GregLocock said:
Back to the old numbers game. Off the top of your head how many male composers of classical music can you name? (I'm guessing sixty) Female? (Four) What is the structural reason why there is this imbalance, it can scarcely be due to physical requirements? Or is it innate? If I do the same with novelists there is a much smaller mismatch.
Classical music is a wretchedly terrible metric to enter into this conversation, because most of it was composed in prior centuries. We know for a fact that the socioeconomics in prior centuries were very heavily weighted against women doing things like composing classical music. We could call that 'sexism' or we could call that 'the reality of the 18th century,' but whatever we do call it, it's obvious that it's not currently applicable, which makes the discussion moot. If you're going to use this metric at all, you need to limit yourself to classical music composers within the last 20 or 30 years, and that nukes your data pool. The discussion is basically not worth having.
Now, if we expand the discussion to all current music, we may still see some gender gap. Some of that gender gap might be due to sexism, and some of it might be due to "male variability hypothesis," although I won't take a position on either. I'm not sure MVH applies to creativity. I'm not even sure how creativity would be objectively measured to make the case. MVH is most solid when you look at things like ASVAB scores, which are specifically tailored to more workplace specific traits.
Which brings up another weird thought I've been tooling on for about a year. Is there a gender gap in things like personality or charisma? If so, does it skew towards women? I think it might be possible. (I think a lot of women would emphatically support that idea, quite honestly) If that's the case, and the slow march of AI and automation continues to consume all the professional jobs for which ASVAB style Male Variability Hypothesis applies, then we could see ourselves shift in the next 50 years away from a technocratic, intelligence based economy and more towards a creative one, where the robots do basically all the math. What sort of gender gaps are going to be in that new world? Probably not a popular thing to ponder on an engineering forum.
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