That said, I believe they’d disagree with this statement:
Most real-world situations are more similar to this than to the model they use to make their argument.
Yes, indeed. That’s the whole source of the disagreement once all the confusions and bad arguments are shaved off.
However, IME they (nearly always, only exception I’ve ever seen was on LW) make the opposite claim on the basis of their own experiences, perceptions of power balance, limited (often cherry-picked) data, and/or personal moral intuitions.
From what little (read: I suspect much more than a typical student who has taken a college course in Feminism or Cultural Studies and goes on to join the feminist movement in some way) social science and serious-psychology I’ve read and understood, it seems that most multiviewpoint analyses and calculations (I’ve seen the term ‘intersectional analysis’ thrown around, but AFAICT it’s basically just computing multiple subjective judgments of power in a combined utilitarian fashion) end up with much higher variation and fluctuation in both nominal agent power and psychologically perceived power balance than the above feminists would even consider plausible.
What I’ve read also seemed to indicate a very important (though not incredibly strong, but enough to be a turning point) correlation between the “normalcy” of an individual and how much those feminist claims will apply to them—IIRC, an IQ more than a standard deviation above the norm is enough to bring the “subconscious advantage” and “landed privileges” difference to statistically insignificant levels of correlation with gender. Other forms of abnormality presumably have similar effects (LBGT, for instance), though I only have anecdotal data there.
Admittedly, I don’t have much more to show either in terms of hard evidence and clear numbers, but I’d largely attribute this to my poor memory. The difference is that I’ve argued for many positions and many claims, a good portion of which were similar to those feminist arguments given in support of the claim that the subconscious domination and privilege conditioning is almost always applicable… and I’ve changed my mind upon realizing that I was wrong many times. When I talk to these feminists, I often quickly realize that they have never changed their mind on this subject.
Given that I’ve read more balanced samples of evidence than it seems most of them have, and that I’ve noticed I was wrong and changed my mind much more than them, I’m very strongly inclined to believe that my beliefs are… well, Less Wrong.
Also, you’re a pretty good Feminist’s Advocate as far as people not devoting their entire life to the cause usually go, IME. And now I’m exhausted for doing so much beisu-ryuu belief-questioning. Whew. Not as productive in terms of belief updating and propagation as I’d hoped, but at least it was good mental exercise.
Yes, just because I can play Feminist’s Advocate, doesn’t mean I actually agree with them :-) That said, I’ve never taken a feminism course, nor am I a sociologist, so my opinion probably doesn’t carry much weight. These kinds of debates can’t be conclusively resolved with words alone; it’s a job not for words, but for numbers.
Yes, indeed. That’s the whole source of the disagreement once all the confusions and bad arguments are shaved off.
However, IME they (nearly always, only exception I’ve ever seen was on LW) make the opposite claim on the basis of their own experiences, perceptions of power balance, limited (often cherry-picked) data, and/or personal moral intuitions.
From what little (read: I suspect much more than a typical student who has taken a college course in Feminism or Cultural Studies and goes on to join the feminist movement in some way) social science and serious-psychology I’ve read and understood, it seems that most multiviewpoint analyses and calculations (I’ve seen the term ‘intersectional analysis’ thrown around, but AFAICT it’s basically just computing multiple subjective judgments of power in a combined utilitarian fashion) end up with much higher variation and fluctuation in both nominal agent power and psychologically perceived power balance than the above feminists would even consider plausible.
What I’ve read also seemed to indicate a very important (though not incredibly strong, but enough to be a turning point) correlation between the “normalcy” of an individual and how much those feminist claims will apply to them—IIRC, an IQ more than a standard deviation above the norm is enough to bring the “subconscious advantage” and “landed privileges” difference to statistically insignificant levels of correlation with gender. Other forms of abnormality presumably have similar effects (LBGT, for instance), though I only have anecdotal data there.
Admittedly, I don’t have much more to show either in terms of hard evidence and clear numbers, but I’d largely attribute this to my poor memory. The difference is that I’ve argued for many positions and many claims, a good portion of which were similar to those feminist arguments given in support of the claim that the subconscious domination and privilege conditioning is almost always applicable… and I’ve changed my mind upon realizing that I was wrong many times. When I talk to these feminists, I often quickly realize that they have never changed their mind on this subject.
Given that I’ve read more balanced samples of evidence than it seems most of them have, and that I’ve noticed I was wrong and changed my mind much more than them, I’m very strongly inclined to believe that my beliefs are… well, Less Wrong.
Also, you’re a pretty good Feminist’s Advocate as far as people not devoting their entire life to the cause usually go, IME. And now I’m exhausted for doing so much beisu-ryuu belief-questioning. Whew. Not as productive in terms of belief updating and propagation as I’d hoped, but at least it was good mental exercise.
Yes, just because I can play Feminist’s Advocate, doesn’t mean I actually agree with them :-) That said, I’ve never taken a feminism course, nor am I a sociologist, so my opinion probably doesn’t carry much weight. These kinds of debates can’t be conclusively resolved with words alone; it’s a job not for words, but for numbers.
I haven’t studied those issues, but what you say is more or less what I have inferred from my experience in meatspace.