Nice links. They will save me from having to explain the differences myself.
You're welcome. I was going to explain it from a psychological/biological perspective but decided I'm lazy and figured I could find someone who already explained it that I could just link to
You're welcome. I was going to explain it from a psychological/biological perspective but decided I'm lazy and figured I could find someone who already explained it that I could just link to
Those were some of the exact points I was going to bring up, but I was too lazy to find sites about them. I remember reading somewhere that men tend to be promoted in the work place more than women because they tend to be more comfortable asking for a raise than women. This is one reason why I pointed out the single sentence I disagreed with.
If you mean that over time the different characteristics between men and women will switch and change, I disagree.
I meant another thing. I presented the main ways men and women get power. I meant if the main way is blocked, the man or woman will go another way or prolong the main way just to get to power.
The differencies between a male and a female brain are anyway just an average, you can find the whole range of phenotypic variation from one extreme to the other, in both sexes.
Women's brains are more focused on communication, while Men's brains have less brain cells that are in charge of communication, they have more cells that govern sex and aggression. Men also have a superior focus ability, (meaning they can do a single thing well, and can't jump between tasks like women do) that is in charge of fight-or-flight.
Wow. Your as sexist as your holy book. Women can lack emotion almost to the extent of me and men can have emotions far past that of most women. What makes you think this?
It's adorable that you have to attack my non-existent religion.
http://tinyurl.com/28cj4hs
http://tinyurl.com/24rackf
If you've ever even talked to a woman, you'd know that they're nearly always significantly more emotional than men.
http://tinyurl.com/32b6uw6
"As reported in the June issue of Epidemiology, American women were involved in 5.7 crashes per million miles driven. Men, on the other hand, clocked up just 5.1 crashes per million miles. Given the fact that men drive an estimated 74 per cent more miles per year than women, the figure is surprising indeed."