to clarify them. Men have made women feel that childbearing and childrearing are handicaps that prevent women from competing with men. The most important occupations in the world handicaps! Alas! And yet this piece of nonsense, wrongheaded and stupid and awful as it is, has caused some women, particularly in our own time, to react with an overweening desire to compete with men in their own fields, on their own ground, in order to prove their equality. How wrongheaded both attitudes are! Neither man nor woman should ever work in order to compete. Nor should women continue to measure themselves by male standards. To do so is to proceed in an utterly misleading direction. A thorough understanding of the differences between male and female, while leading to a promotion of the female, also leads to a promotion, not a demotion, of the male; for men, through better understanding, will be enabled to realize their potentialities quite as fully as women. This is an area in which both men and women can work together most cooperatively and creatively, in getting to understand each other better, in learning to think jointly, and in contributing to each other's happier development. As the distinguished American naturalist William Emerson Ritter (1856-1944) wrote in his last book, Darwin and the Golden Rule, "It appears to me certain that a major factor in hastening the socialization of the male will be his getting a deeper insight than he seems ever to have had into the real nature of the female in relation to the whole sexual, domestic, communal and political complex."
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