{"type":"rich","version":"1.0","title":"Cordelia Fine: Debunking Sex Difference Myths","description":"You’re being lied to about gender difference science. Researchers are inflating, overstating, and falsifying their data, or building biases into the research that render it unreliable. Stories about research inflate the limited differences these flawed studies find, and parenting advice suggests that we should treat girls and boys as radically different types of humans.\n\nSo we do exactly that, and then we insist that different outcomes mean that gender differences must be innate and unchangeable.\n\nNo matter what researchers see in scans of female brains—and even when they see different things in different brains—they conclude that their data prove that women are naturally and inevitably more emotional than men. Lots of activity in a particular brain region, limited activity in that same region, lots of activity in some women and limited activity in others—it’s all used as evidence to support the same bias.\n\nThis research is everywhere, and everyone seems to “know” that the differences between men and women are significant and vast. When you dig into the research, though, that turns out not to be the case. The challenge is that most of us lack the expertise and time to read the research—especially since the promulgators of scientific sexism are constantly producing more research (and more questionable research).\n\nCordelia Fine is a researcher who argues that the science is weak, the assumptions underlying it are flawed, and that the goal isn’t scientific truth or progress. She’s written extensively about harmful gender difference science, and I was so thrilled to bring her on the podcast. Some of the topics we discuss include:\n\nThe myriad problems with studies of sex differences: research that doesn’t prove what it claims to, popular media that overstates research claims, and more.\n\nThe false assumptions that go into gender difference research, and how those assumptions affect research outcomes.\n\nThe misrepresentation, and occasional outright fabrication, of scientific research.\n\nThe cornucopia of myths about testosterone specifically, and hormones more generally, that color our perceptions about gender.\n\nThe numerous forces putting gender role pressure on children, including before they are even born.\n\nThe normalization of gender roles in casual social relationships, and how often these issues come up in parenting small talk.\n\nWhy something being biological does not mean it is innate, inevitable, or unchangeable.\n\nSpurious results, and the replication crisis in behavioral science.\n\nThe just-so stories we tell to understand research findings and defend the existence of gender differences.\n\nThe weaponization of perimenopause to stigmatize and dismiss women.\n\nFind Cordelia’s books, all of the books recommended on the podcast, and numerous reading lists at the Liberating Motherhood Bookshop (https://bookshop.org/shop/liberatingmotherhood) .\n\nAbout Cordelia Fine\n\nCordelia Fine is an academic and writer. Her work analyses scientific and popular biological explanations of behavioral sex differences and workplace gender inequalities, explores the effects of gender-related attitudes and biases on judgments and decision-making, and contributes to debates about workplace gender equality. She was recently named a “living legend” of research by The Australian.\n\nShe is the author of Patriarchy Inc., Testosterone Rex, Delusions of Gender and A Mind of Its Own and has been published in more than a dozen languages. Among other accolades, Testosterone Rex won the Royal Society Insight Investment Science Book Prize. Delusions of Gender was listed in ‘Ten books about women that will change your life’ (Sunday Times), ‘22 books women think men should read’ (Huffington Post), ‘Top 10 books on women in the past 30 years’ (The Australian) and the New York Public Library’s Essential Reads on Feminism, 100 Years After the 19th Amendment, among others.\n\nIn recognition of her work on the understanding of gender stereotypes, challenging gender perceptions and contributions to public discourse to close the gender gap, Cordelia Fine was awarded the 2018 Edinburgh Medal by the City of Edinburgh Council, to honor men and women of science who have made a significant contribution to the understanding and well-being of humanity.\n\nCordelia Fine has degrees from Oxford University, Cambridge University and UCL and is now a professor in the History & Philosophy of Science programme in the School of Historical & Philosophical Studies at the University of Melbourne.","author_name":"Liberating Motherhood","author_url":"https://audioboom.com/channels/5130888-liberating-motherhood","provider_name":"Audioboom","provider_url":"https://audioboom.com","width":480,"height":95,"thumbnail_url":"https://audioboom.com/i/43584379/600x600/c","thumbnail_width":600,"thumbnail_height":600,"html":"<iframe width=\"100%\" height=\"95\" src=\"https://embeds.audioboom.com/posts/8887563/embed?v=202301\" style=\"background-color: transparent; display: block; padding: 0; width: 100%\" frameborder=\"0\" allowtransparency=\"allowtransparency\" scrolling=\"no\" title=\"Audioboom player\" allow=\"autoplay\" sandbox=\"allow-downloads allow-forms allow-popups allow-same-origin allow-scripts allow-storage-access-by-user-activation allow-top-navigation-by-user-activation\"></iframe>"}
