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| Women's Brains | |
| Συγγραφέας: Stephen Jay Gould Stephen Jay Gould: Women's Brains (pdf, 138K) IN THE PRELUDE to Middlemarch, George Eliot lamented the unfulfilled lives of talented women:  Some  have  felt  that  these  blundering  lives  are due  to  the  inconvenient  indefiniteness  with which  the  Supreme  Power  has  fashioned  the natures  of  women:  if  there  were  one  level  of feminine incompetence as strict as the ability to count three and no more, the social lot of women might be treated with scientific certitude.  Eliot goes on to discount the idea of innate limitation, but  while  she  wrote  in  1872,  the  leaders  of  European anthropometry  were  trying  to  measure  "with  scientific certitude" the inferiority of women. Anthropometry, or measurement of the human body, is not so fashionable a field these days, but it dominated the human sciences for much  of  the  nineteenth  century  and  remained  popular until intelligence testing replaced skull measurement as a favored device for making invidious comparisons among races, classes, and sexes. Craniometry, or measurement of the skull, commanded the most attention and respect. Its unquestioned leader, Paul Broca (1824-80), professor of clinical surgery at the Faculty of Medicine in Paris, gathered  a  school  of  disciples  and  imitators  around himself.  Their  work,  so  meticulous  and  apparently irrefutable, exerted great influence and won high esteem as a jewel of nineteenth-century science. Broca's  work  seemed  particularly  invulnerable  to refutation.  Had  he  not  measured  with  the  most scrupulous  care  and  accuracy?  (Indeed,  he  had.  I  have the  greatest  respect  for  Broca's  meticulous  procedure. His  numbers  are  sound.  But  science  is  an  inferential exercise, not a catalog of facts. Numbers, by themselves, specify  nothing.  All  depends  upon  what  you  do  with them.)  Broca  depicted  himself  as  an  apostle  of objectivity, a man who bowed before facts and cast aside superstition and sentimentality. He declared that "there is  no  faith,  however  respectable,  no  interest,  however legitimate,  which  must  not  accommodate  itself  to  the progress  of  human  knowledge  and  bend  before  truth." Women, like it or not, had smaller brains than men and, therefore, could not equal them in intelligence... | |
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