression
play the same economic role, nor are the vast
all
majority necessary for or capable of playing the highest status roles. Diversity
of economic roles and bureaucratic organiza-
tion are the very hallmarks of an industrial society.
the Pygmies have minimal formal organization, societies
industrial
composed of millions of people must have economic-
role differentiation
and formal organization
survive and function. In other words, ciety
Where
minimizes the
effect
they are to
if
where the Pygmy
so-
of the male advantage in biological
aggression, the very nature of the modern, industrial society forces such a society to give aggression relatively free play.
We
cannot even say that the industrial society exaggerates
this aggression; given the nature of the economic and social realities
of such a society the minimal possible effects of this
biological factor will be very great in determining the degree
of sex-role differentiation. Furthermore, given the reality of
an industrializing world, the lovely, gentle that of the cieties
Pygmy,
will not survive
societies,
such as
challenged by so-
whose methods of organization and whose methods of
channeling aggression into
them more
efficient authority
systems render
efficient.
The Limits It
when
of Possibility
should not be concluded from the above that within any
one
society's history a relaxation of traditional
upward mobility
barriers to
will in every case engender an increase in
the importance of aggression or that there
is
an absolute
correlation between a society's economic situation or degree
of homogeneity and the degree to which
it
allows male ag-
gression to manifest itself in social institutions. true throughout this book,
I
am
As has been
speaking only of the limits
of possibility within which a society must operate and the biological forces that
Within these
limits,
it
must
utilize or
of course, there
attempt to counteract. is
an enormous, but
not unlimited, range of possible alternatives, and this allows
121
The Theory of
of societies that the anthropologist en-
for the diversity
The degree
counters.
the Inevitability of Patriarchy
to
which any
particular society limits
the manifestation of aggression in close
it
comes
maximum
to the
differentiation)
any area
in
(how
value system
its
possible reduction of sex
a function not only of the
is
by biology and the degree to which
limits of possibility set
the major institutions of that society utilize biological aggres-
complex of
sion, but also of a
particular
Therefore,
society.
to learn that there are
male aggression and
low
status.
I
am
we
that
which empha-
have extremely
saying only that the degree to which a
society could limit the manifestation of
attainment and the degree to which differentiation will be
much
tive society than if
is
The United
to
specific
societies
women
which
in
less
should not be surprised
some primitive
size
and environ-
values, traditions,
mental necessities that are more or
it
much
greater
male aggression
in
could minimize sex-role
if
the society
is
a primi-
a bureaucratic, industrial society. 50
States, in other
manifestations as
it
words, could not limit the social
as a primitive society
could (and the
Pygmies did )
50 Likewise,
book I am speaking of a gross force (hormonal on and greatly influences human behavior; certainly there are a multitude of social factors that are relevant in any specific case. For example: in every society there will be many women who are born into roles of higher status than any that most men can achieve, though a man born into the same setting will attain roles through his aggression that the woman will not. Because I am dealing here with a gross force I may be guilty of using the terms role, status, and posiin
this
reality) that sets limits
tion
somewhat more
would
loosely than
whose work
the sociologist
is
on these concepts. For example: when I speak of men's attaining a role I am not unaware that roles are often ascribed on birth so that a particular man need not utilize his aggression to attain such ascribed roles. However, when we consider why the society sees the role in question as a male role, we see that male aggression explains this; either the role can best be performed by men or the role will have high status so that in the past men have attained the role and now it is autocentered
matically crucial that
my
with
associated
importance
in
them.
many
While
efforts
use of these terms in any
to
way
theory advanced here.
122
subtleties
deal
with
of roles,
definition I
are
of
do not think
lessens the rigor of the general
The
Male Aggression
Societal Manifestations of
Social Exaggeration of the Biological However, we can speak of a given society's exaggerating the values relevant to male aggression even that the direction of those values
monal
factor.
if
we acknowledge
determined by the hor-
is
Exaggeration could not be determined merely this
would
save that of the
Pygmy
by comparing the given society with another, for force one to conclude that
all societies
exaggerate male aggression.
To
declare that a society's values
do so exaggerate we must compare the degree
to
which
its
values reflect male aggression with the minimal degree that
would be possible would agree
for that sort of society.
that, in all areas save those
Japan's value system
United
think that
concerning abortion,
more male-oriented than
is
all
that of the
Because, very roughly speaking, both Japan
States.
and the United
States are highly bureaucratized, democratic,
industrial societies with the sible
I
same threshold of minimal pos-
male aggression, we might say that Japan exaggerates
male aggression
in that its values reflect
male authority more
than do those of the United States (and that this exaggeration, therefore,
must be owing not
and the
just to biology
general nature of industrial society but also to specific Japa-
nese values )
.
One
could likewise say that the United States
exaggerates male dominance in as
much
as
does Japan )
,
its
value system (though not
but he must measure the degree of
exaggeration relative to a hypothetical
mands
far greater manifestation
minimum
does a society such as that of the Pygmy. the degree to which male aggression society to the
though lower
it
this
is
minimal
is
level possible in
not likely to happen.
to the level
found
in
that
de-
of male aggression than
Pygmy
We
We
could lower
present in American
an industrial
society,
could, theoretically,
society if
we were
will-
ing to give up science, bureaucratic organization, industrialization,
and democracy
(all
those changes which tended to
raise the threshold of the possible
123
minimal degree of sexual
The Theory of differentiation
we
the Inevitability of Patriarchy
and of the importance of aggression). But
we would
even
if
lute
minimal threshold below which no
did this
still
find that there
theoretically limit the manifestation of
system.
An
economic functions
its
is
biological or even
it
is
if,
can even
society
male aggression
institution cannot be eradicated
of
an abso-
is
in
its
by the eradication
if
the institution's reason for being
as
with perhaps, the incest taboo,
necessitated not by biology, but by the basic nature of
society.
Patriarchy in Industrial and "Revolutionary" Societies
Perhaps our emphasis on theory and on primitive
societies
has led the reader to doubt the applicability of
that has
all
been said to modern industrial and "revolutionary"
Such doubts are
we examine
easily dispelled if
societies.
political lead-
ership in such societies.
In the United States there are no constitute slightly cities
more than
1
women
senators:
women
percent of the mayors of
of twenty-five thousand or more, less than 2 percent of
the policy makers in federal government, 3 percent of the
members of the House of Representatives, and 5 percent of the members of the state legislatures. 51 Whatever the alleged changes in our society's view of women, such changes have not been manifested in an increase
in
clenched
political fists,
For
power.
there are
now
all
brave words
the
25 percent fewer
Congress than there were ten years ago.
I
particular significance to the decrease; the in
power
is
so small that
is
it
has any real meaning (though
51
The
number of women
it is
conceivable that a
who would not have formerly woman candidate will hesitate once
on women and the authority
New
Republic,
in
do not attach any
doubtful that this fluctuation
of individuals vote for a
and
women
number
hesitated to
the focus
is
implicit in leadership). In any
December
25, 1971, p. 6.
124
The
Manifestations of
Societal
case, there has certainly
women
in positions of
been no increase. The number of
power and leadership
and business world make the
enables
some women
somewhat comparable
to rank
look like
statistics
(rather
where the hereditary nature of
This
is
political
in the financial
one considers ownership
equalization unless
executive power),
Male Aggression
than
vast wealth
with the wealthiest of men. to
land ownership in some
matrilineal societies.
The
political distribution of the sexes
any other
women sider
society.
Even
if
we
is
no
different in
consider societies in which
constitute half of the labor force, even
societies
if
we
con-
with an ideological commitment to sexual
equalization in the hierarchies of authority, even sider societies that
we
if
con-
have made sustained attempts to equalize
sexual distribution in government
—even
then
we
find the
Sweden all thirteen Cuba twenty of the twenty-one ministers and all fifteen members of the Political Bureau and the Secretariate of the Communist party same
situation that obtains in America. In
of the ministers with portfolio are men. In
are
men. In
are
men. In Communist China, which has been committed
Israel eighteen of the nineteeen cabinet ministers
equalization since the revolution, both
members of the Stand-
ing Committee of the National People's Congress,
members of the and
Offices,
all
to
all
six
State Council, all six heads of the General
seventy-two heads of the General Ministries
are men. All but one of the members of the Politboro are men; the only exception is the wife of Mao Tse-tung. In the
Soviet Union,
where even the
deny the relevance of biology
theories of biology tend to
to behavior, 96.9 percent of the
members of the Central Committee
are men. 52
The
failures
of the Kibbutzim and every other Utopian attempt to alter
52
The
figures for
Sweden, Cuba,
Israel,
and China were compiled from
The Europa Yearbook: 1971 (London: Europa Publications Ltd., 1971) and The Far East and Australasia: 1971 (London: Europa Publications Ltd., 1970). The figure for the Soviet Union is from N. T. Dodge, Women in the Soviet Economy (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Press, listings
in
125
The Theory of
the Inevitability of Patriarchy
sex-role differentiation in this area serves merely to reinforce
the conclusions indicated here. 53
No
doubt one can devise separate and different explana-
tions for each of these societies' failure to deviate
near
total
authority.
male superiority
Each explanation could be
whose
set in the
terms of the
and economic conditions of the par-
particular social values ticular society
from the
in attaining positions of political
failure
is
being explained and in the
terms of the residual strength of the society's "patriarchal" values (values that every society has) rather than in the terms
of an inevitable manifestation of biological
disregard the fact that viewing each society in only
terms tends to demonstrate not
cific
why
Let us
reality.
its
spe-
equalization has
why there has been any increase at women in authority positions (when
not been achieved, but in the
all
number of
there was any increase at all). 54 For the far
point
is
that
one who attempts
more important
to explain these failures in
No doubt by the time the reader reads this these figures need some updating, but the point they make will remain just as
1966), p. 214. will
strong. 53 There have been a
number
of subsocietal groups that have attempted
not only to explain reality in terms that assume that logic
is
the only
limiting factor on social possibility, but to implement this view by de-
veloping
on
new
"societies." Because logic
social possibility, every such
is
not the only limitation imposed
experiment had to
fail
completely
or, like
where the inexorable pull of sexual and familial biological forces had eventually to overcome the initial thrust of nationalistic, religious, ideological, or psychological forces that had the Kibbutz, fail in just those areas
engendered the possibility of the temporary implementation of Utopian ideas. This is not to say that particular social factors did not cause the demise of any particular Utopian experiment before the biological factors had a chance to come into play, but that eventual doom was as inherent in these Utopian experiments as it was for the Shakers. Readers interested in the failure of the Kibbutz to challenge successfully the universal sexrole distinctions we have discussed might consult: Melford Spiro, "Is The Family Universal The Israeli Case" (particularly the addendum), in The Sociological Perspective, Scott McNall, ed. (Boston: Little, Brown and Company, 1971) and A. I. Rabin's "Ideology and Reality in the Israeli Kibbutz" in Sex Roles in a Changing Society, Georgene Seward and Robert C. Williamson, eds. (New York: Random House, 1970). 54 For example, the devastation of the Soviet Union in World War II created such a dearth of qualified people in every area that the competitive aspects of the attainment of position were reduced.
—
126
— The this
Manifestations of Male Aggression
Societal
manner
is
in the position of
one
who
attempts to explain
patriarchy in four thousand different societies with four thou-
sand different explanations, each in the particular terms of the particular society rather than in the terms of one factor
capable of explaining
The
fensible.
As we
four thousand cases.
all
see in Section Three, this
absurd even
is
shall
theoretically de-
if
failure of these societies to alter political patri-
archy does not, of course, "prove" that patriarchy
is
inevitable
any more than the universality of patriarchy "proves" that patriarchy
is
Here
inevitable.
introduce this material on
I
the failures of these disparate societies with disparate eco-
nomic systems, value systems, and sumptive
—
believe
evidence that
—very
there
a
is
strong
traditions only as
presumptive
biological
factor
pre-
evidence,
I
renders
a
that
nonpatriarchal society impossible to achieve.
A
Digression:
Race and Sex
If the only relevance of the question of black-white genetic
differences in behaviorally important areas to the importance
men and women was
of differences between
constantly equating the two,
introduce the subject at to
For
compare her environmental
seems to I
all.
me
it
the feminists'
would not be necessary a middle-class
white
to
woman
situation with that of a black
nothing short of criminally naive. However,
have so often encountered the criticism that the evidence
supporting the contention that there are biological sex differences (which will inevitably be manifested in male
and
female behavior and in social institutions such as patriarchy) is
no
different
from
—and no more
likely to
be correct than
the evidence relevant to racial differences that to
it
demonstrate the differences between the two
is
necessary
sets
of evi-
dence here.
The is
evidence concerning race
a small minority in
is
population in the United States). archy
is
inevitable
is
based on a population that
one environmental context (the black
The
conclusion that patri-
based on the evidence of
127
all
the societies
The Theory of of
the Inevitability of Patriarchy
men and women who have ever lived (i.e., every has been patriarchal ) One immediately sees the in-
the
all
society
.
validity of generalizing a black inability to attain
the dearth of black leaders in the United States
power from
when he
looks
eastward and sees that nearly every black nation invests authority in
its
On
black male leaders. 55
that every society without exception, their value systems ciates
from ours and from one
dominance and "does that
asks
society
the other hand
no matter how
political leadership
mean
that if half the
all
one race was superior sons," the answer
is,
another's, asso-
members of every all societies
were
by blacks) then you would say that
at attaining
power
for biological rea-
of course, yes. But even
had populations evenly divided between the if all societies
see
with men. If one
were white and half were black and
ruled by whites (or
we
different
if all societies
races
and even
were ruled by whites (or blacks), the evidence
supporting the existence of relevant genetic differences would not be nearly as strong as
it
is
for sexual differences; the
evidence for important biological differences between the races
No
would
one
is
still
be hypothetical (though very convincing).
able to demonstrate directly any biological dif-
ferences between blacks and whites that could reasonably be
thought to be relevant to attaining power. differences
between
The hormonal
men and women have been
demonstrated
beyond any doubt whatsoever and the relevance of hormones to aggression has if
we had no
been demonstrated so strongly that even
cross-cultural evidence at all there
would be no
doubt that the biological factor was relevant to the that 55
men
rather than
women
attain positions of
One might
fact
power.
raise the objection that such societies do not have popuwhich half the members are white. There is no reason to doubt that if a number of disparate societies had populations in which each race was equally represented some would be ruled by blacks, some by whites, and, one would hope, most would not associate authority and leadership with color. But if one does raise this objection with the unprovable and undisprovable implication that white would always rule, still he casts no doubt on the reality of sexual differences, but only on the
lations in
genetic similarity of the races,
128
PART II
Section Three
Objections
and Implications
Chapter Six
The Inadequacy
of a
Nonbiological Explanation
The Weight Even
if
one
is
of the Evidence not totally convinced that patriarchy, male
dominance, and male attainment of high-status, nonmaternal roles are inevitable,
he must admit that the evidence provided
only by biology or only by anthropology would suggest that this
is
an exceedingly strong
When
possibility.
both
sets
of
evidence are taken together the argument for an environmentalist analysis disintegrates and the biological hypothesis
becomes overwhelmingly compelling. One
who
then
insists
on
maintaining a belief in an environmentalist analysis whose
and empirical inadequacy is manifest while demanding of the infinitely more probable biological hypotheinternal illogic
sis a
deductive conclusiveness that
is
precluded by the very
nature of science does not do so for scientific reasons. In
of science there
is
no such thing
all
as deductive conclusiveness,
the "proof" that the feminists demand.
It is
axiomatic that
science deals in probabilities and always acknowledges the possibility that a future observation will
A
demonstrate that never
be
"proven." Science always leaves open the possibility that
to-
a
theory
morrow
is
a
incorrect.
mountain will
discover a matriarchy.
We
scientific
float into
theory
can
space or that
we
have not "proven" that E
or that smoking leads to cancer. (The purist, would be quite right in pointing out that we may nically, say that patriarchy, or gravity,
133
is
shall
= mc2
therefore, not, tech-
inevitable;
I
trust
Objections and Implications that
the
that
understands
reader
"inevitable"
in
the
title
that
one does when he says that tomorrow. ) This
will be gravity verification
is
have used the term
I
of this book it
is
why
is
an integral part of the
only in the sense
inevitable that there
continuous empirical
scientific
method. But
the invocation of this aspect of science in order to dismiss the overwhelming likelihood that patriarchy scientifically
is
inevitable
is
untenable and can be explained only in the
emotional terms of desperation logic. Radical interpretation
should imply a better way of explaining what not closing one's eyes so as not to observe. tional analysis of
The
is
observed,
overly emo-
an intellectual problem that forces people have only catastrophic
to disregard observation can
few academic
for objective inquiry. That even a
have accepted the feminist analysis with misrepresentation of fact
emotional necessity.
is
its
results
intellectuals
illogic
and
its
explicable only in the terms of
It is intellectually
defensible in no terms
56 at all.
The
universality of patriarchy
knowledge of the
women, and relationship
differing
the overwhelming evidence that there
between the male hormone and
dominance combine
to present a
which the feminist analysis hooves those
and male dominance, our
hormonal systems of men and
is
who would deny
body of observation with
The
political
It
be-
the inevitability of patriarchy
why
the institutions
have discussed have achieved universality. 56
a strong
not capable of dealing.
to develop a theory that explains
ideologue never did
integrity of intellectual pursuit.
is
aggression-
care about
The layman who
If they ideas,
we
cannot,
logic,
or the
seeks rationalization for
emotional necessity has always embraced the most improbable explanation for as long as it catered to his needs while he demanded of the unpalatable theory a proof that the very nature of scientific theory precludes. The intellectual dabbler has always reacted to the unfashionable with an incredulity based not on a discrepancy between the theory he encounters and the theory's facts, logic, or relevance to the reality
it
explains, but
discrepancy between the theory and the ideology he espouses
on the
— an ideology
founded on wish and sustained by the mutually reinforcing ignorance of its
adherents.
134
The Inadequacy
of a Nonbiological Explanation
then their theory must be consigned to whatever graveyard it
reality,
all
those theories that have been
clever delusions
by their inability to explain
which are buried
in
is
exposed
as
and we must accept the only theory that
consistent with reality, logic
If
and
logical,
is
plausible.
were the only limitation on human
possibility
then mathematical philosophy would be the only science and empirical verification of theory
the scientific process.
The
with
analysis, and, indeed, tions,
is
would not
constitute half of
insoluble problem with the feminist all totally
environmental explana-
not that they posit logical impossibilities or that
they are necessarily internally contradictory, but that they fail
There
in their explanations of empirical reality.
one
logical theoretical explanation for
is
rarely only
an observed
reality.
Because every behaviorally important biological sex difference
must be
reflected in every society's value system,
always be able to say that
men and women
do because
their
tells
biologically
more
society
them
act the
they are
aggressive, boys will be socialized toward
aggressive pursuits and girls will be told that to attempt to attain goals
it is
through aggression.
If
to look for
an institutional conformation (what
and
to biological reality (the
girls)
way
men
Because
to.
one will
unladylike
one wants
we
tell
boys
male hormonalization)
in order to consider the institution the cause of the behavior
(male aggression) that the institution may exaggerate but that flows
from the
be able to do
so. If
biological reality, then
he
is
aware that
virtually disparate observations
he will always
his explaining a
thousand
with a thousand particular
explanations rather than with a single explanation (biological
male aggression)
is
a logical barbarism, if
he must find some underlying factor that
he is
is
aware that
comparable to
the biological factor, he will be able, through tortuous, but
not
illogical,
reasoning to develop a theory that makes no
reference to the biological factor.
I
have no idea what form
such a theory would take, but no doubt
135
it
could be developed.
Objections and Implications
For
one
if
is
more and more convoluted
willing to accept
and irrelevant hypotheses he could even today adhere ignore
all
of the theories of twentieth-century science that
much more
explain reality so
be as perfectly logical as
The This
to
and ether and
theories that posit the existence of phlogiston
it
convincingly. His theory could
was
totally absurd.
Environmentalist's Dilemma what one will be forced to do if he
is
to a totally
insists
on adhering
environmental or economic theory of universal
patterns of sex-associated
dominance behavior. For such a
theory cannot suggest a possible initiative of patterns that invariably
work
in
one direction that
is
nearly as logically and
theoretically compelling as that provided by demonstrable
evidence indicating a strong relationship between hormones
and behavior. Such environmental theory attempts with the biological evidence by ignoring to
it,
to
deal
thereby refusing
acknowledge the determinative influence of sexual hor-
monal
differences
societal
environment), but
in humans (with their nonhuman mammals whose
found not only in the
endocrine systems are similar to man's and for
nonhormonal explanation of behavior
is
whom
a totally
patently ridiculous.
This denial of the biological factor takes the form of either ignoring the universality of patriarchy, male dominance, and
male attainment and pretending that such universality does not need explanation or of explaining such universality in en-
vironmental terms that are either, or both, internally illogical or empirically disprovable.
My
point
from the
is
not that the boy
girl or that
run very deep.
I
is
do not doubt those environmentalists who
claim that by the time an infant nature of the socialization
be determined by
male infants
not socialized differently
such differential socialization does not
its
in blue
it
is
receives
three
from
months old the its
parents will
sex; shortly after their births
and female infants
136
in pink.
we
While
dress it
is
The Inadequacy
of a Nonbiological Explanation
doubtful that this makes it
does show
much
difference to
newborn
infants,
by the parents
socialization
that differential
begins at birth. But this simply indicates the strength and
importance of sexual hormonal
any
society's socialization
reality
conforming
and the necessity of For the
to this reality.
environmentalist to demonstrate that biological reality does
not underlie the directions in which societies socialize the
young he must demonstrate not but that
and
done
this.
This
would be possible
it
girls
is
toward, aggressive 57
Nor
that socialization runs
to socialize boys
activities.
No
could any society ever do
away from,
society has ever this.
the environmentalist's dilemma: he faces the in-
superable task of explaining,
without referring to either
masculine aggression or feminine propensity, of every society without exception into people the feminists
manage
find so
and why no
society
fails
how
distasteful
to
men women
the
to turn the
selves attaining nearly all the positions of
thority
deep
while them-
power and
socialize
young
augirls
57 A few behaviorists have generalized from experiments (which for argument's sake we will assume were as successful as described) in which behavior is altered through high-intensity conditioning and use this as "evidence" that male and female behavior has only an environmental, and not a biological, determinant. Now, besides being unable to explain what element in the cultural environment of every society corresponds to this
conditioning, this analysis erroneously implies that because high-intensity conditioning can force one to behave as if, even to think as if, he had no "sexual drives," then these "drives" are not biological in nature. Indeed, we
know
that some people have been forced to behave in this way not even by high-intensity conditioning, but merely by the extremes of a Victorian cultural environment. The real implication of the behaviorists' experiments is not that sexual behavior is environmentally caused, but that, at
even the most basic biological factors can be driven is extreme enough. It is difficult to imagine how in a world in which we are incapable of even properly feeding most of the population we would suddenly develop the tools and the competence necessary for instituting total conditioning in any society. Howleast
theoretically,
inward
—
the conditioning
if
—
we would elect leaders who had the want to do so; we know that the leaders who would make the decisions on how such conditioning would be used would be men whose aggression had enabled them to attain positions of ever,
it is
requisite
not difficult to imagine that
inhumanity
to
leadership.
137
Objections and Implications
away from aggressive
He
must find a universal cultural-environmental factor comparable to the biological areas.
factor proposed here. This
is
the point that
is
always for-
who would deny the determinativeness of factor or who would claim that this factor
gotten by those the biological
no longer relevant and
is it
are
no longer
universality
necessary.
that the institutions that cater to
The
biological explanation explains
where no other explanation
can.
Perhaps the environmentalist will attempt to explain universality
by invoking the mother's universal
role,
which pre-
cludes her devoting herself to nonmaternal endeavors. This
invocation of a biologically related role does overcome the contradictions inherent in the explanation that
on is
societal values
and
universally associated with
sacrificing the
is
dependent
socialization; since the maternal role
women,
this explanation,
dependence on socialization
by
to explain patri-
archy, avoids the absurdity of invoking the differing social
values and economic factors of each society to explain patri-
archy in each society.
does satisfy those
It
tiveness to the
young have only
who would
and maternal
to believe that the maternal propensity social
origins
like
atten-
(so that a
nonpatriarchal society could ensue from large numbers of
women this line it
deciding not to have children). of reasoning
twofold:
is
first
ignores the hormonal factor that
archy inevitable even
if
large
The
difficulty
with
and most importantly
would alone make
patri-
numbers of women did forsake
the maternal role. Second, an explanation of patriarchy in
terms of the woman's maternal role unless
it
is
virtually tautological
specifies the aspect of this role that precludes
attainment of power.
It
is
true that
female
in every society the
female plays a nurturant role relative to the male, but in
many
societies
women work harder at non-maternal labor do men (hours which could, were it
for longer hours than
not for the hormonal factor and the socialization which con-
forms to the presence of
this factor,
138
be spent attaining posi-
The Inadequacy
of a Nonbiological Explanation
few days out of
tions of authority), they take only a
their
regular schedule to give birth, and leave most of the care-
members of
taking of children to grandparents, other
the
extended family, or older children. It could be argued that the female maternal propensities detract from the mental
women
and emotional energy pursuits, but
one could use
of patriarchy only
if
can devote to suprafamilial
this to
imply the possible demise
he assumes that there
is
no biological
male aggression advantage (or that such aggression evant to attainment )
,
these assumptions, to find
irrel-
some future time chilno longer be borne by women. Even if one makes
no biological component, and dren will
is
that female maternal propensities have
it is
that at
given the cross-cultural data,
difficult,
an aspect of the maternal role that
minor importance
in a
number of
not of such
is
societies that explanation
of patriarchy in those societies by invocation of this aspect is
completely unconvincing. Similarly,
one
who
wishes to emphasize the universal bio-
logical fact of the male's superior size
ignores the
more important
hormonal evidence; he
and strength not only
(in between-sex comparisons)
also faces the observation that there
seems no correlation (among males) between attainment of high status and physical strength, but that there
is
an
easily
observed correlation between such attainment and "aggression." This
is
implicitly
acknowledged by the feminist when
she emphasizes the differing attitudes of
men and women
toward work and aggression (and incorrectly ascribes such attitudes purely to socialization tive
is
)
.
Indeed, the superior execu-
described not as physically strong but as "aggressive."
Obviously male aggression has evolved hand in hand with
male physical
size (just as the
female hormonal system has
evolved hand in hand with female anatomy) discount the male's greater strength and is
still
seen to be determinative. If
size,
.
But even
if
we
male aggression
we were
to set
up an
experimental one-generation society of the infant sons of
139
Objections and Implications
small parents and the infant daughters of large parents (so
were
that the females of this society
we would
still
find that this society developed into a patri-
archy. If, however,
we peopled whose
genetic male infants
our experimental society with
fetal masculinization
blocked and genetic female infants virilized in utero
we would
that authority
ruled,
as large as the males),
who had
accidentally been
find that the genetic females
was associated with them,
attained the positions of high status, that they in dyadic relationships,
form
and
had been
that they
were dominant
came
that socialization
to con-
to all this.
The
environmentalist might be tempted to invoke an ex-
planation of universal patriarchy and male dominance and
attainment based on the necessities of securing food, the male's physical advantage at hunting and harvesting, or the
amount of time women have had
to
spend "at home"
in
order to indicate that the factors relevant to patriarchy, while
once necessary, are incorrect
on
now
irrelevant.
their face; there
tive societies
Such explanations are
have been a great many primi-
with small populations for
whom
the securing
of food entailed only a few hours of labor a week. In some
women while the men perNone of these societies, however,
of these this labor was done by
formed
less
strenuous tasks.
failed to associate authority with the male.
The Future With
in Feminist
Theory and in Reality we have mentioned,
the exception of the few attempts
feminists never offer specific alternatives to the analysis pre-
sented in this essay because they cannot. Nonetheless, femi-
imply that there
nist predictions of the future invariably
some nonbiological explanation or that the is so weak that it can be overridden by an institutional
but no longer
biological factor alteration in the
environment. This implication
the belief that biology is,
may once have been
in the declaration that the
140
is
is
inherent in
determinative,
world has changed
—
The Inadequacy so
much
of a Nonbiological Explanation
that the universal expectations of
men and women
the universal conceptions of masculinity and femininity
—
no longer necessary, and in the prediction that there someday be a nonpatriarchal society. For these beliefs, larations,
and predictions
to
are
will
dec-
be more than baseless assertions
supported by nothing other than their proponents' desire that they be correct,
it
is
necessary that the feminist demonstrate
not only that there will be great institutional changes in the future, but that these changes are relevant not just to the
economic functions of patriarchy, but to the cause of archy.
patri-
She must demonstrate that the changes will eliminate
or override the causal factor which engenders patriarchy and to
which our conceptions of masculinity and femininity con-
form. She can hardly do this
if
she cannot even offer a tenable
explanation of patriarchy as
it
exists
and has existed
in pres-
ent and past societies.
Since the factor that necessitates our conceptions of masculinity
and
and femininity
societies'
is
the reality of hormonal biology
conformation to
it,
since this
conformation
making male and female congruent with probability, and since female at-
serves the necessary function of aspirations
tainment in any nonmaternal area
is
a function of
male lack
of interest in that area, no change in the other functions of sex roles can radically alter conceptions of masculinity and
femininity as they apply to political and dyadic authority and to attainment of high-status positions. It
is
to
be hoped that
future feminist research expands our knowledge of the mech-
anisms through which biological factors are manifested in institutional reality, but
it is
folly to believe that
edge will render the biological factor any
less
new knowl-
determinative;
our discovery of the mechanisms involved in societal conformation to the "sex drive" does not reduce the importance of that "drive" to individual behavior or to the social institutions that
conform
to the drive
and that channel
If the feminist cannot provide us
141
it.
with even a theoretical
Objections and Implications alternative to a patriarchal society,
—any
is
it
not likely that any
society limited not only by the limitations
real society
inherent in society in general, but by the cultural realities of a
modern
society
—
will develop an
contemporary America
Rome
ancient
more
is
than she
is
like the
contemporary
the Bantu, Javanese, or Hottentot, and
any future America will be
less like
America
now,
None
from the
as different
is
is
will
it
still
all,
it
is
societies of
not likely that
contemporary America
than these other societies are now. But even
society
After
alternative.
like her antecedent society in
society
we know
if
a
future
as Hottentot
be patriarchal.
of this implies that there will not be great changes
in the future, but only that such
changes will not be relevant
to the causes involved in the universal institutions discussed
herein. It realities
make
is
one thing
to assert,
perhaps correctly, that the
of increasing population and increasing technology
and
social life less
congruent with our biological
less
natures and quite another to assert, unquestionably incor-
our biological natures are no longer determina-
rectly, that
tive to behavior
that the
world
institution. It
one thing
will
still
be
if
We
contraception
problem we will have the same
need to produce a next generation it
to point out
lead to the demise of patriarchy.
need to propagate the species;
eradicates the overpopulation
the past and
is
overpopulated and quite another to imply
somehow
that this will shall always
and
is
as did all the societies of
women who
give birth. Even
if
there were developed an artificial substitute for the mother
and even
(a likely probability), stitution to
be
made on
probability), patriarchy
if
women wanted
this sub-
a widespread social level (an unlikely
would
exist unless biological adapta-
tion led to the disappearance of sexual
hormonal
differences.
For the hormonal differences in aggression alone would necessitate patriarchy,
male dominance, and male attainment
of status.
The
clash
between our biological natures and modern 142
The Inadequacy society
is
neurosis
is
of a Nonbiological Explanation
very great and the potential for
abundant.
It is
new forms
of
possible that bureaucratization and
overpopulation render our situation one in which the natural flow of our male and female biological forces are, and must
be
if
we want
the rewards of modernization, shunted in
harmful directions or turned neurotically inward. Before the advent of roles and occupations that greatly limited the expression of individual aggression
—expression
that
necessary for the individual and that was formerly essary for the society
—before
dividual feelings of
autonomy impossible for
still
is
more
nec-
bureaucratization rendered inall
but those
before the unspeakable situation in which propa-
at the top,
gation of the species can no longer be viewed as unalloyed joy in every case, before all of these victories of modernization the lives of
men and women flowed more naturally from human species. To the hunter
the biological natures of the
and
wife or to the farmer and his wife the idea of sex-role
his
reversal
are
no
is
modern urban males and females
patently absurd;
less
biologically different,
and these differences no
but the nature of urban
less limit social institutions,
life
does
tend to camouflage the differences enough to enable them to consider the absurd. into a
It
is
we
conceivable that
are heading
world for which we are not biologically prepared.
would not be the
first
If the species
to survive,
is
time that
this has
however,
happened it
limit the institutions that could destroy us
It
to a species.
will be because
we
and not because our
biological natures will be overridden by
new
institutional
realities.
Let us descend to the level of the probable. There will be
changes in the next few centuries, indeed in the next few decades; whether these are "revolutionary" or minor depends
again on whether one sees the glass as half full or half empty,
whether he emphasizes the biological reality
reality to
which
social
conforms or the myriad variations possible within the
limitations
imposed by the
biological.
143
There
is
no doubt that
Objections and Implications
the institutions of American society will soon accommodate large
numbers of women who no longer need devote
entire lives to child rearing, just as
needed virtually
women
of their
all
have many
their
societies that
in the labor force.
While
feminists often discuss this possibility in terms which assume that every
and
woman
that this
is
is
capable of a career in nuclear physics
woman
the option every
should be able to
weigh against the emphasis on the home which would
in-
evitably place limitations
on the
possibility of attainment in
such an area, the reality
is
that
most individuals, male and
female, have average capabilities and average jobs.
women would
most
at all self-evident that
not
It is
choose to devote
to such jobs, rather than to their families, the lifelong ex-
men
penditures of energies which
devote to their jobs and
which are necessary for attainment areas. It
would seem
likely that
in
most occupational
most American women
gravitate toward the social area
where there
is
need and where they need not compete with because no one
is
now performing
will
the greatest
men
—both
those functions and be-
cause this area (social workers, elementary school teachers, etc.)
does not have a particularly high status that would
tract
male competition.
No
number of women
in the
and perhaps an increase
in the
lower authority positions
number of women
in the
higher authority positions in low-status areas. ple, day-care centers
women
at-
doubt there will be an increase
become
a
will unquestionably
major factor
fill
in
If,
in the
for exam-
American
the overwhelming
life,
number
of lower-level authority positions and perhaps the higher ones. This generalization of
motherhood
will be possible be-
cause the area will have low status for males so that males will not
males
compete for the
now
filling
position long
enough
will desire these roles
men would
be.
because there are no
positions,
those roles, and, dare
Any
to
advance
and will be
leave
this point,
my
theoretical
because
better at filling
increase in the
144
I
women
them than
number of women
in
The Inadequacy
of a Nonbiological Explanation
high-status positions in high-status areas, however, will be
and "token." For
slight
this
where
the playing field
is
gression counts the most and here
men
ag-
will succeed at at-
taining the high positions of power, status, and authority as
they always have in every society.
Nothing that
have written should be construed
I
modern women do not
implying
as
face the most serious of problems.
Increasing longevity, a lessened desire for large families, the
TV ciety
Dinner, and the fragility of the family in a frantic create a
anomie
is
context in which
To an
very great.
has garnered what support
movement,
it
is
the potential
extent, the it
for
so-
female
women's movement
has because, like any social
capable of replacing feelings of individual
meaninglessness with a feeling of group strength and belonging. If is
I
do not write
important as If
at
length of economic discrimination
not because such discrimination does not
I
this issue
is, it is
exist,
it
but because,
beyond the scope of
this
book.
have ignored the residual laws that discriminate between
the sexes
it
is
because, whatever their symbolic importance,
such laws are obviously not the source of the energy that
The masculine
engenders male attainment. industrial
and bureaucratic
society
nature of
modern
and the deemphasis of the
family creates problems of meaning for the
woman
that are
only marginally related to laws and other factors that are not inevitable manifestations of
maining laws that
moved, time will make
few
re-
between the sexes are
re-
male aggression.
differentiate
clear
that
If the
such laws had merely
flowed from society's acknowledging sexual differences and
had not caused such
amendment
differences. Passage of
will have little effect
"discrimination"
we
on
an equal rights
either the inevitable
discussed earlier or on discriminatory
attitudes.
The
seriousness of the problems facing
women
in con-
temporary society may tempt us to ignore or even deny the determinativeness of sexual differentiation, but
145
we have no
Objections and Implications justification
whatsoever for doing
to believe that every
an American
so. It is
problem has not merely a
tive solution that enables society to struggle
next day, but a solution that
is
perfect in
adapt to
No
commitment.
ideological
new
women need
ability to eradi-
its
realities
doubt American society will
by expanding those areas in which
neither remain in the
home nor compete with
men. There are many possible paths, and to the role of seer.
conform
We can
I
would not pretend
be sure, however, that the future
to the realities
I
discuss in this book.
Psychobiological Limitations on Malleability
The
through to the
problem while maintaining perfect congruence with
cate the
will
trait
partial, rela-
Human
possible dangers of overemphasizing the biological fac-
expense of purely cultural factors in any given
tor at the
situation are manifest; any attribute of either sex in any particular society can
be rationalized as an inevitable result of
However, these dangers hardly
predisposition.
biological
justify a denial of the determinative effect of biology in the
areas discussed in this book. Biology should never be used as
an excuse for discrimination.
It
can never give us the
right to judge any individual by the characteristics of the
group
that
which
to
woman
women
most
this fact).
woman
that
individual
are shorter than
(a
six-foot
tall
man and the fact most men does not affect tall
Biology can never justify refusing any particular
any option, but
ferences
belongs
not shorter than a five-foot
is
in
it
does explain universal sexual dif-
behavior and institutions where
cultural
and
environmental explanations cannot. Survival, and not the occupational aspiration of the recent college graduate,
one imperative of evolution.
If the abilities, propensities,
behavior necessary for childbirth were not built into
and
if
is
the
and
women,
the aggression and physical qualities necessary for
protecting
women were
not built into men,
146
we
could not
The Inadequacy have survived.
and the
Any
of a Nonbiological Explanation
explanation of male or female behavior
conform
social institutions that
to
and channel such
behavior that ignores this fact does not deserve consideration.
The equation of human behavior
is
complex for
far too
us ever to be able to speak of the relative importance of
heredity and environment, of nature and nurture, in terms
of percentage.
To
speak of the heredity-environment
action in terms of heredity or environment
marbleized
plistically a
reality in
is
inter-
to describe sim-
terms of striation;
it
is
to
consider the horizon a function only of the sky or only of the sea. However, the amorphous complexity of the heredity-
environment interaction does not
affect
the determinative
nature of the limitations imposed on possibility by the biological
component of
to the limits set
this interaction.
Nurture must conform
by nature. The biological forces that drive
us are directed, but they are not channeled; that job.
We know we
whether
that
we
are
hungry and that we must
normal
in our society
in part a function of expectation
environment
it
affects
No
energies of
eat,
but
number of meals considered
pain
biology.
society's
get hungry three times a day or five times a day
will be determined in part by the
is
is
society, its
and by the general supply of food;
a
feeling
(hunger)
and
to this extent
that
flows
from
however, could ignore the biological
members.
No
social
system could survive
if
did not acknowledge the limitations imposed by our bio-
The members of a society might "decide" "normal" for humans to eat once a day or, as in
logical natures.
that
it
is
our society, three times a day. that
one
eats only
If,
however, a society "decided"
once a month the society would vanish
before the next full moon.
Long before anyone starved, of members would
course, the biological energies of the society's
drive
them
to ignore or alter the institution of mealtimes in
their society.
Such must be the case when a society attempts
to ignore biological reality. In other
only
when
it
is
words, biology demands
scorned completely; most of the time
147
it
Objections and Implications
persuades. Furthermore, societies in general are limited not
only by the biological needs of their members, but by preconditions that are not required by individual survival, but
only by the general nature of society
individuals can
(i.e.,
behave incestuously, but no society can allow widespread parent-child incest and survive).
Over the evolutionary aeons environment has a deterministic effect in that only those species whose can deal with the environment survive. But for a species,
time
and over
(certainly
partially
biologies
mammalian
a relatively small portion of evolutionary
over a
our mere six
period as short as
thousand years of recorded history), evolution's physiology (feedback)
will be small.
Minor
effect
on
physiological
considerations such as skin color might be affected, but the
biochemical and anatomical sex differentiation that continues to
have for us the positive survival value
it
did for the pri-
mates which preceded us will be unaffected by environmental change.
While
sort of limits of possibility its
some
will always be true that heredity will set
it
environment and while
on every it
species' interaction
with
seems that sexual differentiation
(within every order of animal) has increased with each evolutionary step,
mental
it
is
not inconceivable that changing environ-
requirements
engender
will
slowly,
major reduction
a
in
over
long
the
hormonal
However, the currently fashionable argument trialization's
relevant betrays
is
future,
differentiation.
that
indus-
rendering the male's muscular superiority
initiating
ir-
an evolution toward biological sameness
an ignorance of the complexity of the male and
female biological systems, and the extent to which sexual differentiation
that
is
one suspects
diffused throughout those systems, so total
we
than with informed
simplism
is
are dealing scientific
surprising in a time
more with wishful
prediction.
when we
are finally acknowl-
edging nature's complexity on an ecological
148
fantasy
This tendency to
level.
The male
The Inadequacy
of a Nonbiological Explanation
and female hormonal systems are responsible not merely for but for myriad other inter-
the male's physical strength,
related differences in anatomy, biochemistry,
powers that complement the biological that illuminate
women whether
These differences are into us
—
roles of
women and
they have children or not).
would
necessary and
still
and
potential
and emotional
proclivity (including, perhaps, the sensitivity
—even
for the imaginable future
Even cloning would not reduce sexual
be built
still
they were not.
if
differentiation.
Males are expendable and females are not; that alone
would have been reason enough for nature
to select
males to
serve the protective function. If aggression were associated
primarily with the female, protection sibility
would be her respon-
and, given the vulnerable situation of
our species would not have survived. If
all
homo
sapiens,
but a handful
of males were killed while protecting females, the population
would be replaced by the next generation; the number of females would be disastrous for
loss of a large
survival.
One
might point out that we are no longer threatened by other
we no
species (but only by the aggression that
or he might
make
the
more questionable argument
logical invention will replace
assume that
longer need),
women would
women
that bio-
as childbearers
(and
But even
such
desire this).
if
considerations are correct and prophetic, physiological adaptation to
then
new environmental
our
institutions
physiologies.
realities will
conform
will
Ending our excursion
consider the possibility
that
take aeons, and until
to
our
differentiated
into fantasy,
biological
we might
engineering could
eliminate sexual differentiation. Here two points are worth
remembering. tions of
First,
it
will be
men who
power from which the
will be in the posi-
decisions
on how
such techniques are made. Second, there are
we
are capable of doing that
we
many
to
use
things
choose not to do. Soon
we
will be able to select the sex of a child before conception;
but the most primitive of primitive peoples had infanticide
149
Objections and Implications
and could have decided
disposal
their
at
nature's equal distribution of the sexes.
none who thought do
to
to
improve on
For some reason
that they could otherwise survive chose
so.
Long before
the discoveries of empirical evidence indi-
cating the hormone-emotion-behavior association, Freud un-
derstood that the emotions he observed are rivers flowing
from
biological sources to be channeled or blocked by cul-
dams. His dictum on anatomy and destiny
tural canals or
now seems
to enrage his critics, but
—
if
destiny
is
seen in
terms of the certainty of social conformation to biological probability
—
there
surprising that
and
is
we
no doubt
he was
that
right.
his social systems; in this century
not
It is
tend to overrate the malleability of
man
we have overcome
the
physical limitations of our physiology through technology
and now we can the
fish,
fly
and even move the
The works
is
in the times
But Sophocles he wrote.
swim
rivers that the fish
of the greatest Greek scientists are
cally superfluous.
was
higher than the birds, swim deeper than
We
now
as relevant today as
is
are
what we
are,
in.
scientifi-
he
and there
not the slightest shred of evidence that our most basic
elements, the biologically based emotions that flow from our
male and female physiologies and have changed significantly since In
all
human
history there
social institution's
Culture
may
is
that guide our behavior,
man
person
he
is
walked the
earth.
having rendered any emotion irrelevant.
conceivably modify or exaggerate one emotion
in relation to the others; certainly
objects to
first
not a single example of a
it
provides some of the
which emotions are attached;
may be
one society a
envious of another's wealth while in a second
envious of his hunting
vation merely provides are to survive
in
new
we must
ability.
But by and large inno-
channels for old emotions. If
find
our more lethal emotions;
we
ing that male aggression
is
new
we
institutional channels for
will not
end war by pretend-
caused only by social factors.
150
The Inadequacy Aggression
may
inevitable, but
is
An
not be.
eradicated; there inevitable societies
of a Nonbiological Explanation
(this
institution is
its
like
war
institutionalization in
infanticide can easily
be
no biological factor rendering infanticide evident
is
from the
ever practiced infanticide)
that
fact
and
as
as
methods of providing enough food are discovered can abandon infanticide
if it
few
very
soon
other
a society
so chooses.
Unlike infanticide and (perhaps) war, patriarchy, male
dominance and male attainment are inseparable from the physiological factors that engender them.
go
a society can is
About the
in overriding the effects of
furthest
male aggression
the separation of male and female roles so that male ag-
gression is,
is
limited in
its
intrusion on female roles.
of course, exactly what every society has done.
seen that even
when
it
is
this
have
a society emphasizes "feminine" values
and abhors aggression, male aggression and that
And
We
is still
determinative
inconceivable that any society will again ap-
proach the "femininity" of Mbuti. But the problem for those
who would aggression
like to eradicate the determinativeness of is
far greater
even than
this.
If the social
male is
to
override the biological, they must develop a society not merely
with feminine values but with some mechanism for eradicating the connection of aggression to attainment of leadership
and
status positions.
Even
if
we
ignore the fact that this must
be accomplished against the opposition of the males
power,
how would
attaining
power?
A
a society
random
who
hold
keep the most aggressive from selection of leaders?
Convincing
more aggressive that they do not want to lead (in which case leadership must be given low status)? Every society must have values and every society must value some things more highly than others. In every society there will be some members who are more favored by the social structure or who are more endowed with the talents necessary the
for attaining positions, status, prestige, wealth, or objects.
The
latter will increase in
importance as the former declines
151
Objections and Implications in importance. Socialization by the society
the
members of the
and observation by
mem-
society will inculcate in the society's
bers a desire for those positions and things that the society
most highly values. 58 The more aggressive will tend
to attain
these positions and things, particularly in a society that does
not have a rigid social structure. This will be true even in the society with peaceful values. Aggression
is
determinative
to attainment of leadership and status and to dyadic domi-
nance not because a positive social value sion, but because aggression
for attainment
is
is
placed on aggres-
a quality that
is
a precondition
and dominance. In one respect the analogy
of aggression and attainment with strength and boxing prowess
is
imperfect; a society that placed a high status on coop-
erativeness
and a low
status
on competition might conceivably
outlaw boxing so that here the male strength advantage, while just as great,
still
would be of
less
importance. But, since
there could be no society without values, at least fication,
and male-female
interaction,
it is
some
strati-
inevitable that
male
aggression will be determinative to attainment and dominance
even
if a society's
value system despised aggression in
all its
forms. In other words, while behavior
is
the interface of biology
and environment and while environment does channel logical energies, the social system
vironment which
is
an element of the en-
limited by the biological in such a
one cannot even imagine
that
is
d.
bio-
way
type of society in which
the male advantage in the capacity for aggression did not lead to success in all areas for dition for success. In
many
which aggression
groups may engender a situation 58
—
I
grant that
I
make
is
cases the competition in
a precon-
between
which one group succeeds
certain assumptions here about
human motivation
assume that most individuals will tend to desire the positions and things that their societies reward (and socialize them toward) but this would seem so self-evident and so congruent with every theory of motivation I have ever heard that I cannot imagine that anyone will challenge I
—
the assumption.
152
)
The Inadequacy in
of a Nonbiological Explanation
withholding from the members of
all
other groups even
the possibility of attaining positions of authority; in such a situation
we
number of
are
still
dealing with a competition for a limited
desired positions (that
is
what
stratification is),
but a situation in which one group has totally succeeded. It
is,
of course, only in the "competition" between males
and females that one group has a
ad-
definite biological
vantage over the other in the capacity for aggression; in the competition between logical
all
other groups no group has a bio-
advantage over the others and
no variable besides sex which
is
this
why
is
there
is
always correlated with the
attainment of desired positions. (Wealth
is
usually,
though
by no means always, associated with positions of authority, but this
is,
authority.
in
One
many
cases,
because wealth
a
is
can hardly argue that one's sex
result
of
a result of
is
his position of authority.
The only arguments leading
to the conclusion that a society
could separate aggression and attainment that
imagine
rest
on an assumption of the
behaving in what some might think of
can even
I
possibility of
man's
as a totally rational
way. This view would see man's rational mind, his cerebral cortex, as capable of overriding the filter system, the hypothal-
amus, that invests
man not
all
thought with emotion.
It is
true that
has some capabilities in this area that other species do (
no one has ever heard of a chicken
who was
celibate for
moral reasons), but to expect that a large number of the
members of any society will ever be able to override emotions would seem to me pure utopianism. Even ignoring the possibility that
the emotion-producing qualities of the hormones
affect the cortex directly
have cerebral
want
cortices,
and the
man we would that if we
fact that apes as well as
one might question whether
to give primacy to rational
man.
It
is
true
could do away with the emotions there would be
little
or
no
need for many of the institutions of sexual differentiation
and the
institutions that satisfy, channel,
153
and control
lust,
Objections and Implications caring,
and
But without such emotions and the
love.
tions they engender,
by the will to live? Things would be
and
possible, is
life
easier, Utopia
would be very boring. In any
the promised land of the ignorant;
those
who know
societies
whose
reality as
is
it
institu-
what would serve the purpose now served
nothing about institutions
for those
it is
human
case, utopia
just as
simple for
physiology to envision
do not conform
who know
would be
to physiological
nothing about anthro-
pology to blithesomely predict the imminent demise of the family and marriage without considering the myriad functions that these 59
While
two
59 institutions serve in every society.
seems exceedingly likely
it
that,
given the "sex drive" and a
physiological imperative that binds the mother to her infant child, both
marriage and family are institutions that are inevitable for any society that hopes to survive, I am not defending this view here. My point is that the predictions one hears every day of the demise of these institutions not only run counter to observation, but are grounded in an ignorance of the myriad functions these institutions serve and the likelihood that no alternative institutions, easy as they are to imagine, could in reality serve these functions nearly as efficiently. One can imagine a totally promiscuous society or a society in which the functions of status assignment, organization, sexual regulation, and satisfaction of the need for deep emotional attachment are served by alternate institutions, but the fact that no such society has ever existed should at least give pause to all but those who are so upset by the fact that the family can be related to neurosis that they predict the evaporation of the family. The family possesses the ability to generate neurosis precisely because it is the ubiquitous source of feelings, feelings of caring and love which, as the young constantly and correctly complain, are now so scarce. Both joy and neurosis grow only in deep soil. The family, both as the primary source of love and the primary source of socialization, is the primary source of "humanization." To hope to rectify contemporary "dehumanization," which is perhaps more attributable to the weakening of the family than to any other single factor, by the eradication of the family is either Utopian (the dream of a communal society, which no society's women have ever allowed) or ignorant (the expectation that the bureaucratization of child rearing will reverse rather than accelerate "dehumanization" the day-care center is about as likely
—
to be capable of inculcating, say, kindness as
In any case
is
it
the individual
is
the motor vehicle bureau).
ridiculous to view the family from the point of view of
if individual feelings accounted for the existence of the then the institution of the family might not have developed in the first place. But the family is a social institution and as such it gets its meaning, possibly its very existence, from the social. Even if there is ;
family,
no
direct
biological
mother-child
dyad),
element responsible for the family (or at least the even if individuals did not attach feelings to this
154
The Inadequacy There was no doubt
where
of a Nonbiological Explanation as
much
sex in Freud's Vienna as any-
else; the denial of a particular emotion or of a set of
emotions by a segment of society will have
Feminism
institutions of society.
deny physiology and
to
its
is
little effect
hardly the
on the
world-view
first
inevitable social manifestations.
In the nineteenth century there were thousands of fundamentalists
who
cieties
in
denied innate sexuality and
who dreamed
of so-
which the manifestations of sexuality would be
limited solely to
its
did not abhor innate "aggressive"
when
feminist reverses
procreative function. Interestingly, they
human
aggression, but termed
someone
they wanted to compliment him.
this.
At
least in theory
The
she enjoys the idea
of innate sexuality and sees only male aggression as unspeakable.
But both fundamentalism and feminism are anchored
same futility of setting mind against body and both doomed to see their visions of Utopia destroyed by the reality of human physiology. 60 For this physiology is irrel-
in the
are
evant only to the ideology which abhors is
incapable of explaining reality;
it
is
it,
an ideology which
determinative to the
reality itself.
institution
and
"automatically" as a result of sustained contact with mother the family's social necessity would be transmitted through
siblings,
the socialization process, using the parents as agent, to individual children
who would
attach feelings to the institution of the family.
of the demise of the family
The
prediction
even less likely to be correct than the prediction of the demise of the state. But this is all rudimentary sociology. 60 The need to deny the importance of physiological factors to the behavior and institutions we have discussed has forced some to seek ways of denying such importance which serve to demonstrate the disastrous effect ideological requirements can have on intellectual pursuit. In an essay that has been reprinted in many feminist anthologies under various titles and in various versions: see for example, " 'Kinde, Kuche, Kirche as Scientific Law: Psychology Constructs the Female," in Sisterhood Is Powerful, Robin Morgan, ed. (New York: Random House, 1970) Naomi Weisstein presents us with a veritable catalog of the misstatements of fact and the fallacious reasoning that are the hallmarks of the feminist attempt to explain social reality. Dr. Weisstein proceeds on the assumption that if one demonstrates that psychological and psychiatric tests are incapable of discriminating between male and female subjects he has demonstrated that there are not crucial psychological differences between is
—
—
155
Objections and Implications
men and women.
It is
quite true that there are
many
psychological tests
do not differentiate men from women in their results because they measure one or more of the many areas in which men and women do not differ. It is the areas in which men and women do differ that are of interest to us, and no demonstration that they do not differ in other areas is relevant, demonstrating that men and women do not differ in memory does not indicate that they do not differ in abstract reasoning. As we shall see there are many tests on which one sex does far better than the other; the differences in male and female results on these tests cannot be explained by bias on the part of the experimenter because the questions are of the multiple-choice type. If male and female answers to the questions consistently differ, there must be some reason for their doing so. Why they differ is a question we shall deal with below; differences in test answers demonstrate only that they do differ. The most important point, however, is this: even if it were true that no test was capable of distinguishing between men and women, this fact would reflect only on the value and capabilities of the tests, not on the presence or absence of male-female differences. If Dr. Weisstein asks us to deny that men and
that
women
are
different
in
their
biopsychological
makeup simply because
psychological tests cannot reflect sexual differences she asks us to deny not merely the evidence advanced in this book, not merely the observations of the psychiatrists she quotes with derision, not merely the observations
own experience, not merely the observations of our greatest writers, but the observations of every feminist author. For the feminist authors do not deny the presence of a female world-view and female attitudes indeed
of our
;
they give us
lengthy descriptions of the female
mind
that
differ
from
those of the psychiatrists quoted by Dr. Weisstein not primarily in what is seen, but in the opinion of what is seen and in the explanation of the causation of
what
is
seen.
Where
and behavior, which he sees
the psychiatrist admires nurturant
from a female physiosubmission engendered by social oppression. In the latter part of her essay Dr. Weisstein argues not that there are no important male-female behavioral differences, but that such differences are not universal and that the biological evidence is either faulty or irrelevant. Dr. Weisstein invokes the finding of S. Schachter and J. E. Singer that the effect of adrenaline on behavior is to an extent a function of suggestion, i.e., subjects treated with adrenaline will be euphoric or fearful depending on the actions of others in the room. This is an interesting and valuable fact about adrenaline, though it would seem that anyone who has felt love and fear at different times would know that adrenaline can attach itself to more than one emotion. Absurdity threatens only when one attempts to transfer this insight into the nature of adrenaline to other physiological materials. Would Dr. Weisstein have us believe that insulin is as malleable in its effects? Is there any reason at all to believe that the fetal stimulation of the male brain by fetal testicular testosterone and the presence of high levels of testosterone in the adult male are merely biological catalysts for social suggestion? And again the same question, which invariably asserts itself: if one does so argue, why does no society suggest female dominance to its members? That Dr. Weisstein is aware of this theoretical problem is apparent from the fact that she claims that
attitudes logical
substrate,
the feminist authors
156
as flowing
see
a
The Inadequacy
of a Nonbiological Explanation
Mafgaret Mead has discovered a number of societies in which male dominance is not manifested in social institutions; we have seen that Dr. Mead went out of her way to deny ever having said this and that, in any case, it would not be true even if she had. Dr. Weisstein carries her method to the primate level and invokes all the illogic we were since forced to deal with in Footnote Thirty-Six. She concludes that ". primates are at present too stupid to change their social conditions by themselves, the 'innateness' and 'fixedness' of their behavior is simply unknown." As I have said, it would make no difference at all to the line of reasoning I invoke if aggression in all nonhuman primates were associated with the female or if it had not been shown that primate male aggression manifests itself even when primates are raised in isolation (thus removing the possibility that primate male aggression can be explained by socialization see Footnote Thirty). But one cannot resist asking why, if there is no physiological basis to the differences in aggression between primate males and females, half the groups of each species of primate are not led by females? .
—
157
.
Chapter Seven
Confusion and Fallacy in
the Feminist Analysis
The
Necessity of Theory
Falsity of
assumption cannot be balanced by a doubling of
emotional investment. the core of
all
The biochemical
realities
men and women
social situations involving
cannot be eradicated by an assertion that one in theory. All social
and
tions of the nature of
man, and
is
unaware and confuses
political theory this is true
his ignorance
one accepts the necessity of theory, alternative political,
as
that lie at
is
is
not interested
built
even
if
on concepthe theorist
with objectivity.
When
one does when he posits
economic, or social systems, he must
begin not with a vision of what he would like reality to be like,
but with observation.
He
must accept and explain such
observation or convincingly demonstrate that such observation is
not trustworthy or that
it is
nonsensical not because is
we
The man is
not inevitable.
the "inherent childishness" of the black
concept of criminally
like to believe that the black
man
born the equal of the white, but because observation of
this
and other
societies indicates that the
described as "childish"
is
behavior whites had
not inherent or universal but a
particular response to a particular environmental situation.
Likewise,
all
those "inevitable" feminine characteristics that
158
Confusion and Fallacy in the Feminist Analysis
do turn out
to
be socially rather than biologically determined
can be exposed by anthropology. All one need do a single society in
ciated with
which
a characteristic
women and he
this characteristic
is
discover
clearly not asso-
is
has, by this discovery,
proved that
not inevitable. This has not been accom-
is
plished with patriarchy, male dominance, or male attainment
of high-status roles and positions. Since the feminist cannot
do
she must attempt to refute the determinativeness of
this
the hormonal factor on a theoretical level. Simply denying that
anatomy
a denial
is
sets limits
repeated or
anatomy any
on
destiny,
how
no matter how often such
derisive
make
determinative to the limits of possible des-
less
tiny. It is pointless for the feminist to
in order to "concentrate if
tone, does not
its
on the
ignore the theoretical
political
and the economic";
the male hormonal system renders males
than females and
if
aggression
is
an advantage for
ment, then "ignoring the theoretical" ing the dearth of
women
more aggressive
is
attain-
analogous to explain-
boxing champions by discussing
only economic and political discrimination against
women
boxers. This analogy seems extreme not because there are
many more women attainment
—
in the highest positions of
there are not
—but
power and
because the reader has no
emotional resistance to the acknowledgment of male physical strength while he resists with
male aggression advantage.
all his
energy the
If the political
tems do not conform to the limitations ferentiation,
Four
it is
set
incumbent on the feminist
reality of the
and economic
sys-
by hormonal
dif-
to so demonstrate.
Fallacies
Our comparison
of the feminist line of reasoning with that
of the fundamentalist
is
particularly illuminating
examine feminist attempts logical
to
when we
explain away the anthropo-
and biological evidence we have examined. Virtually
every feminist theoretical argument could be as easily, and no
more
absurdly, advanced to deny the existence or determina-
159
Objections and Implications
we
tiveness of those physiological sexual factors
and
to as the "sex drive" society's
conforming
capacity
for aggression,
deny the
to
inevitability of every
institutions to this drive.
its
memory, or
is
activated by the stimuli
fantasy.)
Since there
many
individuals
there are
would have
who deny
many men who
to argue that there are
this drive in themselves,
are insecure
enough
attempt to prove
this drive in a constant
no
is
conformation to
exception to the universality of societal the "sex drive," one
(Like the
can be seen as
"sex drive"
the
nothing more than a capacity which of environment,
loosely refer
that
to exaggerate
presence, that
its
there are nonsexual areas of desire in which physiology relevant only as capacity versality of societal
and not
acknowledgment of the sex drive does
not "prove" that such acknowledgment
have not proven
is
as tendency, that the uni-
—and
is
inevitable, that
could never prove
—with
we
deductive
conclusiveness that this drive exists, that no society has ever
even tried to deny to a large number of
its
members
in-
stitutional channels for this drive's satisfaction, that the so-
cialization
of every society assumes the existence of this
and that
drive,
capitalists
exploit this drive. This line of
reasoning differs from that of the feminist only in that the feminist has no emotional barrier preventing her from seeing the absurdity of the fundamentalist reasoning. It is
often suggested that
we
should ignore the
illogic of
feminist analyses because such illogic represents merely the
"excesses" that must be expected of a social movement.
I
do
not think one has the right to ask even this of the theorist,
we deal with here is much more serious. For we discuss are not peripheral or unimpor-
but the problem the fallacies tant,
but are central to the entire feminist line of reasoning.
There are great differences among feminists litical
approach, and in reasonableness; but
in tone, in poall
who do
not
ignore the anthropological and biological evidence altogether
begin with the incorrect assumption that sexual hormonal
160
Confusion and Fallacy in the Feminist Analysis
and
all
attempt to compensate for this incorrect assumption by
in-
differences are irrelevant to behavior
voking one or more of four basic This being the
case,
and
institution,
lines of fallacious reasoning.
we need not dwell on each individual we have discussed (or will discuss in
feminist analysis. Since
this chapter) the internal contradictions that lie at the core of
the analyses of every feminist writer
who
has attempted to
deal with the anthropological and biological evidence, here a cursor)'
The rect
examination first
is
sufficient to
expose these four
of these admits that the evidence
is
but argues that the existence of individuals
conform
to societal
norms
fallacies.
basically cor-
who do
not
that are universal demonstrates that
such societal norms are not inevitable.
We have discussed
the
pointlessness of invoking the exception to disprove the in-
here
evitability of the rule, so
we might
only reiterate that
reasoning would force one to argue that because some members of every society will deny the sexual forces
this line of
within themselves and remain celibate,
it is
not inevitable that
every society must provide institutional channels for our species'
sexual needs.
As we have
seen, inevitability for the
whole
not only need not, but usually will not, imply inevitability for every individual tence of
if
biological probability
some women who
lessen the fact that there
are taller than
is
a factor; the exis-
some men does not
a biological reason
of every society are taller than the
The second
is
women
why
the
men
of their societies.
feminist fallacy involves one or
more of
vari-
ous lines of reasoning that assume that two entities that have
some this
aspects in
is
common
are, therefore, functionally identical;
the sort of reasoning that sees a
identical because both
have
legs.
man and
Thus the
a table as
crucial relevance
of male fetal hormonalization to aggressive behavior and to social institutions that differentiate
between the sexes
is
denied
because there are cyclical aspects to both male and female biology.
Thus the importance of those
types of cognitive and
psychological tests that can discriminate between the sexes
161
is
Objections and Implications
denied because other types of cognitive and psychological cannot so discriminate. Thus the inevitability of quali-
tests
tatively different
forms of socialization of the sexes
denied
is
because sexual differences in the biological materials relevant to aggression are quantitative
the cries of an infant ences
become
men,
—
quantitative
and
qualitative
women
(i.e.,
testosterone nor are they passive;
and continuous sex
from
we
his skeletal remains. 61
when
discrete only
A
manifested in social conceptions).
have raised the point that
are not without
too, are vulnerable to
cannot
This
number of
tell
feminists
the sex of a person
not true, but
is
differ-
they are
let
us assume
Germaine Greer [The Female Eunuch (New York: McGraw-Hill, something of a master at introducing irrelevant factors and making it sound as if she were proving a point. Her attempt to disprove 61 Dr.
1971)],
is
biological considerations appears in her
Perhaps when to see
we have
what the information which
the female sex really
is,
who
the reader
we
learn to "read the
paragraph.
DNA
common
is
but even then
argument from biological data
To
first
learnt to read the
we
will be able
members
to all
of
will be a long and tedious
it
to behavior (p. 15).
not knowledgeable in this area this sentence no doubt sounds as if it means something. But let us once again use the analogy of boxing. Dr. Greer's logic would force us to say that we will have no idea whether biology is relevant to male superiority in boxing until
will
know how
is
DNA." When we
the male genetic
will develop superior strength
—
we
DNA"
hardly need to "read the
is
learn to "read the
—
DNA" we
"program's" direction that the male encoded in the genetic materials, but in order to
know
that
it
is
so en-
one considers the behavior of boxing and agrees that a certain strength level is a precondition for boxing prowess, then the biological element is apparent from the greater muscularity of the male; to see the connection between sexual biology and behavior in this area one does not need to "read the DNA." Likewise, we know the hormonal evidence relevant to aggression. Nothing much will be added to our knowledge of the importance of hormones to aggression when we can precisely describe the genetic etiology of the hormonal development. The use of boxing as behavior to which sexual biology is relevant also allows us to deal with the attempt to dismiss biological considerations that emphasizes that women as well as men produce testosterone (though of course in lesser amounts and not in a context of a "masculinized" brain). Women also have muscles (though smaller ones than males), and, just as women are coded.
If
aggressive (though less so than males), so could they box. In both cases the differences become qualitative when society conforms its
quantitative
socialization
practices
to
biological
probability.
While
some women
could no doubt become better boxers than some men, society must, for
162
Confusion and Fallacy in the Feminist Analysis that
What
were.
it
would
difference
male and female bones are
this
make? To
identical hardly casts
say that
doubt on the
determinative effect of the male and female hormonal systems. Similarly fallacious reasoning
points out that are considered
women perform male
roles in
that in nearly every case this status in
our is
when
the feminist
roles in other societies that society.
Now we
have seen
because such roles have high
our society and low status in others so that in our
men
society
involved
is
"use" their aggression to attain such roles while
in others they use their aggression to attain other
status) roles.
But
let
us assume that
in our society are associated
some
roles (or qualities)
with the male for purely arbitrary
we have spoken
reasons and are not related to the factors about.
(high-
Of what importance is this to the question of biological To focus on these aspects rather than on the
differentiation?
male dominance, and male
universality of patriarchy,
ment of
sexual differentiation tainly
attain-
high-status roles in order to deny the importance of is
mimic the lawyer who
to
you have four witnesses
crime, but
I
have twelve
who
who saw my
argues, "Cer-
client
commit the
didn't."
This fallacy has been invoked to deny differences in tem-
perament between
men and women;
because our society's
association of emotional expressiveness
ness with the female
is
and demonstrative-
reversed in other cultures, innate
sexual differences in temperament are denied. This does onstrate that
it is
not at
all
inevitable that the
men
dem-
of a society
be "less emotional" than the women, that the males be demonstrative in expressing their male emotions than are in expressing their female emotions, but
on the
possibility of innate differences in
it
casts
less
women
no doubt
male and female
emotions. reasons If it
we have discussed, socialize women away from such behavior. if women attempted to attain their goals through force, they
did not,
would
That Dr. Greer is aware of the theoretiapparent from the fact that whenever contradiction threatens she abruptly ends the chapter.
cal
lose in almost every problems in her work
case.
is
163
Objections and Implications
The dence
third fallacious
is
method of
rejecting distasteful evi-
the invocation of a sophistic tool that one might call
"the fallacy of the glancing blow." In committing this fallacy,
one
who
cannot face the implications of a basically sound
theory, reasonable premise, or trustworthy observation, totally
dismisses such theory, premise, or observation by focusing
only on excesses and perverted uses and would have us believe that such a glancing
blow
These excesses and per-
lethal.
is
verted uses are often quite real, and their exposure often quite clever, but there
that lie behind
the predictive
many
no more reason
them than there
power of physics
cause "physicists in
is
to reject the basic ideas
is
to reject physics because
is
less
make bombs." This
than absolute or be-
fallacy can
areas not related to feminism.
Many
be seen today
reject the possi-
ble intellectual validity of psychoanalysis altogether merely
because the nature of
ment of
mind and behavior precludes
the attain-
a level of certainty possible for the physical sciences
(thereby raising the real possibility that theoretical constructs
become
will
self-fulfilling prophecies).
Others reject even
the possibility that homosexuality can be meaningfully described as pathological simply because
we now know
that a
certain portion of the homosexual's unhappiness results not
from
his homosexuality,
but from societal ostracism.
Still
others declare the entire concept of normality altogether meaningless as a description of an individual's ability to deal with his
environment because a distorted definition of normality
may be used
as a device for political oppression.
to say that there can never
This
is
not
be valid arguments for rejecting
psychoanalysis, accepting homosexuality as normal, or con-
sidering
must
all
behavior equally normal, but that such attacks
strike at the heart's core to
Thus
be
fatal.
today feminists ask us to dismiss the possibility that determinative to behavior and
hormonal
differentiation
institution
merely because bogus biological arguments have
been invoked against
is
women and 164
other groups in the past.
Confusion and Fallacy in the Feminist Analysis
As
a result they refuse even to consider the hypothesis that
men and women might
the differing hormonal systems of
reasonably be thought to result in differing propensities and
behavior merely because a hormone-behavior relationship has
never been "proved" with a certainty that the inductive ap-
proach of science can never, even theoretically, achieve.
The
feminist rejection of scientific evidence usually takes the form
of branding any scientific,"
much
work
that refers to
any statement he dislikes
"pseudo-
as
as "pseudo-intellectual"; the femi-
demonstrate about
nists usually
the scientific
hormones
as the present Vice-President will describe
method
Both tend
lectual approach.
as
much understanding
as the Vice-President
to refer to
does of the
of
intel-
any logic that they
cannot handle as "sophistry."
The glancing-blow
evasion occasionally involves the invoca-
tion not of excesses but of an endless
some of which may have
number of
a certain validity
criticisms,
under certain
cir-
cumstances, but which cast no doubt on the basic soundness of that
which
is
being
criticized.
in certain types of research,
Thus one invokes the fact that, there has been shown to be a
tendency for the researcher to overestimate the evidence supporting the affirmation of an hypothesis; this has been in-
voked to dismiss the findings of anthropologists that archy
is
universal. This tendency
consideration
when one
cated research, but
is
is
occasionally a meaningful
deals with certain types of sophisti-
hardly relevant to patriarchy (which can
be demonstrated by merely counting the number of
women
in positions of suprafamilial authority). In
state this use of
patri-
men and
its
crudest
"glancing blow" dismisses anthropological
evidence because "all the ethnographers have been men." point
is
not so
much
that this
is
The
not true, but that this criticism
betrays the ideological nature of the feminist's intellectual
approach. Only one whose commitment
is
totally to ideology
could seriously believe that any anthropologist would spend
two years
in another culture
and then
165
lie
about the per-
Objections and Implications
centages of
more,
men and women
in authority positions. Further-
an anthropologist were to
if
in the other direction;
who
pologist
fame
is
lie,
he would certainly
the sure reward of any anthro-
discovers a society without patriarchy. This
not to say that differing perspectives or mental
and female anthropologists cannot
sets
social life, but
is
of male
result in differing inter-
some of the exceedingly complex
pretations of
gist,
lie
aspects of
nonsensical to argue that any anthropolo-
it is
male or female, would see matriarchy or female domi-
nance where none
exists
—
and, indeed, no ethnographer ever
has.
Similarly,
in challenging the theory presented here
might attempt
one
to exaggerate into the determinative factor such
methodological considerations as the
difficulty
of develop-
ing a precise description of the institutional manifestations of
male dominance, the lack of standardization studies, the small size of
in ethnographic
Dr. Money's sample, and the dangers
that are always implicit in the generalization to the level of experimental studies of
none of these
criticisms
nonhuman
anywhere near
is
own
animals.
human While
lethal against the
area, each does
have a
partial validity. If the theory presented here rested
on the
evidence
it
attacks even in
its
evidence of just one of these areas, then perhaps the challenge, while not overwhelming,
would be worthy of
serious
consideration. But to attempt to dismiss a theory that can sacrifice the
evidence of any of these areas without damaging
the evidence provided by the others, particularly
of these criticisms it
attacks,
The
is
to
is
lethal to
commit the
when none
even the evidence of the area
"fallacy of the glancing blow."
fourth and most crucial of the feminist fallacies in-
volves the confusion of cause and function.
We
need not
involve ourselves in a detailed discussion of causation here; a simple
biology
example should
made him
suffice.
that way.
A
jockey
is
small because
There may be an element of
feedback here in that the jockey might well weigh more
166
if
Confusion and Fallacy in the Feminist Analysis
reward his weighing
society did not
as little as possible, but
the causation involved in the determination of his physical characteristics
is
jockey,
is
The
certainly primarily biological.
that his size plays in society,
its
function
manifestation in his role of
not biological, but society's putting his size to use.
Likewise, the economic functions that sexual differentiation requires
do not cause the
ment of male aggression system.
differentiation.
The
biological ele-
will manifest itself in any
economic
useless for the Marxist to attempt to disprove
It is
the inevitability of male attainment of authority and status positions by demonstrating that males attain such positions in a capitalist society.
and
They do
economies
socialist
must conform
in societies
also.
with primitive, feudal,
Because the social and economic
to the biological,
we
can change any variable
and patriarchy will not be diminished. whether the
Political rule
is
male
institutions relevant to private property, control
of the means of production, and class stratification are as mini-
mally present as society. It
is
is
possible or as advanced as
male whether
a society
is
is
found
in
any
patrilineal, matrilineal,
or bilateral; patrilocal, matrilocal, or neolocal; white, black, or heterogeneous;
racist, separatist,
or equalitarian; primitive,
preindustrial, or technological; Shintoist, Catholic, or Zoroastrian;
monarchical,
Quaker, or Bourbon;
totalitarian,
forbids
democratic;
Spartan,
ascetic, hedonist, or libertine. It
no difference whether a cifically
or
makes
society has a value system that spe-
women from
entering areas of authority or,
like Communist China, an ideological and political commitment to equal distribution of authority positions. One cannot
"disprove" the inevitability of biological factors manifesting themselves by demonstrating the function that they serve in a political or
to,
and
In short, the fallacy here
men
No
economic system.
did not conform
utilize, is
system could operate that
the reality that constitutes
it.
the reasoning that concludes that
rule because of the nature of the political-economic sys-
tem and ignores the
reality
that the possible varieties
167
of
Objections and Implications
political-economic systems are limited by, and must conform to,
the nature of man.
Vulgarized Marxism This
the fallacy that
is
women
treat
the core of
is at
work and
derived from Engels's as a class.
There
all
are, to
all
of the analyses
of those analyses that
be sure, a number of
Marxist writings on the subject of sex-role differentiation that
do not commit
this fallacy; these either
do not disagree with
the theory presented in this essay or admit that the hormonal factor
case
relevant, but argue that
is
we
cannot, as
we have
and the nature of
malleability
it
need not be; in the
seen in our discussion of
latter
human
society, logically disprove the
theoretical possibility of a society without values, stratification,
or status differentiation, but can only point out the Utopian
nature of such a hypothesized society, reiterate that the same
argument could be made by the fundamentalist for the
possi-
bility
of a society that overrode the sex drive of the majority
of
members, and admit
its
and no
that,
/'/
there were no
hierarchies of any kind, then there
government
would be no
patri-
known contemporary feminist works, such as Sexual Politics, The Female Eunuch, and Shulamith Firestone's The Dialectic of Sex 62 all invoke either aspects of archy.
The
better
62 Shulamith
Firestone,
Morrow, 1970). Miss
The
of Sex (New York: William book begins with the advantage (over
Dialectic
Firestone's
those of Drs. Millett and Greer) of an at least tentative admission that men and women are different from each other. Her acknowledgment of
however, limited to the woman's reproductive role and no made of the determinative hormonal differentiation. Like Simone de Beauvoir's infinitely better book, The Second Sex (New York: Knopf, 1953), Miss Firestone's book admits the universality of patriarchy without giving the reader any reason to doubt that the forces that have engendered patriarchy will continue to do so. Where Dr. de Beauvoir is immune to the criticism that she does not introduce the hormonal evidence we have discussed in Chapter Three (little of which had been discovered when Dr. de Beauvoir wrote), Miss Firestone chose merely to ignore the evidence that renders her theory irrelvant. Dr. de Beauvoir's book fails only when it deals with the etiology of patriarchy, male attainment, and male dominance; elsewhere it offers a great deal that is of biology
mention
is,
is
168
.
Confusion and Fallacy in the Feminist Analysis Engels's reasoning or an approach that the authors believe
an adaptation of a Marxist analysis, but with which,
to be
suspect,
no serious Marxist would
associate himself.
I
By deny-
ing or ignoring sexual hormonal differentiation, these authors
human
force the histories of all
societies into the
framework
of economic determinism in order to confuse the conformations of
economic systems to the
reality of
male and female
biologies with the biological determinants of differing sexual roles.
While the
latter
two of these books demonstrate the
same ignorance of the relevant anthropological and biological and the same
facts
total
ignorance of what theory
that permeates Sexual Politics,
is all
about
Dr. Millett's book that
it is
is
most annoying to the serious scholar. For, unlike Sexual Poli-
The Female Eunuch and The
tics,
Dialectic of Sex
do not
attempt to camouflage their intellectual inadequacy behind a facade of scholarship and a misconception that a profusion of footnotes compensates for a lack of the hard logic and hard
mental work of real scholarship. Since any analysis of patriarchy must either accept the determinativeness of hormonal differentiation or demonstrate that such differentiation
need not engender patriarchy,
need not detain ourselves with the that consider only the analysis that views
bother with. the the
we
Marxist analyses
economic and ignore the biological. The
women
It is sufficient
as a class
is
too
silly
for us to
for our purposes to point out that
members of one class are not hormonally different from members of another and that the individuals of one class
do not pair als
specific
off in
head-to-head encounters with the individu-
of another (thereby rendering each
more
tightly
bound
to a
member
member
of each class
of the other class than to
any member of his own)
Miss Firestone's book is both an unsubstantiated assertion that for some reason biology is no longer determinative and a fantasy of suggested social changes whose probabilities range from minuscule to nonexistent.
value.
169
Objections and Implications
When
the Marxist feminist attempts to deal directly with
the question of biology
we
can expect the arrival of Glancing
Blow's ne'er-do-well sibling, Red Herring. In her otherwise
commendable
"Women: The
piece,
Longest Revolution,"
63
acknowledges the necessity for the Marxist to
Juliet Mitchell
deal with the biological factor, but presents the biological factor not in terms of
hormonal
differentiation, but in terms
of the family. She implies that the institution of the family, or at least
its
relevant aspects,
therefore, that patriarchy
may
may
not be inevitable and,
Now
not be inevitable.
there
are quite strong anthropological arguments for the assertion that
no
society could be built
of the family and that, even
on
a foundation other than that
if
one could, the family would
represent not oppression of the female but
triumph. But this
is
not
my
demonstrate that biology archy
is
monal
No
woman's
greatest
point here. For Dr. Mitchell to
not insurmountable, that patri-
is
not inevitable, she must demonstrate that sexual hor-
differentiation does not render patriarchy inevitable.
attack
on the family or any other red herring
such an attack were successful
—can
— even
if
lessen the probability of
the correctness of the theory presented herein.
No
analysis
that attempts to explain the causation of sex-role behavior or
sexually-differentiated institutions in purely economic terms
can claim parity with an analysis that utilizes the hormonal factor in
its
explanation of the limits of social
an analysis may go far toward clarifying cialization,
form
reality;
such
the roles, so-
meanings, values, and ideologies of a society con-
to the limits set
by the hormonal factor or
vary within the limits, but selves,
how
much
less
how
The Marxist attempt is
as
to explain patriarchy, in
these
cannot explain the limits them-
demonstrate that there are no such
and male dominance served by these
it
limits.
male attainment,
terms of the economic functions
absurd as an attempt to explain male
boxing superiority by demonstrating that male boxers earn big salaries, that males are socialized toward boxing, or that 63
New
Left Review, 40:11-37 (November-December, 1966).
170
Confusion and Fallacy in the Feminist Analysis
our ideology associates boxing with males. that an alternative value system
One might
argue
might outlaw boxing (thereby
eradicating male attainment in this area), but
if
one then
argues that a society could similarly eradicate patriarchy, male attainment, and male dominance by eradicating group values, stratification,
government, and dyadic dominance he once
again invokes Utopia.
Vulgarized Marxism not only ing
by ignor-
the biological and anthropological evidence,
all
empirically in that
fails
fails theoretically
socialist society to
it
must explain the
it
also
failures of each
reduce patriarchy in terms of each indi-
men
vidual socialist society. In socialist countries attain the high-status
practicing
roles;
(as
continue to
opposed
to
re-
Union tend to be women, but the role of doctor in the Soviet Union receives low status relative to that which it receives in the United States. 64 As search) doctors in the Soviet
we have
seen, this
is
the crucial point. If being a practicing
doctor were a high-status role in the Soviet Union, the doc-
would be men. Because the
tors is
not a very high-status
role,
role of the practicing doctor
men
use their aggression to
medicine in
attain other, higher-status roles. In time practical
the Soviet
but
if,
Union
will
become
for any reason, this role
identified as
were
"woman's work,"
to gain status,
men would
move into the field and would attain those positions now held by women. All the famous and powerful (though perhaps not the best) cooks in France are men.
The
Failure to Ask
Like the analyses tional
we
"Why"
have
just discussed, a
number of
tradi-
economic and sociological analyses ignore biology and
cross-cultural anthropology altogether (or treat superficiality that
is
them with
a
tantamount to ignoring them) and con-
64 For data relevant to status in the Soviet
Union see "The Social EvaluOccupations in the Soviet Union" in Slavic Review (28,4), "Soviet Women and Their Self-Image" in Science and Society (39,3, p. 294), and Dodge, op. cit.
ation
of
171
Objections and Implications
on the manifestations of biology
centrate
(boys are encouraged to compete, become
while
and
socialization
scientists,
etc.,
encouraged to develop their nurturant quali-
girls are
ties, etc.)
in
in
economic
whelming number of partment chairmen,
(males constitute the over-
reality
senators, corporation presidents, etc.).
scientists,
Some
Woman's
such as Elizabeth Janeway's Man's World, Jessie Bernard's
Women
and the Public
de-
of these works,
Interest,
Place,
and Cynthia
Fuchs Epstein's Woman's Place are honest and intelligent while others are shoddy and wastes of the reader's time. But all
of these works are irrelevant to the general questions
addressed in this book; no primarily economic or sociological analysis
—no
matter
how high
quality
its
—can
ever explain
the causation involved in patriarchy, male dominance, and
male attainment of high-status
roles
and
positions.
Such works
merely document the presence of these universals in this society, a presence that human biology renders inevitable in this
and every other
society.
The more
the feminists produce such
documentation, the deeper they dig the grave for their basic
assumption that these institutions are not inevitable.
Here we Even the
see the ultimate failure of the feminist analysis.
works are grounded
best of the feminist
erroneous assumption
in the
that demonstrating that a society at-
men and women men have often said that men and women somehow proves that these different values and
taches different values and expectations to
(or showing that are different)
expectations are totally arbitrary and are not the social mani-
women have bemen have told them why it is the women of
festations of biological imperatives (or that
haved
—
to
in
in a
feminine way simply because
which case one might ask
every society
around )
.
who
listen to the
Because these works
men and fail
never the other way
even to acknowledge the
problem of causation by asking "why" {why does every ety socialize boys toward,
why
and
girls
are the nonmaternal roles of
172
soci-
away from, competition,
women
never given high
Confusion and Fallacy in the Feminist Analysis
by any society,
status
with the male, the sciences )
,
why
One
dents are men.
from playing with
As long
attempt
as the feminist
tell
dolls or girls
at
presi-
theory
the hormonal evidence or simply asserts that such
all
evidence
away from
most senators and corporation
fist-fighting or that
ignores
are socialized
does not need a sociologist to
that boys are dissuaded
from
every society associate authority
women who
they cannot be considered theory, but, at best,
merely description.
him
why does
is it
is
unimportant, as long as
ignores and leaves
it
unexplained the universality of patriarchy, male attainment,
and male dominance, and
no
as
long as
and females away from aggressive little
and explain
But
to ask
it
ignores the fact that
toward aggressive pursuits
society fails to socialize males
pursuits,
it
will illuminate
less.
why,
to look for theory in order to understand
rather than selective description in order to justify ideology,
requires that one lay before the reader all of his facts,
all
of
his assumptions, all of his reasoning, and, only then, all of
his conclusions so that
down and identify down the short on all
about;
it
—
if
is
—
wrong
the reader can track
the circuit board. This
from the perhaps
differs
insightful nontheoretical
sentence and follow clusion,
he
his mistake just as the electrician tracks
its
work
in that
is
what theory
brilliant
is
and perhaps
one may choose any
thought to the thought's logical con-
do the same with any other sentence, and find that
the logical extensions not only do not contradict each other,
but create harmonies that explain even sentences taken individually. This
ment of any work demanding
to
is
more than do the two
the
minimum
require-
be taken seriously. But
this
the feminist dares not do lest the inaccuracy of her facts, the fallaciousness of her reasoning, the incorrectness of her conclusions,
posed for
and the general inadequacy of her all to see.
analysis be ex-
65
65 It is not coincidental that the intellectual background of nearly every author of feminist anthropological and biological theory (Millett, Greer,
173
Objections and Implications
A
The Obscurantism
Digression:
Inadequate Analysis The feminist analysis is most
of
an when
obviously inadequate
it
deals with the manifestations of biological sex differences that are discussed in the theory presented in this book.
Com-
plex as the areas of patriarchy, male dominance, and male attainment of high-status roles and positions are, however, the intellectual
damage caused by
minimized by our
hormonal
the feminist analysis
ability to explain the
is
mechanisms by which
reality limits social possibility. In this digression I
wish to discuss not these potential for obscureness
areas, but the areas in
which the
far greater, areas in
which our
is
present knowledge precludes rigorous explanations of sex differences but in
which the differences we observe may quite
possibly be real and inevitable aspects of different "mental gestalts" that flow
The logical
from the
different biologies of the sexes.
refusal to consider the possibility that there
component of observed sexual
as the sensitivity necessary for nurturance,
relates
to field
is
a bio-
differences in areas such
perception as
it
dependence or independence, superego de-
velopment and pathology, the nature of sexual arousal, the personalization of reality, the ability to
make and remember
psychologically significant observations (compare the blurred
and obvious description given by the husband with the specific
and perceptive observations detailed by the wife when a
couple discusses the party they have just attended), the preconditions for scientific and artistic genius, and in
all
the
other incredibly subtle, interrelated areas for which observa-
Firestone, Figes, Janeway, Mitchell, and, to a lesser extent,
has been literature or cal
art.
An
De
bearing on the correctness of his analysis, of course, and the
of these authors offer
much
Beauvoir)
author's intellectual background has no logithat
is
illuminating
when
last three
they are not dis-
cussing anthropological and biological theory, but one cannot ignore the fact
that
no serious woman biologist or anthropologist has offered her
support for the theories of these writers.
174
Confusion and Fallacy in the Feminist Analysis tion indicates that there are sex differences,
we have some part. We know
intellectually
is
indefensible until
reason to assume that biology
does not play a
that sexual biology
to the areas discussed in the theory presented in this
we know
men and women
that
whatever the cause. Therefore,
is
crucial
book and
think and behave differently, it
does not seem unreasonable
to suggest that the sex differences listed
above might repre-
sent manifestations of innate differences that have evolved as
men and women have
fulfilled their biological roles. In
whether these subtle differences are biologically or
case,
cially generated, they
do
exist,
so-
and rejections of descriptions
because one does not like such descriptions
This
any
is
hardly justified.
not to deny the potential danger of an expectation's
is
becoming
a self-fulfilling prophecy;
however, to reject the
validity of all our observations of sex differences for this
reason
is
to
commit the
"fallacy of the glancing
to ignore the question of I
why we have
blow" and
such expectations.
think that, in part, the feminist's rejection of the bio-
underpinnings of sexual differences
logical
is
owing
to her
immediate identification with what she imagines to be the
male
situation
—an imagining made simpler by her ignorance
of the negative aspects of the male vision. This refusal to even consider descriptions and to accept that which
which
is
good
is
is
male
as that
most apparent when the feminists attempt
to deal with psychoanalysts like Erik Erikson, psychoanalysts
who,
after
all,
have been trying to correct the admittedly
negative cast of some of Freud's writings on
ing that the feminine behavior of
all
women by showwomen is
the world's
not passive reaction, but an active, life-sustaining force. Half the feminists totally reject
all
psychoanalytic interpretation of
female behavior while the other half describe the ways in
which
a "sexist" society
produces
women
not unlike those
praised by Erikson. Indeed, the very point of the feminist analysis
woman
is
not that the contemporary
woman
is
unlike the
Erikson describes and sees as crucial to our species'
175
Objections and Implications survival, but that this ority results
ments
from
woman
is
inferior
and
that her inferi-
socialization rather than biology. So, judg-
aside, the question of biology seems, as always, to
be
the heart of the matter.
Given
its
and
soft intellectual core
its
simplistic approach
to the complexities of reality, the feminist analysis
incapable
is
of dealing with the most interesting aspects of sexual differentiation.
For example, feminists often portray the male
viewing the
woman
as
as
"unprincipled," quote some nine-
teenth-century misogynist for "documentation," and then dis-
miss discussion of the entire area. In their idealized version of the male view of possible sexual differences in superego
development, feminists assume the superiority of the line of
development of superego sanctions that leads chiatrist's
men
to the psy66
couch and to fight wars for "great causes."
This
assumption dooms them to unhappiness, but more importantly for our purposes
it
leads
differences that observation
process sists
— implores
them
to dismiss
— the
first
us to study
more
from discussion
step in the intellectual
closely.
Even
if
on maintaining that psychological development
66 This analysis
is
one
is
in-
totally
virtually free of reference to psychoanalytic theory,
the genius of Freud becomes more apparent. The absence of hard hormonal evidence necessitated Freud's positing a number
yet with
every
word
Today he would no doubt subour knowledge of testosterone for "aggressive instinct," but otherwise his explanation of the way in which the superego usurps the aggression that is natural in humans and uses it against the ego explains sexual differences in the mechanisms of guilt flawlessly and demonstrates why the greater natural aggression of men should lead more often to exaggerated superego sanctions. The feminist dismissal of Freud or, to be more precise, what the feminists think is a dismissal of Freud (without an awareness or understanding of what they are doing, the feminists utilize those elements of Freudian theory that suit their ideological purposes and of then hypothetical biological elements. stitute
dismiss other,
just as intellectually valid, Freudian theories) and their absurd overemphasis on the theory of penis envy (which Freud advanced very tentatively and which most psychoanalysts have long since greatly modified and have viewed with a great deal of suspicion) would be intellectual dishonesty of the grossest sort were it not the work of individuals who are incapable of the slightest understanding of the inner elegance of Freudian theory.
176
, .
Confusion and Fallacy in the Feminist Analysis a function of social factors,
for disregarding his
own
he has no
intellectual justification
women
observation that
fighting a
duel for honor strikes us as being absurd and that
is
it
un-
imaginable that Crime and Punishment could have been writ-
would have been written by a woman) For the remainder of this section I would like to introduce a number of random thoughts and observations not as proof of anything, but as an indication of the incredible number of ten about a
woman
(or
observations of sexual differences
we make
may have
lihood that each of these differences
component
that the feminist analysis
and the
daily
like-
a biological
would have us
disregard.
A. The feminist "explanation" of the fact that our anthro-
pomorphized God is
is
male
is
limited to a declaration that this
merely another example of "sexism" and the matter
Our understanding of
at that.
reality
would be
is
left
better served
by our examining the possibility that the sex of an anthro-
pomorphized God
God
in a monotheistic society (or of the highest
in a polytheistic society)
logically generated qualities of
and economic needs of the seen, authority
and, given
is
human
is
a function of both the bio-
men and women and
associated with the
biology, this
is
this
must
—
God,
ety, will
will look to a
if
God
male
—
as
A
society that
any industrial
associated with authority,
anthropomorphized by the members of the
always be male. But just as
with the male and
fertility
we
authority with the male, ligion
and look
stance
where
and soci-
with the female (Mother Nature)
biology, these associations are inevitable.
members of an
soci-
associate authority
so does every other society and, again given
that the
we have
in every society
inevitable.
emphasizes bureaucratic organization ety
the social
For example: as
society.
male and female
One might
expect
agricultural society, while associating
would deemphasize authority female God.
to a fertile,
this is the case
that the core of all religion
— perhaps
is
finite
I
this
know is
an indication
man's fear of an
universe and his need of a transcendent authority
177
in re-
of no in-
infinite
—but
at
Objections and Implications
of reasoning allows comprehension where a
least this sort
comprehension of any
cry of "sexism" precludes
B. Examination of the
sort.
most mundane matters can illumi-
nate for those willing to look for causation rather than mere description. Let us take the married
woman who
is
referred
Mrs. and wears a wedding ring. Let us say that
to as
woman
angry because married
is
men
this
are not differentiated
from single men by terminology and wear wedding rings less
often than do
angry. But
if
the
far
women.
Now
woman
argues that these distinctions are
one needs no "right" to get
merely arbitrary or even that they are present only because
male aggression enables men definitely
to individual convenience.
Even
taining that our expectation that
sexual aggressor (though by no initiator)
is
tenable assertion,
it
male which
The inconvenience
This
is
67 It
insists
on main-
who
the male
is
the
necessarily the sexual
some
in
reality,
my
view a
totally un-
should be obvious that the institutions of
women that
easily
society's
are available
would be
society that did not differentiate in
one
if is
it
means
Mrs. 67 and the wedding ring are
women
almost
unrelated to the realities of male and female
hormonal and anatomical
to the
is
inherent in the very nature of society,
reality, to necessities
and
to enforce them, she
wrong. Social expectations are related to biological
way of
indicating
and which are
suffered by
women
not.
in a
between single and married
observed way would be intolerable.
reflected in the fact that, to the best of
my
knowledge,
would not be surprising
if the feminist attempt to replace the Mrs. with Ms. were successful in the business sphere (on letters, for example), but success will have nothing to do with the feminist intention. The function served by differentiation of married from single women is irrelevant for the company that is sending out its monthly bills (or to the male writing to a female stranger about a business matter), and here Ms. is convenient and possible. The real function of differentiation is important only in face to face contact; it is here that
abbreviations Miss and
the
This
(sexually aggressive) is
male must know which
women
of paramount importance for society (the family
every society's
organization
individual married
are available. is
the basis of
and status system) and convenient for the
woman.
178
Confusion and Fallacy in the Feminist Analysis there
no
is
society that does not so differentiate.
Because
this
alone would account for the differentiation between single
and married women, there
complex
issue of
sary for far
whether
is
no need here
this differentiation
more important
ciety that
The
societal reasons.
be interested in considering that
it is
to go into the would be neces-
reader might
quite likely that
was not based on the family and
biological emotional energies, maintaining status, vital functions
and other
identify these wives.
That there are many
institution in
its
males an
in-
and that did not
hibition against taking other men's wives
no
so-
could survive and that the family could not
survive in a society that did not inculcate in
irrelevant;
no
role in directing
its
cases of adultery
any society works perfectly
—
is
that
is why every society has methods of social control. To those who would argue that the breakdown of the institutions of
marriage and the family are exactly what they desire point out that society exist
the
without marriage. Since
breakdown of
To
would
must be based on the family and the family cannot
the best of
more
man
cannot exist without society,
would merely be followed by was also based on marriage and family.
this society
the rise of another that
not
I
the evidence of anthropology indicates that
all
my
knowledge, there
is
no
society that
is
male than with the
lenient with the adulterous
number of male to the number of
adulterous female and no society in which the prostitutes (to serve female clients) relative
female prostitutes
I
grant that one might
logically argue, in these situations, that
males get the "better
is
not insignificant.
deal" merely because their aggression allows rules favoring males, but I think that
a total
and unwarranted commitment
them
to enforce
one would have to have
to
economic determinism
to believe that these institutions cause, rather than flow from,
differences in sexual arousal or to expect that a female equivalent to Playboy
(once the to elicit
initial
magazine could ever command the attention
worn of men. The
novelty had
from millions
179
off)
that Playboy seems
biological
component of
Objections and Implications
the etiology of sexual institutions
by invocation
of, say, the excesses
the revelation that
and
is
women,
male "sex drive"
that the
is
not brought into question
of the Victorian era or by
different
is
from
is
an equal, but
not to
is
female "sex drive"
different,
any more than saying that the institution of patriarchy
male aggression
inevitable result of
of
some female
sive,
to
is
say
that of the female
therefore manifested in different institutions
deny that there
To
have a "sex drive."
too,
is
an
deny the existence
women
aggression, to contend that
are pas-
or to deny that the inevitable manifestation of a bio-
logical reality can be exaggerated in a given society.
C. Let us, for interest's sake, get a bit more speculative. Most men, when made conscious of the fact through questioning, acknowledge that they feel somewhat awkward when shaking hands with a woman. Superficial reasoning would
conclude, perhaps correctly, that this feeling of awkwardness is
completely explained by the fact that
men and would
used to shaking hands with
with
why men
men
with a handshake. All
stitutionalized
are far
more
societies
man
seem
male greetings, however.
to another that
are simply
more
not concern
itself
begin encounters with
likely to
the latent function of the handshake
of one
men
to
Is
have similar
it
in-
not likely that
the acknowledgment
is
he will not invoke his physical
and aggressive potentials? Since close friends would not need this assurance,
likely to
we would
the case. If this
would
expect that a
man would
shake hands with a close friend;
feel
is
is,
be
woman and
less
of course,
the latent function of a handshake,
men
was inappropriate for an en-
that this gesture
counter with a
this
this
would be manifested
in a
feeling of awkwardness. Moreover, the desire for physical contact with a nearby
the male's
—given —
woman contact
woman may
mammalian
lie at
the back of
the handshake's promise of an absence of
strikes the
awkwardness. If
always
brain so that a handshake with a
this
male is
as deceitful
correct
and
180
if
and he
we view
feels this as
the handshake
Confusion and Fallacy in the Feminist Analysis as but
one element of the male "code of honor," then the
implication at least
that
is
women
are in reality
—
structiveness of
is
important point
attempt to limit the social de-
society's
male aggression. Because
code need
gressive, this
is
women
them only
affect
are less ag-
The
secondarily.
not that males distinguish between shaking
hands with a male and with latter,
or
The
capable of acting violently dishonorable.
less
"code of honor"
with the
more honorable
female by feeling aivktvard
a
but that they do distinguish. In some Euro-
woman is more common. The European male will not, then, feel awkwardness when shaking hands with a woman, but he will distinguish the meaning of a handshake with a male from that pean countries a male's shaking hands with a
with a female as surely as does the American male.
D.
It
has been demonstrated that the intelligence levels of
the husband and wife are variables in the
men
often complain that
women
with
among
the most highly correlated
American marriage
relationship, yet feminists
will refuse to enter relationships
men
of equal intelligence because
by such intelligence. If
we
this is untrue. If
we
tively intellectual
segment of the population
there
is
some
truth to
are threatened
consider the population as a whole
limit ourselves to discussing the rela-
what the feminists
say,
believe that
I
but that they
only half the story. Intellectuals, by definition, place a
tell
great emphasis on intelligence, and
it is
natural that, for them,
the feelings (perhaps the biologically generated feelings) of
men and women
relevant to male
themselves here. In other words,
dominance should manifest it
is
possible that
only male emotions that engender relationships tellectuals in
the
woman
large
man
which the man
the
intellectual, despite
number of men over
is
whom
more
it
among
intelligent;
her claim to desire to have a
to choose from,
is
unlikely to select a
will not, therefore, in this crucial area, "take the lead")
me
in-
perhaps
she has intellectual dominance (and
thought occurred to
not
is
.
who This
during a discussion with a feminist
181
Objections and Implications
who,
after arguing that
dominance was not relevant
remarked that she did not find masculine any
relationships,
man who was
The fem-
not more intelligent than she was.
not alone in pretending that their ideology
inists are certainly
the emotional realities of life
reflects
to her
resemble them, but one
when
it
does not even
has difficulty understanding an
still
no
infatuation with an explanation of reality that bears
semblance to E.
reality.
For our
differences
re-
example of
last
between
situations in
men and women
which biological
are not readily seen to
be crucial but for which biological differences may be determinative, let us consider the observation that most
prefer
men
We
lationships.
know
women
that
human
virtues.
Now
a superficial,
totally correct, explanation
man
a taller
as
women
that the
would
We
there
no
is
direct
a desire for
irrelevant to
but again possibly
woman's
desire for
us assume, again for interest's sake,
let
of every society feel this way;
idea whether they do or not. possibilities.
see a
is
re-
even
merely a manifestation of our particular
But
social values.
men
search out taller
though they are perfectly aware that height all
women
than themselves for sexual and marital
taller
We
might assume,
CNS
as
now have I
do
a
I
have no
number of
in this book, that
imperative engendering in the female
male dominance
—
the universal female feelings
acknowledging male dominance being
totally attributable to
the reality of male biological aggression and the inevitable
female response to related to a
woman's
this universal
is;
an inevitable the
men
it
—and
that there
is
CNS
social reflection of the biological reality that
CNS
(because
women of taller men
women for man is "supposed" to be most men are). Or perhaps
the fact that a
woman
a direct
imperative
man be taller than she women may then be merely
of every society will be taller than the
reflects
than his
no
desire that her
tendency of
the society so that the preference of
merely
is
taller
there
imperative engendering in the female a
182
Confusion and Fallacy in the Feminist Analysis
male dominance, but not one for the desire for
desire for a taller
may that
man; then the
—
CNS
no
—
size
is
related to dominance.
available
man
CNS
is
both dominant and
to
there
is
do not know
how else
women
Or perhaps there man who
to desire a
taller.
in any of the situations discussed in this
important the biological factor
important, whether
no one
to the taller
other things being equal); this
imperative directing
a
that
all
in evolutionary terms.
is
digression
one directing the female
is
(again
would make sense
it is
Or perhaps
imperative engendering a female desire for male
dominance, but there
I
of dominance and size
particularly of the child,
other things being equal, which of course they
all
rarely are
association
from the observation,
result
knows
assume that biology
is
it
either
is
direct or indirect.
irrelevant by automatically accepting
how seldom
erbs concerning masculine
one another no matter duced them. Could
might be
It
the aphorisms and prov-
and feminine
how
this
I
when do know
or,
and that no one has the right
the explanation that considers only social factors.
worth noting, however,
is
qualities contradict
disparate the societies that pro-
not be because such aphorisms and
proverbs have long since penetrated to the cores of our natures to find the truths
whose
physical correlates
now
discovering? It would hardly be wisdom preceded knowledge.
183
the
we
first
are only
time that
Section Four
Maleness,
Cognitive Aptitudes.
Performance,
and Genius
Chapter Eight
Possible Sexual Differentiation in Cognitive Aptitudes
Introductory Note in Anticipation of the Deluge: I
have purposely disjoined the theoretical con-
siderations advanced in this chapter
from the theory of the
and the next
inevitability of patriarchy
proper in order to emphasize as strongly as possible the fact that the validity of the theory
is
in
no
way contingent on the correctness of these two chapters and would in no way be affected if these two chapters were completely incorrect. Thus far I have discussed institutions that can be demonstrated to be both universal
and explicable
of an observable physiological factor.
The
in terms
existence
of universality and the physiological factor have
made
it
possible to present a theory as the only
reasonable explanation of patriarchy, male dominance, and male attainment; this scure the fact that
it is
may tend
to ob-
exceedingly rare for any one
theory to be the only reasonable explanation of the reality
mon
it
attempts to explain.
for a
number of
It is
far
more com-
conflicting theories to be
both internally logical and congruent with empirical
reality;
from
in these cases acceptance results not
total destruction
of
all alternative theories,
but from a slightly better ability to persuade.
187
Maleness, Cognitive Aptitudes, Performance, and Genius
This process
is
most people would of the
first
clusiveness while
even
if its
of two con-
meets enormous emotional
sistance while the other
mand
when one
hindered
theories
flicting
is
like to believe.
We
re-
what
in accord with
often de-
theory a virtually deductive con-
we embrace
the second theory
probability of correctness
In these two chapters
I
is
argue that there
is
very low. a physio-
logical basis to certain differences in cognition be-
tween
men and women.
I
do not attach
to the
hypotheses presented in these two chapters any-
where near the probability of correctness
that
I
attach to the theory of the inevitability of patriarchy. For our discussion of cognitive differences
we
have neither the extensive cross-cultural
dence nor the direct biological evidence that
were able
The
to
evi-
we
evoke in the discussion of patriarchy.
explanation of cognitive differences presented
here,
like
any alternative,
environmental
totally
explanation, attempts to persuade by presenting a
configuration of logically interrelated hypotheses that
is
capable of explaining the evidence that
do have. totally
I
we
do not deny that one could present a
environmental explanation of the cognitive
differences
I
discuss nor that such an explanation
could conceivably be correct, but
I
do think that
the explanation that posits a physiological factor
more logically compelling, conmore in accord with experience, and considerably more likely to be correct than the is
considerably
siderably
explanation that does not.
Sexual Differences in Types of Cognition: Is Biology Irrelevant? Thus far we have seen that males attain leadership and status roles
through their aggression, but
188
we
high-
have accepted
Possible Sexual Differentiation in Cognitive Aptitudes
the assumption that there are no innate differences between
men and women
tasks of any particular role.
perform the this
one sex or the other
that enable
assumption
unquestionably
is
to better
With many Perhaps
justified.
roles it
is
justified in the case of every role save, of course, those few
which an extremely high degree of strength or the
for
ability to give birth are necessary.
Perhaps even after reading
this section the reader will believe that
male aggression does
render patriarchy, male dominance, and male attainment of high-status,
nonmaternal roles inevitable, but that there are
no innate sexual differences
in cognitive aptitudes that are
relevant to any social roles or positions or to scientific creative genius. Because it is
male aggression leads
admittedly not easy to determine
men
if
and
to attainment,
a particular
fill
them to attain more capable of performing
role only because their aggression has enabled it
or also because they really are
the tasks
demanded of
men
with
in
find that the
that role.
When
a role
is
associated
one society and
women
men
society desire the role
of the
first
in another
we
always
and the
men
of the second do not. In other words, the males of the
first
society channel their aggression into attaining a high-
men
while the
status role
of the second society, because in
their society that role has to succeed in another
low
status,
use their aggression
(high status) area.
The
only excep-
tions are low-status roles, such as certain roles that
great physical strength, that
Male
women
demand
are incapable of filling.
success in attaining positions of
power and
status does
demonstrate, ipso facto, that males have some quality I call
that quality "aggression"
do women;
to
argue that
attain positions of
—
in greater
men have
power and
status
"not allowed" is
—here
abundance than
women
merely to admit
to
this.
Such an admission does not, however, force one to accept an innate male advantage relevant to performance. Before
we examine
the possibility that there are innate
sexual differences relevant to performance to
make one
point:
if
it
is
important
there are such differences the social
189
Maleness, Cognitive Aptitudes, Performance, and Genius
implications are manifold.
One might be tempted
to
see
such differences as important only at the highest level of
competence; he might acknowledge that there are more
mem-
bers of one sex or the other at any given level of competence
and
members of one sex
that at the highest level only the
on the
will be represented (which sex depends, of course,
aptitude in question), but argue that for the majority of individuals in a society such differences are irrelevant.
he might be convinced that males have a in
an aptitude that
is
Thus
statistical superiority
a precondition for
accomplishment in
physics, that the greatest theorists of physics will be males,
and that
at
any given level of competence above the mean
there will be more males than females (and below the mean more females than males) while maintaining that the number of women who are superior to some men renders the statistical reality irrelevant to
the social reality. This
ing, but, given the realities of social life, realities
entic-
Social
tend to bring together (or into competition) males
and females from equivalent positions
(relative
members of
is
their respective sexes
barriers
artificial
woman
is
incorrect.
are
)
.
This
to
other
most true when
removed. Thus the most intelligent
marries the most intelligent man.
Thus the
brightest
female law school graduates compete with the brightest male
law school graduates for the small number of most desired positions.
The
fact that the
a far better theoretical
perceptions not of
men
—with whom she
nomic
reality,
mind than most men
ability
a
and
is
in contact )
woman
,
and eco-
to her social
to social stereotypes in general. this
faces opposition
As had
engenders a situation in
where
a
man
of no greater
meets encouragement, in which observation leads a
society's
sex, in
irrelevant to
but with the brightest
in general,
been the case with aggression,
which
is
(which will develop congruently with her
her self-image
males
female law school graduate has
members
to associate a particular quality
which the ensuing stereotypes become 190
with one
far stronger
Possible Sexual Differentiation in Cognitive Aptitudes
than the tion
and
statistical differences justify,
conforms
to the stereotypes.
aggression, even
if
in
is
a society,
not drawn to alternate activities by
any
perative, even then
one sex like
them
even
own
if
im-
on
stereotype;
members of society would
to subject the majority of the
is
to inferiority in
With
its
important innate sexual
statistically
differences will result in socialization based
the alternative
socializa-
the case with
the stereotypes do not flow automatically
from the observations of the members of each sex
which
As had been
an area in which their
to excel.
these implications of the social importance of innate
sexual differences relevant to performance in mind, let us
consider the chess champion rather than the senator or cor-
poration president.
I
am assuming
throughout
that the only precondition for chess genius
is
this chapter
an extraordinary
aptitude for dealing with high-level abstractions and that
aggression
of minor importance.
is
might take exception
to this
I
realize that the reader
and might invoke other pre-
conditions (aggression, physical endurance, mental endurance,
and the
ability to control
emotions )
.
I
acknowledge
this
but
suggest that the precondition of an aptitude for abstraction
some (admittedly very few) men and no women precludes the attainment of chess genius by a woman. that
is
found
This aptitude
in
is
to the attainment of a chess
as strength is to the
However,
if
championship
attainment of a boxing championship.
the reader
is
bothered by the existence of other
preconditions for chess genius
—
if,
for example, he believes
male
that aggression, but not abstraction aptitude explains
superiority
—he
may
substitute genius in mathematics, phi-
losophy, legal theory, or composing music wherever chess genius and the logic of this chapter if
is
I
use
unaffected.
But
the reader also argues that male aggression does not have
a biological base,
he must be able to explain why there are
no women aggressive enough
to attain parity
male chess players and why we 191
socialize
with the best
women away from
Maleness, Cognitive Aptitudes, Performance, and Genius chess.
He
cannot explain such socialization as being analogous
women away from
to the socialization of
boxing (as
do)
I
because this would admit that the socialization conforms to a biological
male advantage. Furthermore, while each of the
areas of genius listed above has preconditions for genius that are
unique to
it,
of the areas have in
the only obvious precondition that
common
is
an
all
with high-
ability to deal
level abstractions.
There are presently eighty-two chess Grand Masters; they are all
male despite the
number of
fact that there are a great
female chess players, particularly in the Soviet Union. Indeed, there has never been a female
Grand Master, and
it
un-
is
questionably correct to say that of the five hundred greatest chess players there have ever been, not one has been a
Indeed, there are 136
men competing
with higher point ratings than the highest-rated in history,
Nina
woman. time
at the present
woman
player
Gaprindasvili. Ratings are based on aver-
age, not cumulative,
performance, so there
is
no
built-in
mechanism that discriminates against women. A very conservative estimate of the female membership of the World Chess Federation would be 5 percent. (Since listings are by first
initial
it
percentages.)
is
virtually impossible to ascertain the exact
Other things being equal, one would expect
that twenty-five of the five
percent of the
Now
hundred greatest players and
5
Grand Masters would be women.
the feminist will say that other things are not equal,
but that the inequality has nothing to do with an innate
male potential for dealing with the chess.
logical abstraction of
She will argue that the absence of
women from
the
highest levels of chess attainment merely reflects the fact that girls are socialized
couraged to excel in It
away from chess while boys are
this area.
This
is
merely begs the question and forces us to ask
are socialized
away from
chess;
192
it
is
en-
not an explanation.
why
girls
equivalent to saying
Possible Sexual Differentiation in Cognitive Aptitudes
that
boxing champions are
all
male because
girls are socialized
away from boxing.
A
better environmental
argument would see male chess
(or mathematical, etc.) superiority as resulting from the fact that in
women
many
are socialized
ment (they
away from competing with men
where aggression
areas
is
are so socialized for
a precondition for attain-
good reason
we have
as
seen) and that they have transferred the general value of
female noncompetitiveness to the nonaggressive area of chess (or mathematics, etc.) where aggression for attainment.
It
is
is
not a precondition
conceivable that this generalization of
avoidance of competition explains male chess matical, etc.
men have to
)
dominance and
it is
(or mathe-
true that the certainty that
an innate potential that makes them more likely
be better chess players or
scientists or
composers
is
less
than the certainty that they have an innate aggression that will lead
them
to the bureaucratic positions of
power
see,
there
really
is
shall
considerable evidence for the view that
men
do have an innate superiority
likely that the serial affects the
in the
we
worlds of chess, science, and music. However,
as
in these areas. It
is
quite
unfolding of the male genetic program
male brain
in such a
does develop potentials a
woman
way
that the
male
does not (just as a
really
woman
develops nurturance potentials a male will not). If chess
were the only area in which we could examine differences in behavior,
we would have no
logically
compelling reason
to favor the "noncompetitive" explanation over the "innate"
explanation or vice versa.
Some
Theoretical Problems with a Totally
Nonbiological Explanation However, we can
test
these lines of reasoning
when we
examine possible explanations why Eleanor Maccoby and Roberta Oetzel found, in a survey of twenty studies of cor-
193
Maleness, Cognitive Aptitudes, Performance, and Genius relations
between sex and mathematical reasoning aptitude,
when
that
children are tested
no consistent adult
differences
men and women
between boys and
are tested
girls,
(six studies
twenty studies was of mental retardates and here)
men
were of
always did far better than
tests
is
when
but
—one
of the
not relevant
women. These
studies
given to thousands of people, and there can
be no doubt that they expose
One might
there are
(thirteen studies)
real sex differences in aptitude.
argue that the differences flow from socialization
rather than biology, but he cannot argue that there are
such differences. 68
The between-sex
great as the between-sex differences in height and far consistently different than any other sexual
cognitive aptitudes.
The
no
differences here are as
more
differences
in
feminist will say that by the time
they are in college girls have been socialized to see being a
good mathematics student
as
being unfeminine. Let us
accept this as true and assume that girls have been socialized
one accepts
in this way. Still, if
great mathematicians have
Why
theoretical questions. in
this
way?
Why
all
is
this as the reason
been
men he
why
the
encounters serious
has the socialization proceeded
mathematics unfeminine instead of
feminine? There would seem to be nothing in the nature of mathematics that would automatically lead a society to consider
it
masculine.
that mathematics
be merely that 68
is
Why
"girls'
women
then do stuff"?
we
not
tell
little
boys
Here the answer cannot
have internalized the noncompetitive
That such differences in aptitude exist is demonstrated beyond quesMaccoby, The Development of Sex Differences (Stan-
tion in: Eleanor E.
Stanford University Press, 1966). Of particular interest here is Dr. Oetzel's summary of the results of hundreds of testing studies of sexual differences; H. A. Witkin, et al., Psychological Differentiation (New York: Wiley and Sons, 1962); David Wechsler, The Measurement and Appraisal of Adult Intelligence (Baltimore: Williams and Wilkins, 1958); and Bernard Berelson and Gary A. Steiner, Human Behavior: An Inventory of Scientific Findings (New York: Harcourt, Brace and World, ford:
1964).
194
Possible Sexual Differentiation in Cognitive Aptitudes
mandate
that
is
which aggression leads
valid only in areas in
69 to attainment.
For
women
equal or surpass
men on
all
cognitive tests not related to mathematical reasoning or associated aptitudes.
If the fact that sixth-grade girls
are the
equals of sixth-grade boys in arithmetic, but that twelfth-
grade
girls
have an inferior mathematical aptitude when
compared with twelfth-grade boys festation
of the older
girls'
is
explained as a mani-
having internalized a norm
against females competing with males,
grade
girls
equal males in
all
why do
areas for
the twelfth-
which the narrow
aptitudes relevant to logical abstraction are not necessary?
The to the
implication here
is
not that socialization
is
irrelevant
development of sex differences in cognitive aptitudes
or that there have not been serious attempts to describe these differences as a function totally of socialization
and not of
the fact that men are more likely to have taken mathematics courses, but this is irrelevant for three reasons. First: these tests measure aptitude, and perception on an abstract level, not knowledge or ability. Second: male superiority seems to be maintained even when mathematical backgrounds are equalized; this is surprising since, if the pressures dissuading women from entering mathematics were really all that great, one would expect that only the very best women would take mathematics (i.e., the elective mathematics course would have women only from the top 10 percent of women, but men from the top 30 percent of men) and that this would decrease or eliminate the male superiority when just mathmatics students are tested (even though the male superiority is real and will manifest itself whenever men and women from 69
One might invoke
logic
the
or
same percentiles of
women
their
respective sexes are tested).
in mathematics courses
seem
to
do
The
as badly relative to
fact that
men
in
mathematics courses as women in the general population do relative to men in the general population indicates either that the social pressures dissuading women from going into mathematics are not all that great or that the sex differences at the top of the statistical curve are even greater than in the middle. Most importantly: it begs the question to argue that the society encourages men to study mathematics and dissuades women from doing so, for the basic question remains: why does the society not encourage women and discourage men if not because men long ago demonstrated their superiority here and society has conformed to this reality more for women's sake than for men's? (Similarly: on the quantitative aptitude section of the Graduate Record Examination, a score that places one in the ninetieth percentile among women places one only in the sixtyeighth percentile among men.)
195
Maleness, Cognitive Aptitudes, Performance, and Genius
innate sexual biology. 70
It
though
that there are strong,
is
not conclusive, indications that such socialization conforms to limits set
by innate differences in cognitive aptitudes. This
comparable to
is
conformation to innate male
socialization's
aggression, though the probability that this
cognition
is
less
One might
CNS
of
mental
than
it is
is
the case with
with aggression.
construct a
model
that admits the relevance
factors but that sees these as a result of environ-
factors. It has
been suggested, for example, that the
experience of judging the trajectory of a baseball
is
an en-
vironmental demand that engenders in boys a
CNS
ment
were exposed
that could be developed in girls if they
to these
demands. Given the absence of cross-cultural
dence here (we do not
and females
know
we know
in other societies as
)
We
ing, but not very convincing.
this
,
would deny the
explanation
too
CNS
are discussing only
if
entic-
the
development for
possibility that the boy's activities
is
is
much about
be acceptable.
to
"male" cognitive aptitudes
muscularity, but this point
we
the authority and
explanation
know
relevance of fetal hormonalization to
an environmental
evi-
the cognitive aptitudes of males
status situations of other societies
crease
develop-
No may
one in-
just as they increase his
relevant to the adult factors
there
is
not a
CNS
reality that
accounts for these being a boy's activities and the evidence indicates that there
is
CNS
such a
reality to
which
socializa-
tion conforms.
There
is
another problem with the explanations that
tempt to avoid the conclusion that there
ment
that precedes
is
at-
a biological ele-
male and female cognitive aptitudes and
with the explanations that imply that these differences are erasable or reversible: the environmental sexual differences in socialization that they
70 See, for example,
invoke are so deeply embedded in
Walter Mischel, "A Social-Learning View of Sex The Development of Sex Differ-
Differences in Behavior," in Maccoby, ences, pp. 56-81.
196
Possible Sexual Differentiation in Cognitive Aptitudes
maleness and femaleness that
is
it
irrelevant that
virtually
the biological factor that necessitates the environmental factor or the type of socialization
not direct. For example,
is
one might argue that the adult male mathematical reasoning superiority
of
is
not the direct result of the male
results
from the
fact that the
development of an abstract reasoning
purposes
it
Even
would make no
made male
factor
analysis
if this
asser-
female
limits
ability that is not di-
precluded by limitations of the female
rectly
to cognition.
(i.e.,
and any
encouragement of male
and discouragement of female assertion
tion
CNS
properties relevant to cognition, but that this superiority
its
were
CNS
relevant
correct, for practical
difference whether the biological
superiority inevitable directly or indirectly
the hormonalization factor renders inevitable the posi-
tive socialization of
male assertion and negative
socialization
of female assertion in "male" areas).
Environmentalist attempts to deny the biological factor here usually entail the demonstration of correlations between
one or another aspects of socialization with the demonstrated
male superiority relations
do
causation
narrow area of cognition. Such
in this
cor-
not, in themselves, indicate anything about the
involved.
Obviously
all
sex
will
differences
be
correlated with all others.
None
of this implies that changes in socialization and
education could not tend to reduce male superiority in mathe-
even
matical reasoning;
from
CNS
cally,
be eliminated
circuitry the
superiority
results
directly
male advantage could, very
theoreti-
if
if girls
this
were massively
toward
socialized
improvement and boys were socialized away from improvement (just as the innate adult male physical strength superiority
five
could be eliminated, in theory,
if
all
women
hours a day in intensive physical training and
remained sedentary). For our purposes bility is irrelevant if
results of differing
all
spent
men
this theoretical possi-
cognitive sex differences are either direct
CNS
circuitry or
197
even of differing
sociali-
Maleness, Cognitive Aptitudes, Performance, and Genius zation that
is
an inevitable indirect result of differences in
innate aggression.
The Hormonal In this section
it
Basis of Differentiated Intelligence
will be suggested that
quite likely that
is
it
the male superiority in mathematical reasoning has a hor-
monal
we
base.
It
are dealing
that
cannot be reiterated too strongly that here
on an almost purely hypothetical
though the conclusions offered
are,
more
believe,
I
and
level
hormonal
plausible than the explanation that ignores
ferentiation, they are extremely tentative. In addition,
necessary to point out once again that there
is
difit
is
no reason
to
believe that there are sexual differences in intelligence
we
consider intelligence in
all
of
myriad
its
aspects.
if
To
consider an ability to theorize as a greater demonstration of intelligence than perception or insight
no
less
than
is
loading the dice
is
considering physical strength more important
than longevity as a measure of good health. Nonetheless,
if
we do
aptitudes there can be
focus on certain abstract reasoning
no doubt,
as
we
males are superior to adult females. totally
environmental explanation of
have seen, that adult
We
have seen that a
this runs into serious,
though perhaps not insurmountable, problems. demonstrated a superiority over young
If
young boys
girls in this area there
would be little doubt that male superiority here had a hormonal base, but the tests indicate that, as is the case with height,
male superiority
is
not manifested until puberty.
Why? The most
likely answer,
that sexual differences
and the
least interesting one, is
do exist before puberty, but that the
male superiority has not yet developed it
manifests
situation
itself
on the
that exists
in
tests.
school;
This
is
to the point
where
comparable to the
prepubertal males are not
superior to females in basic arithmetic, which does not call
on
abstract reasoning aptitude, nor are they yet capable of
198
Possible Sexual Differentiation in Cognitive Aptitudes
succeeding on the mathematical
on which, three or four
tests
years later, they will be superior to females.
But
let
us assume that the tests are not too gross to
the necessary distinctions and that
it
is
make
true that prepubertal
males are not superior to prepubertal females. This does not at all
preclude the possibility that hormonal development
relevant here. It
is
is
possible that, just as the pubertal male
increase in testosterone production
may engender
the male
aggression advantage (if the male child's aggression superiority is attributable
and not
completely to socialization for adulthood
at all to the fetal alteration of the
this increase
in certain types of abstract reasoning.
two problems with
this explanation.
perfectly reasonable that the pubertal tosterone,
CNS),
complementing the
fetally
There First:
are,
while
why
this pubertal increase
abstract reasoning aptitude.
and
its
alteration of the
more important
it
seems in tes-
prepared male CNS, it
is
not
should be so important to fetal
male hormonalization
pathways of the brain would seem
here.
The second problem examine the
The
however,
male increase
should generate an increase in aggression potential, clear
so does
engender in the postpuberal male a superiority
arises
from an empirical attempt
possibility of a relationship
to
between male hor-
monalization and nonverbal aptitudes. In an attempt to
dis-
cover the effect of pathological virilization on intelligence, Drs. John
Money and
Viola Lewis reported findings that are
impossible to reconcile with Dr. Oetzel's extensively docu-
mented findings
that the sexes
do not
differ in verbal ability
but that males are superior in mathematical reasoning. Drs.
Money and Lewis found
that a
group of seventy subjects
with either the adrogenital syndrome or progestin-induced
hermaphroditism did remarkably well on IQ a
subgroup of
tive to a tests.
Of
tests,
but that
forty- four of these subjects did as well, rela-
random population, on verbal the seventy subjects
199
tests as
on nonverbal
12.9 percent scored 130 or
Maleness, Cognitive Aptitudes, Performance, and Genius
higher (the expected percentage for the general population
would be
120 or higher
2.2 percent), 31.5 percent scored
(8.9 percent), 60.1 percent scored 110 or higher (25 percent),
and 72.9 percent scored higher than the median for
the general population. 71 Dr.
Money
points out that these
findings must be considered tentative. There that, to
an extent, they represent sampling
these subjects were children of mothers
treatment and this
may
is
the possibility
bias; for
who
indicate that the mothers
above average intelligence. Nonetheless,
it
is
example,
sought out
were of
quite likely
that fetal virilization does increase IQ.
Drs.
Lewis and Money
(and Dr. Ralph Epstein)
did
not compare the nonverbal scores of the subgroup's prepubertal males, prepubertal females, pubertal-adult males,
pubertal-adult females with verbal scores.
and
The sample was
too small to allow breakdown into these cells and, even it
were
jects
not, nearly all the
if
female subjects, like the male sub-
and normal males, but unlike normal females, had
experienced both fetal and pubertal virilization. Nonetheless, it
is
true that
we might
expect that these subjects would
demonstrate a greater superiority over the general population in
nonverbal scores than in verbal scores and they did not. 72
It is
not clear
why
these findings differ
studies reported by Dr. Oetzel.
from the numerous
Three of the
six studies of
adult mathematical reasoning listed by Dr. Oetzel used the
performance sections of the same telligence Scale) as did Dr.
Money,
(Wechsler Adult In-
test
so the discrepancy cannot
be explained by the use of different that there
is
a qualitative difference
tests.
It
is
between the
possible effect
of
71 John Money and V. G. Lewis, "IQ, Genetics, and Accelerated Growth: Androgenital Syndrome," Bulletin of the Johns Hopkins Hospital, 118: 365-73 (1966), and "Prenatal Hormones and Intelligence: A Possible Relationship," Impact of Science on Society, XXI: 285-290 (October-December, 1971). 72 V. G. Lewis, John Money, and R. Epstein, "Concordance of Verbal and Nonverbal Ability in the Androgenital Syndrome," The Johns Hopkins Medical Journal, 122:192-5 (1968).
200
—
Possible Sexual Differentiation in Cognitive Aptitudes
the male
hormone on aptitude
and for the
for these subjects
general population; Dr. Money's finding that these subjects are far superior to the general public in verbal aptitudes
is
given Dr. Oetzel's finding that normal males are not superior to
normal females
in verbal aptitude
—
unexpected
just as
as
his finding that the reasoning superiority of his subjects over
the general population
is
no greater than
riority. It is
only for the female subjects
puberty that
we would
their verbal supe-
who have
reached
necessarily expect virilization to lead
to a non-verbal increase greater than the verbal increase; the effect of
may conceivably be one of threshmay be reached far more often by
hormonalization
old and this threshold
normal males than by normal females (thereby accounting for the male superiority
found by Dr. Oetzel) so that the
male would gain no more
excessively virilized
In any case,
all
between "maleness" and aptitudes
which manifest themselves on
certain tests.
The
ness" manifests itself .
is
only in non-verbal areas or also
(i.e.,
However
evidence
which "male-
conflicting only with respect to the extent to
)
areas.
of the research discussed in this chapter
indicates an association
in verbal areas
here, relative
he would in verbal
to the general population, than
tentative
must be any assessment
of the contribution of hormonal differentiation to the association of "maleness"
there
is
chapter in
and aptitude,
it
is
undeniable that
such an association. If the reasoning invoked in this is
correct,
it
is
difficult to see
performance on the
tests
how
sexual differences
referred to can be reasonably
explained without positing some relevant physiological factor.
In the subtest sample referred to above,
of the genetic females were raised as females; to explain their test
is,
of course,
generalizations
it
but three is
difficult
performance in terms of socialization
when we know masculinization. Dr. Money particularly
It
ali
still
that they
underwent hormonal
writes:
too early to
from these 201
make any sweeping
findings.
But
Katharina
Maleness, Cognitive Aptitudes, Performance, and Genius
Dalton's work, 73 taken together with our own, strongly suggests
androgens,
that
synthetic
progestenic
hor-
mones, and progesterone, given prenatally, do produce an increase in intelligence and eventual academic performance. They do so on both males and females
when
but only
mones
the foetuses are subjected to the hor-
in excess at a critical time of their
development
in the uterus. 74 Similarly,
Dr. Eleanor Maccoby, whose major interests
have been the causation involved in
and the prob-
this area
lems of socialization encountered by young women,
has
written I
think
quite possible that there are genetic fac-
is
it
tors that differentiate the
thought
two sexes and bear upon
performance other
intellectual
of
as
innate
is good reason more aggressive than
there
it
example,
to believe that boys are innately girls
—and it
I
mean
aggressive in
implies fighting, but
one which underlies the
is
analytic thinking, then boys girls
For
implies dominance and initiative as well
this quality
who
later
—and
if
growth of
have an advantage which
endowed with more
are
their
what we have
"intelligence."
the broader sense, not just as as
than
passive qualities will
find difficult to overcome. 75
Feminist Research The reader who is interested
in discovering for himself the
extent to which the popular feminist authors misrepresent
the findings of serious researchers in order to justify their 73 K. Dalton,
"Antenatal Progesterone and Intelligence," British Jour-
nal of Psychiatry, 114:1377-82 (1968). 74 Money, "Prenatal Hormones and Intelligence," p. 289. 75 Eleanor E. Maccoby, "Woman's Intellect," in The Potential
Women, Seymour M. McGraw-Hill, 1963),
Farber and Roger H. Wilson, p.
37.
202
eds.
of
(New York:
Possible Sexual Differentiation in Cognitive Aptitudes
ideologies might wish to
compare what these authors
say
Dr. Maccoby says with what she really says and what she reports (with Dr. Oetzel) in the compilation at the
The Development Millett has just those left the
from the very
extracted
end of
For example, Dr.
of Sex Differences.
quoted above
article
elements which had to do with socialization and
Maccoby
reader with the impression that Dr.
dis-
misses the idea that biological sex differences could be of
any importance. 76 Germaine Greer, in discussing the implications of the
Maccoby-Oetzel compilation,
Non-verbal cognitive
like
abilities
states that:
counting,
mathe-
matical reasoning, spatial cognition, abstract reasoning, set-breaking and restructuring, perceptual speed, ual,
mechanic and
and no
When
scientific skills
significant pattern has
one attempts
to verify Dr.
finds that, with the exception of
have
been tested
all
emerged.
77 .
.
.
Greer's statement he
one study of perceptual
speed (which no one ever associated with the male),
were not found
to
man-
women
men in any study of any when adults were tested. In all the men proved superior or no differences
be superior to
of these particular areas tests
of adults either
were found. six studies of
We
have seen that
this
mathematical reasoning.
was true
To
in six out of
find six out of six
same
large-scale studies each of
which
cally significant patterns
so rare in the social sciences that
this
is
discloses the
cannot be dismissed.
Dr. Greer no doubt glanced
at
the listing of studies of
mathematical reasoning aptitude, saw that girls
statisti-
(as
opposed
to adults) are
onstrated a superiority,
when
boys and
compared neither sex dem-
and looked no further. But Drs.
Maccoby and Oetzel had
listed these studies
of the chronological ages of the 76 Millett, Sexual Politics, p. 216. 77 Greer, op. cit., p. 93.
203
in
the order
test takers precisely
because
Maleness, Cognitive Aptitudes, Performance, and Genius
age
is
when
the crucial factor.
When
the tested subjects are adults,
they have passed the age of pubertal hormonalization,
statistical
male performances on
tests
of mathematical rea-
soning are always superior to the performances of women.
Masculine Logic In other words, the stereotype that sees the male as more logical than the female
is
unquestionably correct in
servation and probably correct in qualities
observed
conform
its
innate
to
its
ob-
assumption that the sexual
limitations
analogous to those relevant to physical strength. 78 Society's socializing girls
away from
careers in mathematics
be an acknowledgment of hormonal deal with high-level abstractions tistical
sense and
conceptions are based.
—
is
is
we
on such
reality.
An
may
well
ability to
unfeminine in the
sta-
statistical realities that social
for all the reasons
A woman who
ability that
ability
it
is
79
we have
discussed
possesses such an ability possesses an
correctly
tend to associate with men. Her
"unfeminine" only
in
the sense that a six-foot
78 "Logic," as used in this book, refers only to certain cognitive abilities
and not at all to "unemotionality." Invoking the second feminist fallacy (see Chapter Seven), some feminists have attempted to show that the abilities manifested on the tests discussed above are not innate; they are quite right in saying that emotionality is "masculine" in some societies, but this is hardly relevant. In Chapter Ten it is suggested that males and females are innately and, therefore, universally, different in their emotional makeup (hardly a revolutionary finding), but no one who is familiar with the relevant cross-cultural data would argue that there is some innate reason why women must be more demonstrative than men. 79 There is an assumption implicit in my equating the demonstrable male superiority in mathematical reasoning with the male logical superiority that is acknowledged by the social value that sees thinking "logically" as "thinking like a man," but I think that this assumption is justified by the high correlation between mathematical reasoning scores and ability in those areas (chess, physics, legal theory, logical argumentation, etc.) which engender the social stereotype. Needless to say, each of these areas has additional preconditions so that excellence in one area does not guarantee excellence in another; all that I am saying here is that the ability that manifests itself in high mathematical reasoning scores, that is acknowl-
edged by the social value that sees condition for excellence that
is
this as
common
204
"thinking like a man,"
to all of these areas.
is
a pre-
Possible Sexual Differentiation in Cognitive Aptitudes
woman's height feet tall
is
is
unfeminine
the quality of being six
(i.e.,
men). Unde-
usually associated, correctly, with
niably the female mathematical genius will meet discrimination (she will be discouraged
where
will be encouraged), but this fact that a
mathematical genius
is
a
man
of equal ability
an inevitable result of the
who
is
a female will always
be a very rare exception. 80 Most likely a population's observation of real sex differences in mathematical reasoning ability
"automatically" leads to the stereotype of male logical abilus for the
moment assume
that
ity,
but
we
did not consider this ability unfeminine,
let
it
does not. If
values did not acknowledge biological reality, the at
our social
if
few women
the high end of the female curve would no longer face
discrimination, but the majority of
80
do not want
I
ented
women
to
many
in
make
women would
be forced
light of the difficulties encountered
by
tal-
areas; to attempt to explain the reasons for social
not to judge them. In my own discipline, sociology, when one informal encounters between male and female sociologists he sees that each views the other not only through the lens of professional expectations, but also in terms of sexual expectations. Insofar as the expectations attached to sociological excellence (theorizing ability, "hardattitudes
is
observes
headed logic,"
etc.)
are
male expectations,
this
certainly tends
to
work
female sociologists who are just as logical and just as capable of dealing with theory as male sociologists. In formal areas, such as promotion, women are not promoted in proportion to their numbers, but
against
this
is
those
not totally attributable to sex.
The
very best
women
scholars see
and the assertion that there are hundreds of Arendts, Bardwicks, Bernards, Hackers, Komarovskys, Maccobys, Meads, or Trillings being passed over for promotion is nonsense. (Incidentally, can anyone imagine any of these women associating her work with the simplisms of a Millett or a Greer?) When we consider the "average" academic sociologist we do find discrepancies, but for the most part this reflects the "publish or perish" syndrome, not sexual their contributions reflected in their positions
discrimination per journals than do
se.
Male Ph.D.'s publish
women
far
more often
in
scholarly
(Maccoby, "Woman's Intellect," p. 24), and, since readers for these journals are not told the names of the authors of submitted manuscripts, discrimination on this level is not a factor. Now one might well argue that promotion should not be so heavily contingent on publication or that women academics spend so much time with their families that they have no time to publish; but as long as men who do not publish are refused promotion no less than women, the charge of sexual discrimination in these cases is hardly justified. It is, however, a fine rationalization for scholarly mediocrity.
205
Maleness, Cognitive Aptitudes, Performance, and Genius
below average (for the population
to consider themselves
whole) in an area in which
as a
society
would
them
like
to
excel. Just as the male's greater aggression led to men's
which aggression led
attaining those roles for
and
to attainment
this resulted in society's associating aggression
culinity, so
masculine logical superiority. 81 Just as
social stereotype of
women away from
the failure of society to socialize sive
pursuits
women,
so
would
would
unattainable
create
would be expected
to
inferior.
women away from
Women
To
be sure, a failure
society's failure to so-
aggressive pursuits; this
is
reflected
brought to bear on the
evinces an interest in mathematics
who
the sanctions imposed on a girl
in
mathematics would not be
would ensue from
in the fact that the pressure
who
women.
excel in the one cognitive area
women away from
cialize
for
a failure to associate mathematics with
which they are unquestionably the disaster that
aggres-
expectations
the male create an intolerable situation for
to socialize
and mas-
does the male's greater logical ability lead to the
is
girl
mild compared to
attempts to attain goals
by righting. It is
from
unlikely that the pressure dissuading the
a future in mathematics has deprived the
young
girl
world of
a
female Einstein. For the biochemical underpinning of male mathematical superiority but to the very best.
throughout the
is
relevant not only to the majority,
The
biological factor manifests itself
statistical curve; as
was the case with
chess,
the very best female mathematicians have far better mathe-
81
This accounts for the oft-repeated observation that the same piece of by both men and women when it is allegedly written by a man than when it is allegedly written by a woman. Here we see the difficulty faced by women intellectuals at its starkest: it is, however, a difficulty that is probably inherent in the fact that the best research is, by and large, done by men. If abstract reasoning research will be given a higher rating
ability
is
a
—
—
precondition for the creation of theory (the highest status
research in every discipline), then these unfortunate attitudes will prob-
ably always face women, demonstrably very great.
to
some
extent,
206
even
women whose work
is
Possible Sexual Differentiation in Cognitive Aptitudes
matical minds than the vast majority of men, but they do
not approach the level of the very best male mathematical geniuses any
more than
It
tallest
ap-
male.
of course, true that the range of aptitude scores
is,
within each sex
is
greater than the difference between the
means of the two sexes and that only is
woman's height
the six-foot
proaches the height of the
that
is
it
only at the very top
one sex will be capable of performance. But
true of height also.
The
of social
statistics
a factor that generates the
life
Men
stereotype.
(correct)
this
introduce are
seen as "more logical" because, statistically speaking, marriage tends
to
bring together a
man from the tenth (or men with a woman of
twentieth or sixtieth) percentile of
the tenth (or twentieth or sixtieth)
percentile of
women.
The husband will seem "more logical" in each case because he is. The same thing applies with any characteristic in which the sexes differ (though with characteristics such as domi-
nance there may be an element of "opposites attracting" and the situation will be the same )
women
.
are
centile of
That the
"more
men
more complex, but
women
logical" than the
men
stereotypes as the fact that the tallest
of the fiftieth per-
development of
as irrelevant to the
is
the point will be
of the ninetieth percentile of
women
social
are taller than
The woman of the ninetieth women is married to a man of the ninetieth men and he is "more logical" than she.
the average man.
percentile
of
percentile
of
An The
Environmentalist Objection environmentalist will no doubt raise the objection that
this line of
reasoning would serve as rationale for the most
arbitrary stereotype. This
that
some behavioral
vironment
(as
behavior,
merely another way of saying
with the black)
conformation to affect
is
differences result
real
statistical
certain
abilities,
207
from the
cultural en-
and some from biological
cultural
differences
that
and propensity (as with
Maleness, Cognitive Aptitudes, Performance, and Genius
women) No
stereotype
.
in that
is
arbitrary; every stereotype
has an element that
it
is
"real"
is
perceived and that can be
seen as biologically caused whether
it
or not. If such an
is
element were not present the members of the society would not perceive that portion of reality in terms of a stereotype
and would
which
select
some other element
present on
is
For example: psychological and
to base a stereotype.
economic factors have led
that
white population's needing
to the
to perceive the black in unfavorable terms.
not perceive the black as cheap or cowardly
—
The white as
did
he did other
who emphasized business acumen or pacifism stupid. What was perceived, of course, was not stu-
minorities
but as
pidity, but a lack of education.
This lack of education had
nothing to do with biology or intelligence, but
The
was seen
stereotype
was
it
in biological terms so that
real.
could
it
continue to serve as rationale for maintaining the very edudiscrimination that makes the stereotype possible
cational
in the first place.
This circular process
awful truth that people will
reasoning
matical
when
positions
why women do and why they fail to
what
their so-
needed
do men need
women.
certainly true that once
is
he will
attain
roles
and
They
to maintain the black
stereotype, so It
poorly in mathe-
aggression leads to such attainment.
will say that just as the white
is
accelerated by the
the environmentalist and the feminist will use this
line of reasoning to explain
a value
is
to believe
about them whether correct or not.
ciety says
Now
come
to maintain the stereotype of
feel threatened
when
one has internalized
the basis for that value
challenged, but this anxiety has no bearing on the correct-
ness or incorrectness of the observations that underlie the
value or on the relevance of biology to those observations. 82 82
rage
No is
one is more threatened than the feminist who is owing more to her personal psychology than to the
of society" indicate
male's
;
how
told that her
— uncertainty—
"sexist nature
however, the fact that she feels threatened while it may she really feels about the accuracy of her analysis just as the
feeling
threatened
may
indicate
208
his
is
in
no way
Possible Sexual Differentiation in Cognitive Aptitudes
One
when he
runs into no obvious theoretical problem
terms of environmental
plains black performance in
exdis-
For black deficiencies in performance might
crimination.
well be exactly what one
would expect of whites
if
they
were forced to suffer the educational discrimination forced
on blacks. But
women
how
does the feminist explain the fact that
men
equal or surpass
in all test areas not related to
Why does "avoidance of Why is rigorous think-
aggression and abstract reasoning?
competition" not assert
here?
itself
referred to as "thinking
ing, but not perceptive thinking,
man"?
like a
and not
cal"
Why that
unperceptive" ?
Is
the stereotype that
is
"women it
"women are illogi"women are
are inarticulate" or
not an unbelievably specialized form of
oppression that generates an inferiority in one narrow area of cognition and in no other?
Our
conviction that there
a biological reason for
is
male
superiority in the aptitudes relevant to mathematical reason-
ing cannot be as great as the certainty that there logical basis for
male success
is
in attaining positions for
aggression leads to attainment. For
when we
more emotionally threatened by
to a
woman
than he
A man
woman
man.
man
that a
He
stronger
generated
than
women
differences.
—
more threatened
—
is
incorrect
Likewise,
from the soldiering role
or
unrelated
the sergeant
who
to
has spent his life this
assertion that
way
male aggression
is
than
men
;
meaning
his
who
has spent
this role,
who sees men and
life,
as well as as
men
—
a sergeant
will feel threatened to the quick by the
not innately greater than female aggres-
sion and that a society could develop in
be more aggressive
physiologically
to
derives
which he has devoted his years learning the tasks and expectations that define this role as a masculine one that women could not fill that no society could socialize women to fill as well
who
is
will never lose a fight to a
and that even engaging a woman in a physical fight is unfair. The he feels threatened hardly demonstrates that the assumption on the expectation rests the assumption that men are physically
fact that
which
is
is
the thought of losing a physical fight
of losing to another
is
precisely because the expectation
which
discuss mental
related to the actual correctness or incorrectness of that analysis. far
a bio-
his
which women were socialized
feelings
of
insecurity
may
to
indicate
something about his sense of certainty, but it casts no doubt on the correctness of his assumption that males are more aggressive and that no society could socialize its women to be more aggressive than its men.
209
Maleness, Cognitive Aptitudes, Performance, and Genius
properties
we
are dealing in part with hypothetical biological
elements (as opposed to the specifiable hormonal elements aggression)
relevant
to
cultural
data
(as
and a limited amount of
opposed
to
the extensive
cross-
materials
on
patriarchy). Nonetheless, the evidence of logic and observation of sex differences in aptitudes in our as
we have
seen,
riority in this area.
the test
is
own
indicate a biologically based
society does,
male supe-
This could be empirically tested, though
not very feasible. Groups of
men and women from
ten disparate societies could be taught to play chess or do
mathematical puzzles. Assuming that these populations do not differ from ours in the innate materials relevant to these abilities
(or that,
maintained),
if
they do, male-female differences are
we would
hypothesize that the males would
demonstrate a superiority in these areas in every group.
210
Chapter Nine
High Genius
in the Arts
The Relevance
The Question As
and
Sciences-
Male Biology
of
of Genius
the case with sexual cognitive differences,
is
it
not
is
possible to explain the preponderance of male genius in the arts
and sciences with the compelling logic that attaches
male dominance, and male
to the explanation of patriarchy,
attainment of high-status roles. to define genius. Genius
admittedly
It is
and
difficult
though
not intelligence,
it
even cer-
is
a high intelligence
is
certainly
a precondition for genius in the hard sciences. It
is
probably
tainly correlated
with
is
itself
it,
impossible for one with an
any kind, but
180
who have
we know
IQ
of too
of 70 to possess genius of
many people with
IQ's of
manifested no semblance of genius and too
many undeniable
geniuses whose IQ's have not been ex-
traordinarily high to equate genius with intelligence.
doubly
difficult to identify
It
is
the biological preconditions for
genius.
Nonetheless,
it
is
difficult
to
ignore the
fact
that
all
the Aristotles, the Leonardos, the Rembrandts, the Bachs,
the Marxes, the Edisons, the Freuds, the Einsteins, and the
Capablancas (and their counterparts in other cultures) have
been
men
despite the fact that half of the
of their societies were
women. In
members of each
the performing arts one
might well argue that the greatest
women
have been the
equals of the greatest men. Perhaps in literature one might take the position that Jane Austen,
211
George
Eliot,
and the
Maleness, Cognitive Aptitudes, Performance, and Genius
Brontes were the equals of Homer, Dante, Shakespeare, and
Dostoevsky. But there
not a single
is
woman whose
number of men
has approached that of any
genius
in philosophy,
mathematics, composing, theorizing of any kind, or even painting. 83
Even
in these areas (except
women
ing) there have been a few
of the greatest genius, but this
prepared to argue that not only
is is
perhaps for compos-
at the level
below that one
irrelevant unless
is
Suzanne Langer the equal
of a Hegel, Kant, or Aristotle, but that in being the equal of these
which
men
she
is
eradicates
in these areas
we would
the entire
were
statistical
rule.
For
genius
if
solely a function of biological factors
expect that, as
be a number of all
not merely an exception, but an exception
is
the case with height, there
women who
would
manifested greater ability than
but a very few men, but none
who
manifested the ability
of the very greatest men.
One might
argue that the
other cultures are equal this
would make no
strated that the arts
women strated. One
with
in
to,
arts
considered feminine in
or not comparable
difference unless
it
to, these,
but
could be demon-
and sciences discussed here are associated
some other
culture; this cannot be
demon-
can argue that the pottery designs created by
83 Perhaps the name of Madame Curie has leaped into the reader's mind. Realizing that doing so will seem quibbling to many readers, I wouid nonetheless submit that: A. Even were Madame Curie the greatest of all theoretical scientists the probability that scientific genius is related to male biology would be unaffected. Again it is important to note that probability expects exceptions and the discovery of an eight-foot woman would not lessen our conviction that men are taller than women for biological reasons. B. Moreover, while Madame Curie was unquestionably one of the greatest of experimental scientists, she was not a theoretical physicist. If we remember that statistically we would expect that some women would be toward the high end of a curve representing abstract
reasoning (but not as many as there would be men) and that the very best will rank far higher than the vast majority of men (but not as high as the highest ranking men), then the surprise is not that Madame Curie had an excellent theoretical mind (but not that of an Einstein, a Bohr, or a Dirac), but that there are so few other female theorists of any note at all.
women
212
.
High Genius
women
in the Arts
which
in a society in
and Sciences
with
this art is associated
on the relevance of genius.
I
am
CNS
development
is
book saying or implying think that
I
it
is
— am not any point any masculine only — at
I
quality
that
superior to any feminine quality
However,
mathematical
to
not saying that masculine creative genius
superior to feminine creative genius in this
women
no doubt
are as creative as Einstein's theory, but this casts
that
would be more
different.
is
it
sensible for the
feminist to argue that our society overrates manifestations
of male genius
and underrates manifestations of female
genius rather than to argue that there are not differences in
males and females engendering the two (just as
more
sensible for her to argue that
values for which aggression
is
would be
it
our society overrates
relevant rather than to argue
that there are not sexual differences in aggression )
Note there
is
that the farther
one moves from those areas
in
which
an obvious need of an aptitude for dealing with pure
abstractions to those in
which such an aptitude
condition for genius, the
more women there
is
not a pre-
are
who
ap-
proach the level of great genius. Moreover, these differences
from the
are maintained as one descends
the history of literature
is
replete with the
names of
been
above average.
It
would seem
likely that the aptitude for
dealing with logical abstractions
is
a precondition for genius
composing, philosophy, theorizing, and mathematics.
have seen that male superiority in
and there superiority
and
is is
is
this aptitude
is
We
undeniable
considerable reason to believe that this male a function of
male hormonal biology.
an exceedingly high-level
If
tions
arts,
first-
women writers, but it is doubtful that there has ever a woman composer who could be considered much
class
in
level of genius;
ability to deal
with abstrac-
a precondition for genius in mathematics, philosophy,
chess, but not for genius in literature or the
we would
expect
in literature or the
women
performing
to attain the level of genius
performing
213
arts,
while they would be
Maleness, Cognitive Aptitudes, Performance, and Genius
precluded from manifesting genius in mathematics, philosophy, and chess. This is
correct,
men
with
then
precisely the case. If this reasoning
is
follows that society will always associate
it
genius in those areas for which the high-level
abstractive aptitude
is
always conform to
a precondition
As was
this.
whose aggression equaled
woman who does where a man of but, as
and
socialization will
the case with the
that of the average
woman
man, the
rare
possess these abilities will meet resistance
equal abilities will meet encouragement;
with the aggressive woman,
for being an exception. If
this is the price
one pays
male biology does contribute
the male ability to compose, then
women
to
composers will
always be such exceptions. I
do not deny that one can develop a theoretically
possible,
though not very plausible, explanation of male success
in
the areas emphasizing an ability to deal with abstractions
without invoking any biological factor; perhaps some eco-
nomic and
social factors direct
which demand
women
toward those areas
a lesser ability to theorize. It
is
true that the
ethnographic materials that were so helpful in documenting universal sex differences in aggression and authority are not
much
help here;
art in the
theless,
we
are dealing primarily with science
Western world, China, Japan, and
this
covers
a
broad spectrum of different
fairly
and musical composition have often had yet even in such times the scientists
There have been
a great
ever since Sappho;
women
would seem
why have
to be nothing in
that
start
it
low
status,
poets and writers
there not been an equal
composers and
a society's associating
fairly
and composers were men.
number of women scientists?
num-
Furthermore, there
composing music (or
in the
would automatically lead to with men. Aggression does not give
sciences for that matter)
men any head
and
None-
with quite different value systems. Science
historical times
ber of
India.
that
here (though the biological substrate
underlies male aggression
214
may
contribute to a male
High Genius
in the Arts
compose), nor
ability to
is
and Sciences
there any obvious connection be-
tween composing music and economic reward (which, one
might argue, could have led men this area
here,
)
If there is
.
what
which an
Why
factor has directed
women toward
with abstractions
ability to deal
men
men
to enter
those areas in less necessary?
is
does society not associate composing with
not because
have
women
to forbid
no male biological element relevant
women if why
have proven to be better composers;
always been the better composers
if
they have a greater biological potential here?
mental answer to these questions must
not because
Any
environ-
relate specifically to
the differences between composing (or science or philosophy)
on the one hand, and
literature or the
performing
arts
on
the other; for any general explanation that one might hy-
pothesize (concerning the
woman's self-image
and energies consumed by the maternal will not be able to explain in the literary area
and
why
so
role,
for example)
many women have
performing
in the
or the time
arts.
excelled
Moreover,
an explanation emphasizing the demands of the maternal role fails to explain the demonstrated superiority of young,
single adult males over stract reasoning.
young
single adult females in ab-
Explanations emphasizing the necessity of
some of these areas cannot deal with the fact that training is far more necessary for the performing arts than for composing music. To say that this is true, but that women have nonetheless been dissuaded from composing and have training in
been urged by society to enter the performing the question. For
urged is
if
why have
arts is to
beg
they been so dissuaded and so
not because their potential, relative to that of men,
far greater in the latter area?
A
similar question
that the absence of
might be asked of one who argues
women from
for dealing with abstractions results
from
is
areas for
which an aptitude
a precondition for genius
differential socialization relevant, not so
to the particular creative area, as to the aptitudes
215
much
which are
Maleness, Cognitive Aptitudes, Performance, and Genius
preconditions for genius in these areas. In other words,
one argues that the point
is
not so
away from composing, but
socialized
much
that
women
if
are
that their socialization
does not encourage the aptitude for dealing with abstractions
which
composing genius, he must
a precondition for
is
why
plain
conform
girls are so socialized if this socialization
to
the contradictions
be added that
we
He
will then face
discussed in the last chapter. true that there
if it is
should
It
a cognitive aptitude
is
a precondition for genius in these "logical" areas
is
which no there
does not
the reality of innate male superiority in the
aptitude for dealing with abstractions.
which
ex-
are
woman
possesses,
is
it
other preconditions
which some
women
whether or not
irrelevant
(aggression,
possess, but
for
example)
which are discouraged
in
women because they run counter to the stereotype by which women are, and, as we have seen, must be, socialized. these
The
absence of the
that
is
what
The
first
precondition precludes attainment;
a precondition
relation of biology is
far too
cause-effect
model.
artistic creativity
scribed
is.
and aggression
complex
to scientific
to yield
However,
if
and
an easily de-
one accepts the
reasoning used in this book, particularly that which deals
with possible innate sexual differences in the potential for abstract mathematical reasoning,
it
would seem quite
that the biological substrate underlying
more
intimately
likely
male aggression
is
connected with genius than mere meta-
phorical comparison
would
indicate. Furthermore,
even were
sexual differences in Central Nervous Systems not related to creative genius, the
mere presence of the male's "extra"
hormonally generated aggression may provide for a complex of factors that constitute an entity which can be viewed either
as
an aggression precondition for genius which
satisfied in a
aggression
from
—
much relative
social sources
smaller to
number of women whose
that
of other
(see section titled
216
women "The
—
is
is
great
derived
Irrelevance of
High Genius
in the Arts
and Sciences
Exceptions) or as an advantage, but not a precondition. Both of these views allow for the female literary genius
The
when
we have
stifled
by the
dominant male (the father or maternal uncle) and by
society
observed.
in general,
is
male's greater aggression,
forced inward, and this
may
direct
male emo-
composing symphonies, creating
tional energies into
development, even
if it
theories,
Woman's
"conquering" mountains, and committing murders.
were not guided by biological
ments that tend toward creating and sustaining
ele-
life itself, is
more "healthy" in that there is less aggression to be turned inward. Thus female biology does not clash with familial and
environmental
societal
realities to as nearly as great
extent as does aggressive male biology, and so there
an less
is
frustrated aggression to be channeled into creative energy. I
think that this would help to explain
the creative area
raw cognitive
where the possible sex
abilities
find, as Elizabeth
undeniably great
why even
would seem
to
women
dedication to their
differences in the
be
Hardwick has pointed
in literature,
least relevant,
we
even the
out, that
writers have lacked the obsessive
work and the inexorable
energies,
the
lifelong burst of speed, that enabled a Balzac to write at the
day
limits of his abilities for sixteen hours a
it
men more
often than
doubt there are psychological preconditions for
that,
while
it is
women's
this ability.
creativity as a search for a
not identical to the meaning that
is
it is
a
women. this,
seems likely that there are biological preconditions
Some have viewed male in
his life. 84
perhaps crazy to write for sixteen hours a day, but
It is
craziness that seems to possess
No
all
but also.
meaning inherent
be precluded by
ability to give birth, tends to
This makes biological sense and acknowledges
the fact that
women
create life itself, but
I
do not think
that this does anything to clarify or extend a theoretical analysis,
for
it
implies that
women do
84 Elizabeth Hardwick, A View of and Cudahy, 1962), p. 181.
not create only be-
My Own (New
217
York: Farrar,
Straus,
Maleness, Cognitive Aptitudes, Performance, and Genius
cause they can conceive. If this were the case one might argue
number of women "decided" not to be life creators, they would be the intellectual creators. If either male CNS that if a
circuitry or just
male aggression tend
to
lead to creative
genius, this would not be the case. I
who
suspect that those
male genius
in
mind of genius
fortune to be exposed to a inconceivable that one that genius
is
explain the preponderance of
environmental terms have never had the
who
for long.
it
will
make
sive reordering of context that
imaginable that
context,
is
has could maintain the belief
often stayed by social factors. If genius
given form by context
It
is
its
own.
genius.
whether the
It is this It
is
is
not
aggres-
simply unmatrix
intellectual
facing the genius or the social and economic factors touching
One
his life could dissuade him.
New-
could describe the
tonian world that Einstein destroyed or the unspeakable
handicaps overcome by so
show
that minorities
many
whose
inferiority
men
around them have produced But
it
must be admitted view of
women
was assumed by
is
that precludes the manifestation of
women
have the biological
potential, his assertion cannot be disproven. is
metaphysical because
someone making such an
to the meta-
something inherent in every
an intellectual genius for which
tion
all
of unquestionable genius.
one adheres
that if
physical assertion that there society's
of the great minds; he could
is
it
not
Such an
falsifiable.
asser-
Whenever
assertion suggests a concrete social
element that accounts for the dearth of female genius one can easily demonstrate that there have been any number of
male geniuses who have overcome the suggested
As long the
as
one merely invokes
"society's
element that precludes the manifestation
genius, his belief
is
not any
obstacle.
view of women" of
more disprovable than
meaningful.
218
as
female it
is
PART III
Section Five
Male and Female
Chapter Ten
Male and Female
No
this area
should examine a contemporary America in which
the rage of tion
why some women will Anyone wishing to explore
doubt there are many reasons
accept the illogic of feminism.
is
young women protesting professional discrimina-
complemented by
roles by the
men who
a
revulsion toward professional
are "supposed" to
fill
them. For an
understanding of the forces that lead to the feelings of meaninglessness that so
many men and women now seem
to attach to their traditional roles
perhaps one should begin
not with the content of roles that were formerly capable of providing meaning, but with the failure of contemporary
American
feeling that the society's value system, reality,
is
members the way of denning
society to inculcate in the society's
correct
and meaningful.
It
its
is
this ability,
rather
than the specific characteristics of the value system or the value system's "humaneness," that the society's survival and that
is
is
the precondition for
relevant to the members'
present feelings of meaninglessness and the feelings of aloneness that are inevitable share.
When
members
if
the
a society loses
members have no meaning
its
to
ability to inculcate values its
Here traditions evaporate, as they must when the values on which they were founded seem meaningless, and they take all sense of continuity with them. Children no longer provide a sense of future, for fall
into the abyss.
values are the link
we
have with our children, and
223
if
we
Male and Female have no values
—
values based on intelligence infused with
experience, not ideological proclamations supported by Uto-
pian fantasy
—then we
sacrifice
our future for their contempt.
In the abyss some will have the strength to become "the
calm in the center of the whirlwind," but many will lack the faith, the strength, the courage, the will, and the imagination to create their
from
their society
own meaning. Having
received
no values
and having themselves created nothing
worthy of passing on
to their children, they will rail against
everything in sight save the image in the mirror. Liberation
an experience of personal salvation that im-
is
power over
plies
oneself. It
is
more than the attainment
far
One who
of social and economic freedom.
of pure meaning will have no need to
The
has found a well
drown everyone
in
it.
priest does not frantically ignore biological evidence
by
arguing that the "sex drive" value or that
we
could expect
is
he acknowledges the power of swering a more compelling feels that her sense of
merely an arbitrary
many people this drive
while himself an-
Likewise, any
call.
meaning
woman who
satisfied in areas
is
social
to choose celibacy;
not usually
considered feminine need not explain to anyone. She can
never hope to live in a society that does not attach feminine expectations to
overcome the
women, but
if
she has the courage she will
attitudinal discrimination that she will,
deniably, face. Certainly such discrimination
is
less threaten-
ing to one's liberation than the obsessive hatred of an
who
futile
own
existence, or the inevitably
attempt to substitute group strength for individual
psychic weakness.
is
enemy
serves only to symbolize one's inner turmoil, the avoid-
ance of the battles for one's
who
un-
devotes her
No
one
is
denying the value of the
life to career rather
no need for her
woman
than to children; there
to rewrite physiology, anthropology,
and
psychology in order to rationalize an unnecessary defense. Ultimately every examined disaster;
life
looking closely enough
224
we
can be interpreted as a can always discover psy-
Male and Female etiological
and
social
forces
provide
could
that
unlimited rage. For every intelligent and creative
men who must
there are ten
stumble through
for
fuel
life
woman without
the aid of intelligence or creativity. But no life can transcend its
own
disasters unless
tributes that if
one
is
it
its
uniqueness and con-
can contribute. Life
is
perverted
never initiating, but always
constantly reacting,
allowing rage to define
Too
celebrates
it
which only
it.
often such a definition shapes the lives of contempo-
and feminists
rary middle-class radicals in general
Too
ticular.
in par-
we fail to ask men and women to face their own existences; we merely inquire as to
often
the battles of
which form of
societal oppression
it
is
that
is
causing their
desperation and accept their exaggeration of external oppressions,
that
oppressions that they use to camouflage the terrors
one must face alone because such terrors are inherent
in existence. This
moral urgency as
it
is
is
is
not only sad, but dangerous.
affluent,
educated generation grows up life's
rewards that are mutually exclusive, fanaticism able than altruism. "facts"
and
emotional appeal tigation.
The
alacrity
reject or accept others is
is
more prob-
on the
basis of their
illusion in the guise of intellectual inves-
Invocation
society
choices offer
with which feminists invent
of
this
illusion
as
self-indulgence parading as virtue. There
American
a
superimposed on an emotional immaturity,
when an
without ever being forced to learn that
some
When
rationalization is
no doubt
demands some new answers
quickly.
is
that
But
the readiness of increasingly large numbers of radicals to translate nearly any
new
idea immediately into action does
not demonstrate rational response nor even pragmatic desperation but betrays an emotional development so stunted that they are forced to navigate life tellect
cating
is
on one engine; the
in-
twisted to serve the stabilizing function of incul-
meaning usually served
in part
but the children of the forties and
225
by the emotions.
fifties
Who
could believe that
Male and Female
would do an about-face this very year just because they did not like the way it was going? Who but children, who combine an intellectual egalitarianism (which views evolution
every individual's ideas as equally valid and accepts one idea over another on the basis of its
its
ideological value
and
perceived sincerity) with an emotional elitism which de-
rides as delusory false consciousness the emotional satisfactions of all the world's
men and women,
as to attempt to justify their
could be so petulant
longing contempt for the eternal
sources of joy with an analysis built of ignorance and held
Who
together by fallacy?
but children whose lifelong nur-
turance on material things has cursed them with the inability discover the small
to
which define happiness could
joys
have failed to learn that human imperfection will be grafted
To
onto any institution?
confuse this inevitable imperfection
with the causes that render the institution inevitable intelligent.
To hope
is
un-
for the perfection of any institution or
the disappearance of the institution because imperfection inevitable
is
is
Utopian.
Both men and women, even the feminist who
rails
against
such a feeling, feel that the husband "allows" and "protects."
Here the for equal
own sis
is
difference between those
work and those who
feelings
strive for equal
pay
reject the validity of their
and observations and accept the feminist analy-
seen in bold
patriarchy and is
who
relief.
dominance
For the former, the question of is
unimportant. For the
latter,
it
crucial; the feminist's philosophical aversion to the pos-
sibility
of the inevitability of male dominance stems from
her finding this possibility psychologically intolerable. Indeed, feminist literature emphasizes this area far it
is
more than
does real economic discrimination. Economic discrimination
abhorrent because
it
is artificial.
When we
speak of male
dominance we are speaking of the feelings of both men and that the man selected by the woman "allows" and
women
"protects," feelings motivating the actions
226
and determining
Male and Female the institutions of every society without exception.
these
It is
masculine and feminine feelings, the emotional manifesta-
and the emotional prerequisites of
tions of our biologies political
power, that prescribe the limits of sexual roles and
social possibility.
As long
as societies are
composed of human
To judge them
beings these feelings will be inevitable.
not merely stupid,
The
women;
central role will forever belong to
Women
the rhythm of things.
sublimation
is
is
blasphemous.
it is
they set
everywhere are aware that
an ignorance of the center; one of the most
stunning regularities one notices as he studies the crosscultural data closely societies
is
women
the extent to which
in all
view male preoccupation with dominance and supra-
familial pursuit in the
same way the American wife views
her husband's obsession with professional football loving condescension and an understanding that
—with
a
men embrace
the surrogate and forget the source. Nature has bestowed
on women the biological
abilities
and biopsychological pro-
pensities that enable the species to sustain itself.
Men
must
forever stand at the periphery, questing after the surrogate
powers, creativity, and meaning that nature has not seen to
make
innate functions of their biology. Each
fit
man knows
he can never again be the most important person in an-
that
other's life for long
superiority in
allowing them to
way
and
enough stay.
know
all
areas often
There
is
no
that they
enough
must
reassert
to justify nature's
alternative; this
is
simply
At the bottom of it all man's job is to protect woman and woman's is to protect her infant; in nature all the
else
is
it is.
luxury.
There are feminists who
try to
have
it
both
ways; they deny the importance of the biological basis of the behavior of the sexes, yet blame the world's woes on the
male
characteristics of
correct,
its
and we find that
leaders.
we
The
latter
are trapped in
hypothesis
the final irony: the biological factors that underlie life-sustaining abilities
—the
qualities
227
most
is
what could be
women's
vital to the sur-
Male and Female vival
of our species
—preclude
women's ever manifesting
the psychological predisposition, the obsessive need of power,
or the abilities necessary for the attainment of significant
amounts of
political
power.
not merely that the line
It is
is
thin that separates the
male's aggression from the child's demandingness; the aggression is
is
inseparable from
lacking in the male
women
is
save those few
its
childish component.
What
an acceptance that radiates from
who
all
are driven to deny their greatest
source of strength. Perhaps this female
wisdom comes from more likely it
resignation to the reality of male aggression; is is
a
harmonic of the woman's knowledge that ultimately she
who matters. As a result, men than brilliant women,
the one
brilliant
women
than good men.
Women
while there are more there are
more good
are not dependent on male
men are women have been ruined by men; female endurance survives. Many men, however, have been destroyed by women who did not understand or brilliance for their deepest sources of strength, but
dependent on female strength. Few
did not care to understand male fragility. In any case the central fact different
is
that
men and women
from each other from the gene
are
to the thought to
the act and that emotions that underpin masculinity and femininity, that
make
eternally different
from the
from
reality
biological natures of
fact that the feminist
as
experienced by the male
that experienced by the female, flow
man and woman. This
is
the one
cannot admit. For to admit this would
be to admit that the liberations of
men and women must
pro-
ceed along different and complementary lines and that the
women
of every society have taken the paths they have not
because they were forced by
lowed
their
men
but because they have fol-
own imperatives. Neither I, women can imagine why
vast majority of
want
to
deny the biological
inherent in
women's
basis of the
nor,
any
I
gather, the
woman would
enormous powers
roles as directors of societies' emotional
228
—
Male and Female resources; doing so that
power has
to
demands
one accept the male belief
that
do with action rather than
feeling.
But
whatever the reasons, denial does not indicate that there was a choice. If
we have we
of every culture,
learned nothing else from the
should have learned by
cannot transcend his fate until
deny their natures,
and covet
demned to
—
who
he accepts
it.
wisdom that
one
Women who
accept men's secondhand definitions
a state of second-rate
manhood,
to paraphrase Ingrid Bengis's
argue against their
now
own
For
juices.
are forever con-
wonderful phrase
all
the injustices com-
mitted in attempts to enforce bogus biological laws, roles associated with
gender have been primarily the
the cause of sexual differences. Sex
determinant of personal identity; about another person and the is
is
it is
last
result rather than
the single most decisive the
thing
first
we
thing
we
notice
forget. Just as
it
criminal for others to limit one's identity by invoking arbi-
trary limitations in the
name
of nature, so
destructive to refuse to accept one's
and powers
it
invests.
229
own
it is
terribly self-
nature and the joys
Epilogue
I
have not
at
characteristic,
any point associated with or with
women
tempted
to discover,
members of every
soat-
any attribute of either the male or the
known
female psyche that was not already individual on earth; such discovery
not of the theorist.
I
masculine
characteristic,
have not discovered, nor
that has not been so associated by the ciety that has ever existed. I
men any
any feminine
to virtually every
the task of the
is
artist,
have attempted only to demonstrate the
inevitability of the sexual differences
we
observe and the
in-
stitutions they engender. I trust the reader understands that
demanded that I refuse to could not be shown to be cor-
the theoretical nature of this book
make any "assumption"
that
have assumed that
rect in virtually deductive terms. I
been addressing a reader sented herein and
who
is
who would
I
have
hostile to the theory pre-
like to believe that sexual
biology does not render inevitable the social and behavioral realities I discuss.
line;
This book
the biological factors
is,
I
in other words, the
bottom
have invoked are those for
which the probability of existence and determinativeness so great that,
I
think, their existence
cannot reasonably be denied. addressing a friendly reader biological
realities
Had
I
assumed that
—one who —
discussed herein
is
and determinativeness I
had been
enjoys the social and I
would have
intro-
duced discussion of sexual differences whose existence and determinative importance to behavior are highly probable, but
230
Epilogue
reasonably debatable.
still
would have,
I
for example, dis-
cussed innately generated sexual differences in direction and
propensity rather than only in capacity.
Indeed, the theory presented here
not in any
is
on there being even a biochemical
tingent
erating the feelings
and
way
factor
affecting the behavior of a
con-
gen-
mother
toward her infant despite the fact that every society
rec-
ognizes the "maternal instinct" and despite the fact that I
how anyone
could not imagine
a factor exists. the attempt
find this
I
— —
and with
for the sake of ideology
only evidence
to explain
away
as
mere
mother and the
human
fiat as
the
socialization the fact
and the small child respond
that the infant to the
could doubt that such
no more absurd, however, than
father, a difference
totally differently
which can be seen
society
and
in every species even vaguely re-
lated to ours; ideology
may
satisfy those
in every
it is
who
espouse
it,
but
not capable of overriding either the daily observation or
the laboratory experiment that demonstrates the damaging effect
there
of maternal deprivation. In any case, to assume that a "maternal instinct" or an innate difference generat-
is
ing the different responses of the child toward the mother
and the father would serve the very positive function of
bal-
ancing the somewhat negative view of feminine behavior that is
inevitable
when we speak
women's response
to
it.
only of male aggression and
But the price
we would
paid for including such an assumption
—
have to have
a lessening of the
tightness of the theory without any corresponding increase in explanatory
powers
—was
reader understands that tions in
no way
correctness
is
my
simply too high.
refusing to
make
I
hope the
these assump-
indicates that I think that the denial of their
not ridiculous.
As
I
developed
this theory I
was often forced
to stand back, incredulous that there are
who have
journeyed so far from themselves that they
people
can really believe that their most basic impulses have nothing to
do with
their
most basic natures, that their daily experi231
Epilogue ences with their children, in sexual encounters, and in psychological relationships, are not given direction by the
The
that run through them.
are
few women who can
argue them, but that she can could.
experience of
outfight
when
a
is
is
that there
them and few who can
women
uses feminine
command a loyalty that no amount The experience of women is that
often seek out
men
hormones
of aggression ever the violence
and overpowering, but
terrifying
man
as
men
that by
woman
using the feminine means that nature gave her, a deal with the most powerful
out-
means
can
an equal. Are not these
sexual differences manifested and described in the works of
whom we
our greatest writers, the members of our species
have acknowledged to have the greatest insight into our natures? Is not the usual practice of ignoring the theoretical
contradiction at the heart of each feminist
work
in order to
concentrate on feminist insight, of treating feminist theorists as
we would
women in a coed football game, both inwomen scholars and pointless; can we really vision from one who is facing away from
treat
sulting to serious
expect a better nature?
Is
an analysis that denies these differences not an
unspeakable insult to the that
women
would not have survived had
Would
their female energies?
of
all
their
societies
women
not a true feminist
that truly believed in the uniqueness of
women
—
movement
yearn to
cover rather than deny the biological factors within
which make
women
One wonders denial of her
of her
own
is
if
Mother Nature's anger
it is,
same chance she allows found a truth they will not survive.
Of
in this epilogue is
when
at
women
her children's
the renegades are
she will nonetheless allow them the all
her other children. If they have
survive. If they have not they will
course the feminist will say that is
dis-
unique?
particularly strong
sex. If
societies
not asserted
all that I
say
merely a reflection of socialization and
for this reason that
I
it
have refused to make any assumption
in the theory that could not
be demonstrated to be correct
232
Epilogue
even though
I
believe that only the most
dehumanized among
us could question the correctness of the assumptions
ex-
I
cluded. This has the advantage of yielding a theory that in
no way contingent on the
characteristics of the theorist or
the moral or political implications of the theory;
presented here truth
libel,
correct, then, as
is
own
is its
if
who
the theory
the case with alleged
is
perfect defense. Therefore,
datory for the feminist theorist
which
If
wishes to be taken
is
seri-
is
in-
she cannot demonstrate either that the facts on
this theory is
invoked
man-
is
it
ously to demonstrate that the theory presented here correct.
is
faulty,
based are incorrect or that the reasoning
then
—
since
is
it
impossible for both this
theory and the feminist theory to be correct
which she bases her
—
the analysis on
world-view must be incorrect. If
entire
the elements of the theory presented here are correct the biological differences between
—
men and women make
inevitable that every society will be patriarchal, that
if it
male
behavior will always be more aggressive than female behavior, that males will always
the nonmaternal roles of
fill
authority and status, that males will be dominant and females
nurturant in dyadic and parental relationships, that socialization ties,
and even stereotype will always conform
and that the physiological
cognition
is
such that
in different terms
to these reali-
basis
of male and female
men and women
will forever see reality
—then what
is
left
of femininst theory? If
the feminist cannot compete successfully even in the area of theory,
where aggression
is
of
little
value,
to
compete
It
should be apparent to the reader by
in those areas
evidence indicates that
women
imperatives and that they the goals that
men
is
why
in this
now
follow their
can she hope
determinative?
is
that
own
would not choose
to
I
believe the
physiological
compete for
devote their lives to attaining.
have more important things to do. that
how
where aggression
and every other
for gentleness, kindness,
and
Men
society they look to
love, for refuge
233
Women
are aware of this and
from
women a
world
Epilogue
of pain and force, for safety from their every society a basic male motivation
is
own
excesses. In
the feeling that the
women and
children must be protected. But the feminist can-
not have
both ways:
it
if
that she will get in return
she wishes to sacrifice is
the right to meet
terms. She will lose.
234
all this, all
men on male
ADDENDUM
Some
Additional
the Universality of
In this
addendum
I
Comments on Male Dominance
deal with every society
have ever heard
I
any author suggest, usually by implication, as a possible exception to the universality of societal conformation to male
dominance
in dyadic relationships.
beat the proverbial dead horse, in an attempt to
keep
I
At the
add
a
risk of
seeming
to
few more comments
this all in perspective.
A. The uncontested universality of patriarchy and our
knowledge of hormonal biology leaves archy, at least,
Even
biological reasons.
if
we had no
tion at all
on male dominance
hormonal
factors
it
doubt that
little
not only universal, but
is
patri-
inevitable, for
is
cross-cultural informa-
would seem
likely that these
would manifest themselves
in dyadic
and
familial relationships.
B.
We do have cross-cultural information
relevant to
male
dominance on between twelve hundred and four thousand societies
(see page 61).
Given the nearly
infinite variability
of the economic, political, religious, and social systems of these thousands of societies and the fact that the most com-
mitted environmentalist does not contest the fact that these societies
acknowledge male dominance,
we do have
the right
to scrutinize evidence alleged to indicate the existence of a society not
acknowledging male dominance with more than
a bit of skepticism.
C. Unlike patriarchy,
male dominance
ered, nor even easily defined.
237
We
is
not easily uncov-
have seen that anthro-
Some Comments on
pologists have dealt with that,
dominance
while these customs will
male dominance
few "chivalrous"
and
in terms of customs
the feelings relevant to
reflect
(as defined in this essay)
case, there are a
toms do not
Male Dominance
the Universality of
in nearly every
societies in
which the
cus-
the member's feelings that authority
reflect
is
invested in the male.
D.
We
must accept the unfortunate, but
at least partially
unavoidable facts that there has not been the kind of stan-
we might have hoped
dardization of ethnographic procedures
some
for and that in
cases particular ethnographic studies
were the work of anthropologists who, possess the objectivity, ability, or
to
be gentle, did not
knowledge
that
would today
be expected of the least competent anthropologist. Given these difficulties the surprise
is
that there are not a great
many
"exceptions."
Considering these four points, right to case.
demand
I
think that
we have
the
that an alleged exception be a fairly clear-cut
Indeed, even
if
there were a
few
clear-cut exceptions,
one would not immediately dismiss the importance of the biological factor; it
he would, however, be forced
was not so overwhelming
a force that
it
to
admit that
could not under
any environmental conditions be overcome. Since there such exception
I
dominance, for
why
we have
think that
again the question: is
if
there
is
is
no
the right to ask once
no biological reason for male
there not a single clear-cut case of a society
which the ethnographer could
state
without equivocation
that the society does not associate general authority in dyadic
relationships with the male?
Alleged Exceptions With the exception of the Berbers and lowing quotations were
all
the "Yegali," the fol-
taken from the same ethnographic
studies that have been invoked by various authors (never the
ethnographers themselves)
as describing societies that did
238
Some Comments on
the Universality of
Male Dominance
not manifest male dominance in their dyadic and familial in-
The evidence
stitutions.
alleged to indicate that the Berbers
and the "Yegali" did not manifest male dominance was based on anecdotal information obtained in an interview (see Beror in informal conversation (see "Yegali" be-
bers below)
low). Save those "societies" that have existed only in myth
and legend, such society that I
"Amazons,"
as the
have ever seen invoked
this list includes every
as exception to the uni-
male dominance. The purpose of
versality of
none of these
course, to demonstrate that
reasonably argued to
fail to
this list
societies
is,
of
can be
manifest male dominance in their
dyadic and familial institutions. Stephens refers to William
N. Stephens, The Family in Cross-Cultural Perspective (New York: Holt, Rinehart, and Winston, 1963). Alorese
Cora
Du
The People
Bois,
of Alor:
A
Social-Psychological
Study of an East Indian Island (Minneapolis: University of
Minnesota
Press,
1944).
Page 114: "... marriage means for economic responsibility in a
social
women
far greater
system that does not
grant them status recognition equal to that of men, while at the
same time
it
places on
monotonous burdens of
Bamenda Phyllis M. Kaberry, Women
them
greater and
more
labor."
of the Grassfields (London:
Her
Majesty's Stationery Office; Colonial Research Publications,
Number
14,
1952).
Page 148
:
"Women
are not eligible for the headship of
kin or political groups."
Berbers
Stephens implies that
it is
"possible" that the Berbers do not
239
Some Comments on
the Universality of
Male Dominance
associate familial authority with the male.
He
indicates that
the ethnographic materials do not imply that the Berbers
fail
with the male (p. 301); his for raising basis the possibility that the Berbers are an excep-
to associate familial authority
tion
information obtained in an interview with a graduate
is
student in archaeology
group
who had
observed a particular Berber
Mountains while on an archaeological dig
in the Rif
(personal communication). Since the informant has not pub-
on
lished
this subject,
own words
that the
not possible to demonstrate in her
it is
group she observed does not represent an
exception to the universality of male dominance. Furthermore, the term Berber refers to a large
whose languages
number of
are similar. Since there
is
social
groups
no way of know-
ing which of the Rif Mountain groups was observed,
not possible to invoke someone the group.
One would doubt
simply because
Murdock, writes: social
in
all
else's
Berber groups are Moslem. Moreover,
groups only among the
Berber groups
Mzab
[not a Rif group]. Else-
into patrilocal extended families,
each with a patriarchal head
[Emphasis added]." George
Peter Murdock, Africa: Its People
(New York: McGraw-Hill,
Hopi Edward
all
"Nuclear families are reported to be independent
where they are aggregated
tory
is
the absence of male dominance
compilation covering
his
it
ethnographic study of
and Their Cultural His-
1959),
p.
117.
"The Hopi-Tewa of Arizona," University and Eth-
P. Dozier,
of California Publication in American- Archaeology
nology, 44, 3:259-376 (1954).
Page 320:
".
be senior to
.
.
it
sisters,
seems that brothers are assumed to
and entitled
to respect as such, in
the absence of evidence to the contrary." (Dozier quot-
ing
Barbara
"Tewa Kinship Terms Hano, Arizona," American An-
Freire-Marreco,
from the Pueblo of
thropologist, n.s. 16:269-287).
240
Some Comments on
the Universality of
Male Dominance
Page 339: "Within the family, the mother's brother, or, in his absence, any adult male of the household or clan,
is
responsible for the maintenance of order and
the discipline of younger members."
Iroquois
Lewis Henry Morgan, League of the Ho-De-No-Sau-Nee or Iroquois (New York: Dodd, Mead and Company, 1901).
Page 315: "The Indian regarded
women
as
the in-
dependent, and the servant of man, and from
ferior, the
nurturance and habit, she actually considered herself to
be so." See also: Cara B. Richards, "Matriarchy or Mistake:
Women
of Iroquois
Through Time,"
in
The Role
Cultural Stability
and Cultural Change (Annual Meeting of the American Ethnological Society in Ithaca,
New
York, 1957), pp. 36-45.
Martha C. Randle, "Iroquois Women, Then and Now," Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin 149 (Smithsonian Institution,
undated).
Jivaro
Stephens presents two contradictory ethnological views of the Jivaro.
One
pictures a strong
on which Stephens bases is
not dominant,
is
R. Karsten,
Amazonia (Helsinki: that the text
is
male dominance. The
other,
his suggestion that the Jivaro
male
The Headhunters
Centraltry-cheriet,
identical to R. Karsten,
of Western 1935). I assume
The Headhunters
of
Western Amazonas: The Life and Culture of the fibaro Indians of Eastern Ecuador and Peru (Helsingfors: Finska Vetenskaps-societeten Helsingfors; Commentationes
narum Litterarum VII, 1935),
in
which Karsten
Huma-
writes:
Page 254: "Of the relations between husband and wife it
may be proper
to say that
241
it is
regulated according to
Some Comments on
the Universality of
the principle 'the sway.'
man
Male Dominance
governs, but the
woman
holds
"
Kibbutz See Footnote Fifty-three.
Marquesans R. Linton, "Marquesan Culture" in A. Kardiner,
vidual Press,
and His
Society
(New
The
Indi-
York: Columbia University
1939). Pages 69-70: "She [the Marquesan woman] does not take the role of disciplinarian."
Page 184: "The gods were almost
all
male. Theoret-
women could hold the highest rank, but in pracfew women were actually household heads, rulers
ically,
tice
of tribes or inspirational priests. In rare cases the eldest
daughter of a chief would become a chieftainess and rule in her
own
adopted a boy
woman might
if
right,
although as a rule the chief
his eldest child
was a
girl.
Such a
be deified, but the most powerful deities
were invariably male."
Mbuti (BaMbuti) Discussed in
text.
Modjokuto Stephens provides unclear evidence to support Modjokuto as "matriarchy"
(i.e.,
female authority in the home). Quoting
Hildred Geertz "Javanese Values and Family Relationships,"
1956 RadclirTe Ph.D. thesis, and The Javanese Family (New York: Free Press, 1961), he says that the man is shown deference in that he gets the better food, often he must be the
first
to eat,
and
receives "formalized deference," but that
242
Some Comments on the
woman
Geertz
the Universality of
Male Dominance
tends to have real household dominance. But
states:
Page 107: "The relationship with the mother remains as strong
and secure
individual's
life.
—and
as before
While mothers
lasts
throughout the
are described as 'lov-
ing' (trisna) their children, fathers are expected only to 'enjoy'
(seneng) them. The mother
of strength and love to contrast, the father
respectfully. It social forms,
and
who
is
is
whom
distant
the mother
who makes
and must always be treated
who
instructs the child in
countless decisions for him,
administers most punishments.
usually only a court of last appeal imitation.
seen as a bulwark
is
one can always turn. In
He
is
and
a
father
is
model for
and and children: he should
expected to be, above
dignified (sabar) with his wife
The
lead them with a gentle though
frm
all,
patient
hand, not inter-
fering with their petty quarrels, but being always available to give solemn sanction to his wife's punishments
of disobedient children. Only during the one early phase
of the child's
life is this aspect
of the father's role set
aside" [Emphasis added].
Nama
Hottentot
As Stephens (p. 298) points out (quoting I. Schapera, The Khoisan Peoples of South Africa [London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, Ltd., 1930], p. 251), the woman does have considerable authority in the
but
"...
to tribal life,
her
home and
over the children,
she plays a subordinate role in matters pertaining
and
in public always
walks several paces behind
husband. ..."
Navaho Clyde Kluckhohn and Dorothea Leighton, The Navaho (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1946).
243
Some Comments on
the Universality of
Male Dominance
Page 55: "Formally, from the Navaho angle, the 'head of the family'
is
the husband.
Whether he
varies with his personality, intelligence,
is
in fact
and prestige."
Nayor E.
Kathleen Gough, "The Traditional Kinship System of the
Nayars of Malabar." Manuscript, Social Science Research Council
Summer Seminar on
Kinship, Harvard University,
1954, quoted in Stephens, p. 317:
"The Karanavan
[mother's brother] was traditionally
unequivocal head of the group.
mand
all
.
.
.
He
could com-
other members, male and female, and chil-
dren were trained to obey him with reverence.
..."
Philippines C. L. Hunt, tios
in the
"Female Occupational Roles and Urban Sex RaUnited
Social Forces,
States,
Volume
43,
Japan, and the Philippines"
Number
3,
in
March, 1965.
Page 144: "This combination of patterns has brought the Filipino
woman
although denied
to a point where,
some of the adventurous freedom of
the male, she
be even better prepared for economic competition.
work may be seen
acceptance of the boredom of routine as part of 'patient suffering'
which
is
may The
said to characterize
the Filipino female to a greater extent than the male.
Her
responsible role in the household
wife
is
is
charged with practical
affairs
means
that the
while the husband
concerned to a greater extent with
ritualistic activity
which maintains prestige."
Semai
Knox Dentan, The Semai: A Non-Violent People of Malaya (New York: Holt, Rinehart, and Winston, 1968). Robert
244
Some Comments on
the Universality of
Male Dominance
women from being influwomen are. Most of the time, howwomen are primarily concerned with the
Page 68: "No rule prevents
and some
ential,
ever,
Semai
petty affairs of hearth
puts
it,
and home. As a Semai proverb
"men's loincloths are long,
are short,' that
is,
men
women with minor women feel 'embarrassed' lems,
in public
debate,
women's
are concerned with ones. to
although a
loincloths
major prob-
Furthermore, Semai
take a prominent part
woman
often exercises
influence through her husband."
Tchambuli Discussed in
text.
Yegali This tribe
is
alleged to have existed in Madagascar in Harold
Hodges 's introductory sociology text, Conflict and Consensus (New York: Harper and Row, 1971). Dr. Hodges writes (personal communication) that he heard of this group from the late Donald Bender. Investigation has not uncovered a single
mention of
this
group in either anthropological or
popular publications.
245
Index
American
Adolescence, testosterone level
108-109
in,
Aggression androgen and, 87
and
sciences,
214-216
attainment and, 105-108 biological evidence in, 104 as boxing prowess, 97 n. channeling of into authority
Aptitudes, "maleness" and, 201 Aristotle,
in,
195 see also Mathematics
Arts and sciences aggression in, 216
genius
151
male advantage in, 98 male-female difference capacity for, 90
in
elements
in,
in,
211-218
Ashley Montagu, M. F., 55 n., 59 n. Austen, Jane, 211 Authority delegation of, 37 male aggression and, 103114 wealth and, 153
121
leadership and, 152 in male, see Male aggression
96
212
Arithmetic, sex differences
female, 77, 93, 149, 151
nonbiological
and,
limits
29-73
gender identity and, 80-81 hormones and, 81-82, 85, 91-94, 104 inevitability of,
41
variation
social
systems, 120 denned, 91 dyadic male-female relationship in, 97
in industrial society,
in,
see also Male dominance Androgen, aggression and, 87 Androgenized girls, 84 Anthropology male anthropologists in, 165-166
Adultery, society and, 179
in arts
male domi-
society,
nance
n.
as physical strength,
sex drive and, social,
98-99
98-99
Bachofen, Johann
Bamenda
94-96
85-90 use of term, 92-93, 96 see also Male aggression "Aggressive instinct," 176 n. Alorese tribes, 239 Amazons, 31 n., 45, 54-61 testosterone level and,
44,
Bantu
tribe,
55
J.,
male
tribe,
male
role in,
Bardis, Panos, 55
Bardwick, Judith, 94
Barnouw, Victor, 44 Beach, Frank, 76
246
role
in,
239
n.
142
Index
Simone
Beauvoir,
174
168
de,
Blood, Robert O., 36 n. Bohr, Niels, 212 n. Boys, socializing of, 135 Brain mechanism, testosterone
n.,
n.
Beeson, Paul B., 95 n. Behaviorism, male-female role
137
in,
and, 89
n.
Bender, Donald, 245
Briffault, Robert, 55
Bengis, Ingrid, 229
Berber
tribe,
British Guiana, nuclear family
male role
in,
in,
39,
239-240 Berelson, Bernard, 194 n. Bernard, Jessie, 44 n., 84
n.
and Emily,
Charlotte
212 Bureaucracy
n.,
172
in industrial society,
masculine nature
Biological analogy, dangers of,
76-78 Biological
women's engineering,
differentiation
role in,
121-122 145
of,
111
sexual
149-
and,
male aggres-
Capitalist society,
sion in, 167
150
Castration, effects of,
Biological factors
94-99 123—
social exaggeration of,
fetal alteration and, 199 genius and, 216 hormonal stimulation and,
124 social realities and,
Biological
tions to,
Biological
120
hypothesis,
86-88
objec-
133-157
nature,
vs.
mathematical genius and, 213 morphological changes in, 89 sexual differences as develop-
society,
142-143
ment
Biological reality
140-146 socialization and, 108-110 society and, 147-148 Biological stereotype, 207-208 future change and,
of,
196-197
Chesler, Phyllis, 56 n.
Chess genius
in,
191,
213-214
male superiority
in,
193
women
Biology, discrimination
players in, 191 Childbirth, women's role
through, 146-147 Biopsychological differences,
in,
146-147 Child training, female need
n.
Black leadership, sex and, 31
in,
103
n.,
128
Chivalry, vs. male dominance,
Black matriarchy, 31 Black people as minority,
78
Cause, vs. function, 166-167 Central nervous system
irrelevance of exceptions in,
156
49
Bronte,
41
n.
Chromosomal
dimorphism, gender identity and, 83 Cicero, Marcus Tullius, 23
127-128
performance deficiencies
209 white's perception of, 116 Blizard, David, 76
of,
Cognition, biology in, 188-193 Cognitive aptitudes, sexual differentiation in,
247
187-210
Index
Communist China
Dostoevsky, Feodor, 212 Dozier, Edward P., 240
authority positions in, 167
Du
male leadership in, 125 Composers, women as, 212 Crime and Punishment (Dostoevsky), 177 Cuba, male leadership in, 125
Bois, Cora, 239 "Dyadic dominance behavior," 80 Dyadic relationships, in social context, 34 n., 36
Cultural-environmental factors, sex behavior and, 137-138 Cultural variation as biological explanation, 73 relevance of, 65-72 Curie, Marie Sklodowska, 212 n.
Edwards, David, 76, 88-89 Ehrhardt, Anke A., 84 n. Einstein, Albert, 212 n. Eleftheriou, Basil, 93 n. Eliot, George, 211 Emotionality
Dalton, Katherina, 201-202
Dante
212 Davis, Elizabeth Gould, 56 Day-care centers, 144 Deference, customs of, 34 Dehumanization, 154 n. Democratic society
inculcation of, 25 male vs. female, 163 Emotional resources, woman keeper of, 25
Alighieri,
organizational
n.
authority
Emotions,
110-112 authority role
32
Dentan, Robert Knox, 244-245 of Sex Differ-
The
(Maccoby),
203 of Sex, stone), 168
Diamond, M., 86
(Fire-
biology,
of
biological
of,
factor
197
125
Evolutionary fallacy, 52-54 Exceptions, irrelevance of, 94-
110-112,
99 Familial
n.
male-
behavior,
female difference
in,
200
Erikson, Erik, 175
(deoxyribonucleic acid), "reading" of, 162 n.
Dominance
by,
Epstein, Ralph,
DNA
see also
Environmentalism, dilemma 136-140, 207 Environmentalists
male "logic" and, 207-210
145-147 economic, 226
T.,
147
Epstein, Cynthia Fuchs, 172
n.
Diner, Helen, 55, 56 n. Diodorus Siculus, 55 Dirac, Paul A. M., 212 Discrimination
Dodge, N.
57,
survival and, 148
denial
The
Dialectic
through
51-52,
168
vs. heredity, in,
Development ences,
60, 70,
Environment 113
sexist "battle" in,
women's
institutions
social
and, 150 Engels, Friedrich, in,
as
of,
authority,
37
Family humanization through, 154 neuroses and, 154 n. as patriarchal,
91
Male dominance
36
universality of, 32
248
delegation
n.
n.
n.
Index Farber,
Seymour M., 202
Fertility,
n.
Father role, 41 "instrumental" nature of, 48 in
Manus
society,
47
89 M., 89 108 n., 174 n. Firestone, Shulamith, 168-169, 174 n. Fisher, Alan, 89 n. Field, Pauline
n.
Female
Figes, Eva,
authority of, 41
lower status roles of, 45 nurturant role of, 138-139 superiority of, see also
female and, 177
Fetal brain, hormonalization of,
24-26
Food gathering,
Woman; Women
Female aggression, 77, 93, 149, 151
Female chess players, 191-192 Female Eunuch, The (Greer),
patriarchy and,
140 Freeman, W. H., 89 n. Freud, Sigmund, 48, 150, 155, 175, 176n. Function, vs. cause, 166-167
168-169 Female infanticide, 65 Female status, socializing 106-107 see also
"Status of
Ganong, of,
women"
Feminine logic, 204-206 "Feminine" societies, 61 n. Femininity
hormonal biology and, 141142 physiology of, 155 power-engendering of, 27 Feminist analysis confusion and
ideological
F.,
in,
"tomboyism" "unladylike"
of,
174-
175 socialization of sexes in,
162
Feminist research, 202-204 Feminists and feminist movement, 24 assumption of on sex-role differentiation,
of,
n.
211-218
106-107 84 n.
in,
behavior
in,
118, 135
134-135 rejection of biology in,
242-
fighting behavior in, 118
172-183 acceptance
n.
Girls socializing of,
fallacy
89
243 Gender, socializing of, 80, 84 Gender identity aggression and, 81-82 genetic code in, 82-83 Genetic code, 82-83 Genius, nature
aspects
158-183 failure of,
W.
Gaprindasvili, Nina, 192 Geertz, Hildred, 40 n.,
49-52
invention of "facts" by, 225 male dominance and, 35 Feminist theory, future in, 140-
146
Glancing blow, fallacy of, 1 64166 God, as male personage, 177 Goode, William J., 46 n. Gough, E. Kathleen, 56 n., 60 n., 70 n., 244 Government, women in, 124— 125 Goy, R. W., 89 n. Graves, Robert, 55 Germaine, Greer,
163 205
n.,
168
n.,
n.
Gynecocracy, 31 n.
249
162 n., 173 n, 203,
Index Hamster, size of female in, 86 Handshake, function of, 180181 Hardwick, Elizabeth, 217 Harlow, Harry F., 78 n. Harris, Marvin, 44 n., 59 n. Hegel, Georg Wilhelm Fried-
Homosexuality,
patriarchy in,
124-127
Infanticide, 65, 151 Infants, male-female differences in,
108
Institutions, universality of,
61—
65
attain-
of husband and 181-182
Intelligence,
wife,
Intelligence
happiness
monal
in,
hor-
differences,
basis of,
198-202
IQ
Indians, male role in, 44,
genius and, 211 sexual differentiation
240-241
Hormonal Hormonal
role
aggression in, 121 bureaucracy in, 121-122 male dominance and, 68 masculine nature of, 145
164-165
Hopi
authority
32
Industrial society
Heredity, vs. environment, 147
Hermaphroditism hormones and, 78-85 IQ and, 199-200 Herodotus, 55, 59 n. High-status roles, male ment and, 44-47 Hodges, Harold, 245 Homer, 55, 212
women's
in,
212
rich,
62
Incest taboo, 32, India,
factor,
in,
199-201
aggression, 81, 104
74-99
Iroquois tribe, male role
in,
40,
44, 58, 241
Hormonalization, social values and, 135, 197 system, "head start"
Israel,
women and
authority, 32
Hormonal
male
for
in,
Janeway, Elizabeth, 172, 174 n. Javanese, male role among, 142
105
Hormones aggression and, 81, 104 in human hermaphrodites,
Jivaro tribe, male role in, 39,
42
n.,
241
79 Hottentot
tribe,
male role
in,
142
House of
Representatives, U.S.,
female members
Human
of,
124
aggression, see Aggres-
sion;
Male aggression
Kaberry, Phyllis M., 239 Kant, Immanuel, 212 Kanter, Emmanuel, 56 n. Kardiner, A., 242 Karsten, R., 241 Kibbutzim, male role in, 45,
125-126
Humanization, family and, 154 n.
Human in,
malleability, limitation
146-157 L., 244
Hunt, C. Husband,
as protector,
Ideology, 134 n.
"Killer instinct," 75 Kluckhohn, Clyde, 243
Joseph Francois, 55 Langer, Suzanne, 212 Lawrence, D. H., 50 n. Leacock, Eleanor Burke, 70 n. Lafitau,
226
250
Index attainment
Leadership aggression and, 152 cultural variation in,
and,
66-67
biological association in,
39 n., 59 Levine, Seymour, 89 n.
n.
192-193 childish component
chess and,
112 environmental
female aggression, 77, 93, 149, 151 as female "oppression," 113-
McEwen,
vs.
55
126
inevitability of,
Male
societal
26-27 deference of, 34 dominance of, see Male domiauthority of,
of,
psychological differences
in,
superiority of
on
certain tests,
203 superior size and strength of,
139 see
also
status and,
103-114
superiority and, also
92
Aggression;
Male
dominance
Male authority, defined, 36 n. Male dominance alleged exceptions to, 238245 attitude toward,
37
defined, 31 n., 33,
114 114
degree of, 67 in dyadic and familial tutions,
182-183 Leadership;
in,
98
251
68 36
insti-
67 182-183 feminist feelings and, 35-36 industrialization and, 68 inevitability of, 38 as feeling,
Male
dominance Male aggression advantage
of,
biological factors in,
n.
tallness in,
manifestation
115-128
see
163 expendability of, 149 high-status role of, 44-47, 71 leadership and, 32, 105 as protector, 227
156
78
limiting of by society, 122
physical size and, 139-140 power and, 103-114
n.
Glazer, 60 n.
nance emotionalism
54
male dominance, 33 n. preponderance of, 189-190
Bruce, 76 Scott,
74-75
factor in,
as instinct,
Nona
explanation
vs.
Maccoby, Eleanor E., 103, 193194, 202-203, 205 n. McDermott, Walsh, 95 n.
Malbin,
228 110-
136-140
114 hormonal
McNall,
of,
discrimination through,
of,
204-207
F.,
167
in capitalist society,
Lewis, Viola G., 199-200 Linton, Ralph, 242 Logic, masculine vs. feminine,
J.
77-
78
women's "exclusion" from, 106 women's preference in, 105 Leighton, Dorothea, 243 Leslie, Gerald,
103-114
authority and,
male aggression and, 107 male-dominated, 29 status of, 151
McLennan,
206,
189,
209
female desire
n.,
for,
Index
Male dominance
Masculinity
(cont.)
leadership and, 29 vs. male aggression, 33 n. male-female and, contact
48
n.,
50
n.
26-27, 31-32 and economic sys-
vs. patriarchy,
in political
tem, 112-113 "protection"
woman
of
in,
226-227
universality
123 39-44, 52,
of,
fears,
environmental
determinant
Male
Femininity;
also
women's
leadership,
erence
pref-
Man, concept of, 23 see also Male Man's World, Woman's Place (Janeway), 172 Manus, father role in, 47
n.
Tse-tung, 125 Islanders, 61 n.,
242
Marriage
breakdown
of,
universal
of,
biological evidence for,
denned, 30 evidence
n.,
for,
31 n. 55 n.,
63 59
n.,
n.
"prehistoric,"
54-61
57
lineality,
in,
25,
society,
44,
67,
male role 118-120,
151
105
for,
Maleness, obstacles to, 201 see also Masculinity Malinowski, Bronislaw, 47 n., 48
as
"Matriarchal stage," fallacy
Mbuti Pygmy
see also Leadership
Marquesan
in,
Matrilineality, transfer to patri-
n.
dominance; Patriarchy
Mao
as
197
in,
194-195 "unfeminine," 194, 208
60
94 137
213-214
in,
Matriarchy
matriarchy and, 56 "Male-female" behavior, 23-24 aggressive capacity and, 91-
Male
genius
52-53
134, 237-245 wife and, 37 n.
see
50 n. Maternal propensity, 138-139, 231 Mathematics
sex differences
social exaggeration of,
in,
sex-linked tendency toward,
male superiority
role of, 33
Male
hormonal biology and, 140142
179
institution,
32,
61 Martini, L., 89 n.
Mead, Margaret, 43-46, 157 Mice, fighting in, 88 Mill, John Stuart, 51 n. Millet, Kate, 49 n., 50 n., 51 n., 168 n., 173 n., 205 n. Mischel, Walter, 196 n. Mitchell, Juliet, 170, 174n. Modjokuto (Java), male role in, 39-40, 242-243 Money, John, 50 n., 76, 79, 8183, 84 n., 166, 199-201, 202 n. Monkeys, play behavior in, 78 n. Montagu, see Ashley Montagu Morgan, Lewis Henry, 40, 58, 241
Marxism, vulgarized, 168-171 Masculine logic, 204-207 "Masculine" societies, 61 n.
252
Morgan, Robin, 155
n.
Mother, artificial substitute 142
for,
Index
"Mother Nature," 177 "Ms," abbreviation, 178 n. Murdock, George Peter, 58-59, 240
Philippines, in,
dominance
male
244
Philosophy, genius in, 214 Phoenix, C. H., 86 n., 89 n. Physical strength
Nama
Hottentot, male role
39,
Napier,
98-99 139 Physiology, feminism and, 155 Playboy magazine, 179 aggression
in,
243 J.
Navaho
87
R.,
n.
male role among, 243 Nayar tribe, male role in, 45, 244 Nimkoff, M. F., 39 n. Indians,
Nonbiological factors, quacy of, 133-157 Nuclear family, 49 n.
as,
status and,
Plutarch, 55
Policy making, male leadership in,
124-125
men
Political authority,
inade-
32-
in,
33 "Political
dominance behavior,"
80
women
Politics,
199-
Oetzel, Roberta, 193-194,
201, 203
in,
124-125
Polyandry, 64-65, 72
Power 36 n. male aggression and, 103114 male dominance and, 26 as influence,
"Oppression," 113-114 Origin of the Family, (Engels), 52 Overpopulation, 142
The
Prehistoric matriarchies, 32 n.
Preoptic area, sexual dimorphParsons, Talcott, 48 Patriarchal family,
36
ism in, 89 Primate studies,
n.
156
Patriarchy alternative to,
biological
142
evidence
Private Property for,
63,
108-110, 123-124, 133157 denned, 30 n., 31 n. food gathering and, 140 in industrial society,
124-127
of, 103-128, 233 vs. male dominance, 27, 31-
inevitability
32 universality
of,
52, 66, 78,
30-33,
arts,
86
n.,
n.,
and the
State
(Engels), 52 Psychoanalytic theory, 176 n. Psychological differences, 155 n.,
156
n.
Psychology of wick), 94
Women
Pygmy
male role
society,
(Bardin,
25,
44, 67, 118-120, 151
Queen Mother, cieties,
134
Patrilineality, transfer to,
Performing
51-
78
n.
in
African so-
32
57-58
women
in,
211-212 Personal identity, sex and, 229
253
Rabin, A. I., 126 n. Race, sex and, 127-128 Racism, biological truth and, 77
Index Raisman, Geoffrey, 76, 89-90 Randle, Martha C, 241 Reed, Evelyn, 56 n. Reeves, Nancy, 56 n. Reiss, Ira L.,
39
individual behavior and, 141
women, 180 Sex role differentiation feminist assumption on, 4950 Marxist writings on, 168 in
n.
Research, rating of, 206 n. Revolutionary societies, patri-
archy in, 124-127 Richards, Cara B., 241 Rights versus "respect," 68-73 Rogers, Hilliard, 91 n.
Sexual biology, socialization and, 108-110 Sexual dimorphism, in preoptic area,
89
dominance,
Sexual
Sappho, 214
Scientists,
women
John
Sexual
as,
social
212-215
male role in, 26 E., 156n. J. Smith, R. T., 49 n. Singer,
Social aggression, 94,
29 Social
sexual
contacts,
nance
in,
52-
53 exaggeration,
Social
of
male
dominance, 123
aggression and, 97 behavioral manifestations of,
Social
116-117 component of, 174 performance and, 189-191 race and, 127-128
Socialization
biological
reality
and,
108-
female status and, 106-107 80-82, 84 n.,
gender and, 85 n.
187-
Social organization,
need for, 115-118 Sex distribution, improvement
emotion
110, 147
Sex differentiation
210
institutions,
and, 150
biological
Social
fac-
120
Structure
Social
121-122
biological
realities,
tors in,
(Murdock),
58-59
Sex drive aggression and, 98
224 159-160
Social
celibacy and,
denial of,
domi-
104
Social evolutionary theory,
n.
superiority in, 24
149-150
96
Social behavior, leadership and,
Sex differences
in,
of,
Shtetl,
73
in cognitive aptitudes,
basis
n.
Shakespeare, William, 212
149-150
behavior and, 50
status and,
stereotypes,
50
n.
P.,
preselection of,
n.,
168-169
S., 1
93 n. Semai tribe, male role in, 244 Senate, U.S., male make-up of, 124 Seward, Georgine, 126 n. Sex personal identity and, 229 Scott,
social
Sexual Politics (Millett), 50
56 n. Schapera, I., 243 Schultz, Adolph, 86 Schachter,
in
104
contacts,
values,
of,
hormonalization
135
Societal variation,
254
29-73
Index Testosterone level in adolescence, 108-109 aggression and, 85-90 virilization and, 95
Society clash with biological natures,
142-143 emotionality limits of
25-26
in,
male aggression
in
in,
121-122 patriarchy in,
115-
in,
necessity for, 158-159 Thurnwald, Richard, 44 n. Tiefer, Leonore, 86 n. "Tomboy ism," 84 n. Trobriand Islanders, sexual roles among, 48 Turnbull, Colin M., 119-120
118 106-110,
by,
147, 172 Soviet Union
male authority in, 46 male leadership in, 125
women women
chess players
doctors
Spiro, Melford,
126
in,
192
United
171
in,
physical strength and,
65
139
behavior,"
80 "Status of Steiner,
Vaerting, M., 57 n. Violence, feminine control of,
women," 68-73
Gary A., 194
232
n.
Stephens, William N., 39-41,
Virilization,
43, 239, 242-243 Stoller, Robert, 50 n., 84 n.
42
Strength, aggression
as,
Women, of (Mill), 51 n.
Subjection
176 meaning
Superiority-inferiority,
24-28
Survival, environmental factors in, 148 Sweden, male 125
Waehrer, Helen 60 n.
98-99 The
Suomi, Stephen J., 78 n. Superego development, sexual
of,
leadership
testosterone
and,
95
n.,
differences in,
male aggression
in,
biological advantage in, 105
attainment
States,
41-43 see also Male aggression Universality, meaning of, 61-
n.
Status
"Status
n.
nature of, 7-10
31-32
sex differentiation socialization
women, 95-96, 162
Theory
in,
Tallness, as social value, 182
Tasks, male status in, 47
Tchambuli (New Guinea), male role in, 39, 43-44 Testes, in fighting of mice, 88
Youngelson,
Ward, Lester Frank, 55 Wealth, authority and, 153 Weber, Max, 42 n. Wechsler, David, 194 n. Weisstein, Naomi, 155 n., 156 n., 157 n. Whalen, Richard E., 89 n. Wife, male dominance and, 37 n. Williamson, Robert C, 126 n. Wilson, Roger H., 202 n. Witkin, H. A., 194 n. Wolfe, Donald M., 36 n.
Woman
255
concept
of,
as creator,
23 25
Index
Woman's
Place (Epstein), 172
percentage of in U.S. work
211-218
physiological imperatives of,
Women in arts
46
force,
and
sciences,
in bureaucracy, 111
career vs. family for,
233 power advantage
224
of,
36
n.
227 as chess players, 191-192 childbirth and, 146-147 as composers, 212, 214-215 in day-care centers, 144
respect for, 69, 72 sex drive in, 180
"discrimination"
testosterone level of, 95-96,
central role of,
"status" of,
superfamilial roles of, 42 n.
against,
145-147 as
106 68-73
socialization of,
162
Women
doctors in Soviet Union,
n.
and the Public
Interest
(Bernard), 172
171 equal pay and
government 125
work
roles
226 124-
Women's
"rights,"
Work, Murray
Work
in high-status areas,
"inferior"
for,
of,
force,
S.,
68-69
91
women
n.
46
in,
145
feelings in,
116-
X-factor, aggression and, 91
117 leadership roles "barred" logic of,
"Yegali"
to,
tribe,
Young, W., 89
106
239, 245 n.
204-207
"oppression"
of,
113-114
Zelditch, Morris,
256
47
n.,
48
(continued from front flap) point of view that
is
meant
to influence people's
behavior, nor does he say or imply that any
masculine quality
is
superior to any feminine
quality.
The
standing.
It
will
over, praised will
is
a major ad-
human
self-under-
Inevitability of Patriarchy
dition to the literature of
be discussed widely, argued
and damned. But, assuredly,
who
be required reading for anyone
to consider seriously the relationship
men and women
between
in our world.
Steven Goldberg was born and presently lives in Manhattan. the
it
wishes
Department of Sociology
He
raised
and
has been in
at City
College
for four years.
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