What happens when people are paid to write silly things... It's obvious why there wouldn't be anything unnecessary like pockets on her suit: you don't carry a phone or a lighter or whatnot on the stage in front of hundreds of people.
On the other hand, if I'm allowed to generalize based on my intuition, usually women carry more items regularly than men do (make-up items if they wear make-up, sometimes a bottle of perfume, a pack of pads on their periods, etc...), and it's not practical for them to put all them things in their pockets, especially given that stretchy garments are a la mode for both sexes.
The "things" that have historically dictated men's fashion usually involve being shot/stabbed at. Usually by force of draft.
A lot of men's clothing comes from the battle field. I'm not sure that counts as a privilege as this article would have you believe. Not everything male is a net positive.
Examples from the top of my head and without verification:
* Trenchcoats. Used in World War 1 by British Officers.
* Fishtail Parkas. As favoured by Mods on scooters.
* Combat trousers. Were a big 90s fashion trend.
* MA-1 style bomber jackets.
* Boots with a heel. Originally used to keep feet in stirrups by horse cavalry soldiers.
I would imagine there were many more. William Gibson uses this trend for military fashions as a subplot in his Blue Ant trilogy.
1. Are you a woman who wants bigger pockets? Those are for sale. Buy them!
2. Are you a man who wants no pockets? Those are also for sale. Buy them!
That's really all there is to it. Stores stock what customers buy, not the other way around. I'm sure Macy's would love nothing more than every woman on the planet deciding to buy a new wardrobe of pocket-laden pants... the weak link in that plan is not Macy's management, but rather women not wanting to buy those pants.
OP sounds about as sane as a die hard haskell programmer claiming haskell books don't sell because booksellers secretly want to oppress programmers.
> And why do you think that is? Diagnosing the symptom is far easier than understanding the cause. You're doing the former.
When you're talking about emergent behavior of extremely complex systems, "why" is incredibly hard to answer accurately and incredibly easy to answer inaccurately. I honestly have no clue why women en mass (apparently) don't care for pockets. All I can say is that would seem to be their aggregate preference. Can you honestly tell me that anyone can say more?
For example, I also can't tell you why I exist. I'm aware that there are many groups who claim to know why (god), but in my opinion their explanations are wrong. I'm satisfied to simply #include evolution, and note that my female ancestors and male ancestors probably liked each other, at least on average.
I also can't really tell you why I checked a bug into the project I'm working on yesterday. I can tell you what the bug was, and what the fix is... but why? I'm not sure. Maybe human brains just have a non-zero failure rate? I really didn't want to code it wrong, but it happened anyway. All I'm really sure about with respect to my bug is that the answer probably isn't because there's a historical trend toward bugs.
Circling back, there are many areas in modern life where women have deviated strongly from their historical conditions. You might even say that deviation from historical trends is itself a historical trend. But you can't say that without giving up on historical trends as a useful explanation :p
> I'm aware that there are many groups who claim to know why (god)
This is a complicated example. The fact that people make these claims is itself a phenomenon with complicated, physiological explanations. Hence the process of investigation interferes such as to confound the investigation.
While I do agree it's a complicated example, I also feel like the phenomena of people claiming to understand why women in aggregate behave a certain way similarly confounds OP's investigation. So a complicated example for sure, but for fair reasons.
> "why" is incredibly hard to answer accurately and incredibly easy to answer inaccurately.
Of course. Yet we should try, shouldn't we?
Your life, and mine, are made out of millions of choices that have been made by people before you. The shape of the building you're in right now, the size and proportion of your chair, the computer, the width of the roads you drove on, or the form of the subway you were on. The fact that you're typing these letters on a keyboard in a linear sequence, from left to right. There are countless historical reasons why you
To say "I don't know why any of these happened; I'm just going to look at the present" is fine. But it makes it impossible to evaluate any action in context. Your profile says you're a statistician - surely you understand the value of understanding things in context?
So, here's another example:
Bob says: "I honestly have no clue why black males en mass (apparently) commit the most crimes. All I can say is that would seem to be their aggregate behavior. We should stop and frisk and detain black males based on these statistics. Can you honestly tell me that this is wrong?"
Would you agree? Why examine pesky historical trends, and the history of slavery, the civil war, structural racism? After all, 'why' is incredibly hard to answer accurately. The facts are clear, after all. Isn't it okay to enact policies based on the present that don't care at all about the past? /devilsadvocate
>> "why" is incredibly hard to answer accurately and incredibly easy to answer inaccurately.
> Of course. Yet we should try, shouldn't we?
I mean, maybe? If you see a way to do it that you think would actually work? What I was saying above is that I'm not aware of any methods that would work, and that I've spent quite a while looking for one. At best it's a pure waste of time, at worst you accidentally trick yourself into believing you've found something.
Same example: It's very unlikely that even if there is a reason "why" you and I exist, that we will ever learn the answer. To spend time on this problem looks like it's at best wasteful, and at worst results in insanity or cult formation.
> Bob says: "I honestly have no clue why black males en mass (apparently) commit the most crimes. All I can say is that would seem to be their aggregate behavior. We should stop and frisk and detain black males based on these statistics. Can you honestly tell me that this is wrong?"
This is a very very different statement than the one above. Although the sentences have similar structure, mine is about the limits of knowledge, and yours is someone being overconfident about a policy recommendation (since there are presumably many other possible approaches to policing that would need to be considered before a policy could be deemed best).
If you're asking how I'd respond to someone saying that today? I dunno, the hypothetical speaker sounds dumb. I guess I'd ask for references and do some reading before coming to a conclusion. That's what I did for the pockets argument, and how I came upon the above economic rebuttal.
I also really don't see what stop and frisk has to do with black crime statistics mentioned above... are you saying the statute literally mentioned race? If so that seems dumb / unjustifiably specific. If not, well, you just failed an ideological turning test[1].
My understanding as someone who doesn't follow politics is that some parts of the country are sufficiently high crime that people want to designate those places as essentially airports (so you'll need to be screened if you'd like to enter). That doesn't sound insane to me, but then again I haven't really read anything on the subject.
> What I was saying above is that I'm not aware of any methods that would work, and that I've spent quite a while looking for one.
> Same example: It's very unlikely that even if there is a reason "why" you and I exist, that we will ever learn the answer. To spend time on this problem looks like it's at best wasteful, and at worst results in insanity or cult formation.
History! Research! That's the best we can do, but there are entire disciplines devoted to trying to understand.
I would rather that humankind as a species is enlightened enough to try to understand the universe, past and future and present, and to consider that 'why' and 'how' is a more important question then, I don't know, appeasing some shareholders.
It sounds like you're interested in highly deterministic ideas of why, and any form of inaccuracy is unacceptable, so to find highly accurate 'proofs' for 'why' something happened in such a highly complex system as "the world" is nearly impossible. Better not to try.
It's difficult, yes, because there are no clear answers. But part of many things is about making decisions without clear answers, or clear reasons. Does it sound like madness? Sure, from the point of view of statistics or pure models. But in the field, in situ, improvisation and heuristics and 'best-guess' progress is currently what we have.
> I also really don't see what stop and frisk has to do with black crime statistics mentioned above...
Stop and frisk is racial profiling. Racial profiling is based upon prejudices or statistics about crime based on race. Please do a little bit of research. There's a reason why it was ruled unconstitutional in New York City.[1]
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At the end of the day, I think that approaches like yours are dangerous because the choices you make will unwittingly map onto the choices that others have made, previously. What seems like an independent decision with independent analysis actually is an amplifier of others' existing decisions. I am suggesting that asking "why" is the only way we can have independent and clear thinking.
Take for example 'turning high crime areas into required screening areas' that "doesn't sound insane" to you.
On the surface, it might make sense. Dangerous areas should be segregated. That way we can lower the danger. Diagnose the symptom and stop it.
However, if you understood the impact of ghettos, the impact of prisons (which is a form of segregation through spatial/societal exile), and the history of racial segregation through financial policies like redlining[2], you'd understand that you'd be setting a policy that was the exact same reason why these high crime areas happened in the first place. You'd be amplifying a feedback loop.
The only way to understand is to do some research and understand what the major factors for crime are. Is it a lack of jobs? A drug-trade fueled underground economy? A lack of education? A lack of strong familial/social structures? What improvement would have the biggest impact in the area?
Are these analyses trying to understand 'why' going to be rock-solid 100% verifiable? No. Is the symptom 100% verifiable? Yes. Despite that, it makes sense to at least TRY to understand the cause.
The point I was trying to make was not that good judgement under uncertainty is impossible. As you mentioned, I'm a statistician... as such, I'm 100% certain I would never say that :p
What I was trying to say was that the methods commonly used in social sciences departments, and the watered down versions used in popular social science writing (perhaps typified by OP's essay) are basically a waste of time if your goal is understanding rather than entertainment.
That's not to say I think that real world action (including ethical action) is impossible, or that it's not worth doing. That's to say I have a strong, somewhat professional, opinion on how it should be done.
I am not alone in this. There are groups of statistically minded people who are making headway avoiding the traps of "common sense". http://www.givewell.org might be a good introduction, perhaps reading about how the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation allocates funding would also be helpful if you'd like details. They do around ~500 times more measurable good per dollar donated than the average charity (source: http://www.givewell.org/international/technical/programs/ins... etc). That this level of improvement was possible is a harsh critique of the sort of watered down social sciences methods we're discussing.
> I am suggesting that asking "why" is the only way we can have independent and clear thinking.
I mean, I get that you're saying that... but oh man is a citation needed there. "What"/"How" is normally the question that leads to insight and paradigm change in my experience. I don't usually cite Kuhn, but https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Structure_of_Scientific_Re... might be worth a read for you.
> However, if you understood the impact of ghettos, the impact of prisons (which is a form of segregation through spatial/societal exile), and the history of racial segregation through financial policies like redlining[2], you'd understand that you'd be setting a policy that was the exact same reason why these high crime areas happened in the first place. You'd be amplifying a feedback loop.
> The only way to understand is to do some research and understand what the major factors for crime are. Is it a lack of jobs? A drug-trade fueled underground economy? A lack of education? A lack of strong familial/social structures? What improvement would have the biggest impact in the area?
I'm so confused. You think the reason people have proposed stop and frisk is because they haven't considered what the major factors correlating with future crime are? (ie what makes a high risk area, how to city plan around that, etc) I would be very surprised if that were the case. If it's a stupid policy (and I'm more than willing to believe that it is) I would have thought it would be an example of shoddy social sciences thinking (ie people who shouldn't have asked "why")
How do you think government officials decide which policies to enact? They went to some of our nations best schools (yes, that's meant to be a critique of those schools). ...
> the methods commonly used in social sciences departments
What methods? Could you clarify? There's an immense diversity within 'social sciences' departments; are you including all forms of history/theory, including the history of technology as well?
> There are groups of statistically minded people who are making headway avoiding the traps of "common sense". http://www.givewell.org might be a good introduction
I'm familiar with Givewell. As a non-profit, Givewell does good work, but they perform a form of meta analysis of other non-profits, and do not do direct work. As a result, Givewell isn't a good example of "real world action",
I'd love to see another example of 'real world action' that you think makes good judgment under uncertainty that isn't a form of meta-analysis.
As a software developer AND architect (the bricks and mortar kind, not the software kind), I find that my logic-oriented education is often less-than helpful on the construction site. What's more important is a holistic (or cybernetics[1]) way to understand a series of entangled questions - why people use space, how they interact with a building, how a structure is constructed, what technologies are used, construction time and cost, risk, relationship to building codes, building inspectors et cetera.
So to me, a form of thought that thinks asking "why" is "insanity or cult formation" is very well-meaning but ill-informed in terms of much forms of action. It works on the screen, but it doesn't work when it interfaces with complexity.
Or take it this way. Logic-based thinking works in a highly controlled environment, where the logical axioms are pure and easy. Heuristic-based action works in a highly complex environment, where there are no axioms, rules are always bent, and things are always interconnected in highly unpredictable ways.
> "What"/"How" is normally the question that leads to insight and paradigm change in my experience.
Sure, I've read SSR. So to clarify, your argument is that spending time on 'why' is "at best wasteful", and thus "what"/"how" is better?
I think we agree here, but I'd say that it seems like you're in disagreement with your previous answer.
> I'm so confused. You think the reason people have proposed stop and frisk is because they haven't considered what the major factors correlating with future crime are?
> How do you think government officials decide which policies to enact? They went to some of our nations best schools (yes, that's meant to be a critique of those schools). It's not like doing what social science has been doing, only harder, will somehow change the results we're seeing.
First of all, yes, I do! History has proven that people have been consistently wrong in thinking about policy. At some point, the country was against miscegenation as a policy, for goodness's sake. Why wouldn't they be now?
You assume a neat synchronous relationship between knowledge and policies, so lack of knowledge is the reason why good policies are not being enacted, and thus if bad policies are being enacted, then the current forms of knowledge practice (what you call "social science") are inadequate.
I don't think you've considered the results of politics, of democracy, of messy decision-making practices between groups of people who disagree. This often manifests as a temporal delay.
Take climate change, for example. Every sane scientist in the field agrees that climate change is a real thing. Yet there are not enough policies actively addressing the issue.
Couldn't I say: "You think the reason people haven't addressed climate change is because they haven't considered what the major factors correlating with future climate change are? They must have since...
> I'm familiar with Givewell. As a non-profit, Givewell does good work, but they perform a form of meta analysis of other non-profits, and do not do direct work. As a result, Givewell isn't a good example of "real world action",
While I do agree that decisions under time pressure take on a different character than more deliberative decisions, I disagree with the implication that they are somehow fundamentally different than performing day-to-day construction coordination tasks. The complexity level that the givewell guys grapple with when formulating their models is very high (ie finding a simple model that's not missing the point is a lot harder than using such a model after the fact).
> What's more important is a holistic (or cybernetics[1]) way to understand a series of entangled questions - why people use space, how they interact with a building, how a structure is constructed, what technologies are used, construction time and cost, risk, relationship to building codes, building inspectors et cetera.
(Other than the non building specific parts) these are exactly the kinds of questions givewell grapples with -- time and cost, risk: shifting disease patterns, unstable governments in the third world, estimated future efficacy, capital saturation, etc.
> Or take it this way. Logic-based thinking works in a highly controlled environment, where the logical axioms are pure and easy. Heuristic-based action works in a highly complex environment, where there are no axioms, rules are always bent, and things are always interconnected in highly unpredictable ways.
Right, statistics (well, probability theory) is an extension of logic to the sorts of highly complex environments you're describing.
>So to me, a form of thought that thinks asking "why" is "insanity or cult formation" is very well-meaning but ill-informed in terms of much forms of action. It works on the screen, but it doesn't work when it interfaces with complexity.
Perhaps you were meaning something different than I was with regard to why questions? I was referring to what OP does in her essay, and what you evoked when you asked for with "> women not wanting to buy those pants. And why do you think that is?"
Ie a non-tested (and often non-testable <- a much worse sin) speculation not backed by evidence with the feeling of truth. A pet theory in an area I know relatively little about for the purpose of seeming smart or interesting in conversation. A unnecessary heuristic to cloud my future self's vision. An unwarranted and unnecessary generalization about a group of people. A new religion to join.
To speculate accurately about the reason for one person's actions may sometimes be possible. I'll say again that I don't believe this can be done with any accuracy in the area of societal level women's fashion choices. There are simply too many women, buying pants for too many reasons. We can make aggregate predictions about that group much like an actuary would price a life insurance contract, but that deals with the what of a situation, not the why. You can even correctly infer the structure of the what (ie "cigarette smokers should be charged more for life insurance"), however you must be very careful when doing this, as this is extremely difficult to do without experimentation.
> So to clarify, your argument is that spending time on 'why' is "at best wasteful", and thus "what"/"how" is better?
> I think we agree here, but I'd say that it seems like you're in disagreement with your previous answer.
Well good! Glad to meet a sane person such as yourself. I have not read SSR myself (it's social science nonsense / overgeneralization in my opinion), but I'm glad to hear that my mentioning it seems to have been helpful. I've gotten the cliffs notes by spending time on the internet.
Yeah, the idea that women's fashions are dictated by men is pretty silly. Women buy what they want to wear, and anybody who sells clothing is going to cater to their tastes. It takes a feminist to look at a sign of power (social and market) and see a sign of oppression - the women I've dated didn't feel the need for pockets because my pockets were their pockets. Or so I was told.
And it's not like men's clothing is strictly functional. The first thing they tell you when you buy a suit or sport coat is not to put anything in the jacket pockets, because they'll stretch and sag. And WTF is a tie for, anyway?
Firms do not operate independent of the social institutions, norms, and beliefs which surround them. This includes the producers and the consumers. Trying to divorce markets from society is like trying to separate a fish from water and still expect it to survive (even fish with lungs still need moisture). And as proof of my point look at every venture that tried to run counter to social norms like private busing firms in the 1930s which tried to fight back against Jim Crow laws. They were promptly outlawed or bought out by those friendly to racist ideologies. Similarly, movable type printing presses were closely regulated when Catholicism was the only lawful faith in the HRE. Get caught without your license even in a liberal free city in the HRE expect your press ceased and yourself in a prison or worse. Social norms and institutions always shape fashion not the other way round.
Every example you've listed has to do with subverting the free market though legislation. You didn't list other subversive forces on the market, but there's also a pseudo-regulation through non-governmental force (death threats, other threats), and boycotting / consumer groups (large groups of consumers form a sort of monopsony, refusing to purchase from corporations without a given policy).
If any of these three hold in the case of the market for women's pants pocket size, please let me know. In that case I would agree there is sexism in that market, and sign petitions etc to stop the market subversion. Examples of evidence:
* A law on the books requiring ladies pants pockets to be under a certain size. (If such a law does exist, I've just verified Amazon is violating it btw)
* A police report that (for example) a Macy's executive has been threatened over the pocket size of the pants they stocked at a store.
* The website of a large consumer group, officially boycotting a retailer due to their women's pants pocket policy.
If such evidence doesn't exist, then you should strongly consider the null hypothesis: that the overwhelming force governing the size of women's pants pockets is Adam Smith's invisible hand.
This is the default assumption when looking at markets because covert coercion on such a vast scale (literally all retailers) would require considerable organizational effort, and would consume considerable cost to maintain. We're talking government scale action, sustained over hundreds of years (see OP's story), with no leaks. All to keep pocket sizes small. That's simply not plausible.
Again, I'm not saying it didn't happen in those cases you mention above -- which is to say I think you could provide such evidence as I'm requesting for your examples -- I'm saying you can't do that here because OP's theory is a conspiracy theory.
None of what you've stated is true for the following reasons.
1. Markets are not value free as people compose markets. Thus their personal values and those social values which they subscribe to are part of their reasoning about the market regardless of how they try to assert rationality as their primary motivator for their actions in the market.
2. Legal norms which I mentioned are PREDICATED on SOCIAL NORMS. Jim Crow didn't happen before some mean senators wanted it. It happened because the majority of former slave owners were part of the voting population. And they were able to convince many non-slave-owning Southerners that Jim Crow was a swell idea (see the history of the drug war for details on this, it's quite interesting).
3. Social norms don't just change because legal norms change. Even though in the United States redlining is illegal in many cases it's still in effect despite best efforts of legislators, lawyers, and even private organizations. So no amount of market action will ever erase those norms unless the environmental impact of those norms make it impossible for a significant portion of the market to operate without subsidy.
In short, you're confusing the issue as much as the person I was criticizing. Both of you expect people to act like homo economicus and that markets can overturn social norms just because. Also, Adam Smith didn't believe that social norms didn't affect markets otherwise why did he write Wealth of Nations as a criticism of Mercentalism which was a system of social and legal norms of his time? I think you really need to analyze my comments and come back with a better criticism that actually can apply to my points.
If you are a woman or spend any time in feminist circles, you will come across the "lack of pockets" argument multiple times.
It's a bad argument.
Fundamentally, "pockets" have only become a feminist rallying cry because of their unpopularity. Even if you assume that women's clothes do not contain pockets because of underlying misogyny, that same argument would apply to any other parts of women's grooming that do not apply to men. Skirts, makeup, dresses etc.
Yet, no-one is willing to openly rally against makeup or skirts or dresses because feminist women want to wear them. "Pockets" are a safe repository for illusory protest because they have very few IRL defenders. There is simply no demand for them.
This is simply virtue signaling. Nothing more and nothing less.
Yes, but those are the more radical anti-femme feminists. There's very little ideological consistency. The author of the post decrying the lack of pockets wears makeup, high heels and bras on her blog.
I don't get this kind of writing. It starts out with a detailed description of Clinton suit, but is full of pictures of fashion models. Am I supposed to go on Google to look at it? Why isn't it included in the article?
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[ 3.2 ms ] story [ 90.5 ms ] threadObama doesn't have keys.
On the other hand, if I'm allowed to generalize based on my intuition, usually women carry more items regularly than men do (make-up items if they wear make-up, sometimes a bottle of perfume, a pack of pads on their periods, etc...), and it's not practical for them to put all them things in their pockets, especially given that stretchy garments are a la mode for both sexes.
The "things" that have historically dictated men's fashion usually involve being shot/stabbed at. Usually by force of draft.
A lot of men's clothing comes from the battle field. I'm not sure that counts as a privilege as this article would have you believe. Not everything male is a net positive.
Examples from the top of my head and without verification:
I would imagine there were many more. William Gibson uses this trend for military fashions as a subplot in his Blue Ant trilogy.2. Are you a man who wants no pockets? Those are also for sale. Buy them!
That's really all there is to it. Stores stock what customers buy, not the other way around. I'm sure Macy's would love nothing more than every woman on the planet deciding to buy a new wardrobe of pocket-laden pants... the weak link in that plan is not Macy's management, but rather women not wanting to buy those pants.
OP sounds about as sane as a die hard haskell programmer claiming haskell books don't sell because booksellers secretly want to oppress programmers.
And why do you think that is? Diagnosing the symptom is far easier than understanding the cause. You're doing the former.
History allows us to actually understand how historical/societal trends have changed over time. To ignore that is to be overly simplistic.
Like saying "Q: Why is the '<a>' tag used to make links in HTML?" "A: Because browsers interpret <a> as a link!"
When you're talking about emergent behavior of extremely complex systems, "why" is incredibly hard to answer accurately and incredibly easy to answer inaccurately. I honestly have no clue why women en mass (apparently) don't care for pockets. All I can say is that would seem to be their aggregate preference. Can you honestly tell me that anyone can say more?
For example, I also can't tell you why I exist. I'm aware that there are many groups who claim to know why (god), but in my opinion their explanations are wrong. I'm satisfied to simply #include evolution, and note that my female ancestors and male ancestors probably liked each other, at least on average.
I also can't really tell you why I checked a bug into the project I'm working on yesterday. I can tell you what the bug was, and what the fix is... but why? I'm not sure. Maybe human brains just have a non-zero failure rate? I really didn't want to code it wrong, but it happened anyway. All I'm really sure about with respect to my bug is that the answer probably isn't because there's a historical trend toward bugs.
Circling back, there are many areas in modern life where women have deviated strongly from their historical conditions. You might even say that deviation from historical trends is itself a historical trend. But you can't say that without giving up on historical trends as a useful explanation :p
This is a complicated example. The fact that people make these claims is itself a phenomenon with complicated, physiological explanations. Hence the process of investigation interferes such as to confound the investigation.
Of course. Yet we should try, shouldn't we?
Your life, and mine, are made out of millions of choices that have been made by people before you. The shape of the building you're in right now, the size and proportion of your chair, the computer, the width of the roads you drove on, or the form of the subway you were on. The fact that you're typing these letters on a keyboard in a linear sequence, from left to right. There are countless historical reasons why you
To say "I don't know why any of these happened; I'm just going to look at the present" is fine. But it makes it impossible to evaluate any action in context. Your profile says you're a statistician - surely you understand the value of understanding things in context?
So, here's another example:
Bob says: "I honestly have no clue why black males en mass (apparently) commit the most crimes. All I can say is that would seem to be their aggregate behavior. We should stop and frisk and detain black males based on these statistics. Can you honestly tell me that this is wrong?"
Would you agree? Why examine pesky historical trends, and the history of slavery, the civil war, structural racism? After all, 'why' is incredibly hard to answer accurately. The facts are clear, after all. Isn't it okay to enact policies based on the present that don't care at all about the past? /devilsadvocate
> Of course. Yet we should try, shouldn't we?
I mean, maybe? If you see a way to do it that you think would actually work? What I was saying above is that I'm not aware of any methods that would work, and that I've spent quite a while looking for one. At best it's a pure waste of time, at worst you accidentally trick yourself into believing you've found something.
Same example: It's very unlikely that even if there is a reason "why" you and I exist, that we will ever learn the answer. To spend time on this problem looks like it's at best wasteful, and at worst results in insanity or cult formation.
> Bob says: "I honestly have no clue why black males en mass (apparently) commit the most crimes. All I can say is that would seem to be their aggregate behavior. We should stop and frisk and detain black males based on these statistics. Can you honestly tell me that this is wrong?"
This is a very very different statement than the one above. Although the sentences have similar structure, mine is about the limits of knowledge, and yours is someone being overconfident about a policy recommendation (since there are presumably many other possible approaches to policing that would need to be considered before a policy could be deemed best).
If you're asking how I'd respond to someone saying that today? I dunno, the hypothetical speaker sounds dumb. I guess I'd ask for references and do some reading before coming to a conclusion. That's what I did for the pockets argument, and how I came upon the above economic rebuttal.
I also really don't see what stop and frisk has to do with black crime statistics mentioned above... are you saying the statute literally mentioned race? If so that seems dumb / unjustifiably specific. If not, well, you just failed an ideological turning test[1].
My understanding as someone who doesn't follow politics is that some parts of the country are sufficiently high crime that people want to designate those places as essentially airports (so you'll need to be screened if you'd like to enter). That doesn't sound insane to me, but then again I haven't really read anything on the subject.
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ideological_Turing_Test
> Same example: It's very unlikely that even if there is a reason "why" you and I exist, that we will ever learn the answer. To spend time on this problem looks like it's at best wasteful, and at worst results in insanity or cult formation.
History! Research! That's the best we can do, but there are entire disciplines devoted to trying to understand.
I would rather that humankind as a species is enlightened enough to try to understand the universe, past and future and present, and to consider that 'why' and 'how' is a more important question then, I don't know, appeasing some shareholders.
It sounds like you're interested in highly deterministic ideas of why, and any form of inaccuracy is unacceptable, so to find highly accurate 'proofs' for 'why' something happened in such a highly complex system as "the world" is nearly impossible. Better not to try.
It's difficult, yes, because there are no clear answers. But part of many things is about making decisions without clear answers, or clear reasons. Does it sound like madness? Sure, from the point of view of statistics or pure models. But in the field, in situ, improvisation and heuristics and 'best-guess' progress is currently what we have.
> I also really don't see what stop and frisk has to do with black crime statistics mentioned above...
Stop and frisk is racial profiling. Racial profiling is based upon prejudices or statistics about crime based on race. Please do a little bit of research. There's a reason why it was ruled unconstitutional in New York City.[1]
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At the end of the day, I think that approaches like yours are dangerous because the choices you make will unwittingly map onto the choices that others have made, previously. What seems like an independent decision with independent analysis actually is an amplifier of others' existing decisions. I am suggesting that asking "why" is the only way we can have independent and clear thinking.
Take for example 'turning high crime areas into required screening areas' that "doesn't sound insane" to you.
On the surface, it might make sense. Dangerous areas should be segregated. That way we can lower the danger. Diagnose the symptom and stop it.
However, if you understood the impact of ghettos, the impact of prisons (which is a form of segregation through spatial/societal exile), and the history of racial segregation through financial policies like redlining[2], you'd understand that you'd be setting a policy that was the exact same reason why these high crime areas happened in the first place. You'd be amplifying a feedback loop.
The only way to understand is to do some research and understand what the major factors for crime are. Is it a lack of jobs? A drug-trade fueled underground economy? A lack of education? A lack of strong familial/social structures? What improvement would have the biggest impact in the area?
Are these analyses trying to understand 'why' going to be rock-solid 100% verifiable? No. Is the symptom 100% verifiable? Yes. Despite that, it makes sense to at least TRY to understand the cause.
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stop-and-frisk_in_New_York_Cit... [2] http://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2014/05/the-raci...
What I was trying to say was that the methods commonly used in social sciences departments, and the watered down versions used in popular social science writing (perhaps typified by OP's essay) are basically a waste of time if your goal is understanding rather than entertainment.
That's not to say I think that real world action (including ethical action) is impossible, or that it's not worth doing. That's to say I have a strong, somewhat professional, opinion on how it should be done.
I am not alone in this. There are groups of statistically minded people who are making headway avoiding the traps of "common sense". http://www.givewell.org might be a good introduction, perhaps reading about how the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation allocates funding would also be helpful if you'd like details. They do around ~500 times more measurable good per dollar donated than the average charity (source: http://www.givewell.org/international/technical/programs/ins... etc). That this level of improvement was possible is a harsh critique of the sort of watered down social sciences methods we're discussing.
> I am suggesting that asking "why" is the only way we can have independent and clear thinking.
I mean, I get that you're saying that... but oh man is a citation needed there. "What"/"How" is normally the question that leads to insight and paradigm change in my experience. I don't usually cite Kuhn, but https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Structure_of_Scientific_Re... might be worth a read for you.
Why almost invariably leads to https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Attribution_bias and/or https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fundamental_attribution_error , both in my experience and according to the literature.
> However, if you understood the impact of ghettos, the impact of prisons (which is a form of segregation through spatial/societal exile), and the history of racial segregation through financial policies like redlining[2], you'd understand that you'd be setting a policy that was the exact same reason why these high crime areas happened in the first place. You'd be amplifying a feedback loop.
> The only way to understand is to do some research and understand what the major factors for crime are. Is it a lack of jobs? A drug-trade fueled underground economy? A lack of education? A lack of strong familial/social structures? What improvement would have the biggest impact in the area?
I'm so confused. You think the reason people have proposed stop and frisk is because they haven't considered what the major factors correlating with future crime are? (ie what makes a high risk area, how to city plan around that, etc) I would be very surprised if that were the case. If it's a stupid policy (and I'm more than willing to believe that it is) I would have thought it would be an example of shoddy social sciences thinking (ie people who shouldn't have asked "why")
How do you think government officials decide which policies to enact? They went to some of our nations best schools (yes, that's meant to be a critique of those schools). ...
What methods? Could you clarify? There's an immense diversity within 'social sciences' departments; are you including all forms of history/theory, including the history of technology as well?
> There are groups of statistically minded people who are making headway avoiding the traps of "common sense". http://www.givewell.org might be a good introduction
I'm familiar with Givewell. As a non-profit, Givewell does good work, but they perform a form of meta analysis of other non-profits, and do not do direct work. As a result, Givewell isn't a good example of "real world action",
I'd love to see another example of 'real world action' that you think makes good judgment under uncertainty that isn't a form of meta-analysis.
As a software developer AND architect (the bricks and mortar kind, not the software kind), I find that my logic-oriented education is often less-than helpful on the construction site. What's more important is a holistic (or cybernetics[1]) way to understand a series of entangled questions - why people use space, how they interact with a building, how a structure is constructed, what technologies are used, construction time and cost, risk, relationship to building codes, building inspectors et cetera.
So to me, a form of thought that thinks asking "why" is "insanity or cult formation" is very well-meaning but ill-informed in terms of much forms of action. It works on the screen, but it doesn't work when it interfaces with complexity.
Or take it this way. Logic-based thinking works in a highly controlled environment, where the logical axioms are pure and easy. Heuristic-based action works in a highly complex environment, where there are no axioms, rules are always bent, and things are always interconnected in highly unpredictable ways.
> "What"/"How" is normally the question that leads to insight and paradigm change in my experience.
Sure, I've read SSR. So to clarify, your argument is that spending time on 'why' is "at best wasteful", and thus "what"/"how" is better?
I think we agree here, but I'd say that it seems like you're in disagreement with your previous answer.
> I'm so confused. You think the reason people have proposed stop and frisk is because they haven't considered what the major factors correlating with future crime are?
> How do you think government officials decide which policies to enact? They went to some of our nations best schools (yes, that's meant to be a critique of those schools). It's not like doing what social science has been doing, only harder, will somehow change the results we're seeing.
First of all, yes, I do! History has proven that people have been consistently wrong in thinking about policy. At some point, the country was against miscegenation as a policy, for goodness's sake. Why wouldn't they be now?
You assume a neat synchronous relationship between knowledge and policies, so lack of knowledge is the reason why good policies are not being enacted, and thus if bad policies are being enacted, then the current forms of knowledge practice (what you call "social science") are inadequate.
I don't think you've considered the results of politics, of democracy, of messy decision-making practices between groups of people who disagree. This often manifests as a temporal delay.
Take climate change, for example. Every sane scientist in the field agrees that climate change is a real thing. Yet there are not enough policies actively addressing the issue.
Couldn't I say: "You think the reason people haven't addressed climate change is because they haven't considered what the major factors correlating with future climate change are? They must have since...
While I do agree that decisions under time pressure take on a different character than more deliberative decisions, I disagree with the implication that they are somehow fundamentally different than performing day-to-day construction coordination tasks. The complexity level that the givewell guys grapple with when formulating their models is very high (ie finding a simple model that's not missing the point is a lot harder than using such a model after the fact).
> What's more important is a holistic (or cybernetics[1]) way to understand a series of entangled questions - why people use space, how they interact with a building, how a structure is constructed, what technologies are used, construction time and cost, risk, relationship to building codes, building inspectors et cetera.
(Other than the non building specific parts) these are exactly the kinds of questions givewell grapples with -- time and cost, risk: shifting disease patterns, unstable governments in the third world, estimated future efficacy, capital saturation, etc.
> Or take it this way. Logic-based thinking works in a highly controlled environment, where the logical axioms are pure and easy. Heuristic-based action works in a highly complex environment, where there are no axioms, rules are always bent, and things are always interconnected in highly unpredictable ways.
Right, statistics (well, probability theory) is an extension of logic to the sorts of highly complex environments you're describing.
>So to me, a form of thought that thinks asking "why" is "insanity or cult formation" is very well-meaning but ill-informed in terms of much forms of action. It works on the screen, but it doesn't work when it interfaces with complexity.
Perhaps you were meaning something different than I was with regard to why questions? I was referring to what OP does in her essay, and what you evoked when you asked for with "> women not wanting to buy those pants. And why do you think that is?"
Ie a non-tested (and often non-testable <- a much worse sin) speculation not backed by evidence with the feeling of truth. A pet theory in an area I know relatively little about for the purpose of seeming smart or interesting in conversation. A unnecessary heuristic to cloud my future self's vision. An unwarranted and unnecessary generalization about a group of people. A new religion to join.
To speculate accurately about the reason for one person's actions may sometimes be possible. I'll say again that I don't believe this can be done with any accuracy in the area of societal level women's fashion choices. There are simply too many women, buying pants for too many reasons. We can make aggregate predictions about that group much like an actuary would price a life insurance contract, but that deals with the what of a situation, not the why. You can even correctly infer the structure of the what (ie "cigarette smokers should be charged more for life insurance"), however you must be very careful when doing this, as this is extremely difficult to do without experimentation.
> So to clarify, your argument is that spending time on 'why' is "at best wasteful", and thus "what"/"how" is better?
> I think we agree here, but I'd say that it seems like you're in disagreement with your previous answer.
Well good! Glad to meet a sane person such as yourself. I have not read SSR myself (it's social science nonsense / overgeneralization in my opinion), but I'm glad to hear that my mentioning it seems to have been helpful. I've gotten the cliffs notes by spending time on the internet.
I think the root o...
I though this form of analysis (favored by Marx) was debunked?
In some men's fashions the pockets are ersatz. There is no sack behind the sealed slit under the flap --all for show.
And it's not like men's clothing is strictly functional. The first thing they tell you when you buy a suit or sport coat is not to put anything in the jacket pockets, because they'll stretch and sag. And WTF is a tie for, anyway?
Seriously, these memes feed off patriarchy-paranoia, indicating there's far too much of it around..
If any of these three hold in the case of the market for women's pants pocket size, please let me know. In that case I would agree there is sexism in that market, and sign petitions etc to stop the market subversion. Examples of evidence:
* A law on the books requiring ladies pants pockets to be under a certain size. (If such a law does exist, I've just verified Amazon is violating it btw)
* A police report that (for example) a Macy's executive has been threatened over the pocket size of the pants they stocked at a store.
* The website of a large consumer group, officially boycotting a retailer due to their women's pants pocket policy.
If such evidence doesn't exist, then you should strongly consider the null hypothesis: that the overwhelming force governing the size of women's pants pockets is Adam Smith's invisible hand.
This is the default assumption when looking at markets because covert coercion on such a vast scale (literally all retailers) would require considerable organizational effort, and would consume considerable cost to maintain. We're talking government scale action, sustained over hundreds of years (see OP's story), with no leaks. All to keep pocket sizes small. That's simply not plausible.
Again, I'm not saying it didn't happen in those cases you mention above -- which is to say I think you could provide such evidence as I'm requesting for your examples -- I'm saying you can't do that here because OP's theory is a conspiracy theory.
1. Markets are not value free as people compose markets. Thus their personal values and those social values which they subscribe to are part of their reasoning about the market regardless of how they try to assert rationality as their primary motivator for their actions in the market.
2. Legal norms which I mentioned are PREDICATED on SOCIAL NORMS. Jim Crow didn't happen before some mean senators wanted it. It happened because the majority of former slave owners were part of the voting population. And they were able to convince many non-slave-owning Southerners that Jim Crow was a swell idea (see the history of the drug war for details on this, it's quite interesting).
3. Social norms don't just change because legal norms change. Even though in the United States redlining is illegal in many cases it's still in effect despite best efforts of legislators, lawyers, and even private organizations. So no amount of market action will ever erase those norms unless the environmental impact of those norms make it impossible for a significant portion of the market to operate without subsidy.
In short, you're confusing the issue as much as the person I was criticizing. Both of you expect people to act like homo economicus and that markets can overturn social norms just because. Also, Adam Smith didn't believe that social norms didn't affect markets otherwise why did he write Wealth of Nations as a criticism of Mercentalism which was a system of social and legal norms of his time? I think you really need to analyze my comments and come back with a better criticism that actually can apply to my points.
It's a bad argument.
Fundamentally, "pockets" have only become a feminist rallying cry because of their unpopularity. Even if you assume that women's clothes do not contain pockets because of underlying misogyny, that same argument would apply to any other parts of women's grooming that do not apply to men. Skirts, makeup, dresses etc.
Yet, no-one is willing to openly rally against makeup or skirts or dresses because feminist women want to wear them. "Pockets" are a safe repository for illusory protest because they have very few IRL defenders. There is simply no demand for them.
This is simply virtue signaling. Nothing more and nothing less.
For an article stressing the importance of small sartorial details they missed at least one detail in their photographs.
"Women riding 1880's bicycles" is clearly women riding 1880's tricycles.
I have no opinion on the politics of that extra wheel.