| A
revolution of the sexes
Kingsley Browne
This article originally appeared
in the London Independent, 13 October 1998.
Imagine a world in which women had a virtual monopoly on
political power; where women out-competed men in the quest
for positions of high status; where women, upon giving birth,
left their babies with their husbands who stayed home and
kept house; and where the Army, Air Force and Marines were
made up mostly of women.
For those raised on the assumptions of standard social science,
this Utopia could conceivably come to pass. For them, the
primary obstacles to achieving it are arbitrary cultural
beliefs about the two sexes.
For those who believe that human psychology is a product
of eons of evolutionary history, however, this hypothetical
world is simply incompatible with our innate psychology,
no more likely to occur than a population of pigs deciding
to sprout wings and fly.
Natural selection, specifically sexual selection, has shaped
the human mind to create a 'human nature', In fact, in some
ways it is not too much of an exaggeration to say that it
has created two 'human natures', a male nature and a female
nature.
The reason that the sexes differ in temperament is that
different traits have been advantageous to the reproductive
success of members of the two sexes. A characteristic feature
of mammalian reproduction is that the female must invest
substantial physiological resources in offspring, during
both pregnancy and nursing. The minimum necessary investment
of the male involves participation in a single sexual encounter
(a burden, as we know, that men are all too willing to shoulder).
Thus, a male can enhance his reproductive success by acquiring
multiple mates in a way that a female cannot.
The question, then, is what distinguishes the successful
from the unsuccessful male?
The long period of dependency of human young creates substantial
pressure for male post-conception investment, so the woman,
from time immemorial, has looked to her mate for provisioning
and protection. Who can provide those things? Obviously,
it must be someone with both the ability and the inclination
to do so.Therefore, for a woman, important attributes of
a mate are status and resources (and, of course, a willingness
to share those resources).
Because the quest for status entails competition with other
men, men are predisposed to engage in the competitive, risky
and aggressive behaviours that may be required to attain
it.
Women, on the other hand, would generally gain no reproductive
advantage through open competition for status or from exposing
themselves to substantial risk. Instead, they have enhanced
their reproductive success by providing direct care for
their offspring, probably accounting for the stronger bond
between mother and infant than normally exists between father
and infant.
Temperamental sex differences can explain a pattern that
is otherwise puzzling. Is the representation of women in
high positions today the maximum number that female biology
is capable of achieving? The answer is a resounding 'No'.
As corporate suites become increasingly populated by people
who entered the labour force in the Eighties and Nineties,
rather than in the Sixties and Seventies, the number of
women should continue to rise.
On the other hand, it is unlikely that women will ever achieve
parity at the highest levels. Fortune profiled the women of the Harvard
Business School class of 1983. Many of these women have
been immensely successful, with a number of them earning
more than $lm per year. On the other hand, about a third
of the women either work part time or have left the labour
market altogether, most to spend time with their families.
The 'glass ceiling' metaphor is meant to evoke an image
of an impermeable but invisible barrier that holds women
back. But women who make the same career choices as men
can reach the corporate pinnacles, and many do. A more apt
term is 'gossamer ceiling', which evokes just the opposite
image. It is a barrier that women often 'see', but that
is not strong enough to hold them back if they choose to
cross it.
Women who are potential CEOs and who leave the workforce
to be with their children do not do so because they cannot
afford child care; they are typically highly paid employees
already. Instead, they leave because they feel a strong
desire to be with their children, a predictable urge for
a mammalian mother.
The question for policy makers is not whether they should
base policy on a particular view of human nature; rather,
it is a question of which view of human nature they should
adopt.
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