Νευροσεξισμός
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“ | Ο νους μας δεν είναι αιχμάλωτος των φύλων ή των γονιδιών μας, και αυτοί που ισχυρίζονται αλλιώς απλώς ντύνουνε παλιά στερεότυπα με περιτύλιγμα (ψευδο)επιστημονικής αξιοπιστίας. | ” |
Νευροσεξισμός είναι η σεξιστική υπόθεση που παίρνει ως δεδομένο ότι οι διαφορές ανάμεσα στα φύλα προκαλούνται από βιολογικές διαφορές ανάμεσα στους εγκεφάλους. Η πίστη στην ουσιοκρατία των φύλων συντελεί στην δημιουργεία αυτοεκπληρούμενης προφητείας. Ο νευροσεξισμός παρέχει ένα πλαίσιο μέσα στο οποίο νέοι και ενήλικες αντιμετοπίζονται διαφορετικά, που τους κάνει να συμπεριφέρονται διαφορετικά, και με τη σειρά του στηρίζει τον νευροσεξισμό — η επιτομή της κυκλικής λογικής και της αυτοεκπληρούμενης προφητείας.[2][3]
Ο νευροσεξισμός είναι η εσφαλμένη πεποίθηση που προκύπτει από τη διασταύρωση της νευροεπιστήμης και του σεξισμού. Η προκατάληψη αυτή προκαλείται σε μεγάλο βαθμό από θεσμικές και πολιτισμικές δομές, οδηγώντας τους ερευνητές της νευροεπιστήμης (συμπεριλαμβανομένων των επιστημόνων της νευροβιολογίας και της νευρολογίας) σε σεξιστικές παραδοχές σχετικά με το πώς λειτουργούν οι εγκέφαλοι και, κατά συνέπεια, ο νους. [4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12][13][14][15][16][17][18][19][20][21][22][23][24][25][26][27][28][29] Παρ' ότι βαθύτατα λανθασμένη, η πεποίθηση αυτή έχει δημιουργήσει ένα στιβαρό υπόβαθρο επιφανειακής επιστημονικής εγκυρότητας του σεξισμού στα μάτια πολλών, τόσο στο χώρο της επιστημονικής κοινότητας όσο και έξω από αυτόν. [2]
Contents
Damage to children
“ | There’s enormous danger in this exaggeration of sex difference, first and foremost in the expectations it creates among parents, teachers, and children themselves. Kids rise or fall according to what we believe about them, and the more we dwell on the differences between boys and girls, the likelier such stereotypes are to crystallize into children’s self-perceptions and self-fulfilling prophecies. | ” |
—Lise Eliot[2] |

Apart from being pseudoscientific, and thus inherently damaging to scientific research, neurosexism also actively contributes to creating gender differences by making teachers and parents treat children differently.[3][30] Societal and cultural norms also play a role and feed into creating neurosexism, and into creating gender differences, which then go on to create even more gender differences:
One study found that boys threw better than girls did with their dominant arm — but when the kids were asked to throw with their other arm, there were no gender differences. If biology alone determined throwing ability, then boys would throw better than girls with either arm. Practice, not hardwired ability, turned boys into better throwers. Playing videogames that involve stalking or tracking also create superior mental rotation skills.[2] |
History
The word
"Neurosexism" was coined by Cordelia Fine, in her book Delusions of Gender, to describe the phenomenon in neuroscience, in neurobiology, and in the brain and cognitive sciences more broadly, of assuming there are essential differences between the brains of women and men.[31] Thanks to her scientific writings and others' voices joining her this baseless assumption it has become recogntised by many neuro- and cognitive scientists as a problem.[1]
The concept
The idea that proposed or real differences in brains are a direct cause of gender differences has been used to oppress and marginalise women long before Fine wrote her book debunking it:
we thought for years that a very real structural difference — men’s greater brain size — was important to human intelligence, and it turned out to be of very little consequence. But that mistake kept women out of universities for years.[2] |
Complementing definitions
Wiktionary defines neurosexism as:
[t]he use of neuroscientific research to support preexisting ideas about inherent sex differences.[32] |
Neurological versus biological sex
The use of the phrases "neurological sex", to mean a neurological configuration of some kind or another that gives rise to a "gendered brain", and "biological sex", to mean genitals, are used by some transgender rights activists, truscum, and (especially the latter) trans-exclusionary radical feminists and radical feminists in general.
Both these phrases, apart from being unscientific, are also highly oppressive:
- "Neurological sex" does not exist. On the neural level of analysing cognition and the brain there is no gender.[7] Gender is a self-concept as well as a social construct but not a neurological configuration.
- "Biological sex", which in this case is used to refer to the type of genitals a person has, is a problematic use of the word gender. Gendering penis as male, and vagina as female, relegates, e.g., trans women's bodies to being described using misgendering language. A more useful way of describing genitals, if they must be when discussing gender, is to use words from biological science, like vulva, glans penis, clitoris, testicles, and so on. "Biological sex" is especially damaging as a concept since the classification of human body parts into male and female harms both trans people and intersex people. The latter of which are often forced to undergo surgery, which often damages their sex lives.
One of the reasons, a minority of transgender people have latched onto the idea that there is such as a thing as a neurological gender is because of how oppression manifests. Both Harry Benjamin syndrome supporters (HBSers) and truscum are consciously or unconsciously attempting to gain some access to privilege and respect by using the language of neurosexism.
By appealing to cisnormativity and the now outdated medical, scientific, and academic communities' understanding of gender HBSers and truscum gain some acceptance and recognition. So in other words they internalise and propagate cisssexism because it offers a short-term payoff within the gender hegemony. When one appeals to norms, when one makes a kyriarchal compromise, like accepting that the gender binary exists and that one's genitals or brain are "wrong", one is forced to engage in gatekeeping. Therefore, truscum and HSBers, are inclined to, by their own ideology and ultimate goal of acceptance into the kyriarchy, to accept cisnormativity, reject non-binary people, and engage in harmful behaviour towards those under the trans umbrella who they see as jeopardising their chance at "acceptance". These acts are a side-effect of their theory almost by definition because the truscum and HBSer communities are not interested in acceptance (as in being allowed to exist without being coerced into changing), but in assimilation (as in being moulded by cisnormativity).
HSBers and truscum, in other words, use the tools of oppression (binarism, dyadism, binary gender, neurosexism, etc.) in order to "build a house"; piggybacking on the deeply embeded colonialism, racism, and (cis)sexism within Western medicine and science. To protect this "house" from criticism from oppressive forces, they must remove dissenting trans and feminist voices that ask for more inclusive definitions of gender. For both truscum and HBSers pseudoscience, especially neurosexism, has provided foundations for their "house", mainly because of the prestige (pseudo)scientific language grants them. The end result is that they grant legitimacy to harmful ideas and behaviours and further marginalise and horizontally as well as vertically oppress non-binary trans people.
See also
External links
- The gender myth, by Robin McKie
- New insights into gendered brain wiring, or a perfect case study in neurosexism?, by Cordelia Fine
- Cordelia Fine: Delusions of Gender, a video lecture by Cordelia Fine
- Pink Brain, Blue Brain, a video lecture by Lise Eliot
- Neurosexism: Brains, Gender and Tech, by Caryl Rivers and Rosalind C. Barnett
- The New Soft War on Women, by Caryl Rivers and Rosalind C. Barnett
- Neurosexismo, by El demonio blanco de la tetera verde
Αναφορές
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 The gender myth, by Robin McKie
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 Neurosexism: Brains, Gender and Tech, by Caryl Rivers and Rosalind C. Barnett
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 Why Parents May Cause Gender Differences in Kids, by Sharon Begley
- ↑ New insights into gendered brain wiring, or a perfect case study in neurosexism?, by Cordelia Fine
- ↑ Cordelia Fine: Delusions of Gender, a video lecture by Cordelia Fine
- ↑ Plasticity, plasticity, plasticity…and the rigid problem of sex, Cordelia Fine, Rebecca Jordan-Young, Anelis Kaiser, , Gina Rippon, Volume 17, Issue 11, November 2013, Pages 550–551, Trends in Cognitive Science
- ↑ 7.0 7.1 Deconstructing Gendered Minds, by Daniel Toker
- ↑ The worst neurobollocks infographics on the web
- ↑ The Role of Fetal Testosterone in the Development of the “Essential Difference” Between the Sexes: Some Essential Issues, by Giordana Grossi and Cordelia Fine
- ↑ Book Review: Neurofeminism: Issues at the Intersection of Feminist Theory and Cognitive Science, edited by Robyn Bluhm, Anne Jaap Jacobson & Heidi Lene Maibom, by Dafne Muntanyola-Saura
- ↑ New insights into gendered brain wiring, or a perfect case study in neurosexism?, by Cordelia Fine
- ↑ asking questions about men and women by looking at teenagers, by Sophie Scott
- ↑ So, men and women's brains are wired differently – but it's not that simple, by Oscar Rickett
- ↑ Are Male And Female Brains "Wired Differently"? It’s Really Not That Simple, by Kelly Oakes
- ↑ What a difference a day makes: How social media is transforming scientific debate, by Dorothy Bishop
- ↑ Men, Women, and Big PNAS Paper, by Neuroskeptic
- ↑ Discussion on PubPeer: Sex differences in the structural connectome of the human brain
- ↑ Getting in a Tangle Over Men’s and Women’s Brain Wiring, by Christian Jarrett
- ↑ What's For Breakfast? Fried Girl and Boy Brainz! How Men's And Women's Brains are Dramatically Different And What It All Means, by Echidne of the Snakes
- ↑ Stop Looking For 'Hardwired' Differences In Male And Female Brains, by Virginia Hughes
- ↑ Environmental and Genetic Influences on Neurocognitive Development: The Importance of Multiple Methodologies and Time-Dependent Intervention, by Annette Karmiloff-Smith, B. J. Casey, Esha Massand, Przemyslaw Tomalski, and Michael S. C. Thomas
- ↑ “Fighting the neurotrash” ScienceGrrl discussion at WOW 2014
- ↑ Men and women do not have different brains, claims neuroscientist, by Sarah Knapton
- ↑ Neurosexism and Delusions of Gender
- ↑ Girls' and boys' brains respond differently to funny videos, by Christian Jarrett
- ↑ Reading books does re-wire your brain, but so does everything else, by Ian Steadman
- ↑ Our brains, and how they're not as simple as we think, by Vaughan Bell
- ↑ False Positive Neuroscience?, by Neuroskeptic
- ↑ SfN Neuroblogging 2012: Implicit and Explicit Gender Bias
- ↑ Calling All Female Brains: Stop the 'Neurosexism', by Rosalind C. Barnett and Caryl Rivers
- ↑ Delusions of Gender, by Cordelia Fine
- ↑ Neurosexism on Wiktionary