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Discussion and Debate
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GQ’s New Masculinity
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<blockquote data-quote="Tom 1" data-source="post: 74391748" data-attributes="member: 404020"><p>That would be an end point, not a beginning. In any case, whose criteria are those? You seem to be the only one using them.</p><p>The whole social conditioning idea is a bit dubious, given that it relies on ideas about things that have gone on in a fraction of a fraction of the time humans have been walking about, and even that fraction is so complicated little or nothing definitive can be said about whatever influence it may have had on whatever differences there are between genders. To me it seems practically impossible to state what that is, which isn’t surprising given that nobody can, but that has no actual relevance to the question. There isn’t enough known about the brain and whatever else is in there to address the question beyond different avenues of speculation.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Tom 1, post: 74391748, member: 404020"] That would be an end point, not a beginning. In any case, whose criteria are those? You seem to be the only one using them. The whole social conditioning idea is a bit dubious, given that it relies on ideas about things that have gone on in a fraction of a fraction of the time humans have been walking about, and even that fraction is so complicated little or nothing definitive can be said about whatever influence it may have had on whatever differences there are between genders. To me it seems practically impossible to state what that is, which isn’t surprising given that nobody can, but that has no actual relevance to the question. There isn’t enough known about the brain and whatever else is in there to address the question beyond different avenues of speculation. [/QUOTE]
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