Why Can’t a Woman be More Like a Man?

Via Quillette

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A fascinating paper about sex differences in the human brain was published last week in the scientific journal Cerebral Cortex. It’s the largest single-sample study of structural and functional sex differences in the human brain ever undertaken, involving over 5,000 participants (2,466 male and 2,750 female). The study has been attracting attention for more than a year (see this preview in Science, for instance), but only now has it been published in a peer-reviewed journal.

For those who believe that gender is a social construct, and there are no differences between men and women’s brains, this paper is something of a reality check. The team of researchers from Edinburgh University, led by Stuart Ritchie, author of Intelligence: All That Matters, found that men’s brains are generally larger in volume and surface area, while women’s brains, on average, have thicker cortices. ‘The differences were substantial: in some cases, such as total brain volume, more than a standard deviation,’ they write. This is not a new finding – it has been known for some time that the total volume of men’s brains is, in general, larger than that of women’s, even when adjusted for men’s larger average body size – but all the studies before now have involved much smaller sample sizes.

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Does this paper have any implications when it comes to men and women’s intellectual abilities? The answer is yes, but they’re not clear cut.

On the one hand, feminists won’t like this confirmation that men, on average, have bigger brains than women because there’s a well-established connection between total brain volume and IQ. That was the conclusion of the authors of a 2015 meta-analysis that looked at 88 studies involving 148 mixed sex samples comparing magnetic resonance images of people’s brains with their cognitive test scores. They found that the association between brain volume and cognitive ability was positive in children and adults, applied across a range of different IQ domains (full-scale, performance and verbal IQ) and was true of both men and women. According to another study led by Richard Haier, author of The Neuroscience of Intelligence, total brain volume accounts for about 16 per cent of the variance in IQ.

Remember, we’re just talking about mean differences between men and women’s brains – as Ritchie and his team point out, there is a substantial degree of overlap between the sexes on all their measures. Nonetheless, if there is a positive correlation between total brain volume and intelligence, and men generally have larger brains than women, doesn’t that mean that men are, in aggregate, more intelligent than women?

Not so fast. Don’t forget that Ritchie’s team also found that women’s brains, on average, have thicker cortices than men’s and there’s some evidence linking intelligence with the thickness of the cerebral cortex. For instance, this 2009 study of 216 children found a positive association between cortical thickness and general cognitive ability, as did this 2013 study. However, this finding is less robust than the link between total brain volume and IQ, with some studies failing to replicate it and others both replicating it and seeming to contradict it at the same time. For instance, this 2015 paper involving 514 subjects found that the association between cognitive ability and cortical thickness was negative for 10-year-olds – that is, the smarter they were, the thinner their cortices – but positive for 42-year-olds.

It is worth noting that Ritchie et al – who studied more than 5,000 subjects, don’t forget – confirmed the positive association between total brain volume and intelligence. The men in their sample scored, on average, fractionally higher than the women on a test of verbal-numerical reasoning and recorded slightly faster processing speeds on another test. After extensive statistical analysis, they concluded that the modest sex differences in verbal-numerical reasoning were almost entirely due to differences in brain volumetric and surface area measures and the differences in reaction time were partly due to the same.

Ritchie’s team caution against reading too much into this finding and note that the cognitive tests given to their subjects were fairly rudimentary and their sample may not be representative of the population at large. They also point out that previous, representative studies have found no mean difference between men and women in general cognitive test performance. Back in 2017, before his paper had been peer-reviewed, Ritchie was keener to talk about another of his team’s findings, namely, that the male brains they studied were, on most measures, more variable than the female ones. He was excited about the fact that this discovery complemented a 2008 study of male-female IQ differences, also carried out by a team from Edinburgh, which found only negligible differences in the mean scores of men and women on intelligence tests, but that men outnumbered women at either end of the cognitive bell curve. So greater variability among men when it comes to cognitive ability. That was also the conclusion of a 2007 paper which found that among those scoring in the top two per cent of the Armed Forces Qualification Test, men outnumbered women by a ratio of 2:1.

Ritchie and his co-authors note that this finding has been replicated many times – ‘almost universally’ is the phrase they use – but that doesn’t mean it’s universally accepted. Far from it. When Lawrence Summers, then the President of Harvard, suggested that the higher preponderance of men on the right-hand tail of the IQ distribution curve might help to explain why there are more male than female professors in the maths and sciences at top universities, he was rounded on by almost the entire liberal establishment. Distinguished Harvard alumni withheld donations, the university’s Graduate School of Arts and Sciences passed a motion of no confidence in him and he was forced to apologise – over and over again – like a supplicant at a Chinese show trial. In the end, he had no choice but to tender his resignation. This controversy is thought to be the reason he didn’t get the job of Treasury Secretary in the first Obama administration.

Summers made things worse for himself by using the word ‘intrinsic’ to describe this difference between men and women, suggesting it is genetically hard-wired. ‘Research in behavioural genetics is showing that things people previously attributed to socialisation weren’t due to socialisation after all,’ he told The Boston Globe. He wasn’t claiming that all men are cleverer than women, or that the average man is brighter than the average woman, or that the most able women aren’t as intelligent as the most gifted men – although many of his critics understood him to be saying those things, or at least pretended to so they could justify how outraged they were. All he was saying is that the greater variability of men’s IQ – at both tails of the distribution curve – might be rooted in genetic differences between the sexes.

You can see why such a claim would be controversial. According to most progressives, the fact that only 48 of the almost 900 people awarded Nobel Prizes since 1901 were women – and the Fields Medal has only been won by a woman once – is entirely due to social/cultural factors. If you allow that genetic differences may be a factor, then parity between men and women when it comes to intellectual eminence won’t easily be achieved. Just levelling the playing field – eliminating gender stereotypes, sexual discrimination, implicit bias, and so on – won’t be enough.

Is Summers’ right to claim that this variability difference is hard-wired? We can’t say for sure, but there are some reasons for thinking so. We know from family studies, twin studies and adoption studies that IQ is about 50 per cent heritable in adolescence, rising to 80 per cent in adulthood. It would be odd if genetic differences accounted for such a large percentage of the variance in IQ, but had no effect on its variability. We also know for certain that some cognitive differences between men and women, such as the fact that rates of Alzheimer’s disease are higher in women than men, are at least partly due to genetic differences. And other psychological differences, such as the higher rates of autism spectrum disorders, schizophrenia and dyslexia among men, are part-biological too. If these phenotypic differences between the sexes are genetically influenced, why not others?

Another consideration is that explanations of the gender gap in IQ variability that rely entirely on cultural/social factors aren’t very convincing. In Inferior: How Science Got Women Wrong – and the New Research That’s Rewriting the Story, Angela Saini argues that the reason men outnumber women by 2:1 among the top two per cent when it comes to cognitive ability is because intellectually gifted boys receive more praise and encouragement than their female equivalents. She quotes Melissa Hines, a Cambridge psychologist, who believes this is why there are more highly able boys than girls. ‘I think in some social environments they don’t get encouraged at all, but I think in affluent, educated social environments, there is still a tendency to expect more from boys, to invest more in boys,’ says Hines.

If that was true, you would expect to see a greater discrepancy between the sexes in the variability of IQ among subjects from rich backgrounds than from poor backgrounds. To date, that has never been detected (although to be fair I don’t think anyone has looked for it). Even if we park that, the evidence that expecting more from children and giving them more encouragement boosts their IQ scores is pretty threadbare. (One oft-cited study that purports to show that IQ can be raised by those kinds of inputs is the Abecedarian Early Intervention Project. But the number of children in that study was only 111, with just 57 in the treatment group.) Then there’s the issue of how this same mechanism could account for the higher preponderance of men in the left-hand tail of the bell curve. Do boys who struggle with basic arithmetic receive less encouragement than girls? How does Hines square that with her claim that we invest more in boys?

Saini points out that male science professors outnumber female science professors by a higher ratio than 2:1, suggesting that there are other factors at play – the same factors that account for why only nine per cent of the UK’s engineering workforce is female and why she was the only girl in her A level Chemistry class and the only engineering student in her university class.

Well, yes, there are other forces at work and some of them may be the ones Saini identifies – such as the view among employers and schoolteachers (although not many these days) that women are, on average, less able than men when it comes to science and maths, which isn’t true. But some of those other factors may also be linked to differences between men and women that don’t, on the face of it, appear to be cultural/social either.

For instance, on average women are more interested in people and men more interested in things – a gender difference that remains constant across cultures and across time, suggesting it’s at least partly biological. (See this 2010 paper by Richard Lippa.) In his now famous debate with Cathy Newman on Channel 4 News, Jordan Peterson suggested it was this that explained why men outnumber women in professions dealing with things, such as computer science, and women outnumber men in fields dealing with people, such as nursing. Additional evidence for the same point has come from several international studies showing that the more gender equality there is in a society, the lower the percentage of women going into engineering and tech, implying it’s the result of women exercising their free will rather than misogyny, patriarchy or even low-level sexism. (See this recent article in The Atlantic headlined ‘The More Gender Equality, the Fewer Women in STEM’.) Women are eschewing those fields in favour of professions like health-care (82 per cent of obstetrics and gynaecology medical residents in the US in 2016 were female) because of population-level gender differences, not because they’re victims of oppression.

One final point: women who score in the top two per cent or higher for general cognitive ability are more likely than men to have strong verbal scores, meaning they have more career options than their male counterparts. Could that be why the ratio of male to female professors in science and maths is higher than 2:1? Perhaps women capable of landing chairs in STEM subjects at top universities – like Lady Gaga, who has a genius level IQ – are more interested in other ways of using their talent. Ironically, writers like Saini who are so eager to ascribe the low numbers of female professors in science and maths to sexism are guilty of something like sexism themselves – namely, under-estimating the agency of the women who could go into these fields but choose not to.

If you’re a conservative male, making these points can result in you being depicted as a ‘custodian of the patriarchy’, as Peterson was in an absurdly one-sided New York Times profile last week. To be clear, I think the likelihood that there are genetically-based differences in men and women’s personalities – at an aggregate, population level, not to be confused with essentialist claims about every man and every woman – and that these are linked to average differences in men and women’s brains is pretty high; but that doesn’t mean I’m opposed to equal rights. Saying that women have certain population-level characteristics is not the same as saying all women have those characteristics, so it would be irrational for an employer to discriminate against a woman, or a teacher against a female student, by citing these average differences. In any case, women are morally entitled to equal rights, regardless of their characteristics. So please don’t confuse this article with a defence of sexual discrimination. That remains wrong whether or not psychological gender differences are, in part, biological. And it follows that defenders of equal rights don’t need to continually deny the scientific evidence backing up that hypothesis. As countless others have pointed out, to maintain that equal rights are contingent upon behavioural differences being reducible to social/cultural factors is to commit the naturalistic fallacy.

The difficulty this evidence presents is not for believers in equality of opportunity, but equality of outcome. The differences between men and women are such that gender parity in STEM fields, particularly at the top of those professions, is unlikely to be achieved without some highly intrusive state interventions. And I don’t mean equal pay or paternity leave legislation which, as we’ve seen in Scandinavia, has resulted in fewer women going into engineering and tech, not more. What this data tells us is that hard gender equality of the kind favoured by intersectional feminists can only be achieved at a huge cost to human freedom, particularly the freedom of women.

Back in 2017, Stuart Ritchie cautioned against ascribing any of the differences between male and female brains to genetic differences. ‘Our manuscript is just about describing the differences, and we can’t say anything about the causes of those differences,’ he told New York magazine. But he added that it won’t be long before we’re in a position to start talking about the genetic and environmental causes of those differences – he is hoping to get his hands on imaging data for 100,000 brains soon. I have little doubt that future studies of this type involving huge sample sizes will reveal the biological underpinnings of human nature, like the genetic research looking at the DNA of hundreds of thousands of people which I’ve also written about. Whether it’s the new genetics or cutting-edge neuroscience, the egalitarian left is on a collision course with science. 

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31 Comments
Anonymous
Anonymous
May 26, 2018 4:27 pm

I wouldn’t mind seeing a study of brain volume and ethnicity, including both male and female volumes of each, just to see if there are any difference between the races and how they compare if there are.

subwo
subwo
  Anonymous
May 26, 2018 10:42 pm

eugenicsarchive.ca
Per above link Cannucks started movement 1839, Brits and America took it up, Hitler adopted it. Studies done. Black men have smaller brains but are better endowed, per Mandingo.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  subwo
May 27, 2018 9:47 am

I wonder if the male or the female Blacks have the larger brain capacity of the two.

Sparky
Sparky
May 26, 2018 5:34 pm

“on average women are more interested in people and men more interested in things”

Generally speaking of course, with lots of exceptions to that general rule of thumb.

Musings, rants, and random thoughts about this, just for the fun of it.

How 2 females can talk on the phone or in person or in groups for hours, about trivial shit that men don’t care too much about is just 1 example. Gossip. Estrogen fueled clucking.

Males wanting to work with things instead is an escape from the hen house noise, and things are interesting and fun without any 2nd guessing from or by inanimate objects. Peaceful.
Until it’s time to eat or get laid. Then the rooster will start strutting and crowing too.

Wimenz are just wired different. Speaking from a wire guy / electrician / electronics vein,

Brain connections of theirs have heavy gauge wire for emotions and nurturing a group’s welfare, particularly the young uns. Even in nature, pity the fool who crosses a sow w/ cubs, a doe w/ fawns, etc.
The connections for logic and reason can be thinner than a light bulb filament…burning bright at times, but if the load is too heavy, the circuit opens, the room goes dark, and their auto transfer switch kicks over to start the loud generator that provides the emotional juice.

Most men are hardwired with heavy gauge leads in evaluation, logic and reason, where high current loads work reliably, rarely failing. Thinner gauge wires for the emotion and sensitive instrument connections. Those contacts in the male brain get corroded and impede conductivity, and when that circuit is tried, it’s soon realized as non-functional, and the manual transfer switch is thrown back to logic, reason, and more powerful circuitry, which sometimes trips out on over-current, and anger could result. Fuses blow. Sometimes loud bangs are heard, arc flashes, etc. Men are more interested when that occurs.

Sometimes circuits burn out, the breaker can’t be reset, or meltdowns occur, though.

Caution when handling heavy duty wiring that’s live. If not handled wisely, it’ll bite ya.

EL Coyote
EL Coyote
  Sparky
May 27, 2018 3:42 am

Sparky, you reminded me of old Pangloss’ joke:
guy 1 – touch that wire, feel anything?
guy 2 – no
guy 1 – ok, then, don’t touch the other one, it’s got 10,000 volts on it.

https://embryo.asu.edu/pages/david-reimer-and-john-money-gender-reassignment-controversy-johnjoan-case

A different L
A different L
  EL Coyote
May 27, 2018 8:11 am

Hombre, that link / story was disturbing, although interesting. A botched job for the attempted cure of a physical condition, using cauterization, instead of a scalpel? Horrific.
Then the follow up, years long experimentation study with Reimer, his brother and parents as guinea pigs. I found it infuriating. I kept thinking, while reading it, that the cliche “mad scientist” fits. Ironic, his name was Money.

Your takeaway on things posted here, and subsequent comments routinely lead to interesting points.
e.g., Pangloss…a subject I need to look into, when time allows.

I think you’re keenly aware of way more than most give you credit for.
You’ve influenced me in more ways than one, but suspect you know that already.
I routinely upvote you, but I notice how often you get the thumbs down.

Some good writer on the platform should reflect and write about the significance of the anonymous aspect of thumb votes, and what they mean to different monkeys.
A couple of our mutual pals around here took umbrage at downvotes earlier in this weekend’s threads, and questioned the intelligence of the voters. Interesting.
It would be a worthy topic, and the comments that would follow would be entertaining.
Some would have no shits to give about thumbs, but they’d be untrue to themselves by saying such, IMO.

Buen fin de semana, Amigo.
I’ll leave you with this: “…to each his own, philosophy”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J1wc4Yc1NlY

EL Coyote
EL Coyote
  A different L
May 28, 2018 12:27 am

Different L, even a so-called fellow Hispanic (Let’s Play, Infidel) wanted me to be a conformist. I do not like that because I already do not fit in in this land of misfits.

The only way to do it is to add a private observation or go off on a tangent. btw, I haven’t heard from –but he used to do some awesome riffs pinging off every random thought.

You can’t follow that kind of conversation, though. I think Maggie, jFish and I went a bit too long doing that kind of wordplay. A trio of bullshitters who didn’t know how to yield the last word.

There was a system before that caused comments to be hidden if they got enough downvotes. Then we got thumbsies. At first, they are offensive but in time, you realize that people out there merely want to show disagreement with the comment, it ain’t personal. I’m well aware that nobody can ever claim to like me or not like me on the basis of a comment but when you get in tune with a commenter like Stucky or Maggie, you can get a feeling that you know where they are coming from. And you get the feeling they understand you when other readers don’t. So that more than makes up for a few down-thumbs.

I guess people forgot about the courtesy of a reply – Old Pangloss

Pangloss is many folks, male and female, whose comments are in my RAM. In this case, Pangloss is a Phoenix lawyer (Joe Erlichman) who groused about a slow response from somebody.

Maggie Redux
Maggie Redux
  EL Coyote
May 28, 2018 1:09 am

Never yield the last word if you can sneak one in.

And, you are spot on Coyote. There is a certain sense of understanding which is kind of a ” between the lines” sort of crosstalk. I think Mary Christine noticed the crosstalk right away.

Our little trio bonded at a special time I think. I wonder how your grandbaby is doing sometimes. Since I finally managed to get over my baby leaving home for good (yes, I doted, but he’s such a GOOD young man!), I am hoping your holiday gathering was a special one.

And if we are sad for a few people who were once with us and now are not, well, I’m pretty sure Doc Pangloss has some wise counsel that might help us get through it all.

EL Coyote
EL Coyote
  Maggie Redux
May 28, 2018 1:21 am
Maggie Redux
Maggie Redux
  EL Coyote
May 28, 2018 2:26 am

Last word.

Realestatepup
Realestatepup
May 26, 2018 5:48 pm

I never felt oppressed or singled-out my entire school career. I excelled in English, reading, history, social studies, sciences like biology and physiology, music and art. I muddled through advanced maths like calculus. I could do them, but found them mind-numbingly boring and tedious.
Teachers constantly wanted to put me in advanced math classes even though I had zero interest in them. NONE. I wanted to be with the advanced English classes, writing, and the sciences. I loved the debate team, and problem solving with people. Sure, I can turn a wrench, change my oil, and read a manual and figure something out, but it’s not my forte nor would I choose to do it for a living. Just like all those other intelligent women who could do it, but would be bored to death and not really excel. Not feel fulfilled at all. And would be sub-par at the job, really, and leave the field in the end.
My success in sales is because I have excellent grammar, spelling, and PEOPLE skills. One very good friend of mine who also got his real estate license HATES the people part and chooses to work on the preservation and repair end of it. A man. Who likes things over people. Wow. What a shocker.
Men and women excel, GENERALLY, at different things.
My dad and his male friends would often joke that if child rearing were the primary responsibility of a man, the human race would die out. That’s because men, BIOLOGICALLY speaking, are not cut out to be the primary nurturer of children and a home. They usually are not great at it at all. Of course there’s plenty of great dads out there, just like there’s a ton of horrible moms.
There will be all kinds of variances across the board. I agree that equal opportunity should be given, and then back off and leave the rest up to the individual. End of story.

Capn Mike
Capn Mike
  Realestatepup
May 26, 2018 6:22 pm

As the French say: “vive la difference.”

jamesthedeplorablewanderer
jamesthedeplorablewanderer
May 26, 2018 5:59 pm

The job of any real manager in business is to teach and tune his team of employees to get the best results out of them. Whether the goal is sales, production, legal defense, accounting or whatever, you take the group you have (or can hire) and appoint to their strengths, develop against their weaknesses and push them all to do more, be more and accomplish more than they think they can.
That’s no matter who you have; until you (or someone else) has to fire them for cause, you grow your team. If you lose one, you try to learn from that and hire someone better.
Last week two of our ladies got into it – and it wasn’t even driven by sex, money or rock ‘n’ roll. One gal was older, and the motherly type – she wants to take care of everyone. The other was younger, and driven to succeed – all by herself, if possible. She saw the well-intentioned promptings of the elder as “interference”, “meddling” and “coddling” – the elder saw the refusals as “bad manners”, “mis-guided independence” and “refusal to learn”. It broke into a disruption that sent the younger home, reduced the elder to tears and had a co-worker (not nominally involved) so upset I was called in to take over a shift while everyone decompressed.
The manager spent the last week going over what happened, why it happened and how to avoid it happening again with all parties concerned. Given that HR departments today look for reasons to punish people (called “building a file” or “building a case”), the manager did well to calm tempers, explore ways to avoid further conflict and create a professional atmosphere again. He seems to have managed (early days still) to keep both of them on board, relatively content and more-or-less working with each other again. He gets high marks in my book for getting there.
Whether your people have high IQs or just get by, are male or female, young or old or whatever, getting the most out of them while training them to be better is what it’s about. THEN you get to pay taxes on it….

Steve C
Steve C
May 26, 2018 6:38 pm

“Why Can’t a Woman Be More Like a Man?” Rex Harrison

middle-aged mad gnome
middle-aged mad gnome
May 26, 2018 6:43 pm

The article takes great pains to deny the utility of applying the overall numbers to individual cases. The value of this type of information is probably found in looking at how these differences (and a society’s response to them) affect the society as a whole. Casinos understand this and have created a profitable industry. Perhaps this approach needs to be taken to understand how our society’s refusal to manage itself with these considerations in mind has created some real societal malfunctions.

steve
steve
May 26, 2018 7:38 pm

Leave it to Progressives to fuck with the truth; like summers findings.
Look to nature to find answers. Men were and still are in a few homes the hunters. They needed intelligence, cunning, planning. Women were the nurturers. They built and supported the family. That still happens to chimps/apes in the wild. Of course there are going to be evolutionary differences. What’s the big deal about that? I readily concede Asians have higher IQs. I not ruffled or outraged. It’s just the way it is. Whites score better on ingenuity. Differences.
How many women have been Grand Masters? Not many. Guys are outpaced by women in many arenas. Who can’t live with that?

Bob P
Bob P
May 26, 2018 8:39 pm

Excellent article.

Of course die-hard feminists will vehemently disagree. For them I have a proposition: each sex only gets to use what his or her sex invented. That leaves them living in a cave with . . . what? Liquid paper?

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
May 26, 2018 9:00 pm

If you need scientific proof vis a vis a study of brains to understand that there are fundamental differences between men and women, the scientific studies aren’t going to convince you either.

The Western World is suffering from a collective form of toxoplasma gondii.

Maggie
Maggie
  hardscrabble farmer
May 27, 2018 6:47 am

Toxoplasma Gondii
Toxoplasma gondii is a microscopic protozoa that causes a disease called toxoplasmosis. The disease is found all over the world. Some estimates suggest that over 30 % of human population is infected. For example, in Germany and France most people carry the parasite, whereas in South Korea it is quite rare. More than 60 million people in the United States are said to be infected. Toxoplasmosis is usually asymptomatic, because our immune system keeps the parasite from causing illness. The disease is more problematic for pregnant women and people who have weakened immune systems. Cats are the primary host and humans and other warm blooded animals are just intermediate hosts. In this sense Toxoplasma gondii is not a pure human parasite.
Toxoplasma gondii is known to change the host’s behaviour. Studies show the capability for the parasite to make rats fearless near cats. This indicates the evolutionary need for Toxoplasma gondii to get inside felines. When a rat is eaten by a cat the parasite gets inside the primary host. There have been a few studies with humans, too. Some results indicate a strong correlation between schizophrenia and toxoplasmosis. According to some studies women with toxoplasmosis are more likely to cheat their husbands. Men with the parasite have shown to be more aggressive. Infected humans also have slower reaction times.
Humans get infected by:
blood transfusion or organ transplantation (very rare)
consuming undercooked, infected meat (especially lamb, pork and venison)
ingesting water, soil (for example, putting dirty fingers in your mouth) or anything else that has been contaminated with cat feces
mother-to-child transmission. A pregnant woman, who has just been infected with Toxoplasma gondii can pass the infection to her unborn baby (congenital infection). She might not have any symptoms, but the unborn child might suffer and develop disease.
The life cycle of Toxoplasma gondii starts, when oocysts (resting form of the parasite) exit the primary host (cat) in the feces. Millions of oocysts are shed for as long as three weeks after infection. Oocysts sporulate and become infective within a few days in the environment. The oocysts are found only in the feces of domestic and wild cats. Birds, humans and other intermediate hosts get infected after ingesting water or food contaminated with the cat feces. (Healthy cats can get infected this way, too.) In the gut oocysts transform into tachyzoites which are about 4–8 µm long and 2–3 µm wide. They travel to other parts of the body via bloodstream and further develop into tissue cyst bradyzoites in muscle and neural tissue. Cysts are about 5–50 µm in diameter. They are commonly found in skeletal muscles, brain, myocardium and eyes where they can remain many decades. If a cat (or a human) eats the intermediate host, the tissue cysts get ingested and the parasite activates in the small intestine.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Maggie
May 27, 2018 2:28 pm

Maggie, Atlantic magazine had a great article on this some years ago. I shared it with a guy coworker who kept a cat. Perhaps derision of cat ladies is justified by their infection.

Maggie Redux
Maggie Redux
  Anonymous
May 28, 2018 1:23 am

I learned something new here AGAIN. This place is just full of smart people.

MrLiberty
MrLiberty
May 26, 2018 9:33 pm

XX=Female
XY=Male
Variations on these two happen every now and then. Our empathy and sympathy should be extended to these folks, their parents, and their doctors who may be forced to have to make difficult medical decisions regarding external genitalia, etc. Indeed there are even those WITH these NORMAL human genetic makeups that possess external and internal sexual organs that do not fall within the normal range of structure and appearance, and to them the greatest level of sympathy, empathy, and the rest should be extended.

If you are unable to deal with the realities of genetics, the differences between the TWO sexes, and the social imperative to treat EVERY individual as an individual (without the need to lump them into a group for political or other exploitive purposes), then YOU are the problem, not god/mother nature, and the glory that has been bestowed upon the planet.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  MrLiberty
May 27, 2018 9:53 am

I can think of only two combinations of X and Y when one of of the the combination has to be an X.

What other combinations are there?

MrLiberty
MrLiberty
  Anonymous
May 27, 2018 11:30 pm

Far too many to list and describe here. Although there are probably better sources than Wikipedia (well, there are ALWAYS better sources), look up “Sex Chromosome Disorders” and you will see just how messed up things can be. Some are not exactly super rare. In fact, XYY is significantly over-represented in the prison population.

Here’s the link: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sex_chromosome_disorders

Hollywood Rob
Hollywood Rob
May 26, 2018 10:05 pm

I have to admit to some confusion. How did they find that many women with a brain to study? Surely that must be pretty much all of them.

BB
BB
May 27, 2018 12:00 am

Meatball ,are you trying to be funny ? Did you miss me ? I’m back forever and I’m going to on your ass big boy.
In other words God of the Bible created men and women different.Wow what a shock . Says God created female from the male .So we bees very similar but different.All to the glory of God.

Rdawg
Rdawg
  BB
May 27, 2018 12:18 am

“…I’m going to on your ass big boy.”

Fag.

nkit
nkit
May 27, 2018 1:11 am
LaGeR
LaGeR
  nkit
May 27, 2018 10:59 am

Great blast from the past, nkit.

Maggie Redux
Maggie Redux
  LaGeR
May 28, 2018 1:36 am

It was… by the way, I had the Dirty Blonde and Nick had the Horny Monk. Then, we had a few Coronas and Nick became the Dirty Monk and, since I’ve been in the sun a lot my hair is blonding… LOL.

The rain lily wipes are not as effective as Avon’s Skin So Soft, but they do help keep the ticks away I think. I think you should add some clove, basil and thyme oil to stink them up and market them as tick and chigger repellant. Perhaps it is just me… we have a real tick problem this year. I never realized just how important those chickens are when you live in the Ozarks.

I was going to send you some of that cranberry-cinnamon bread I drizzled HSF Maple Syrup over but Nick liked it so much the second pan never made it to the freezer.

The song was a blast from the past. I hit “play” and within a few seconds, Nick came into the room and said “That was a great song!”

I was surprised. He’s rather unimpressible.

22winmag - when you ask someone which floor they'd like, and they respond with "ladies lingerie"- they're referencing the AEROSMITH SONG!!!
22winmag - when you ask someone which floor they'd like, and they respond with "ladies lingerie"- they're referencing the AEROSMITH SONG!!!
May 27, 2018 10:26 am

Many women are alley cats just looking for their next fence to piss on and the next bitch to hiss at.

It’s primeval.