>So yes I think its important for us. One way lies blind belief and the
>other way suggests some answers to things that bugged even my mom, like Why
>does dad and your brother do those silly things anyway? The social history
>angle doesn't even come close to expalianing it all.
>
>Betty
So Betty, how come you think you argument is reasonable but others are
blind belief. My opinion comes from study of psychology and in particular
psycho biology and if the differences in the way we think and act can be
atributable to sex differences then we can go even further and say that
they are entirely attributable to ONE hormone - androgen. For people with
androgen insensitivity syndrom who are born xy but they nor their parents
know (therefore not mudding the social experiement) <not a real experiement
just real experience> the persons behave and have wants and desires just
like a 'real girl'. One case in point was a young married woman (to a guy)
who went to the gyno to see why she couldn't fall pregnant - no periods
ect. She was a very 'normal' girl, liked dolls ect. She had androgen
insensitivity syndrom. That's right folks she was a he!
I believe that physical differences account for very little in our basic
natures and that the differences we see are due to social conditioning.
Physical differences of note though are that a woman's brain has more than
1 million more neurons than that of the male. The basic program for the
human being is the female. We are all female for the first six weeks after
conception.
Kylie.
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