I think hairyfigment is of the belief that the Romans (and in the most coherent version of his claim you would have to say male and female) were under misconceptions about the nature of male and female minds, and believes that “a sufficiently deep way” would mean correcting all these misconceptions.
My view is that we really can’t say that as things stand. We’d have to know a lot more about the Roman beliefs about the male and female minds, and compare them against what we know to be accurate about male and female minds.
I was trying to say with my second paragraph that we specifically cannot be sure about that. My first paragraph was simply my best effort at interpreting what I think hairyfigment thinks, not a statement of what I believe to be true.
From my vague recollections I think the idea is worth looking up one way or the other. After all, a massive portion of modern culture is under the impression there are no gender differences and there are other instances of clear major misconceptions I actually can attest to throughout history. But I don’t have any idea with the Romans.
After all, a massive portion of modern culture is under the impression there are no gender differences
That’s the stupid portion of modern culture, and I’m not sure they actually, um, practice that belief. Here’s a quick suggestion: make competitive sports sex-blind :-/
I think hairyfigment is of the belief that the Romans (and in the most coherent version of his claim you would have to say male and female) were under misconceptions about the nature of male and female minds, and believes that “a sufficiently deep way” would mean correcting all these misconceptions.
My view is that we really can’t say that as things stand. We’d have to know a lot more about the Roman beliefs about the male and female minds, and compare them against what we know to be accurate about male and female minds.
And what evidence do you have that they laboured under such major misconceptions which we successfully overcame?
I was trying to say with my second paragraph that we specifically cannot be sure about that. My first paragraph was simply my best effort at interpreting what I think hairyfigment thinks, not a statement of what I believe to be true.
From my vague recollections I think the idea is worth looking up one way or the other. After all, a massive portion of modern culture is under the impression there are no gender differences and there are other instances of clear major misconceptions I actually can attest to throughout history. But I don’t have any idea with the Romans.
That’s the stupid portion of modern culture, and I’m not sure they actually, um, practice that belief. Here’s a quick suggestion: make competitive sports sex-blind :-/
I don’t think it’s massive, either.