Does identity politics make you stupid or does it make you
into a blithering fool?
Researchers in Australia seem to have given up on actual physics, so they have put their pee-brains to
work trying to figure out why boys do better than girls at physics. (via John Ellis at Pajamas Media.)
The reason: boys pee standing up. No kidding. You can’t make
this stuff up. And no, they assure us, they are not writing for The Onion.
Note well: if you have to disclaim the possibility that you are engaged in self-parody, you should keep your research to yourself.
Of course, by wasting their time on such questions the
politically enlightened physicists are showing us that they, two out of three
of whom are female, prefer the fever swamps of gender politics to doing actual
physics. Might that be the hidden explanation for their foolishness.
Here, they explain their theory:
Playful
urination practices – from seeing how high you can pee to games such as Peeball
(where men compete using their urine to destroy a ball placed in a urinal) –
may give boys an advantage over girls when it comes to physics. And we believe
there’s something we can do about it.
No
doubt you have some questions, the first is probably: what could possibly lead
us to believe this?
Well,
for starters, our recent analysis of the kinds of physics questions females
generally do worse at than males. Add to that strong evidence for the
widespread nature of certain kinds of pee-based game-playing among young (and
not-so-young) boys. Finally, throw in our observations on curriculum sequencing
and the ways in which formal, mathematically codified physics is often
introduced to children and young people.
In truth, no law in the universe says that girls should be
just as good as boys at physics. Or that boys should be just as good as girls
on verbal aptitude. Why don't these these hand wringers and teeth gnashers
do a pseudo-scientific study to show that girls do better at verbal tasks
because they pee sitting down. Have you?
The researchers have been observing this phenomenon-- watching boys pee-- for some
time now. But, don’t they have anything better to do with their time? And, doesn’t
this intrusion into a private space constitute some form of child abuse. Allow
them to explain:
Like
many parents of small (and not-so-small) boys, two of us (KW and DL) have
observed the great delight young males take in urination, a process by which
they produce and direct a visible projectile arc.
The
fact that boys (and men) play with their ability to projectile pee is hardly
contentious. Boys are trained to pee into toilet bowls with floating targets, a
huge variety of which can be bought on Amazon; Amsterdam Airport Schiphol
famously cleaned up its urinals by encouraging men to hit flies etched next to
the drain; and Peeball is now a worldwide phenomenon.
Meanwhile,
YouTube videos explain how to write your name in the snow with your pee; and
the post-match celebration peeing antics of sportsmen are widely reported in
the media. Indeed, the very notion of a pissing contest – furthest, highest, most
precisely aimed – is a deeply embedded part of some cultures. Alexander Pope
includes a pissing contest in his narrative poem, the Dunciad. Our own children
describe a stepped wall behind their primary school that’s used by male pupils
for competitive target practice. And a colleague who grew up in the Canadian
arctic describes boys competing to see who could perfect the trajectory so that
what ascended as liquid fell as ice crystals.
All
this is experienced up to five times a day, so by 14, boys have had the
opportunity to play with projectile motion around 10,000 times. And 14 is when
many children meet formalised physics in the form of projectile motion and
Newton’s equations of motion for the first time.
Guess what, this activity is “self-directed and hands on.” You would never have guessed:
This
self-directed, hands-on, intrinsically (and sometimes extrinsically, and
socially) rewarding activity must have a huge potential contribution to
learning, resulting in a deep, embodied, material knowledge of projectile
motion that’s simply not accessible to girls.
One is amused to see that the pseudoscientists declare that
this activity “must have a huge potential contribution to learning.” According
to whom? What about the characteristically male activities of throwing balls—activity
at which few girls excel or even want to excel? And, what about brain
structure, the difference between male and female brains? The researchers do
not care and do not recognize it as a reality.
Happily, our intrepid researchers have a solution to the
problem. They want physics courses to begin with something other than
experiments in projectile motion… because such a topic puts girls at a
disadvantage. They do not consider questions of verbal aptitude, especially as
it applies to math. Is there a correlation between algebra and peeing standing up? And they do not consider why boys prefer to play with
trucks while girls prefer to play with dolls. Is there something in the brain
of male and female humans that directs them in one or another direction?
Had they been as resourceful as some other practitioners of
gender politics they might have suggested—as has been reported in
Sweden—that boys must be forced to pee sitting down. There, that will solve the
problem.
4 comments:
Yes, the study sounds flawed and confused, although I admit as a male, projectile motion could entertain me for hours when I was younger. And later I recall in physics class learning you could hit a target from two angles, one higher than 45 degrees and one lower, and that a maximum range comes from a near 45 degree angle. But I still don't know like how I could underarm throw a horseshoe seemingly nearly straight up and have it land with a thud inches from my target - how did my fingers know how to release so perfectly? And as soon as I asked the question, my aim went far off on the next throw, apparently paying attention overrode some bodily genius. Mostly I'd explain such physical skills because after we learn something new, we forget how many hours it took to get there.
Stuart: In truth, no law in the universe says that girls should be just as good as boys at physics. Or that boys should be just as good as girls on verbal aptitude.
Certainly this is important remember, although we also always need to remember there are bell curves to every distribution, and the top women will be better than average men at physics, and top men better than the average woman in verbal aptitude, even if you still more often need to remind these men that its important to talk to babies before they can talk back, while most women more generally don't seem to need this reminder.
Overall for me gender wars seem silly, and I usually presume whatever limitation one gender seems to have in a given field, there's some liability in the other gender despite its advantages, so its good when we can work together, and help each other individually past our blindspots.
After reading this, I'm off.
Europe is encouraging (i.e., pretty much DEMANDING) Sitzpinkling for all males.
For some odd reason this made me think of Foucault's pendulum.
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