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Women do not have an assigned place. In free societies, they choose where they wish to be. For at least five millon women in America, that happens to be in the home as full-time mothers. What is wrong with that?
What can be done to address the phenomenon that had been mostly invisible for a decade--boys falling behind girls in school?
Gender bias is the usual explanation for why few women reach the top levels of academic science, but what if the explanation is more complex than that?
J. M. Barrie's famous 1904 play, Peter Pan or the Boy Who Wouldn't Grow Up, reflected the difficulty of the young entering the adult world in Victorian times. The story, still enormously popular, made the refusal to grow up sound charming. Far less charming is the thwarted transition to adulthood...
Women are joining men as partners in running the world, but they are not replacing men and never will. Yes, women are flourishing in unprecedented and gratifying ways. But men have hardly vanished from the center.
It is culture that creates economics, and not the other way around.
The Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study at Harvard University hosted a forum for indignation over the possibility of inborn differences between the sexes raised by Larry Summers.
Examining cognitive differences between the sexes can help us understand the sources of human abilities and limitations.






