John B. Dilworth's Commentary on "Bringing in the First Woman"
Anyone who identifies (as should we all) with the feminist
cause of furthering equal rights and equal opportunities for
women will find plenty to dislike in this case. It is not too
much to say that it is saturated with various kinds and levels
of sexual prejudice.
Fortunately, however, those same features do make the case a
useful one for some brief criticism and analysis of the vast,
pervasive world of prejudice about women. Some idea of the
magnitude of this mixture of social and ethical problems
becomes apparent through looking closely at the conventional
ways of thinking and talking about women which occur in this
case. Sadly, these are indeed all too conventional and common.
Sex prejudice is so widespread and ingrained in our culture
that most of the time we hardly even notice it.
First, some ethical basics. Surely we can agree that people
with unprejudiced views of men and women would treat them both
simply as human beings or persons. This means that any special
features distinguishing women from men, and vice-versa, would
be ignored in making business or professional judgments about a
person of either sex. The ethical imperative that women ought
to be treated equally with men implies exactly this point, that
we ought to ignore sex differences in assessing people in the
workplace.
Put in this general form, perhaps most if not all people
will agree with this principle. It is exactly analogous to the
widely accepted, anti-racist principle that we ought to ignore
differences of race among workers. Yet at the same time almost
no one is prepared to actually apply our anti-sexist principle
to concrete situations such as those described in this case.
For if they did, cases such as this one would become utterly
trivial.
To see this, try replacing all terms referring to women in
the case with similar terms referring to persons, or to men. If
the case presented an unprejudiced view of women, the
replacement should make no difference to the business problems
being presented, but in fact such replacements change
everything. Clearly we are relying on all kinds of specific
attitudes or beliefs specifically about women (about female
humans rather than about humans in general) in our
understanding of and judgements about women in the case. Hence
we must conclude that the case, as filtered through our
conventional understanding of it, is systematically sexist.
It is useful to bring in a comparison to racism once again,
because racist prejudices are somewhat more under control in
U.S. society than are sexist attitudes. This is not to say that
racism has been eliminated, but just that it is no longer so
acceptable for most people to unthinkingly adopt traditional
racist attitudes in dealing with business problems.
Try a similar experiment of word-substitution as before, but
this time use some racial description (such as 'black') in
place of the references to women. The result is a revealing
intermediate case. Some problems may seem to remain, yet it is
embarrassingly clear that they are problematic only because of
our residual or latent racist attitudes. (A common explanation
of our perceptions in a case such as this is as follows. We
have become 'sensitized' through the civil rights movement,
etc., to the issue of racism, so it's difficult not to perceive
racism and feel guilty about it in such cases.)
These experiments should be sufficient to show the sexism in
the current case, and in our habitual perceptions of such
cases. But it might be thought that nevertheless we haven't
made any real progress toward solving the problems. Even if it
is conceded that the 'problems' only seem problematic to people
in a sexist society, aren't there still real issues of how to
ameliorate or eliminate such pervasive sexist attitudes in the
workplace?
The answer to this question is yes, sexist attitudes are
indeed serious problems, which do need to be worked on. But
note that this issue is no longer about women in the workplace
(the overt focus of the current case), but instead it is about
attitudes to women in the workplace. Women are the victims of
such attitudes, yet our society is so prejudiced that we
unthinkingly see the women themselves in such cases as being
'the problem', rather than the sexist attitudes which they (and
to a lesser degree all who are 'sensitized' to the problem)
have to endure. In effect we are 'blaming the victim' in such
cases.
How should we go about eliminating sexist attitudes? That is
a big question, but there is one serious trap which must
briefly be mentioned and defused. It is all too easy to think
that the central problems in sexist attitudes must come from
incorrect beliefs or assumptions about the abilities or
personalities of women. The cure then might seem to be
educational or publicity exercises in which successful, popular
women demonstrate their abilities and hence change the beliefs
of their audience.
Certainly successful women can act as 'role models' for
other women, and help to eliminate a few extreme beliefs in the
general populace such as 'no women could ever do X', where X is
something that the successful woman demonstrates she can do.
However, such approaches are still deeply enmeshed in sexist
attitudes, because even the most successful of such
demonstrations is still focussed on the woman's abilities as a
woman, rather than simply as a person.
To see why this is problematic, imagine that a business
demonstration by a woman is so charismatic and successful that
the audience come to believe that women in general would make
ideal bosses. It should be clear that all we have done is to
replace one sexist attitude (women are bad bosses, because they
are women) with another (women are ideal or excellent bosses,
because they are women.) This latter attitude would doubtless
be easier to live with than the former, but a prejudice in
favor of women is still, inescapably, prejudice!
What has gone wrong here, in this misguided attempt to
eliminate sexism? Most basically, it has confused the moral
imperative, that everyone ought to treat woman equally, with a
purely factual claim to the effect that women are at least
equal in ability, etc., to men. Whether or not this claim is
true (or even meaningful) is totally irrelevant to the moral
issue of sex equality.
If we do resolve to live up to our obligation to treat women
equally, what is needed instead is a quite different
educational program from the above. Our obligation is to ignore
differences of sex in the workplace. Hence we would not
tolerate sexist attitudes, because they are incompatible with
ignoring sex differences. We would seek not to reform or
'improve' such attitudes (through the use of positive role
models, etc.), but to totally suppress and destroy them, at
least as far as any public expressions of them are
concerned.
This may sound excessively protective of women, in that we
would be out to silence their sexist critics. But the other
side of the coin is that women would get no special treatment
whatsoever under this simple but demanding ethical approach. If
a woman boss manages poorly, she would be treated exactly like
any other poor manager, including being fired if necessary. The
desire of head office to get more women into managerial
positions would also be resisted as sexist interference. Any
person of either sex would be judged purely on their own
specific abilities to 'get the job done'. Why would any
unprejudiced person want anything else?
Cite this page:
"John B. Dilworth's Commentary on "Bringing in the First Woman""
Online Ethics Center for Engineering
8/17/2006
National Academy of Engineering
Accessed: Wednesday, February 08, 2012
<www.onlineethics.org/Resources/Cases/Woman/WomanDilworth.aspx>