Taken literally, it is seen as pedantic, much like the guy who insists that every statement of the form “men are stronger than women” be followed by the suffix “on average”. Of course in a planet of 3 billion women there are going to be some exceptions; that’s not an interesting observation.
One thing I’ve noticed is that, whereas zero-article plurals in English are usually taken to only refer to central elements of a category (“ducks lay eggs” even though male ones don’t) in descriptive statements, they often aren’t in normative statements (say “ducks aren’t allowed here”). Therefore, claims like “women are X; therefore, women shouldn’t be allowed to do Y”, insofar as “women are X” would normally be taken to refer to typical women and “women shouldn’t be allowed to do Y” would normally be taken to refer to all women, sound a lot like fallacies of equivocation to me.
Therefore, claims like “women are X; therefore, women shouldn’t be allowed to do Y”, insofar as “women are X” would normally be taken to refer to typical women and “women shouldn’t be allowed to do Y” would normally be taken to refer to all women, sound a lot like fallacies of equivocation to me.
Or maybe the claimers do not believe that every rare exception warrants a deontological obligation to create an entire legal/social/institutional framework to acommodate it, regardless of consequences such as horrible inefficiency, toxic social pathologies, or the abandonment of vitally important Schelling fences (I am reminded of a comment on Steve Sailer’s blog: “The military is too male. I don’t have a joke, I’m just really in awe of that phrase. I’m thinking about the length of a journey that a culture must undertake in order for that to stop sounding crazy.”)
If that’s their argument, I’d rather they stated that explicitly, rather than relying on the ambiguity of generic plurals.
(And in certain cases I can’t see what’s wrong with just using the same legal/social/institutional framework that already exists for men. “After all, we are a university, not a bath house.”)
One thing I’ve noticed is that, whereas zero-article plurals in English are usually taken to only refer to central elements of a category (“ducks lay eggs” even though male ones don’t) in descriptive statements, they often aren’t in normative statements (say “ducks aren’t allowed here”). Therefore, claims like “women are X; therefore, women shouldn’t be allowed to do Y”, insofar as “women are X” would normally be taken to refer to typical women and “women shouldn’t be allowed to do Y” would normally be taken to refer to all women, sound a lot like fallacies of equivocation to me.
Or maybe the claimers do not believe that every rare exception warrants a deontological obligation to create an entire legal/social/institutional framework to acommodate it, regardless of consequences such as horrible inefficiency, toxic social pathologies, or the abandonment of vitally important Schelling fences (I am reminded of a comment on Steve Sailer’s blog: “The military is too male. I don’t have a joke, I’m just really in awe of that phrase. I’m thinking about the length of a journey that a culture must undertake in order for that to stop sounding crazy.”)
If that’s their argument, I’d rather they stated that explicitly, rather than relying on the ambiguity of generic plurals.
(And in certain cases I can’t see what’s wrong with just using the same legal/social/institutional framework that already exists for men. “After all, we are a university, not a bath house.”)