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In reply to the discussion: Where have societies' views of women come from? [View all]RainDog
(28,784 posts)44. The soundest argument, it seems
One of the best arguments seems to come from the idea that it was the issue of property, or the "nuclear family" as a unit of society more important than the community - that arose with the rise of property held privately - makes a lot of sense.
And the move to agriculture created a situation in which childbearing was for the purpose of economic gain - to create workers.
That seems to be about as basic as it gets - and there are still cultures that don't have that same way of being - but they're all cultures that don't settle into one spot and don't view holding property as the goal of life.
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the poster to whom you responded is one seriously dedicated feminist, and probably, as I am,
niyad
Apr 2013
#13
True, I suppose. But that was a new idea at the time. Very modern and a new way of thinking
Honeycombe8
Apr 2013
#11
No, I haven't done a scientific study. That was my opinion, based on things
Honeycombe8
Apr 2013
#12
^This. When survival depended on brute strength, a woman needed a man to survive more than a
Squinch
Apr 2013
#80
where does it come from? the abrahamic, patriarchal religions, to start (meaning, christianity,
niyad
Apr 2013
#15
I read it many years ago, thought I still had a copy somewhere, but I dont. Saw Riane in
niyad
Apr 2013
#37
will have to order that one, as well. thank you. that one I know is not on my shelves.
niyad
Apr 2013
#87
Good post. I would add that before war and settled communities came an ecological barrier that
byeya
Apr 2013
#56
Genetically, humans are slightly closer to common chimps than bonobos, I think. When a bonobo female
byeya
Apr 2013
#53
There are still matriarchal societies today. The Mosuo in China come to mind
riderinthestorm
Apr 2013
#35
The anthropologist Marvin Harris showed that the more militaristic a society was, the worse females
byeya
Apr 2013
#41
Thomas Jefferson who wrote "All MEN are created equal" and left out 76% of the country
graham4anything
Apr 2013
#51
You're asking for a single source, for one of human society's most complex constructs?
Scootaloo
Apr 2013
#78