By David C.
Geary
Thursday,
September 01, 2022
Much remains to be learned about the
nature and origins of various sex differences, but more is known than most
people realize. Much of the current confusion is generated by activists who
suppress, attack, and distort information on sex differences in order to
reinforce their preferred ideological narratives. These ideology-driven
distortions are helpfully illustrated by a recent New York Times essay by Chelsea Conaboy, which announces that the maternal instinct is
a “myth”—a social construct generated and upheld by the patriarchy to impel
women to raise children and keep them out of the workforce.
Maternal instinct and the patriarchy
Conaboy’s goal, apparently, is to undo 200
million years of mammalian evolution, which produced maternal investment in offspring. She correctly points out that, in the past, Western societies discouraged and often excluded women from entering
higher education and professional jobs. But while this continues to occur in
many parts of the world, in highly developed Western societies women now
outnumber men in higher education. Jerry Coyne has provided a valuable rejoinder on this point and several others in Conaboy’s essay, to which I
will add a few more here.
The first relates to the construction of
the parental brain, about which Conaboy writes:
New
research on the parental brain makes clear that the idea of maternal instinct
as something innate, automatic and distinctly female is a myth, one that has
stuck despite the best efforts of feminists to debunk it from the moment it
entered public discourse.
According to this view, the parental brain
is essentially a blank slate filled with experiences chiefly dictated by social
expectations for women and men. In other words, women’s and men’s parental
brains and associated behaviors would be the same with the right social mores
and behavioral expectations. But this claim fails to consider that males do
very little parenting in the vast majority of mammals, especially those (including
humans) in which males compete intensely for status.
As it happens, humans are among the exceptions to this pattern. Men invest considerably more in their children
than do the males of our closest relatives—chimpanzees and bonobos—who are
uniformly deadbeats. Nevertheless, the sex difference in the direct care of
human children is found throughout the world, especially in infancy. Fathers
among the Aka—a nomadic people indigenous to the Democratic Republic of the
Congo—provide more direct care to their infants and children than fathers in
any other society hitherto studied. Yet Barry Hewlett’s observations indicate that when in camp, “the father would on average hold his infant
for a total of 57 minutes while the mother would hold the infant [for] 490
minutes.”
The sex difference here and elsewhere is
related in part to maternal suckling of infants that can last for several
years. But it persists past infancy, and follows more general patterns. Female primates not only gestate and suckle young but are consistently more
sensitive to and behaviorally attentive to offspring than are males. This is
not to say that these differences are all hormonally or genetically
determined—experiences do matter, as Conaboy argues. But nature has not left
engagement in the associated behaviors to chance. Nor has it made maternal and
paternal brains equally responsive to the associated experiences. In a review
of brain imaging studies conducted while parents look at images or film clips
of their children, Feldman noted that there is:
greater
amygdala activation [associated with emotions] in mothers and greater cortical
activation in fathers, suggesting that the hormones of pregnancy may chart a
unique limbic path to parenting in mothers, which in fathers is constructed via
cortical networks and active caregiving behavior.
The tendency to see results like these as
categorical reflections of women’s and men’s responses to their children only
adds to the confusion. These are general trends that are not applicable to each
and every mother or father. Within-sex variation in parental behavior is found
in both sexes, and in this case, more in men than in women. The variation in maternal and paternal attentiveness and responsiveness to
children is partly heritable, but it is also related to the characteristics of
parents’ individual children, to their past experiences, and to wider social
mores (for instance, marriage rules). This is why, as Conaboy points out, some
women describe parenthood as a fabulous and happy experience, while others find
it physically and emotionally draining. There is nothing exceptional or
unexpected about this variation. Biology will produce female-typical and
male-typical biases and behaviors, including in parenting, as well as
within-sex variation and cross-sex overlap.
But the argument that social forces in
highly developed Western nations are directing women to maternal activities and
restricting their opportunities in the workforce does not survive scrutiny. Sex
differences associated with being career-focused versus family-focused are
well-documented and show that women are more variable than men when it comes to
these trade-offs. A nationally representative survey of adults in the United Kingdom found that 14 percent of women were work-focused
(most men are work-focused), 16 percent were home-focused, and the remainder
had a mixed home- and work-preference.
Importantly, most women were able to
achieve these preferences. Four out of five (or 82 percent of) well-educated
and work-focused women had full-time careers, whether or not they had children:
“[P]atriarchal values have very little impact, and child care responsibilities
have no impact at all on work rates among work-centered women.” If anything,
the home-focused women were less able to realize their preferences, as many of
them had to work to contribute to family finances. This type of variation among
women (and men) follows from sexual reproduction and is a natural part of life.
There are two sexes
Sexual reproduction is a milestone in the
evolution of planetary life and it is found in one form or another in nearly
all eukaryotes (organisms whose cells contain a nucleus). The most fundamental
mechanisms that support sexual reproduction are evolutionarily conserved (found
across species) and emerged at least 1.5 billion years ago. Early eukaryotes were unicellular organisms, typically with two mating
types that produced gametes of about the same size. Competition to merge with
the gametes of the other mating type set the stage for the evolution of smaller
(sperm) and larger (egg) gametes. These emerged under what biologists call disruptive selection, which favors large or small gametes rather
than those in between.
With sperm, you’re buying thousands of
lottery tickets—most will be losers but there’s a good chance of hitting a few
jackpots. The sperm are built for movement and speed and so don’t carry large
caloric or nutritional reserves. If two of them combine there are insufficient
reserves to support post-fertilization growth. The larger eggs generally stay
put and have the cache of reserves needed to support this growth. Their size
means they are more costly to make than sperm and so there are fewer of them.
Moderate-sized gametes, meanwhile, are outgunned on both sides. They have some
reserves but are not as mobile as sperm and there aren’t as many of them. Even
if they were fertilized, they cannot support the same level of
post-fertilization growth as larger eggs. No doubt they were around following
the evolution of sexual reproduction but they were evolutionary dead ends. The
result was the evolutionary emergence of individuals who either produced small
gametes (sperm, males) or large ones (eggs, females).
In other words, sexual reproduction has
independently evolved in different groups of plants and animals and has always
arrived at the same solution—two sexes distinguished by the size of the respective
gametes they produce. In some species, sex can change depending on ecological or social conditions, changes that
typically improve their reproductive success. Some reef fish, for example,
might transition from female to male as they grow larger, if large males can
monopolize breeding territories and thus reproduce with lots of females. But
this type of sex change does not occur in mammals (or birds). Sex is therefore
a categorical binary.
The existence of two sexes does not mean
that males always behave in evolved male-typical ways and females in
female-typical ways. The picture is complicated by human self-awareness and by
psychological and social issues that can arise from engaging in sex-atypical
behaviors. Engagement in these activities (such as doll play for boys) can
undermine acceptance by peers and result in a higher risk of psychological
issues like depression, especially for boys. Engagement in behaviors that are more typical of the other sex might
result in preferring the other sex as playmates or friends, at least at times,
but this is not the same as wanting to physically become the
other sex.
Most people (more than 99 percent, in fact), including those with interests more common to the opposite
sex, psychologically identify as the sex of their birth. A tiny minority of
people with gender dysphoria desire to be seen as the opposite sex and will
medically transition, but this is not as common as implied by activists (or the attention currently devoted to the
issue), nor would we expect it to be common from a biological perspective.
The origins of sex differences
There are, of course, many similarities in
the behaviors and other traits of males and females in most species, but there
are also well-understood differences that are common across species. Differences are typically associated with different approaches to
reproduction, as detailed by Charles Darwin more than 150 years ago. These approaches generally turn on
relative contributions to parenting, with the higher investing sex being
choosier when it comes to mates and the other sex competing for access to
mates. This typically manifests as male-male competition and female choice,
although there are species in which females are more competitive and males
invest more in parenting. Female parenting and higher investment in offspring
are built into the biology of reproduction for mammals, with internal gestation and postpartum suckling.
Males provide considerable care in some mammals, but it’s not the norm.
Instead, males generally attack one another or compete in other ways to gain
social status with which to attract females.
For primates, a sex difference in physical size is a good indicator of the extent to which males focus on
competing for mates rather than investing in offspring. If males are on average
larger than females, this is generally associated with a polygynous mating
system, whereby dominant males have offspring with many females and many
low-status males never reproduce at all. Sometimes, these males provide
protection to offspring (for example, gorillas) but females provide most of the
direct parental care. When males provide social protection or other resources,
females compete to develop relationships with them, as is found in several
species of Savanah baboon. In these cases, we see female-female competition and male choice,
along with male-male competition and female choice.
Human sex differences in physical size and
many associated traits related to intense physical competition fit nicely
with this general pattern. In fact, larger males than females date back at least four million
years in our ancestry. Some have argued that these patterns are the result of a sexual
division of labor and monogamy, whereby males provisioned females and
offspring. But this is unlikely, given the general pattern in primates and that
intense male-male competition and polygyny are the norm in traditional
societies. In any event, the fact that human sex differences are real and have
a strong biological basis does not imply genetic determinism. Sex differences
are not socially constructed from whole cloth, but their expression can be
exaggerated, suppressed, or deflected to be expressed in different ways by
local conditions and social rules such as marriage laws or customs.
Still, sex differences in physical traits
are well-documented and cannot simply be argued away. Hyde acknowledges some large differences, such as throwing distance, but argues that
these are exceptions and that most differences are small. Archer later pointed out that
there are quite a few individual traits with large sex differences, including
very large differences in homicide rates, which can be 30 to 40 times more
common among males (typically killing male rivals) than females, as well as
large differences in fearfulness in real-world contexts (85–90 percent of girls
and women are more fearful than the average boy or man) or pain tolerance
(almost 90 percent of boys and men have a higher pain threshold than the
average girl or woman). As Del Giudice and colleagues have argued, the real differences are found in the pattern of
related traits.
It’s not that male-male fighting produced
the evolution of taller men; it selected for a suite of correlated and
co-evolving traits, including height, cardiovascular capacity, skeletal
structure, bone density, lean muscle mass, as well as some less obvious traits.
As with other primates with a history of physical competition, these include sex
differences in brain areas involved in sensorimotor integration and aggression that support
deft behavioral and emotional reactions to physical attacks. In traditional
contexts and historically, male-male competition included the use of blunt
force and projectile weapons. The latter favors strong throwing accuracy and
velocity, as well as enhancement of the brain and cognitive systems that
support the tracking of objects moving through space and integration of these
systems with those that support throwing accuracy and the ability to dodge
projectiles. Boys and men have advantages in all these individual areas. The sex difference for each individual trait ranges from small to
quite large. The critical point is that their combination is integrated into a
uniquely male suite of correlated traits.
The same is true for girls and women, who
typically don’t physically fight but do engage in relational aggression that
includes manipulating social information in ways that undermine the reputation
of competitors and disrupt their social-support networks and access to would-be
mates. Among other things, competence at relational aggression and skill at
detecting and avoiding it is supported by a host of social-cognitive
competencies (sometimes called emotional intelligence). These skills are also
used to build cooperative friendships and include (among others) aspects
of language, reading facial expressions, body posture, and gestures, and drawing
inferences about the thoughts and feelings of others (called theory of mind).
Girls’ and women’s advantages in these
individual areas are generally small to moderate, but in the real world, they
work in combination. Here the differences are large; almost nine out of 10
women outperform the average man on tasks that involve their integration. In
traditional contexts, female-female relational aggression is common, especially among women in polygynous marriages, and
women who are skilled at navigating these relationships generally have more and healthier children.
Sex differences in the brain
The extent of sex differences in the
brain, cognition (for example, spatial abilities), and behavior (for example,
personality) continue to be vigorously debated. But minimalists tend to focus
on individual behavioral and psychological traits when making their case. Hyde,
for instance, argues that most of these differences (such as self-esteem) are small or close
to zero. But while single psychological traits are interesting and useful to
study, they do not stand alone in the real world. Like physical traits, they
are components of more complicated and integrated systems, and sex differences
in these suites of traits are much larger than those found for the individual
components.
Brains are a mosaic of integrated regions that in most areas are more similar than different across boys and
girls and men and women. At the same time, we would expect sex differences in
the brain to be distributed across regions that are integrated into functional
systems (areas that work in concert), such as those that support physical
fighting or simultaneously processing and responding to different forms of social
information (language, gesture, and so on). The result would be small to
moderate differences in some areas, but potentially large differences in
whole-brain patterns.
These patterns are the key to fully
understanding sex differences. For individual personality traits, such as
emotional stability (about seven out of 10 men are more stable than the average
woman) or social agreeableness (about three out of five women are more
agreeable than the average man), there are small to moderate differences. These
are interesting and important, but if we look at the entire structure of
personality, including things like risk-taking, openness to new ideas and
experiences, conscientiousness, and so forth, the differences are now two to five times larger than they are for these individual traits.
One study examined the patterns of grey and white matter in the brains of nearly 10,000 boys and girls and asked whether the sex of the child could be determined by these patterns. They can. The sex of 93 percent of the children was correctly identified. Histograms of the numbers of boys and girls with male-typical and female-typical brain patterns are shown in the figure below.
Histograms of brain-based sex score for boys (left) and girls (right). Adapted from K. Kim et al. (p. 3864). Creative Commons |
As can be seen, most boys (left side of figure) and girls (right side) have grey and white matter patterns that are sex-typical (highly like other members of the same sex) and substantively different than those of the opposite sex. There are boys and girls with brain patterns that are in between male- and female-typical patterns and some with patterns found in the opposite sex, in keeping with natural within-sex variation.
We don’t know if brain patterns that are
more like those of the opposite sex are associated with behaviors and interests
that are more common in the opposite sex, but it seems likely that they are.
Girls with prenatal exposure to male hormones engage in more male-typical
behavior than other girls and are less interested in infants and more likely to be work-focused. Men with a cellular
insensitivity to testosterone have female-typical brain activity patterns
during spatial tasks, suggesting a more feminine brain.
This is not an anomalous finding. Brain
patterns can be used to correctly identify whether the owner is a man or a
woman with 93 to 96 percent accuracy. By analogy, the human face is also a suite of
traits with overlap across females and males in the size of core features (for
example, the area of the eyes) but the sex of the individual is easily
determined by most people. At the same time, studies like these ignore areas
where boys and girls and men and women are similar and use crude computer
algorithms to identify areas that best discriminate one sex from the other,
without considering whether these differences are components of integrated
systems.
One way to assess the latter is to examine
patterns of spontaneous activity that often reflect the synchronized activation
of integrated and distributed brain networks that support functional systems,
such as language comprehension and production. These types of studies can now
be conducted prenatally and reveal distinct brain networks in four- to
six-month-old fetuses. Synchronized activity across different brain areas helps to build and
strengthen these systems, and there are sex differences even at this age. At
least some later sex differences in brain organization appear to have their
roots in prenatal development. A recent study found that the sex of 83 percent of eight- to 23-year-olds could
be correctly identified based on differences in the spontaneous activity
patterns of different brain networks that in turn were associated with sex differences
in patterns of gene expression. Some of these functional brain-network
differences have been linked to sex differences in social information
processing, although much remains to be learned.
Sex differences in anatomical and
functional brain networks have not yet been fully integrated with what we know
about sex differences in behavior and cognition, nor fully integrated within an
evolutionary perspective. But there has been considerable progress. Despite
these current gaps in our knowledge, the findings noted here and in many other
neuroscience studies are not consistent with 52 genders, nor are they consistent with the social construction of gender or
gender/sex differences. To be sure, there are social and cultural influences on
the expression of these differences, as noted, but the argument that they are
purely (or mostly) the product of social forces is simply untrue, and that
includes Chelsea Conaboy’s claims about parenting.
The bottom line
The claims made in a virtual world of
internet algorithms populated by ideological social media pundits, journalists,
and gender studies professors contradicts common sense and rational analysis
of real-world phenomena. This is a world of words and ideas fraught with wishes and desires
that are not always tethered to reality, including many far-fetched beliefs
about the number of sexes and the origins and malleability of any associated
sex or gender differences. Much remains to be learned about these differences
which leaves plenty of room for legitimate debate. But there is no scientific
room for the nonsensical idea that boys and girls and men and women are
infinitely malleable and merely socially constructed products of the patriarchy
or some other social system.
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