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Stupidity is a Sex-War Issue (1)
© Peter Zohrab 2005 |
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Stupidity is a Sex-War issue !
There is a lot that can be said about this, and I have already written
something on this issue: See, for example, dumbfemi.html
, femathom.html and stupidt2.html.
Stupidity, with regard to logical reasoning, is something that I have noticed
particularly in the legal fraternity and in females -- which makes it unsurprising
that the legal fraternity is now increasingly made up of women. It is this
stupidity which allows women and the legal fraternity to believe Feminist
dogma without being appalled by its stupidity.
Below is a short, one-question questionnaire I passed out to students
of the International Trade Law class of the Victoria University of Wellington
Law Faculty in December 2004. Not only do the results of the questionnaire
demonstrate that almost 20% of the respondents are stupid, but the comments
written on this particular copy (as well as on some others) also demonstrate
the primitive mentality of some Law students -- probably the same 20% !
Paul Zoubkov is a Leftist who had expressed the view in a previous class
(Jurisprudence) that he abhored anything written by me. Nevertheless, I
thought his presentation in International Trade Law class on how the First
World deliberately exploited the Third World quite plausible, on the surface.
I did not know anything about the issue, but was willing to keep an open
mind.
However, being a typical Leftist, he had to mouthe a platitude about at
least one other member of the Rainbow Coalition -- namely women. All that
he said about women (at the end of one section) was:
"There is evidence that women are more disadvantaged
than men in developing countries." (N.B. One respondent suggested
that he had said "Evidence suggests", rather than "There
is evidence", and this may well be true, but it is irrelevant to my
point.)
The breakdown of the 39 responses (there was not a large response in proportion
to the class as a whole) was:
a) |
7* |
18% |
b) |
22 |
56% |
c) |
3** |
8% |
d) |
7 |
18% |
My point is that merely to say that there is evidence
suggesting something, without stating the evidence and also stating the
counter-evidence, should not have any effect whatsoever on one's belief
about that issue -- especially in the case of Law students. It was
pleasing that 56% of respondents saw it that way.
However, the fact that almost 20% of the respondent Law students said
that that statement strengthened their belief ties in with such facts as
the following:
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I almost never heard the word "intelligence" mentioned at
Law School;
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There were no classes in reasoning or Philosophy;
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The Jurisprudence lecturer, Grant Morris, didn't realise that you had
to have evidence for the statement that Domestic Violence was a purely
women's issue;
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None of the brightest students in my last year at High School were going
to study Law.
* Needless to say, I am not
claiming statistical validity for these results, in the sense of trying to
extrapolate them to the class as a whole, or to the law student population
as a whole, or to lawyers in general. However, the results suggest that there
is an issue worthy of further research here. The legal profession is an immensely
powerful one, as fathers have found to their cost. If -- for genetic or educational
reasons -- lawyers really do have limited reasoning abilities, this is a serious
social issue.
**Strictly speaking,
it is just as illogical to say that the statement in question proves that
women are NOT more disadvantaged as it is to say that it proves the opposite.
However, while there seems to be a plausible explanation (i.e. irrational
belief) for thinking that it proves they are more disadvantaged, there is
no obvious explanation for why anyone would be so perverse as to say it actually
proves the opposite.
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