Bugmaster comments on LW Women- Minimizing the Inferential Distance - Less Wrong

58 [deleted] 25 November 2012 11:33PM

You are viewing a comment permalink. View the original post to see all comments and the full post content.

Comments (1254)

You are viewing a single comment's thread. Show more comments above.

Comment author: ChristianKl 26 November 2012 02:13:13PM 0 points [-]

I think the point of the Star Wars anecdote is: Woman do engage in roleplaying but when they do they don't focus on papers-and-dice fighting and instead have a discussion about moral issues.

The woman who wrote the example with the evil elves probably wanted to show that she didn't cared primarily about battling the evil elves but that she rather wanted to help the farmers directly.

Comment author: Bugmaster 27 November 2012 09:55:41AM 4 points [-]

I think the point of the Star Wars anecdote is: Woman do engage in roleplaying but when they do they don't focus on papers-and-dice fighting and instead have a discussion about moral issues.

Is that actually true, though ? This seems to fit the pattern of "men are combative, women are nurturing", which is often denounced as a stereotype; at the very least, there is a lot of debate on whether or not this principle is generally applicable.

I'm not saying that the statement is wrong, necessarily; only that I require more evidence to be convinced.

Comment author: Swimmer963 27 November 2012 10:57:11AM 2 points [-]

This seems to fit the pattern of "men are combative, women are nurturing",

I would read it more as "men like to model situations, women like to model people." This may be a stereotype, but I've noticed it to be anecdotally true. Men, when spending time together socially, tend to talk more about sports and politics than women do; women spend more time talking about other people (i.e. gossip) and analyzing their motivations. Fighting elves is a situation; you don't have to try to understand the elves' motivations and 'drama' in order to fight them.

Comment author: Randy_M 27 November 2012 09:40:55PM 1 point [-]

"This may be a stereotype, but I've noticed it to be anecdotally true." "but" What do you think sterotypes are? Generally they tend to be statements that are true 30-90% of the time, which should provide plenty of room for confirming annecdotes.