A discussion in the Wing Chun forum touched on this area somewhat and I think it's a topic that could yield some interesting insights both in terms of 'modern' views and what the historical record has to show us.
To put my cards on the table, I'm a middle-aged Englishman brought up through a religious background and inculcated with what many would consider antiquated ideas about the nature of the roles of men and women. To say I was Idealised Victorian in outlook would not be too much of an insult :lol:.
However, I have tried to overcome the strictures of my youth and can quite clearly see that at times what my instincts tell me differs from what my observations tell me. So please bear that in mind as you read what follows and hold back with the flames and the RTM's . I'm aiming for a productive discussion not a flensing of the OP .
Anyhow, to begin I shall present a somewhat 'Straw Man' target of the most threadbare structure to get the counter-arguments flowing more easily.
The current general mindset of the Sexist Brigade might be baldly expressed with the simple sentence that women have no business fighting or learning how to fight as that is not the role to which evolution has fashioned them.
Bad as that sounds in this overly PC era, there is a certain element of truth buried within the stygian depths of that sentiment.
On average, or more properly by mean women are not as large or strong as men. They have a different muscular structure that is not so well suited to physical conflict.
The long term pain threshold of women is higher but the short term pain suppressing physiology of males makes them better able to handle the shocks of fighting, as does the rather surprisingly overlooked fact that males simply 'detect' the world more coarsely, their nerves/receptors being about half as sensitive as a woman’s.
Importantly, the mental architecture between the sexes is quite different in general, such that whilst a woman can demonstrate considerable skill in body or object control, a man’s situational awareness is greater in scope and detail. The most commonly given modern evidence for this is from studies done of drivers. Women actually handled the car better than men on average but were worse at being aware of what was going on around them on the road.
{Aside: To me, that last seems to be in contradiction to the end of my previous paragraph}
The obvious summary of the above is that women are simply not 'designed' with fighting in mind. They are weaker, smaller, more reactive to sudden pain and less aware of what is going on around them in a stressed situation.
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As oh so many exam questions say, "Discuss" but this one is a little broader as there is a clause tagged on the end that says "With reference to written or oral historica and how interpretations of same have changed over time" .
To put my cards on the table, I'm a middle-aged Englishman brought up through a religious background and inculcated with what many would consider antiquated ideas about the nature of the roles of men and women. To say I was Idealised Victorian in outlook would not be too much of an insult :lol:.
However, I have tried to overcome the strictures of my youth and can quite clearly see that at times what my instincts tell me differs from what my observations tell me. So please bear that in mind as you read what follows and hold back with the flames and the RTM's . I'm aiming for a productive discussion not a flensing of the OP .
Anyhow, to begin I shall present a somewhat 'Straw Man' target of the most threadbare structure to get the counter-arguments flowing more easily.
The current general mindset of the Sexist Brigade might be baldly expressed with the simple sentence that women have no business fighting or learning how to fight as that is not the role to which evolution has fashioned them.
Bad as that sounds in this overly PC era, there is a certain element of truth buried within the stygian depths of that sentiment.
On average, or more properly by mean women are not as large or strong as men. They have a different muscular structure that is not so well suited to physical conflict.
The long term pain threshold of women is higher but the short term pain suppressing physiology of males makes them better able to handle the shocks of fighting, as does the rather surprisingly overlooked fact that males simply 'detect' the world more coarsely, their nerves/receptors being about half as sensitive as a woman’s.
Importantly, the mental architecture between the sexes is quite different in general, such that whilst a woman can demonstrate considerable skill in body or object control, a man’s situational awareness is greater in scope and detail. The most commonly given modern evidence for this is from studies done of drivers. Women actually handled the car better than men on average but were worse at being aware of what was going on around them on the road.
{Aside: To me, that last seems to be in contradiction to the end of my previous paragraph}
The obvious summary of the above is that women are simply not 'designed' with fighting in mind. They are weaker, smaller, more reactive to sudden pain and less aware of what is going on around them in a stressed situation.
_________________________________________________________
As oh so many exam questions say, "Discuss" but this one is a little broader as there is a clause tagged on the end that says "With reference to written or oral historica and how interpretations of same have changed over time" .