David Lankott
Aug 8, 2017 · 2 min read

You assume that differences in gender behavior are entirely due to social conditioning rather than being biological in nature. This is completely false because biology itself is one of the main influences on the development of social norms in the first place.
You just say it’s all “cultural” and just stop there without investigating why this is that way in the first place, how come it’s not women who are good at maths (culturally speaking), why did it evolve this way in the first place?

There’s obviously biological reasons for this, because this kind of thing doesnt just appear out of nowhere like you seem to believe, everything is influcenced by something. which means there’s some sort of biological foundation for the sort of gender differences we are seeing today in all our cultures, therefore you have to view culture as sort of an extension to evolution, it just builds social norms around what has been working in the past(from an evolutionary perspective) and therefore there are some things women do better than men and some thing men are better at.

Unfortunately this belief of social construction as this seperate distinct entity that is influenced by nothing other than itself has become so mainstream today, this is simply a belief that is 100% wrong, and this sort of thinking
is incredibly harmful and will lead to enormous problems in the long run.

There is a clear leftist and even marxist bias in the sciences today that completely ignores the influence of culture on socioeconomics as well as the influences of biology on the development of a given culture itself. And ignoring stuff in science is never a good thing…

    David Lankott

    Written by