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Thursday, April 11, 2019

Sex on the Brain by Robert James

Saying that people deserve to be treated decently is not a factual claim. You can’t look it up in a textbook, and no amount of brain-scanning is going to reveal why it’s true. People having been either succeeding (or more often failing) to treat each other kindly, fairly, and honorably, since before there was science, since before there were people really. And—they will continue to try (and often fail) far into the future, whatever science reveals about our natures.



If I am trying to help a child understand why stealing from another child was wrong, or that they should share the sandpit, or to apologize to that other annoying (and now crying) kid…yes…I know he took your dolly, but you still can’t hit him with that Lego dinosaur…Well, I don’t get out my copy of Eric Kandel's Principles of Neural Science, and start pointing meaningfully to the diagram of Brodmann area 11 in the pre-fontal cortex.
This seems blindingly obvious. However, the corollary: That you don’t need neurological backup to argue that you should treat people fairly, seems lost on writers like Cordelia Fine and Gina Rippon. Both are trying to argue that humans are neurological hermaphrodites, because somehow admitting any sex differences would mandate unfair treatment of women.

I’ve addressed Cordelia Fine’s misunderstandings of science here. Obviously I did an utterly  brilliant job, so Gina Rippon is back to “debunk” neuroscience with her latest, The Gendered Brain: The New Neuroscience That Shatters The Myth Of The Female Brain. It is tempting to rebunk these debunkings but, if I am right in my guess about what is going on here, no amount of factual piling on is going to help. In fact—it may make things worse, because it’s going to convince writers like Fine and Rippon that some hideous conspiracy is occurring and, like some horrible feminist version of Alex Jones, that the whole of brain science is fake news. Let’s stop things before they get out of hand.
Fine and Rippon have decided that women are often not treated fairly. No argument there, they often aren’t. We (almost) all agree on this. But they have decided that the way to counter unfairness, is to claim that men and women are neurologically identical. No. They aren’t. This is silly, and it’s got to stop. It’s hurting people. And it’s getting out of hand. A 2017 issue of Neuroscience Research devoted an entire issue to detailing large, repeatable sex-typed brain differences that have clinical significance (If you want a partial list I’ve prepared one below--and brace yourself because its long) because they were concerned that this sort of politically-motivated science denial was hindering medicine. Nature recently penned an anguished rebuttal to its earlier rather spineless review in support of Rippon.

All of that factual back-and-forth is important (although it must be danged confusing to non-specialists watching from the sidelines) but, if my guess is right this is going to make Rippon et al. double-down and come back with yet more (and more bizarre) "debunkings". This is because they have confused facts and values. So—let’s address that directly.
Do they really think that chauvinists and bigots are leaning back in their La-Z-Boy recliners, reading the latest issue of Neuroscience Research, and going “Heck woman, it sez here that the female olfactory bulb is right 40% more neurologically dense than the male one. By the sacred jockstrap of Jordan Peterson, I did not know that! Now git into that kitchen and make me a san’wich!”?

Less facetiously, they have confused the fact that historically bigots have (and still do) take weird factual claims about sex differences morally seriously, and come to the conclusion that the way to address this is to attack those claims. But it’s naïve to think that those factual claims, rather than the desire to treat people unfairly, were the cause of the behavior, rather than the consequence. If you “debunk” those facts the bigots aren’t going to go away. They will find new reasons, invent them if they have to, and ignore the whole of science if they must. You can see them doing all these things right now. What I’m saying should not come as a surprise. Why does this matter? Because failing to treat sex differences as real means that things like drug dosages, disease susceptibility, and differential diagnoses, are being swept under the carpet.

Sexual dimorphism does not mean that males and females are different in every respect. It means that sex is a meaningful variable that allows us to predict differences. Brain differences. Go and look at that list I made below. I’ll wait. And consider what would have to be true for sexual dimorphism not to apply to brains. It would mean that an entire chromosome, which has about 800 genes on the X bit, and 70 on the Y, has no effect on the resultant organism and it's control center. Evolution just doesn’t work that way. Evolution couldn't work that way.

But, you don’t have to be a neuroscientist to see that men and women’s brains have to be different. Their bodies are different. Not as different as some sexually dimorphic species—but different nonetheless. Brains control bodies. For those brains to be indistinguishable, would be like saying that any TV remove should control all other TVs. Of course there are similarities—more similarities than differences—but (and this is the really important point): So what? Put it this way—what brain difference would mandate treating half the population as inferior to the other half? Name one. I dare you. I double dare you.

And if sexual dimorphism doesn’t convince you—try heterosexuality. Most of us fancy the opposite sex (most, not all, there are very interesting variations but they don’t affect the central tendency or my argument). “Fancying the opposite sex” is not a single brain state. For males to find females attractive, they have to be attracted to female-typical bodies. For females to find males attractive, they have to be attracted to male-typical bodies. Now, let me say this slowly and carefully, these are not the same bodies. Therefore, the systems (brains) that attract us to them (bodies) can’t be exactly the same either.

However, if recent experience is anything to go by, simply elucidating facts is not going to stop this daftness going away. What might it go away is if we all do better at treating each other fairly and decently, and leaving the science to the scientists.


About the Author

Robert James King, Ph.D., is a lecturer at the School of Applied Psychology, University College Cork, in Ireland.

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