Feminist Critiques of the Uses of the Prehistoric Past to Explain Sex and Gender Differences in the Present

Authors

  • Mariela Solana Universidad Nacional Arturo Jauretche

Keywords:

sex differences, science communication, gender and science, feminist scientific philosophy, evolutionary psychology

Abstract

This paper examines and criticizes the use of the prehistoric past in evolutionary psychology studies to explain sex and gender differences. According to these studies, the differences between men and women can be traced to living conditions in the Stone Age, when human beings lived as hunters and gatherers. Based on a reading of a series of feminist works committed to the critical analysis of biology, genetics and neuroscience, this paper seeks to show that evolutionary psychology entails serious epistemological and political difficulties. Far from pursuing the abandonment of neuroscience and the theory of evolution, it defends the search for scientific models that, while still being rigorous and empirically sound, move beyond any essentialism, reductionism and gender and sexual determinism.

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Author Biography

Mariela Solana, Universidad Nacional Arturo Jauretche

Doctora en filosofía por la Universidad de Buenos Aires (UBA), Argentina. Investigadora asistente del CONICET y docente de prácticas culturales en la Universidad Nacional Arturo Jauretche, Argentina.

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Published

2020-10-27

How to Cite

Solana, M. (2020). Feminist Critiques of the Uses of the Prehistoric Past to Explain Sex and Gender Differences in the Present. Revista Iberoamericana De Ciencia, Tecnología Y Sociedad - CTS (Ibero-American Science, Technology and Society Journal), 15(45). Retrieved from https://ojs.revistacts.net/index.php/CTS/article/view/182

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