A great deal of effort goes into making sure (1) and (3) match. Clothing, hairstyles, perfumes, pigments applied to face and nails, jewelry, bags, gaits, eyewear etc. are carefully categorized as male or female. So I would not say they are really independent tests.
They are independent tests in the sense that there are people who fail one and pass the other. It’s exactly my point that nevertheless passing one test is correlated with passing another.
It seems to me that the social consensus that “women paint their nails and men don’t,” for example, arose organically and not as the result of careful categorization. Maybe I don’t understand what you mean by careful categorization.
My point is that if you group these tests into pairs, (1 and 2) and (2 and 3) seem to correlate without much help but (1 and 3) is different, it has a suspiciously large amount of human effort invested in strengthening the correlation.
I don’t know what you could mean by “suspicious.” Maybe there is a large amount of human effort invested in strengthening the correlation between 1. and 3. What would follow?
Clothing, hairstyles, perfumes, pigments applied to face and nails, jewelry, bags, gaits, eyewear etc. are carefully categorized as male or female.
Carefully? More like recklessly. And categorizing (on the level of social norms) aspects of social behavior as unambiguously belonging to one gender is usually a bad idea, because it singles out all the intermediate cases.
Yes, carefully. In general, people are more careful never to display the ‘wrong’ gender signals than almost anything else. And I only meant to point out that this is the way most people are, not to endorse it as a good idea.
A great deal of effort goes into making sure (1) and (3) match. Clothing, hairstyles, perfumes, pigments applied to face and nails, jewelry, bags, gaits, eyewear etc. are carefully categorized as male or female. So I would not say they are really independent tests.
They are independent tests in the sense that there are people who fail one and pass the other. It’s exactly my point that nevertheless passing one test is correlated with passing another.
It seems to me that the social consensus that “women paint their nails and men don’t,” for example, arose organically and not as the result of careful categorization. Maybe I don’t understand what you mean by careful categorization.
My point is that if you group these tests into pairs, (1 and 2) and (2 and 3) seem to correlate without much help but (1 and 3) is different, it has a suspiciously large amount of human effort invested in strengthening the correlation.
I don’t know what you could mean by “suspicious.” Maybe there is a large amount of human effort invested in strengthening the correlation between 1. and 3. What would follow?
Carefully? More like recklessly. And categorizing (on the level of social norms) aspects of social behavior as unambiguously belonging to one gender is usually a bad idea, because it singles out all the intermediate cases.
Yes, carefully. In general, people are more careful never to display the ‘wrong’ gender signals than almost anything else. And I only meant to point out that this is the way most people are, not to endorse it as a good idea.