One argument you could give a Less Wrong audience is that the information about intelligence you could learn by learning someone's gender is almost completely screened off by the information content gained by examining the person directly (e.g. through conversation, or through reading research papers).
That is exactly what should happen, but I suspect that in real life it doesn't, largely because of anchoring and adjustment.
Suppose I know the average intelligence of a member of Group A is 115, and the average intelligence of a member of Group B is 85. After meeting and having a long, involved conversation with a specific member of either group, I should probably toss out my knowledge of the average intelligence of their group and evaluate them based on the (much more pertinent) information I have gained from the conversation. But if I behave like most p...
A few examples (in approximately increasing order of controversy):
If you proceed anyway...