Dolphin42 wrote:Halfwit: I think the proposition that the inclusion of spiritual and holistic viewpoints is unscientific probably obscures the point you're trying to make and will probably simply lead to an irrelevant argument as to whether that proposition is in fact true. (On a philosophy forum that could take years.)
Your point, as I understand it, is simply that making any change to the character of the subject in question in order to include a particular section of society undermines the argument that this section is unfairly excluded.
I do not disagree that women are unfairly excluded. I'm just asking what it would mean to make science more spiritual? For example, if you can't figure out why the quarks go this way instead of that way, just say, "Oh well, it's the spirits," and this would be regarded as valid science as long as a woman does it?
I am trying to understand what the OP is saying. If the OP believes that women are spiritual and holistic, does the OP believe that science should (somehow) be made more spiritual and holistic? What does that even mean? The poor dears can't sling equations but they can sure be spiritual? OP's statement seems very condescending to me.
If you want more women in science, then women have to do science. You can't just say that women are spiritual so we'll redefine science as spirituality. What sense does that make? Why not just define not-science as science, and now LOTS of women are doing science?
Perhaps you could give me a concrete example of how physics can be made more spiritual or holistic by women. Is Noether's theorem an example of female spirituality in physics? How about the work of Lise Meitner? Did she bring holistic thinking to physics?
Not to mention that the premise itself is false. Did Indira Gandhi, Margaret Thatcher, and Golda Meir bring a soft, gentle, spiritual, holistic touch to politics? Politics is hardball and those three ladies played hardball. They were tougher than the men around them, not weaker.
You and the OP are slinging vague generalities and thinking with very fuzzy logic. Women will bring spirituality to physics? Would you explain how Lisa Randall brings spirituality and holistic thinking to physics? What exactly are you talking about? Tell me so I can understand it. A man who can't hack the math gets rejected from science, but a woman is granted tenure because she's spiritual? I really want to understand the thinking behind this idea, which seems to me to claim that women can't actually do science so let's let them be scientists because they're warm and empathic. It's an extremely condescending point of view. You want more women in physics because they're good at stroking male egos?
I ask again: What place does spirituality have in physics (OP's word, not mine) and what makes anyone think women should be brought into physics not because they can do physics, but because they're spiritual? What nonsense is this?