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'Shirtstorm' Leads To Apology From European Space Scientist

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stonesak

Okay, if you really insist
Again the implication that he wasn't really sorry and was only sad at how mistreated he was by all the mean feminists. Your cynical, self serving interpretation of him and his motivations speak poorly of your ability to have a rational discussion.

My only implication is that tossing around words like "sexism" and "misogyny" are not conducive to rational discussion. Feminists could have asked why he wore that shirt. They could have asked if his wearing that shirt might send a negative symbol to women interested in STEM research. There were plenty of ways to address the underlying issue without the venom spewed towards Matt (and by proxy, many other males in STEM fields).
 

Entropy912

Neo Member
I find it extremely telling you have focused entirely on repeating over and over that it's just an 'anecdote' or 'opinion' rather than responding to the weight of my posts which was that STEM is not well represented by women and STEM is biased against women. You seem to have no interest in those facts whatsoever aside from trying to rewrite your original post to be referencing chemistry when in talks about STEM in general.

Why even offer an 'opinion' that you don't think should be used to reach any sort of conclusion and that you don't think is evidence of anything? Clearly it has to be some kind of evidence otherwise it would have no relevance to your opinion in the first place. Why not take 5 seconds to google your industry's gender share and use that instead of an anecdote?

You have a good point there, why did I offer my opinion in the first place?. I can tell you without a doubt that my intention was not to provide any evidence against all the various studies you've posted. I guess my train of thought was something along the lines of "I have a career in STEM, I've noticed many women in my profession, maybe others in the thread would find it interesting that I haven't noticed this disparity between men and women in my field."

You keep telling me that I'm wrong, wrong, wrong and I'm simply trying to tell you that I'm not arguing with you.
 

Dice//

Banned
"I'm sorry some people are too tragically dense to understand the simple difference between any sexualized depiction of the female form, and sexism." That should have been his apology.

Yup. Sadly there is a greater history and context there that extended beyond intention; and sadly one sex is historically much more sexualized and still "second-fiddle" compared to their male counterpart.

Really though, no one here has direct beef with Matt Taylor at all. It's more the commentary and dialogue surrounding the issues thats had greater discussion.
 

Brakke

Banned
From the article: "This is the sort of casual misogyny that stops women from entering certain scientific fields. They see a guy like that on TV and they don't feel welcome. They see a poster of greased up women in a colleague's office and they know they aren't respected. They hear comments about "bitches" while out at a bar with fellow science students, and they decide to change majors." They also include Rose Evelyth's tweet, that they endorse as her 'brilliantly capturing' the situation: "No no women are toooootally welcome in our community, just ask the dude in this shirt."

If you don't think that's blaming him for women not feeling welcome in STEM fields then you might be the one with poor reading comprehension.

All of that quote is saying this is emblematic of a broader culture. "Casual misogyny" is accusing him of being careless, not malicious.

Google "Matt Taylor". Might be different depending where you're searching from, but for me on the front page apart from 2 links about different Matt Taylors and his wiki article (which does mention the shirt thing but it obviously isn't the main focus), every link is about the shirt he wore. Does that not count as damaging his image? I agree he'll be fine professionally but still.

And yeah I think he was more deserving of happiness on Wednesday than people who'd get so upset by a shirt they feel the need to take it out on others like that.

Nobody's upset about the shirt. The shirt is a jumping off point. People are upset by decades and centuries of women's opportunities being constrained and their interests discouraged, even after we should know better.
 

berzeli

Banned
Why are you laughing? The fact that there is a difference is the issue. Anyway that line should probably read

Because it directly contradicts you statement of:

Trying to shoehorn this shirt into STEM participation is academically bankrupt. There are deeper issues at hand. Gender differences in brain development makes mathematics and logic more easily understood to the average male compared to the average female, while women are on average better at communicating and empathy.

And you can't "correct" it and assume that it is supposed to say what you want it to say. I've read the entire section on biology and the conclusions and it does not support your statement about mathematics and logic being more easily understood by males.

Regardless the article clearly identifies a gender gap in mathematical problem solving

Yes but not that it is due to biology.
 

KHarvey16

Member
My only implication is that tossing around words like "sexism" and "misogyny" are not conductive to rational discussion. Feminists could have asked why he wore that shirt. They could have asked if his wearing that shirt might send a negative symbol to women interested in STEM research. There were plenty of ways to address the underlying issue without the venom spewed towards Matt (and by proxy, many other males in STEM fields).

But sexism and misogyny were the correct terms. You really aren't reading what's being typed. Again, the fact he wore the shirt and it wasn't immediately clear to him, his colleagues and his superiors that it was a problem is a symptom of deep rooted, unchecked misogyny inherent in STEM today. That is literally the entire point.
 

jorma

is now taking requests
But part of how we look at and respond to this kind of limited data is recognizing the difference and asking yourself:

Do I really think this has a non-gendered explanation?

I'd like to know the age difference. Perhaps 40 years ago, the gender imbalance in the STEM-fields were much much bigger, and so the most experienced and accomplished people today (that would gain the highest salary and earn the most quotations) are more likely to be male. In that case i expect the difference to even out with time.
 

IcedTea

Member
The only reason is isn't "conducive to rational discussion" is that some people get really personally defensive if you even dare imply that something might be racist/sexist/etc.
Well, lets not forget that the entire point of this thread is that some people can''t handle a shirt that a guy wore. So rational discussion was kicked out the door on day one.
 

unround

Member
Well, lets not forget that the entire point of this thread is that some people can''t handle a shirt that a guy wore. So rational discussion was kicked out the door on day one.

It feels like you people are working from a script at this point.

Edit: ahaha were people seriously trying to claim that the women on the shirt weren't sexualized?
 

Opto

Banned
No. You need to learn what bondage is. Women wearing latex and holding guns is not bondage. And the images aren't inherently sexy. That's in the eye of the beholder. Get over yourself thought police.

yup i'm the thought police that's why matt taylor is in jail right now
 

Dice//

Banned
Well, lets not forget that the entire point of this thread is that some people can''t handle a shirt that a guy wore. So rational discussion was kicked out the door on day one.

And the casual hand-waiving and statements like "can''t handle a shirt that a guy wore" is missing the point and proving casual misogyny on certain levels and lacks a lot of perspective that has been discussed, to death, here because you cherry picked what you wanted to read.

I guess this can apply to both sides: But people don't want an opinion, just an accomplice.
 
For the upteenth time

The shirt is symptomatic of the problems with being inclusive to women in STEM fields. It, specifically, does not produce all of the toxicity and other things that is found to be problematic in the fields. It is the straw that broke the camel's back. It's the drop in the bucket that made it run over.

Wearing a shirt with partially naked space bondage babes is VERY different from a real, living woman choosing to present her self as sexy. One is an object, and the other is a person with agency.

So what? Does objectifying a body someone finds sexy have to be a statement now about where one thinks said person falls in social-ranking? What if it was just about being playful with eroticized imagery?

We're already so sexually repressed as a society, and now even images like the ones on this shirt should be removed? Should we just become Saudi Arabia?

If anything I think we don't have nearly enough objectification. For starters, we can give the same treatment to the male form.
 
I find it interesting that the initial reaction is to focus on critiquing and dismissing research rather than exploring or affirming what it's looking into. I mean let's be honest, even if I could present the magical research paper which completely satisfied and proved everything you wanted accounted for or controlled for, would that actually change anyone's minds? It's not like the traditional GAF reaction is empathy and curiosity, it's always about invalidating and overruling.

Research is not and cannot be comprehensive and perfect. Different research design means it may be doing a cursory investigation or a more in-depth analysis. In many cases, the 'problems' with research are intentional or unavoidable side effects, which the authors explicitly acknowledge and want to address when they do the next round.

We also demand a level of proof that research often cannot give us. A study showing a discrepancy in aggregated outcomes can never prove individual bias, but it's not possible to do that in the first place. The scientific response often is, we seem to have a general indication of a problem, we'll need to do more research to iron out the variables and try to pin down causes as best we can. But for GAF, we take that as proof that the study is worthless and offers no valuable information.
 

Ayt

Banned
And in return he got a huge amount of anger poured over him, including that Verge article that accuses him of misogyny and compares him to a group of men calling women bitches, not to mention all the shit on Twitter.

If you agree he's a nice guy who just made a mistake don't you think that really sucks, especially considering it should have been one of the best days of his life? That's why people are so pissed off at the Verge article.

It is one article. Beyond that, the only people bringing it up and giving it a voice, so to speak, are the people that are angry it was even written. How many people have brought up that article in this thread in anything other than a negative light?

In other words, the people making that Verge article a story are precisely the people that, apparently, don't want it to be a story.
 

Dash27

Member
But sexism and misogyny were the correct terms. You really aren't reading what's being typed. Again, the fact he wore the shirt and it wasn't immediately clear to him, his colleagues and his superiors that it was a problem is a symptom of deep rooted, unchecked misogyny inherent in STEM today. That is literally the entire point.

There, now it's settled. It is about Matt Taylor and the charge is sexism and misogyny. For all wondering why this was getting so many comments of "it's just a shirt".

That said! There are thoughtful posters on the other side of this. Mumei has a good post here: http://www.neogaf.com/forum/showthread.php?p=138940918#post138940918

Which is a very different argument:

Women felt that they were less similar to the typical computer science major. This influenced their sense that they belonged in computer science - again lower in women - and it was this lack of fit that drove their lack of interest in a computer science major.

In the geeky room, men considered themselves significantly more interested in computer science than did women. But when the geek factor was removed from the surroundings, women showed equal interest to men.

This contends that women simply don't connect with the stereotypical geeky environment and so if you make it more neutral or woman friendly you'd get more women. A much different argument from the misogyny spittle.

So if you accept this, that's fine, but that doesnt give you authority to police what a person wears any more than you could tell a woman to cover up if she wears a skirt that's too short for your tastes.
 

berzeli

Banned
No, I never said that. I can best explain it with referring to...

Okay, to make clearer what I meant: the subculture I was referring to was accused of "Satanism" and even killing people in the past. Obviously bullshit? Yes, but according to you, people were right in "voicing their concerns". Even if they had no fucking idea what the subculture was about (and they still don't, the perception just changed to a harmless kind of wrong).

Firstly sorry for not getting back sooner, but I was busy laughing my ass off at someone linking a study that was directly contradicting their opinion.

Are you willing to concede that people within a culture voicing their concerns is different from an outside perspective? Because I know I may have oversimplified my arguments a tad. Yes sometimes there are instances where public perception lack any basis in reality. But hopefully all of the research that have been linked in this thread shows that this isn't the case in this particular example. And I think we probably shouldn't derail the thread any more with this discussion of the perception of geek culture if you are ok with that. (Feel free to PM me though).

So no, perception and reality aren't necessarily related. Issues in geek culture have to be addressed, right, but I'm absolutely not convinced changes within the culture itself are enough to change its perception. Oh, and I think if we would get more women into geek culture, many of the problems would solve itself.

The issues in geek culture are what is keeping women out, you can't get more women into the culture without combating the issues. But as I said above, we should leave this particular subject for another time.
 

jorma

is now taking requests
But that shirt, in that context, is sexism.

In particular, the brand of sexism falls under misogyny, given that sexism deals with both gender, and misogyny deals specifically with sexism against women.

Misogyny: dislike of, contempt for, or ingrained prejudice against women.

The only reason is isn't "conducive to rational discussion" is that some people get really personally defensive if you even dare imply that something might be racist/sexist/etc. We all know that those are bad things, and people that are racist/sexist are "bad," but it's gotten to the point that people aren't willing to examine their actions because they don't want to admit to themselves when they are not being "good."

Instead, it's just become "omigod HOW DARE YOU tell me something is sexist?! YOU'RE THE BAD PERSON NOT ME. YOU'RE JUST SOME SJW THAT HATES FUN AND HAPPINESS AND WANTS TO CHOP OFF MY BALLS."

Most people won't actually agree with your assertion that the shirt is undoubtedly sexist, and that Matt is (casually) displaying ingrained prejudice against women. Most people will actually and honestly think "but it's just a shirt, what's the fuss about".

And, speaking of setting up strawmen, your last paragraph.. uh. Yeah.
 

Dice//

Banned
So what? Does objectifying a body someone finds sexy have to be a statement now about where one thinks said person falls in social-ranking? What if it was just about being playful with eroticized imagery?

We're already so sexually repressed as a society, and now even images like the ones on this shirt should be removed? Should we just become Saudi Arabia?

If anything I think we don't have nearly enough objectification. For starters, we can give the same treatment to the male form.

Why do we have to go to hyperbole? Is the world black and white to you?
Is there no middle ground or should we all wear shirts with half-naked people on it --- or risk "becoming Saudi Arabia"?

For the last bit, the problem is that it ISN'T that way.
 

Opto

Banned
So what? Does objectifying a body someone finds sexy have to be a statement now about where one thinks said person falls in social-ranking? What if it was just about being playful with eroticized imagery?

We're already so sexually repressed as a society, and now even images like the ones on this shirt should be removed? Should we just become Saudi Arabia?

If anything I think we don't have nearly enough objectification. For starters, we can give the same treatment to the male form.
A pornographer explains why the shirt was sexist:

http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2014/11/...guys-shirt-crash-landed/#.VGmk3jjs6N-.twitter

so yeah, don't say people against the shirt are sex-negative
.
 

Opto

Banned
and objectification is bad all around. it dehumanizes the individual. so no, you dont want the same thing happening to men
 

The Technomancer

card-carrying scientician
A pornographer explains why the shirt was sexist:

http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2014/11/...guys-shirt-crash-landed/#.VGmk3jjs6N-.twitter

so yeah, don't say people against the shirt are sex-negative
God this shit is the worst, I'm so sick of being accused of being "sex negative" because of raising complaints about sexualization or objectification. I'm very sex positive, but people constantly misconstrue that phrase to mean that "sexy stuff everywhere is great!". Honestly as much as we have unhealthy problems with sexual repression we also have issues with sexual objectification and the ensuing alienation.
 

Opto

Banned
So if you accept this, that's fine, but that doesnt give you authority to police what a person wears any more than you could tell a woman to cover up if she wears a skirt that's too short for your tastes.
you're talking ABOUT TWO DIFFERENT THINGS.
 

hohoXD123

Member
I find it interesting that the initial reaction is to focus on critiquing and dismissing research rather than exploring or affirming what it's looking into. I mean let's be honest, even if I could present the magical research paper which completely satisfied and proved everything you wanted accounted for or controlled for, would that actually change anyone's minds? It's not like the traditional GAF reaction is empathy and curiosity, it's always about invalidating and overruling.

Research is not and cannot be comprehensive and perfect. Different research design means it may be doing a cursory investigation or a more in-depth analysis. In many cases, the 'problems' with research are intentional or unavoidable side effects, which the authors explicitly acknowledge and want to address when they do the next round.

We also demand a level of proof that research often cannot give us. A study showing a discrepancy in aggregated outcomes can never prove individual bias, but it's not possible to do that in the first place. The scientific response often is, we seem to have a general indication of a problem, we'll need to do more research to iron out the variables and try to pin down causes as best we can. But for GAF, we take that as proof that the study is worthless and offers no valuable information.

You're assuming ignorance where there is none, and "GAF" isn't a single entity. If you present evidence to back up your argument then that evidence can be scrutinised. Sure, there is no comprehensive nor perfect research, but some are generally better than others, for example a meta-analysis vs a cohort, or a study with no major limitations vs a study with numerous ones, or a study with significant results vs one without.
 
Why do we have to go to hyperbole? Is the world black and white to you?
Is there no middle ground or should we all wear shirts with half-naked people on it --- or risk "becoming Saudi Arabia"?

For the last bit, the problem is that it ISN'T that way.

What would the middle-ground here be though? Clearly people upset by the shirt do not want this sort of imagery openly displayed in public. I grew up in Kuwait, and these were the types of images that were completely dragged through the ground as "filthy" there yet I'm sure all the naysayers had them behind closed doors while they promoted censorship publicly. Western films were frankenstined and chopped up to remove any bodies, album covers were haphazardly colored with markers to cover up exposed legs and torsos, same with magazines and posters, even shit like Little Mermaid was made to wear badly drawn shirts underneath her clamshell bra in "official" artwork. It basically intruded on and fucked up all sorts of artwork. Having an uproar over the images on this shirt is really reminiscent to all that non-sense.

My posts might be coming off a bit like a knee-jerk reaction, but I guess this sort of body-imagery-taboo is a bit of a hot-button issue for me.

As for men not being objectified, I agree that yeah it's the problem, but I don't think swinging back the other way and flipping the tables and saying women shouldn't be either is the solution.

and objectification is bad all around. it dehumanizes the individual. so no, you dont want the same thing happening to men

No it doesn't. Not inherently. Being sexualized is very much part of being a human being. Of course consent and environment, parties involved, etc are all important, but blanketly saying objectification is bad is sex-shaming.
 
You're assuming ignorance where there is none, and "GAF" isn't a single entity. If you present evidence to back up your argument then that evidence can be scrutinised. Sure, there is no comprehensive nor perfect research, but some are generally better than others, for example a meta-analysis vs a cohort, or a study with no major limitations vs a study with numerous ones, or a study with significant results vs one without.

No, I feel pretty comfortable in saying that there is a significant proportion of GAF who, when threads involving womens' experiences come up, don't listen or try to understand, but actively try to negate and overrule in an attempt to discredit the problem entirely.

I feel like people get up in arms about granular details of research design only if the implications of the research upsets the 'no problem' position. If someone believed that STEM had problems or that women faced bias, people wouldn't put so much undue attention and effort onto relatively minor issues in the grand scheme of the thread/issue/research.

If one's position is that nothing inherently is wrong, than any research which shows any correlation to a problem is deeply damaging to your position and must be vehemently opposed. If you hold a view that the issue is one of degree rather than existence, then research, well designed or not, would be addressed in a more neutral or positive way. Perhaps the person would look for their own research which they feel more accurately represents the problem. But when the thread is about an issue in general and research is offered about a generalized point of discrimination or bias (women in STEM), people suddenly making structural objections seems a bit disingenuous.

People will address the 'accepted' or 'positive' research in a sentence or two, or even not at all (like the stats on sexual assault in field research). But it's done in a very driveby and temporary way. It doesn't start a conversation or create context that carries over, it doesn't move forward with the thread. What will move forward is the 'negative' research where people will devote the bulk of their posts to discrediting it. The conversation ends up focusing entirely on all the ways you're wrong rather than addressing the real or undisputed issues.
 

Opto

Banned
No it doesn't. Not inherently. Being sexualized is very much part of being a human being. Of course consent and environment, parties involved, etc are all important, but blanketly saying objectification is bad is sex-shaming.

Sexualizing and objectification are different. Objectification makes the person a prop, someone without agency, something to only be observed and robbed of choice or decision. Of course, this changes if something is curated in a different context. Don't accuse me of sex-shaming, and please read the article I linked.
 

unround

Member
What would the middle-ground here be though? Clearly people upset by the shirt do not want this sort of imagery openly displayed in public. I grew up in Kuwait, and these were the types of images that were completely dragged through the ground as "filthy" there yet I'm sure all the naysayers had them behind closed doors while they promoted censorship publicly. Western films were frankenstined and chopped up to remove any bodies, album covers were haphazardly colored with markers to cover up exposed legs and torsos, same with magazines and posters, even shit like Little Mermaid was made to wear badly drawn shirts underneath her clamshell bra in "official" artwork. It basically intruded on and fucked up all sorts of artwork. Having an uproar over the images on this shirt is really reminiscent to all that non-sense.

My posts might be coming off a bit like a knee-jerk reaction, but I guess this sort of body-imagery-taboo is a bit of a hot-button issue for me.

As for men not being objectified, I agree that yeah it's the problem, but I don't think swinging back the other way and flipping the tables and saying women shouldn't be either is the solution.



No it doesn't. Not inherently. Being sexualized is very much part of being a human being. Of course consent and environment, parties involved, etc are all important, but blanketly saying objectification is bad is sex-shaming.

Objectification and being found sexually attractive are not the same thing. Objectification implies that all other aspects of one's being are treated as completely irrelavent. In the case of sexual objectification, one is literally regarded as a sexual object and nothing more. Hopefully you can see the problem with this.
 

verdures

Member
What would the middle-ground here be though? Clearly people upset by the shirt do not want this sort of imagery openly displayed in public.
That's obviously not the case though. Straight from the OP:
Alice Bell said:
I don't personally have much of a problem with the existence of Matt Taylor's shirt. And certainly not with its designer. Scientists should be able to wear what they want. Science could do with a greater diversity of cultural expression. Dr Taylor and I have PhDs from same institution. I have a lot of sympathy for how much crap he must have had about tattoos and clothes. It was amazing to go and work in other unis, to suddenly be able to wear a skirt and not have your legs stared at, like you were an alien. It wasn't just gender. I got comments about my CND badge. I remember colleagues hating pressure to wear a tie. It was mainly gender though.

What I do have a problem with is that no-one thought it'd be a problem to wear that shirt in that context. They didn't see it.
Feels like you're going way too far in the other direction here. It's really the context.
 

Opto

Banned
I think it's just easier to keep quoting myself so I don't go insane
You want to make this shirt not a big deal? Make feminism win. Make it so a woman can walk the streets as clothed as Lady Godiva without being harassed or fearing for her safety. Make it so when a woman says No, the man respects her decision. Make it so that a women expressing her sexuality or lackthereof is never demonized for her choice.

Then, maybe after that's been internalized by everyone, and no woman is afraid to enter any field because she knows she'll be respected, maybe a dude can wear a shirt with sexy ladies on it.
 

jorma

is now taking requests
I find it interesting that the initial reaction is to focus on critiquing and dismissing research rather than exploring or affirming what it's looking into. I mean let's be honest, even if I could present the magical research paper which completely satisfied and proved everything you wanted accounted for or controlled for, would that actually change anyone's minds? It's not like the traditional GAF reaction is empathy and curiosity, it's always about invalidating and overruling.

Research is not and cannot be comprehensive and perfect. Different research design means it may be doing a cursory investigation or a more in-depth analysis. In many cases, the 'problems' with research are intentional or unavoidable side effects, which the authors explicitly acknowledge and want to address when they do the next round.

We also demand a level of proof that research often cannot give us. A study showing a discrepancy in aggregated outcomes can never prove individual bias, but it's not possible to do that in the first place. The scientific response often is, we seem to have a general indication of a problem, we'll need to do more research to iron out the variables and try to pin down causes as best we can. But for GAF, we take that as proof that the study is worthless and offers no valuable information.

Yeah well, but at least noone said something in the lines of:
"Why even offer an 'opinion' that you don't think should be used to reach any sort of conclusion and that you don't think is evidence of anything?"

I mean i find it rather hypocritical that you call out people wanting to have more data on the research you presented, claiming they are being "all about invalidating and overruling" after dropping something like the sentence above a few minutes earlier.
 

berzeli

Banned
No, I feel pretty comfortable in saying that there is a significant proportion of GAF who, when threads involving womens' experiences come up, don't listen or try to understand, but actively try to negate and overrule in an attempt to discredit the problem entirely.

I feel like people get up in arms about granular details of research design only if the implications of the research upsets the 'no problem' position. If someone believed that STEM had problems or that women faced bias, people wouldn't put so much undue attention and effort onto relatively minor issues in the grand scheme of the thread/issue/research.

If one's position is that nothing inherently is wrong, than any research which shows any correlation to a problem is deeply damaging to your position and must be vehemently opposed. If you hold a view that the issue is one of degree rather than existence, then research, well designed or not, would be addressed in a more neutral or positive way. When the thread is about an issue in general and research is offered about a general point of discrimination or bias, people suddenly making structural objections seems a bit disingenuous.

And I would second that assertion, I did write a bit about it in a general way earlier but I'll quote the relevant part:

I think that the reason as to why this spawns a lot of discussion is that the shirt fits really well into two differing larger narratives, one where the shirt is a symbol of the casual sexism within STEM and one where there exist an "outrage culture" that overreach. And if proponents of either narrative neglect or choose to ignore the existence of the other narrative they can argue ad infinitum since any argument that the opponent present isn't compatible with their narrative and therefore doesn't carry any weight. Very interestingly having this singular narrative creates a need to mould real life events so that they fit that narrative

The need to deconstruct research that goes against their beliefs is almost unsettling and almost as bad is that a lot of people wilfully ignore the research when it is presented. The worst example of this behaviour is currently:

The fact that there is a difference is the issue. Anyway that line should probably read


Where the poster manages to firstly link a study that contradicts their original argument about biological differences being the deciding factor. And then when I point that out the user says that the study probably meant to say that it was agreeing with the poster's beliefs.
 
Sexualizing and objectification are different. Objectification makes the person a prop, someone without agency, something to only be observed and robbed of choice or decision. Of course, this changes if something is curated in a different context. Don't accuse me of sex-shaming, and please read the article I linked.

The author's arguments come down to:

  • A) Shirt is bad because it's not sex-positive cause sex-positivity should include conscent. So, in this case where it's a fictional depiction of a gender, what, should the artist and person wearing said image ask for permission from everyone of said gender being depicted?
  • B) This was not the place to wear it. I can at least entertain this argument unlike the previous one, but it comes back to social repression. I think he should be allowed to express some playfulness with some suggestive imagery. Relegating things like these only behind closed doors or sex-centered events would be socially stifling.

Objectification and being found sexually attractive are not the same thing. Objectification implies that all other aspects of one's being are treated as completely irrelavent. In the case of sexual objectification, one is literally regarded as a sexual object and nothing more. Hopefully you can see the problem with this.

Who is the "one" here though? They're just sexual characters on a shirt. Why does it have to be about real people? If I saw some fit guy submissively on all fours in a speedo on some poster, I'd honestly feel like I'm flattering myself if I argued "oh yeah, this hot dude is a representation of me, merely because we both have penises."

All of this is a moot point though, because it's assuming some people do not enjoy being objectified or find it hot which is again, blanket generalizations, and feels like attempts at sweeping any sexual expression, imagery, roles under the rug.
 

Ayt

Banned
But sexism and misogyny were the correct terms. You really aren't reading what's being typed. Again, the fact he wore the shirt and it wasn't immediately clear to him, his colleagues and his superiors that it was a problem is a symptom of deep rooted, unchecked misogyny inherent in STEM today. That is literally the entire point.

There, now it's settled. It is about Matt Taylor and the charge is sexism and misogyny. For all wondering why this was getting so many comments of "it's just a shirt".

Your interpretation is almost the exact opposite of what KHarvey posted.
 

Dash27

Member
Your interpretation is almost the exact opposite of what KHarvey posted.

You post very much like KHarvey. Simply saying something doesn't make it so.

Again, the fact he wore the shirt and it wasn't immediately clear to him, his colleagues and his superiors that it was a problem is a symptom of deep rooted, unchecked misogyny inherent in STEM today.

"He" in this case is Matt Taylor. It's not debatable. But if you care to try it should be interesting. I'll check back when I get home.
 
Yeah well, but at least noone said something in the lines of:
"Why even offer an 'opinion' that you don't think should be used to reach any sort of conclusion and that you don't think is evidence of anything?"

I mean i find it rather hypocritical that you call out people wanting to have more data on the research you presented, claiming they are being "all about invalidating and overruling" after dropping something like the sentence above a few minutes earlier.

Readers can judge me how they will based on their reading of it, but I stand by what I said about that poster. I don't believe their motivations were pure and found their explanations to be ad-hoc rationalizations to get around the obvious implications that their post was otherwise making. Maybe that was unintentional on the posters part, but it hit the check-marks I otherwise expected and I have less trust when seeing juniors, especially given the gamergate thread where "neutral" juniors pop up all the time.

The exact line you quoted makes sense even out of context to me though. If your opinion or statement or post is not supposed to have any informational content derived from it whatsoever, then why is it there? By their very nature opinions are supposed to show how we feel or think about things. Are we not allowed to correct posters if their opinion ignores facts? At the very least they did make a positive claim that women do not suffer bias in STEM, which is not true. None of these points were addressed by them however, the poster merely kept repeating that it was just an opinion.

An opinion that STEM has no gender bias or gender representation problems has latent informational content reflecting one's belief about said issues. You can't just say, "I see lots of women at my work". Okay, so what? I, and I assume others, scoff if someone claims it was just said because it was "interesting" and for no other reason. That's a dodge/code if I've ever seen one.
 

Hermii

Member
For some reason this reminds me about the scene in Pearl Harbour, where command tells Ben Affleck not to wear those damn Hula shirts after he shot down a bunch of planes.

Shitty movie aside, he should have wore another shirt. But what he helped achieve was awesome.
 

jorma

is now taking requests
Brawndo Addict,
but the actual issue is that you got all huffy and puffy that someone had the audacity to post the researchers own issues with the research you presented as proof of gender imbalance that couldn't possibly be because of other reasons. And then it turns out the people doing the actual research thought that yeah, well, it could actually be because of a bunch of reasons.
(that would sort themselves out in a generation or two and that you really can't do anything about today).

And instead of acknowledging that you called that person out. "GAF has no empathy! It's all about invalidating and overruling! And they only do it if they don't agree with the assertions presented!". Fair enough, but that's exactly what you were doing yourself, so congratulations. You are part of the the very thing you identified and problematised.
 

leadbelly

Banned
A pornographer explains why the shirt was sexist:

http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2014/11/...guys-shirt-crash-landed/#.VGmk3jjs6N-.twitter

so yeah, don't say people against the shirt are sex-negative

The whole subject of sexual objectification is confusing to me. I would assume for instance that 'porn' is sexually objectifying. When watching porn, you care nothing of the woman in it, she is quite literally an object for your sexual gratification. Does it really matter if a woman has 'agency' if it contributes to sexual objectification in the greater social context?
 

KHarvey16

Member
Your interpretation is almost the exact opposite of what KHarvey posted.

I was starting to wonder if I had gone crazy.

You post very much like KHarvey. Simply saying something doesn't make it so.



"He" in this case is Matt Taylor. It's not debatable. But if you care to try it should be interesting. I'll check back when I get home.

Somehow you still aren't understanding and I don't know how else to write it such that you do understand. My hopes are further diminished by the fact I'm maybe the 5th or 6th person to try.
 
Brawndo Addict,
but the actual issue is that you got all huffy and puffy that someone had the audacity to post the researchers own issues with the research you presented as proof of gender imbalance that couldn't possibly be because of other reasons. And then it turns out the people doing the actual research thought that yeah, well, it could actually be because of a bunch of reasons.
(that would sort themselves out in a generation or two and that you really can't do anything about today).

And instead of acknowledging that you called that person out. "GAF has no empathy! It's all about invalidating and overruling! And they only do it if they don't agree with the assertions presented!". Fair enough, but that's exactly what you were doing yourself, so congratulations. You are part of the the very thing you identified and problematised.

I have no idea how you reached this characterization of my posts. Perhaps you are conflating my responses to the junior with my responses to people raising issues about research? Here's the response I made to the junior posting their 'non-informational opinion'. This is different from my posts to other people about the research issue. Also, people took issue with the citation bias study in this post, not the other studies. So even if you take out that study, the post is still completely supported. What upset me is that people will implicitly accept the studies about huge gender disparities and bias in evaluating candidates/students ability/pay, but then focus entirely on negatives by making a mountain out of a molehill with the citation study and try to use that to discredit everything else by association. And where you got the bolded I don't know, but it fits with the 'do nothing' 'no real problem' narrative going on in these kinds of threads.

I wasn't trying to present evidence for anything, it was simply an opine based on my observations in my field. I'm curious if the breakdown is similar across the various areas of STEM. When I was in college the ratio of male to female engineers was much higher than that of the biology or chemistry majors.

You said nothing about your 'curiosity' in the first post. This seems to be an ad-hoc addition to try to defend yourself by appealing to the particular STEM segments with higher female participation rather than STEM at large which is what you were talking about originally. Second, you can play the semantics game all day but people understand what you're arguing for even if you don't explicitly say it.

I'm a professional scientist in my late 20s and from my observations, women are very well represented in this industry.

Objectively wrong.

STEM Workforce

Women remain underrepresented in the science and engineering workforce, although to a lesser degree than in the past, with the greatest disparities occurring in engineering, computer science, and the physical sciences (NSF, Science & Engineering Indicators, 2014; NSF, Women, Minorities, and People with Disabilities, 2013).

Female scientists and engineers are concentrated in different occupations than are men, with relatively high shares of women in the social sciences (58%) and biological and medical sciences (48%) and relatively low shares in engineering (13%) and computer and mathematical sciences (25%) (NSF, Science & Engineering Indicators, 2014).

Women make up 47% of the total U.S. workforce, but are much less represented in particular science and engineering occupations (U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Women in the Labor Force: A Databook, 2013). For example:

  • 44.2% of chemists and material scientists are women;
  • 25.7% of environmental scientists and geoscientists are women;
  • 17.7% of chemical engineers are women;
  • 13.7% of civil engineers are women;
  • 8.8% of electrical and electronics engineers are women;
  • 18.8% of industrial engineers are women; and
  • 4.5% of mechanical engineers are women.

Then you say...

Both of my previous bosses were women, incredibly smart, and very well respected within the company and our new executive director of research who is female is also brilliant and has company wide influence and respect. The great thing about STEM is that at the end of the day your data, techniques, and research are a tangible thing and represents how good of a scientist you are regardless of gender, creed, or anything else.

Again untrue.

Gender-bias-figure-1.jpg


Gender-bias-figure-2.jpg


Gender-chart.jpg

And finally...

In response to the story, his shirt was tacky and unprofessional under any circumstance, and he should have known better pHd physicist or not. But does his shirt say anything about the state of women in STEM careers? IMO, absolutely not.

Untrue again.

These stereotypes also extend into how we portray male scientists. Research has indicated that when females are exposed to nerdy white-guy stereotypes, it discourages them from STEM fields.


Clearly you haven't read much of the thread otherwise none of this would be news to you and you would have seen Mumei's detailed walk-through post.

The junior responding with "opinion, not trying to argue for anything" is ridiculous. At the very least his opinion is factually incorrect and there is nothing wrong with calling that out.

Second, you act as if I tried to hide the fact that the researchers did what all good scientists do and discuss their limitations and problems. But I didn't! I included the paragraph about one study where this was the case, and for the gender citation study, included the whole section about it when asked.

In a finding that poses uncomfortable questions for the UK scientific establishment, researchers uncovered evidence of women scientists working in the field of infectious diseases being disadvantaged in crucial funding allocations for more than a decade. Out of more than 6,000 funding grants between 1997 and 2010, less than a quarter were awarded to studies led by women. Male scientists received nearly £1.8bn of funding in the time period, compared to just £488m for women.

Studies led by women were also more likely to receive lower sums of money. The average grant for a woman-led study was £125,556 – compared to an average award of £179,389 for research proposed by men – a difference of 43 per cent . The authors of the study, published in the online journal BMJ Open today, said their findings could not be taken as evidence of gender bias on the part of funding councils, but urged funder to “urgently investigate” the reasons behind the differences.

There are several limitations to the conclusions that can be drawn from our findings. Foremost among them is that age indisputably has a role — perhaps even the major role — in explaining gender differences in scientific output, collaboration and impact. As is well known, the academic pipeline from junior to senior faculty leaks female scientists, and the senior ranks of science bear the imprint of previous generations' barriers to the progression of women. Thus it is likely that many of the trends we observed can be explained by the under-representation of women among the elders of science. After all, seniority, authorship position, collaboration and citation are all highly interlinked variables.

Another key limitation is that authorship of papers is only one of many indicators of research activity. Our analysis includes only journal articles, not books, conference proceedings, database construction or code, for example. Also problematic is the lack of universal norms associated with authorship attribution and position. For example, it is possible that some women do not appear as authors despite their contribution to research activities, and there are fields in which authors are listed alphabetically. There is also a concern that gender-assignment techniques can introduce errors (see Supplementary Information). We have tried to mitigate this with validation exercises, but there is always room for improvement.

Future research should drill into questions raised by this analysis. What distinguishes pockets of anomalously high parity? Are there characteristics of the work itself that contribute to disparities in output and citation? Are there other, perhaps less quantitative, aspects of scholarship that reveal a different story regarding gender balance in science? Furthermore, is there anything intrinsic to certain disciplines or cultures that make them more or less appealing to scientists of a particular gender?

None of that means the studies are untrue or worthless. That's just part of the scientific process in discussing the limitations and implications of your research, and ideas for future research to narrow down the results. The part about the UK group saying it was not proof of gender bias is because science can't provide individualized causes like that and because they were researching the raw numbers. I can show you a study that blacks are hired less than whites, but it can never prove that any given individual white employer is racist or biased. Taken in the aggregate, it creates a stronger presumption that such biases are in play though.
 

stonesak

Okay, if you really insist
I was starting to wonder if I had gone crazy.



Somehow you still aren't understanding and I don't know how else to write it such that you do understand. My hopes are further diminished by the fact I'm maybe the 5th or 6th person to try.

Let me give it a try. Your position is "Matt Taylor's decision to wear a shirt that objectifies women, along with the fact that no one told him it might be offensive, demonstrates the misogyny that exists within STEM fields, which discourages women from pursuing careers in said fields." Is that accurate?
 

KHarvey16

Member
Let me give it a try. Your position is "Matt Taylor's decision to wear a shirt that objectifies women, along with the fact that no one told him it might be offensive, demonstrates the misogyny that exists within STEM fields, which discourages women from pursuing careers in said fields." Is that accurate?

Essentially, yes. That Matt Taylor is a nice guy who never consciously chose to perpetuate misogyny is precisely the reason the issue needs attention. It's so deeply embedded that it doesn't require conscious effort to be continued and because of that these are often the toughest problems to solve. The answer is to raise awareness, which is why raising a big stink and talking about it isn't just slacktivism, it's concerted effort to address the problem.
 

leadbelly

Banned
Essentially, yes. That Matt Taylor is a nice guy who never consciously chose to perpetuate misogyny is precisely the reason the issue needs attention. It's so deeply embedded that it doesn't require conscious effort to be continued and because of that these are often the toughest problems to solve. The answer is to raise awareness, which is why raising a big stink and talking about it isn't just slacktivism, it's concerted effort to address the problem.

Would discouraging the women who modelled for pictures used in the shirt help?

Edit: Actually looking at the shirt, they seemed to be drawn not actual pictures. There is a wider point I was making though. It is to do with my confusion of sexual objectification in general.
 

stonesak

Okay, if you really insist
Essentially, yes. That Matt Taylor is a nice guy who never consciously chose to perpetuate misogyny is precisely the reason the issue needs attention. It's so deeply embedded that it doesn't require conscious effort to be continued and because of that these are often the toughest problems to solve. The answer is to raise awareness, which is why raising a big stink and talking about it isn't just slacktivism, it's concerted effort to address the problem.

So you don't have a problem with the shirt itself, if he chose to wear it out in public as normal citizen, you wouldn't find it offensive? That he was seen wearing that shirt as a public representative of ESA is where the problem arises. Is that accurate as well?
 

KHarvey16

Member
Would discouraging the women who modelled for pictures used in the shirt help?

Edit: Actually looking at the shirt, they seemed to be drawn not actual pictures. There is a wider point I was making though. It is to do with my confusion of sexual objectification in general.

No, the shirt itself, its creator and the women depicted on the shirt are not a problem.

So you don't have a problem with the shirt itself, if he chose to wear it out in public as normal citizen, you wouldn't find it offensive? That he was seen wearing that shirt as a public representative of ESA is where the problem arises. Is that accurate as well?

Yes, the context is key. Again the issue we're concerned about is identified by the fact he chose to wear it and that no one stopped him from wearing it.
 
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