Some instructors are kind of caving into the pressure that students and others are exerting on them to refrain from offence terms like pregnant woman, or male or female. These are future doctors who are not comfortable with biological terms used to describe sex. I'll give you, i will av arne edi. But let me just reintroduce the book "Testostra" The story of testostra, on the hormon that dominates and divides us.
In episode 204, Michael Shermer speaks with codirector of undergraduate studies in the Department of Human Evolutionary Biology at Harvard University, Carole Hooven, PhD about testosterone. While most people agree that sex differences in human behavior exist, they disagree about the reasons. But the science is clear: testosterone is a potent force in human society, driving the bodies and behavior of the sexes apart. But, as Hooven shows in T, it does so in concert with genes and culture to produce a vast variety of male and female behavior. And, crucially, the fact that many sex differences are grounded in biology provides no support for restrictive gender norms or patriarchal values. In understanding testosterone, we better understand ourselves and one another — and how we might build a fairer, safer society.