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- Path: sparky!uunet!gatech!usenet.ins.cwru.edu!agate!remarque.berkeley.edu!muffy
- From: pw@panix.com (Paul Wallich)
- Newsgroups: soc.feminism
- Subject: Re: Faludi on neurotic single men: lapse?
- Date: 24 Dec 1992 03:49:33 GMT
- Organization: Trivializers R Us
- Lines: 36
- Sender: muffy@mica.berkeley.edu (Muffy Barkocy)
- Approved: muffy@mica.berkeley.edu
- Distribution: world
- Message-ID: <1hbc0dINNmn0@agate.berkeley.edu>
- References: <1992Dec23.044226.3706@sophia.smith.edu>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: remarque.berkeley.edu
- Originator: muffy@remarque.berkeley.edu
-
- In article <1992Dec23.044226.3706@sophia.smith.edu> orourke@sophia.smith.edu (Joseph O'Rourke) writes:
- >In "Backlash" Susan Faludi seems at one point potentially guilty of
- >the same error she uncovered in the shoddy work of others: assuming
- >that correlation implies causality. She quotes statistics (p.17) to
- >show that single men are more depressed, passive, and susceptible
- >to nervous breakdowns; experience more nightmares, fainting, insomnia;
- >and in general are more neurotic than single women. She concludes that
- >"the institution of marriage has an overwhelmingly salutary effect
- >on men's mental health."
- > What I don't see is evidence to rule out the possibility
- >that neurotic behavior keeps you single, rather than her implicit
- >assumption that marriage improves mental health. Perhaps this
- >evidence is in the many references she cites, and which I have not
- >read. I'd appreciate clarification from anyone who knows the
- >statistics.
-
- This would be true only if neurotic people mostly stayed single
- long term. I guess you could argue that someone was neurotic
- for a long time, therefore remaining single, then suddenly
- improved and became capable of marriage, but occam's razor
- goes the other way. In addition (and I believe also cited by
- Faludi) there are stats showing that the mental health of newly-single
- (i.e. due to death of spouse or divorce, particularly death) men and
- women follows the same pattern. There are other potential confounders
- here, but as far as I understand it there's enough longitudinal work
- (repeated studies over years) to suggest strongly that marital state
- is the independent variable.
-
- paul
-
-
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