“No,” and so much “Yes”: An appreciation of Dr. Melissa Hines’ “However,” and a pondering of the possibility in infinite “however’s”
Yes! Someone finally, explicitly answered a question to which we were all awaiting the cut and dry answer. “No.” (Many cheers and clinking of glasses.)
Melissa Hines actually answers the title question of her article “Do sex differences in cognition cause the shortage of women in science?” by stating, “Innate sex differences in cognitive abilities do not cause the shortage of women in science” (101). She sticks it to the old, unhip science by challenging preconceived notions such as a specific characteristic shows an innate, immutable sex difference, bigger brains equal bigger knowledge, men are limited to excelling on spatial and math abilities and women are limited to excelling on verbal abilities, kids get spatial ability from parents, prenatal exposure to androgen increases intelligence, and hormones are the culprit. Yes! Greatly appreciated, Dr. Hines!
Alright, there you have it, folks. We can all go home and wipe the sweat of anticipation from our brows. UM, NO. WE CANNOT DO THAT. Never become complacent in the realm of science. Never yawn in the face of progress.
While I appreciate Dr. Hines tackling and calling out dated results of ill-conceived studies, I believe she even falls short of providing more supporting data with specifically two of her arguments: (1) the correlation between brain size and intelligence (for I think that to be a relevant and unnecessarily convoluted topic) and (2) sex differences in cognition are smaller than sex differences in behavior— for I see they lack a broader “however”. On the other hand, there is only but so much one can fit in a written article that attempts to answer unanswered questions: Why aren’t there more women in science? Do sex differences in cognition cause the shortage? As I browse resources trying to find the catch-up to her short-falls, the end-all-and-be-all, I am greeted by endless results on the brain—how this part may affect this part which would affect male in this way and females in another. How do we know when to end?
As far as this article goes, I must say, in my opinion, this was by far the most interesting, engaging, and well-supported one that I have read thus far. Her three main “however” arguments (1) how typical cognitive sex differences that come to our minds (verbal and spatial abilities) are oversimplifications; (2) influence of early versus adult hormonal exposure on brain development; and (3) the debunking of the suggestion prenatal exposure to androgen increases intelligence were all very well supported and truly altered my perception on the question of why there aren’t more women in science. It has me questioning what I have read in the past… and if I read in the past is the “real cheese” and rather if Dr. Hines’ article is the stinky soy cheese! Science is a sticky spectacular thing in itself; and once you add the science of social science (gender issues within STEM fields) to the mix, it becomes almost like wet cement.