Steven Goldberg

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Darimoma (talk | contribs) at 11:24, 20 September 2008 (Actually removed the reviews section this time...). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Steven Goldberg
Born1941
Nationality American
Known forThe Inevitability of Patriarchy
Why Men Rule
Scientific career
FieldsSociology
InstitutionsCity College of New York

Steven Goldberg (born 1941) is a native of New York City and was president of the sociology department at City College of New York (CCNY).

Biography

William Helmreich, a colleague of Goldberg's at CCNY, wrote a short biography of him for Heterodoxy. At the end of this short biography, Helmreich reveals the core passion in Goldberg that motivated Helmreich to write about him – "[Goldberg] even goes so far as to write that, while the best thing about truth is that it is true, the second best thing about truth is that it is, whatever the authority system, subversive. In this sense he continues to represent the anti-authoritarian spirit of the 1960s."[1]

Helmreich tells us Goldberg is "a heavyset man with a quick smile who has been called a 'typical New Yorker,' perhaps because his words come so rapidly in an attempt to keep up with his thoughts."[2]

Goldberg has a particular passion for the work of cultural anthropology.

Cultural anthropology has given the world a priceless treasure the ethnographic descriptions of many hundreds—or thousands, if one counts less formal works—of societies and the incredible variation they have demonstrated. In the future, when the homogenization of the world has made all societies more alike than different, only these ethnographies will stand against the human ethnocentric tendency to think things had to be the way they are [emphasis original].[3]

In Fads and Fallacies Goldberg placed professional academics in his own discipline under scrutiny. It made him unpopular with many people; however, he constantly gets letters from other academics who praise him for his "courage",[4] to which he responded:

It was Freud, I think, who once pointed out when someone called him courageous, all one has to lose by unpopular arguments is contact with people one would not be terribly attracted to anyway. Now, five hundred years ago when you said something unpopular they BOILED YOU IN OIL. That took courage [emphasis original].[5]

Goldberg is best known for his two books on patriarchy.

Goldberg and Brain Sex only spoke of results that were then known – the effects of hormones on brain development and hence social behaviour. In 2005 and following years, however, biology has been producing exciting results that show sexual dimorphism in brains can be influenced by genes even before the influence of hormones in the womb. "Genes on the sex chromosomes can directly influence sexual dimorphism in cognition and behaviour, independent of the action of sex steroids." [6] This will have been no surprise to Goldberg, it provides even more of exactly the kind of evidence of biological influence on male dominance behaviour that Goldberg's hypothesis predicted.

In his book, Fads and Fallacies in the Social Sciences, Goldberg reveals his personal hero is Jackie Robinson and devotes a whole chapter to him. Goldberg also devotes a chapter to Bob Dylan, whose lyrical ideas stimulate his sociological mind.

Books

Debate

File:Inevitability.jpg

Articles

Published letters

Interviews

Biographies

Goldberg as reviewer

  • Chynoweth, W. Edward. Masquerade: The Feminist Illusion. Trafford Publishing, 2004. ISBN 1412011450

Those of us who have addressed the strictly scientific aspects of sex differences have long looked in vain for a work that examines the wide range of likely social effects of these differences. Finally such a work, W. Edward Chynoweth's Masquerade, takes up this challenge. Analyzing a great number of possible manifestations of these differences in modern society, Chynoweth offers a fascinating analysis of what we can expect. Challenging a host of 'politically correct,' but scientifically baseless assumptions that have become widely accepted (without much changing the world that those making the assumptions wish to engender), Chynoweth has written a book as eminently readable as it is valuable.

Goldberg's and other reviews of Chynoweth's book are available online, quoted by Elizabeth Kantor, editor-in-chief, Conservative Book Service — 'Our Editor's Review'.

See also

References

  1. ^ William Helmreich, 'Steven Goldberg, Iconoclast: The Most Controversial Professor in America', (Heterodoxy 2, September 1994): 14.
  2. ^ Ibid., p. 2.
  3. ^ Ibid.
  4. ^ Ibid., p. 13
  5. ^ Ibid.
  6. ^ Skuse, David H (2006). "Sexual dimorphism in cognition and behaviour: the role of X-linked genes". European Journal of Endocrinology. 155: 99–106. doi:10.1530/eje.1.02263.


Template:Persondata