sbsquarepants wrote: » No some questions are obviously written by men, such as this one which featured on University Challenge only last week... Question: What is the correct order in which a gentleman should ride little mix? Answer: Start with the black one, then one who goes out with the Ox, then the other kinda blondie one and finally the one that looks like a cabbage patch doll. (No, I do not know their names!)
PlaneSpeeking wrote: » I was advised by several chaps in my acquaintance that it's: Black one Fat One Blonde One Other One But that's probably offensive somewhere!!
sbsquarepants wrote: » No no no! Blonde and other are interchangeable I suppose, but you must start on black and end on fat - that much is set in stone!
PlaneSpeeking wrote: » One of them's done a One Directioner and a Liverpool player - even if she was my bag I'd swerve!!!!
Akrasia wrote: » Hannah Arendt, Emma Goldman and Ayn Rand are the only 3 I can think of from the courses I studied in College
sbsquarepants wrote: » I've never seen it, but I do like Victoria Coren, she's quite funny. It's worth checking out you reckon?
professore wrote: » Exactly. Most of the advanves throughout history have been driven by men. Trying to pretend otherwise for ideological reasons is just false.
Ironically a coupe of really influential women are rarely talked about: Elizabeth I, who laid the foundations for the British Empire, Margaret Thatcher and more recently Theresa May. For some reason they are taboo
seamus wrote: » All seems pretty reasonable tbh, I don't know why people are getting so offended about a programme tweaking their questions to provide a level playing field.
Lorenzo Bumpy Rake wrote: » And you'd really have to stretch the definition of "philosopher" to include them. Probably the greatest female philosopher (as in actual philosopher) was G. E. M. Anscombe, a student of Wittgenstein who produced significant work in ethics, the philosophy of mind, and other fields. Her 1957 book Intention is probably the single most important philosophical work written by a woman. She is neglected by feminist academics, though, because she was a lifelong devout Catholic who supported the Church's stances on contraception and abortion.
Sardonicat wrote: » Where does it say that the questions have been made more difficult so as not to offend anyone? I see an effort to introduce a bit of balance by not ignoring the academic and cultural contributions of women prominent in their fields. The contestants' inability to answer them is more a reflection of the content of courses they are studying.
seamus wrote: » ITT: People who read the thread title and not the article. All seems pretty reasonable tbh, I don't know why people are getting so offended about a programme tweaking their questions to provide a level playing field.
professore wrote: » Ironically a coupe of really influential women are rarely talked about: Elizabeth I, who laid the foundations for the British Empire, Margaret Thatcher and more recently Theresa May. For some reason they are taboo
Grayson wrote: » But on the other hand you have philosophers like Stein who are widely studied. Stein was a jewish woman who converted to catholicism, became a nun and was killed by the Nazi's in a gas chamber. She's now a saint and is one of the 6 co-saints of europe. I even studied St. Hildegard in college. BTW, Arendt was definitely a philosopher although she hated being called that because she felt that philosophers were pontificating men who did not engage with the world. That might come from her teacher Heidegger. He had an affair with her, a jew, but later became of of the nazi's most emphatic flag wavers. Arendt wrote extensively on phenomenology and later on ethics, especially totalitarianism and the nature of evil. As for Ayn Rand, jesus what a pile of crap. Her work is essentially a celebration of egoism and selfishness. I would describe her work as a work in philosophy but I would say that the admiration it gets from the right is greatly undeserved. There are essentially two types of philosophers and even I guess two type of readers. Those who start with an idea and build and argument to prove it, and those that start with evidence and build a hypothesis from it. Rand is definitely the former.
Badly Drunk Boy wrote: » That's the thing though...it implies that males only know/want to know about males in history/science/whatever and females only want to know about females. Women didn't have the same opportunities as men in centuries gone by, therefore it's expected that there should be more questions about men.
seamus wrote: » I don't know why people are getting so offended about a programme tweaking their questions to provide a level playing field.
Lorenzo Bumpy Rake wrote: » The vast majority of world leaders, scientists, mathematicians, composers, intellectuals, and artists have been men -- so it's difficult to see how one can create the illusion of a "level playing field" when the playing field throughout human history has been about as level as a railway embankment. Suppose they want to ask a question on the topic of US presidents. How do they "tweak" the questions to create a "level playing field" when every US president in history has been male?
seamus wrote: » Teachers and professors who talked about history, tended to focus on the men, and pay less attention to the women. As a result, the "popular" and "well-known" historical figures, are men.
Lorenzo Bumpy Rake wrote: » Trying to turn history into a revisionist fantasy so that we can pretend that women have always been as influential as men is nothing more than a sham and a distortion.
Badly Drunk Boy wrote: » That's the thing though...it implies that males only know/want to know about males in history/science/whatever and females only want to know about females. Women didn't have the same opportunities as men in centuries gone by, therefore it's expected that there should be more questions about men. I like University Challenge and usually get a good few answers, even if some of them are only educated guesses. The thing that annoys me most about it though, are the long-winded, rambling questions where at the end you're asking yourself "At the start, did he want to name of a person, a place or a variety of apple?". I like Only Connect and Mastermind too. I always like to get at least one of the Mastermind specialist questions right, even if I've never heard of the subject of the questions. I'm not mad about John Humphreys but I think Victoria Coren is great.
seamus wrote: » Is "revisionism" a bad thing if it's uncovering lost facts? History is always written with a bias. Whether that be an ideological one or a gender one, or a race one. The aim of the historian is to peel back that bias and try to establish the facts, without bias or prejudice.
seamus wrote: » I'm not sure it implies that men only know about male history and women only know about female history. It implies that as a society we tend to rely on history that was written from a male perspective. We're not constantly revisiting and refining what we know about history. A lot of what we know comes from contemporaneous works. As you quite rightly point out, women actually feature less because there were less opportunities, but women were also whitewashed/ignored in contemporaneous writings because the people documenting at the time did so with a focus on the men present. Teachers and professors who talked about history, tended to focus on the men, and pay less attention to the women. As a result, the "popular" and "well-known" historical figures, are men. While the bible may not exactly be an historically accurate document, when we look at the parables contained within, women are often excluded from them unless they are a major focus. The creation myth, for example, talks about Eve, but then mentions few or no women for many generations, even though clearly there must have been. This writing then informs later readers and drives later adaptations and discussions about the stories. The key here is that nobody is intentionally viewing it with a male-focussed slant; but they are unaware that they are parroting slanted views which have been previously presented. A large and popular body of work in historical research now is going back to discover the women (and other players) who received little recognition for their contributions at the time and who may have been excluded from contemporaneous accounts of historical events; for better or worse. UC is simply recognising that there is a huge body of data out there from which to draw questions, which has been traditionally been ignored - not intentionally, but through unconscious bias and the tendency of the question-writer to draw on the things that s/he knows about. Which, on the whole, tends to be more weighted towards men; especially when it's a man writing the question.
bluewolf wrote: » Well said seamus. How famous mozart's sister would have been if she hadn't been sent home from her world tours when she got a bit older as it wasn't apt for a woman. Clara schumann was one of the tops as well
Deleted User wrote: » How famous I could have been if I hadn't quit football, sure let's have questions about me.
bluewolf wrote: » Well said seamus. How famous mozart's sister would have been if she hadn't been sent home from her world tours when she got a bit older as it wasn't apt for a woman. Clara schumann was one of the tops as well. Random examples popping to mind after reading this
Grayson wrote: » I mentioned Edith Stein earlier. She was refused permission to submit her thesis to two separate universities because she was a woman. There's so few famous women from the past because of these reasons. Women tried and did some amazing work, but they never got recognised.The women we do know about should be lauded because they had so much more to overcome. And we should recognise the women who contributed but who's contribution was ignored.
NOVA MCMXCIV wrote: » The world is f***ed.
Grayson wrote: » There's so few famous women from the past because of these reasons. Women tried and did some amazing work, but they never got recognised.