GENETICS VERSUS CULTURE;
Nature vs Nurture;
Heredity vs Environment
AN EXCHANGE OF VIEWS
James R. Fisher, Jr.,
Ph.D.
November 3, 2014
NOTE:
This exchange was stimulated by the posting of a review of A
GREEN ISLAND IN A BLACK SEA (2013) on www.amazon.com
by a reader, a book about a young American executive in South Africa
facilitating the formation of a new company, and losing his way in the process. The views that follow deal with Africa,
Africa Americans, genealogy, and culture.
READER'S REVIEW OF "A GREEN ISLAND IN A BLACK SEA"
I am an African
American privileged to grow up in this country a free man, and to have the
extraordinary career that I have had. Fisher writes a story of South Africa
during apartheid, and spares the reader no comfort in describing his sense of
betrayal when his company, his country and his church puts him in the midst of
a colonial society and expects him to function without sensitivity to its
colossal injustices. It takes me back in my own history of growing up in a
similar segregated society in the early 60's in the Midwest of Missouri,
Arkansas, Texas, Oklahoma and Kansas. Even then I remember the pain of
discrimination in restaurants, hotels and social settings. The story tracks the
moral and emotional breakdown of the protagonist, a man who prefers being
addressed by his surname, Devlin, as he encounters one duplicity after another.
The book is grand in scope and reminds one of books written by the Russian
masters, as it departs from the stereotypical characters familiar to American
readers. Is it a great book? I leave that to the literati. I only know it
is a book I'm glad I read. Twice. The
author has his way of making us confront our own demons, even if the subject matter
goes against our conscience in the way Mark Twain used Adventures of
Huckleberry Finn to make a similar statement about his time.
FIRST READER RESPONDS
TO REVIEW
Really significant. So personal, you can feel it! Keep punching! (Reader is president emeritus of my university
where I received my Ph.D.)
DR. FISHER RESPONDS:
So good to hear from you.
I feel so connected to you. When
I was commenting recently about courage I should have thought of you. Quietly and unobtrusively, you have
contributed so much. I feel so lucky to
have you in my life.
SECOND READER
WRITES:
The events in South
Africa were not humanities finest hour, but I find it interesting that the
black leadership in this country found problems only with South Africa but
never mention the mess that exists in many other African countries.
DR. FISHER RESPONDS:
True, Africa in many places is a mess, but only South Africa imposed apartheid, or separate development of the races on the Bantu or black majority by the Afrikaners or white minority.
Once I experienced South Africa, I wondered what kind of a person I would have been if I was born black in the United States or South Africa, or any other place as color too often is an indictment.
Once I experienced South Africa, I wondered what kind of a person I would have been if I was born black in the United States or South Africa, or any other place as color too often is an indictment.
Given my capacity for anger, and with my mind for
organization, well, it was a bit scary for me to contemplate. Tom Friedman has a column in the Tampa Bay
Times today, "Sunni grievances and the echoes of Vietnam." It caught my attention because "Time Out for Sanity,“ implies the
USA has never left the 1970s. His column
suggests this and the misreading of history from the colonialism aspect.
Well, I have seen, first hand, in Africa and South America
how colonialism has messed up these continents with the WEST's imperialistic solipsistic
hubris, translated "greed."
Reading Foreign
Affairs my wonder is how people in government, privy to these sensible
commentaries, can still get it so wrong, Africa being one of the places. It is the reason I was never a fan of
Theodore Roosevelt and his imperial expansion driven colonial policy.
George Kennan wrote a Foreign
Affairs article on his "containment theory" with the pseudonym
"Mr. X." That was in 1947, and
the theory worked so well it kept the world out of WWIII. Predictably, Secretary of State John Foster
Dulles got him booted from the diplomatic service seeing him as too soft on
communism. Sometimes I wonder if these
fine schools that produce our leaders do anything more than staple their
brains. Africa is a mess and the West
has a lot to do with stirring up the pot to make it so.
THIRD READER WRITES:
I only know about
Africa by what I have read. The current
leadership appears to be taking care of itself just like in many other
places. The tribalism which is also an
issue in many parts of the world also contributes. Then there is the human condition of yearning
for power and control of some of its members.
Colonialism certainly was not a good thing but just like slavery in this
country it is not the problem of why blacks over here are in the situation they
find themselves. Apparently we find in
Ferguson that the killed black guy’s friends lied, that he was a thief and that
he was probably racist toward whites.
Also, Hattie is another example of failure that can be laid squarely on
the population. All the problems of the
world are certainly not the fault of the west.
Islam prevented scientific inquiry back in the twelve hundreds. Many Arab nations supported Hitler and what
he did to the Jew. Culture and genetics
play a big part in who we become. Had my
mother stayed in Germany after the war, I doubt I would have had the same
opportunities that I had here. Your
achievements and thinking are also relevant in this context according to the
background information you have provided over time.
DR. FISHER RESPONDS:
Your responses, which are always succinct versus mine which
are not, is something to behold.
Words are the fuel of ideas and language its vehicle, not a
very reliable one but all that we have, and therefore, I guess, they should be
cherished.
Explosive words such as "tribalism,"
"power," "control," "colonialism,"
"culture," "slavery," "race," and now
"Islam," "Jew," and such places as "Haiti," and
"Ferguson," keep the pot boiling.
One time, I was in Kingston, Jamaica, and during that trip
two things happened that made an indelible impression upon me. I was getting my shoes shined, listening to
the lyrical expression of the shoeshine boy, who had some vocabulary. I asked him if he had been to
university. He broke into a raucous
laugh, looked down at his shoeshine rag, and laughed again, "Mann do you
think I would be doing this?" He
laughed again.
I apologized, saying I meant no disrespect but I was
impressed with his use of language. He
paused to see if I was sincere, deciding I was, and said, using his hands to
express his rolling words, "I hear a word.
I roll it around my tongue. I
look it up to get inside it. Once inside
it, I make it my own, mann, then I use it every chance I get as now it belongs
to me." This was all said in that
lyrical Jamaican confluence, which proved quite mesmerizing, so much so that I can
remember that voice and those words, although that was nearly sixty years ago.
Later, I attended an evening Mass at the Kingston Cathedral,
along with my Protestant assistant, who went because he was curious, knowing I
had a reputation of being a devout Roman Catholic.
The Catholic Bishop of Jamaica conducted the Mass, and gave
the sermon. The sermon, too, has stayed
with me. The church was packed but with
more than three-fourths women, all black, with my friend and me the only
whites.
The sermon was about dignity and pride, and concerned
Jamaican men. I am paraphrasing but the
essence of what the bishop said went something like this: "When a man cannot find a job, when a
man cannot make a living for his family, when a man is treated as less than a
man, his loins speak for him, and he spreads seed because that is the only way
he can express himself as a man. It is
not the right thing to do, but it is the only thing he knows. But give him a job, give him a right to his
dignity, treat him as a man, and he will behave as a man." He turned and left the rostrum without another
word.
No "fire and brimstone," no "hell and burning
forever in Dante's inferno," no "God this and God that," nothing
that I was used to hearing as a third grader at St. Boniface Church at Sunday
Mass from Father Sunbrueller. .
Much as it made an impression on me, I stood in line after
the service with others, and waited my turn to thank the Celebrant for his
moving sermon. When my time came, and I
expressed these thoughts, he looked at me for a moment, a tall blond clearly an
American white man, looked past me and greeted the next person, as if I were
invisible.
I was crushed, also naive and yet to work in South America,
which I was surprised to find so extensively black, not yet scheduled to work in
Africa, and to ultimately live in South Africa. You imply I have had the advantage being born
and reared in the United States. I
expect that is a fair assumption. Yet, at
every juncture, it is appropriate to note that assumption has been used against me on a
regular basis as if that explained my life.
My da was a yeller, complainer, and a "woe be me an Irishman," whose mother died when he was born and da took off never to
be seen again. He never overcame that
handicap, in fact, juiced it to his advantage all his life, never trying to
improve himself, learn new skills, or challenge the system, dying three days
after his fiftieth birthday. I chose to
be different.
In sport, I was quite an athlete in my youth, in the
classroom, a diligent student, in life, always with the same chip on my
shoulder as my da, call it DNA or genetics, another word you mention that can
be inflammatory. As a thinker and writer,
I have relied upon my experience to guide me to what is and what is not, often
in opposition to what is popularly professed.
Were I my da I would have given up and given into the very
arduous work that it takes to be a serious writer, but I remembered the yelling,
the complaining, and the "woe is me" and have chosen to be otherwise.
From my experience, I have found colonialism evil no matter who
orchestrates it. Because of my
experience with my da, I know no one can take my power away from me unless I
give it to them, and once given, I cannot get it back.
The UAW in the automotive industry never learned this. Nor have the peoples of Third World
nations. The UAW gave the industry its
power and control of what workers did for perks, benefits and salary concessions.
The leadership of Third Word countries gave away their natural resources for
pennies, and then found most of those pennies going to the corrupt, and not to
the benefit of the people. Now the UAW
workers don't have jobs, and Third World countries are in constant civil
wars.
The freest people are not the millionaires or the
billionaires, but the people who live within their means, and buy what they
need and let those out of control buy what they want. The "want industry" is a
multi-trillion dollar industry and is not wanting for customers. Millionaires
and billionaires never have enough because there are always millionaires and
billionaires who have more. Greed is
more enslaving than any kind of slavery because it is self-inflicted. A person has to be trained to listen to the
heart, and it is not part of the curriculum in school.
I have been told "How lucky you have been!" Luck had nothing to do with it. Work did. Turning away from flatterers did.
I've never been good at turning the other cheek either. Cross me, and I
have often been crossed, and you don't get a second chance. The chip shows.
My books are written for people who think they believe in luck. I believe in courage. Luck is only when preparation meets
opportunity. People may think they get promoted
because they are "good guys and good gals," when they are promoted
because they can be used, which is different than being useful; useful you
determine the game, used the game determines you.
Were I a victim of a heritage of 300 or 400 years a slave,
given my Irish roots, as no people were less desirable when they came to this
country than the Irish, I can imagine what I would be like. The Irish have never been comfortable under
the colonialism of British rule, which brings me to Ferguson, Missouri. Ferguson is Dante's hell on earth. That tall strapping young black man with a
chip on his shoulder epitomized that fact. He may have been a bad apple, but he
didn't deserve to die because of that chip or because he was black. A community gets the police force it deserves.
With no job, nothing to do, no place to go, burning with
resentment, and no language or insight to why you feel that way, or any
inclination to do anything about it, well, it can get dicey for any band of
young people. There is a theory in
psychology called "reaction formation," which has to do with what
triggers a cataclysmic reaction to a circumstance. The right trigger was boiling in Ferguson waiting
for something to happen to break the surface and explode, and it did.
We are often unconscious of what is troubling us because we
are so good at self-denial and self-deception, what Sartre calls "bad faith." Few us know
ourselves and are constantly looking for some tree in the forest upon which to
post our grievances, where similar grievances have already been posted,
confident that we are not alone. The
religious and political delight in exploiting this inclination to their
advantage, and of course, most of us are obliging.
FOURTH READER WRITES:
Again, you mention the
Irishman's position in the pecking order.
Just as African-Americans (are there really any left? Are they not Americans?) are clinging to that
slavery rung, time to move on. Do you realize
the Irish were used as slaves on the railroad and in New Orleans to dig the
canals?
We share the ill-will
directed our way of being the non-protestant, non-Anglican lower level of the
American caste system: however, that was another time, another place. On my mother's side, both sides, her people
had been in America prior to 1845. In
fact, on the McDowell side the very early 1700's as Scottish soldiers brought
over to fight the Indians in upper state New York. There was a Revolutionary and a Civil War
general among them. A county in North
Carolina named after these same McDowell’s
On my father's side
purely Polish. The paternal side from
Warsaw and educated in sciences.
Maternal side purely peasants, lived in villages and farmed on their own
farms Lublin area, very near the Ukrainian border. My gramps and his brother were chemists
brought to Sheboygan to work in Chicago but choose to come to Clinton Foods
thus to Clinton. My dad worked first in
chem lab at Clinton Foods then went to Chicago to business school while working
for American Can Corp again in chem lab, when he met Mom they married and lived
in Chicago building a nest egg...Mom worked as a companion for a Mrs. Olsen who
owned hotels around Montrose and Sheridan, for that a small salary and a small
apt. In the evenings she babysat for
band leaders and members who played at the open air dance halls at Wilson
beach, two blocks away. Eventually she
added bar tender at that open air dance hall.
Ironically when the
boys were finally over 19 they could live off campus of SAIC and found an apt.
in a brownstone six-plex on Racine and Montrose just two blocks west of where
the folks had lived in the late 30's.
Prior to WWII the folks moved back to Clinton, Dad again at Clinton
Foods and bought a bar, dubbed Tony's Tavern, as Mom wanted to work and knew
the trade. She began selling fishing
equip and bait as well, then Dad added guns and finally they had enough to
build Sportsman's Exchange at 910 south 4th St.
As you demonstrate in each of your writings the only limits on what you
can accomplish is you.
DR. FISHER RESPONDS:
Your heritage is impressive and you can rightly be proud of
it. As you have noted, my interest is
not in family trees but in cultural heritage.
It is why I am working on "Search
for the Real Parents of My Soul."
Granted, it is frustrating that people of color have not
made more progress. It is equally hard
to imagine Ferguson, Missouri in 2014, but it happened. Are we to blame for the unrest among blacks?
During the Great Depression, most black families in the
United States were two parent families; the African Christian church and its
ministers were powerful influences in the black community; the black community thrived. With all the good intentions of integration,
and the Civil Rights Movement, it resulted in fragmentation of the black
community, African American churches lost their authority and influence, and
with rare exception, that has continued to this day.
A strange dichotomy is still in vogue: African Americans
have much greater unemployment than whites, while progress for African
Americans remains the exception rather than the rule, possibly with the
exception of professional sport, where they dominate in the National Basketball
Association (70%) and National Football League (60%), and are competitive in Major
League Baseball (40%), but trail considerably in the National Hockey League,
National Tennis Federation and National Golf Association.
African Americans can trace their heritage as accomplished
Africans back before the Plymouth Rock Puritans. Going back to the sixteenth century, and the
arrival of the Puritans, is not far enough, not even back to the Greeks and the
Romans is far enough. You have to go back
long before Aristotle and Plato, or the Roman conquests, back to the early
Persians, long before Alexander the Great, when language, the alphabet,
mathematics, art and architecture, and Zoroastrians were working out ideas that
often had a Manichean duality to them. We
forget long before there was a West there was an African and Middle Easterner culture.
On a personal note, my uncle Leonard escaped Clinton, Iowa
ethnic poverty by getting an education and earning two Ph.D.'s in economics and
psychology at the University of Iowa in the 1920s, becoming a powerful
influence on me in the 1940s. While he
was head of the department of finance and economics at the University of
Detroit, a Jesuit university, he would invite me to spend part of my summer vacations with him and my cousin
at his Higgins Lake retreat in Michigan.
My cousin and I would argue baseball, until one day, my
uncle said that our lunch breaks would be devoted to discussions about great civilizations,
including the Etruscans who preceded the Romans, and of course, Zoroaster, the
eighth century B.C. Persian mystic. These
seminars were boring to my cousin, but not to me. They helped me to develop a discriminating mind.
Often, I have run into generalities, stereotypes, assumed
truths, and outright dissembling offered as the basis of how to think and what to
believe. Through my educational years,
and early working years, these were willfully upheld despite evidence to the
contrary. Gradually that changed. I suspect it shows in “A GREEN ISLAND IN A BLACK SEA,” which is a morality play that
attempts to show how Seamus "Dirk" Devlin was duped by his culture only to find everything he had been told to be true was a lie.
Manuscripts written forty years ago -- “Time Out for Sanity” and "Search for the Real Parents of My Soul"
– manage to get inside old mysteries, cherished dogmas, and sacred beliefs many of which proved to have pagan origins in prehistory. This does not make them wrong. It just makes them human.
Currently, the Pharisees fascinate me whereas they
infuriated Jesus. Even the Pharisees
changed their views back and forth on eternal life, mortality of the soul, but
one thing they consistently upheld, and that was freedom and individualism, a
legacy that predates Western democracies.
The problem, as Erich Fromm shows in "Escape from Freedom" (1941), is that freedom is not
easy, so most people move away from it.
That is why I have such regard for people of Jewish heritage. There are only 14 million Jews in the world,
8 million in Israel, and only 6 million elsewhere, which means Judaism
represents two tenths of one percent of the world's population. Yet, Heidegger and Hitler feared a Jewish
conspiracy for their dominance in finance, banking and academia, claiming such dominance was
traceable to the Jewish propensity for abstraction and assimilation. I trace it to individualism and the courage
to embrace freedom with gusto.
A far greater percent of Jews have won Nobel Laureates than
any other ethnic group. Conversely,
while we celebrate the scholarship of the Chinese, who are at the top in the
categories of math, science and technology according to the Program for International Student Assessment
(PISA), not one Chinese trained student since the Chinese Revolution of 1949 has
won a Nobel Prize.
Zheng Yefu in "The
Pathology of Chinese Education" (2013) writes:
“No one, after twelve
years of Chinese education, has any chance to receive a Nobel Prize, even if he
or she went to Harvard, Yale, Oxford or Cambridge for college. Out of the one billion people who have been
educated in Mainland China since 1949, there has been no Nobel Prize
winner. This forcefully testifies to the
power of education in destroying creativity on behalf of the Chinese society.”
You cannot force feed creativity because it needs
individualism and freedom to thrive in the crucible of meaning. Poor as our American educational system is,
you cannot say it is not free and that the individual cannot prosper through
his or her own efforts.
FIFTH READER WRITES:
What I learned from my
students teaching art was that almost anyone could learn to draw, paint and do
pottery. However, there were some
students who stood out in ability, and if you talked to them you would find out
that someone in their family tree was good in art. However, as far as I know none has achieved
renown. Of the few I know one is a
lawyer, another is a social worker, another an elementary art teacher. These people were all hard working students
who appear to be happy like I was in my chosen profession. When you look at the lives of many famous
artist, you find people whose parents were not artists but who had inherited
talent, motivation and a mind set for looking for their own path instead of
following. In every case luck or chance played a part from their inception as
to which egg was fertilized by which sperm as well a multitude of events in
their lifetime over which they had no control including their talent and drive.
As far as blacks in
this country are concerned I also learned a lot from teaching. I had black students who worked hard but also
students who did not and some of it had to do with studying made you wanting to
be white. People in Africa were tribal
which appears to be one of the problems also in the mid-east. The mess in either place cannot be placed on
the west as the history of the Jews strongly supports. Genetics determine how you react to your
environment.
DR. FISHER RESPONDS:
We politely disagree.
Although I think genetics are important, I find culture is more so. True, each of us is born with attributes to
excel at certain things. Although these
attributes differ from individual to individual, all individuals have
them. Genetics fail to explain why China
has never had a Nobel Laureate and Japan, although excelling in quality, has
lagged in its number of inventions.
China is a draconian society with a strong cultural delimiting authority;
Japan is a group culture in which individualism and free expression are frown upon
outside that norm. I use myself as an
example to express the power of individualism and freedom.
When I was a child, I had a rather traumatic beginning,
something many children have, when they have little sense of parents, my mother
was in hospital, my da a bit of a dandy.
That all changed when I was five years old. Suddenly, we were a family, a struggling
family but together, a sister and brother at that time, another sister to come
later. My da was no longer a dandy, but
a good father and devoted husband, and remained so until his early death at 50.
My parents put me in the public school after the first
grade. They were unaware of me as a
child those first five years. There
were, however, indicators that something was wrong. At recess, I would leave St. Patrick's
school, and go home every day, which was a half a block away. I suppose today they would say I acted autistic,
but closer to the truth I was there (in school), but not there. Being a family was a new experience for my
mother and me. She became my muse and I her
listener. I write about this in my novel (In the Shadow of the Courthouse),
and here for readers experiencing something of the same.
My family moved from St. Patrick's to Lyons in the north end
of Clinton, and put me in the second grade at a public school too far from home
to leave at recess every day. The
teacher and the principal found me a daunting task. They told my parents I was there but not
there and should repeat the grade.
It devastated my da, who went to school through the seventh
grade, but for my mother I became a work in progress. Thereafter, I was returned to the parochial
school system, where I flourished.
Already as a sixth grader, now back at St. Patrick's, I
showed considerable athleticism, being the tallest boy in my class. The high school basketball coach, started
recruiting me for his high school team from that point forward, spending many a
day over at courthouse where we, the Courthouse Tigers, played baseball during
the summer.
He was successful in getting me, and Bobby Witt, the star of
"In the Shadow of the Courthouse" to go to Clinton High
School. Bobby took public school in stride, a boy that had a much older brother
and was reared essentially as an only child by doting parents who were always
there from birth. Like Deja vu, once at Clinton High, having
been an "A" student at St. Pat's, I retrogressed (at first) to that
lost lad I had once been as a six-years-old, as the public school was a
cultural shock to my system. My high school basketball coach (who was Catholic) and my
mother stepped in to right me, clearly with different motivations, I'm sure. That said, they were effective in
getting my attention, after that rocky freshman year.
I would excel in my studies for the next three years taking
the most difficult courses offered, and graduate in the top ten percent of my
class, despite that freshman year. I
would again excel at university, graduating with honors, honors coming my way
throughout the balance of my life.
Culture, irrespective of genetics (I believe genetics are exaggerated)
can make or destroy you because it is mainly subliminal, felt but not seen,
inevitable but usually not understood. In
my books, I tell people to feel the place they find themselves, and if it
doesn't feel right it is the wrong place for them to be. You will not change the culture, but the
culture will endeavor to change you, and in the process of trying to do so it
may destroy you. This has been my experience.
Culture was not consciously felt much less understood at
first, but having been trained as a chemist, or a lab rat, I gradually came to
see the work environment as a laboratory with draconian pressure to conform. As I once studied stoichiometric equations in
chemistry, I now studied people in the workplace. Life has given me a great opportunity to do
so, working in the chemical and hi tech industry, first as a laborer in five
summers while going to university, then as a bench chemist, then as a sailor in
the Mediterranean on a ship with 1,400 men on board. All the peoples I saw or met throughout the
Mediterranean region including North Africa, Europe and the Middle East became statistics in my constant data collection.
Once again traumatized by my experience in South Africa,
devastated to the point that I was not sure I wanted to go on living, I
returned to the US and did nothing for two years but read books, play tennis
and basketball, and wonder throughout the Tampa Bay (Florida) area, observing people,
writing poetry and thinking. I had a
wife and four young children, and lived on my savings, having given up what
some might have thought a dream job, making more in a week than my da ever made
in a year.
A professor, a regular tennis partner, persuaded me to go
back to school, which I did, finding the university a factory just like the
world I had left, only if possible, more petty. This promoted my interest in
culture seeing how the invisible hand of fear controlled the academic workplace every bit
as much as I had seen it control the world of the Bantu in South Africa with
apartheid.
Academia took grit but I stuck it out to earn my Ph.D. not
feeling I had learned very much about life or this world, but for a few authors,
and a few mentors, one named Bernie Turner, president of my university, and
Billy Gunter, a professor who literally saved my life.
Reading diligently on culture, mainly from anthropologists
and philosophers, I developed my own paradigms, which I have tested and
retested throughout life, but with no interest in promulgating other than in my
books, which are not about solutions but defining problems that I have experienced
then conceptualizing these experiences in paradigms. This is one:
“The structure of work
(academic curriculum, workplace modus operandi, policies & procedures,
pecking order, rites of passage; power & subjugation; instrumental & terminal values) determines the function of work; the function of work creates
the workplace culture; the workplace culture dictates organizational behavior;
the organizational behavior establishes whether the organization is going to
thrive, vegetate, flounder, and expire, or succeed and the people of all hues
with it, or not.”
For ten years (1970-1980) as an OD (organizational
development) consultant, I worked intimately with police organizations from
Hartford, Connecticut to Miami, Florida along the east coast of the United
States, while also conducting executive seminars for the American Management Association across the United States during
that same period in which senior officers of police organizations were usually in
attendance.
Additionally, I was embedded in the Fairfax County Police
Department (the county adjoining Washington, DC) where most senators and
congressmen live, for nine months, after a 27-year-old African American was
killed in a Seven/Eleven store by a white police officer, who unloaded his
service revolver on the young man after he pushed the young man into a cooler,
and the man grabbed the officer's nightstick in an attempt to defend himself, a
riot followed (my master's thesis is on this work, "A Social Psychological Study of the Police Organization: The
Anatomy of a Riot,” 1976).
Later, I would spend five months embedded in the Raleigh,
North Carolina police department, when the 350 sworn officers threatened to mutiny if the chief of police was not fired. Later
still, I would spend six years as an organizational and management development
psychologist at Honeywell, Inc., and then as director of human resources planning
and development for Honeywell Europe, Ltd.
Each situation verified the dominance of culture irrespective of
genetics.
Currently, my wife is business manager of Hillel Academy, a
Jewish day school, where the head of school, with no input from me, has opened
the campus, literally, so that it looks less like a school, and more like an
open learning environment, a kind of environment in which culture urges students
on to explore their attributes and natural gifts, which differ from person to
person.
Given this assessment, were the culture more women friendly,
as it has not been over the last several centuries, we would have more female
philosophers, artists, mathematicians, engineers, inventors, composers,
architects, and scientists. Genetics do
not favor one gender over another, or one race over another, but culture does.
* * *
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