| Londa Schienbinger, The Mind Has No Sex: Women in the Origins of Modern Science (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1989).
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| 12. National Science Foundation. Women, Minorities, and Persons with Disabilities in Science and Engineering, Arlington, VA: NSF 96-311.
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| 13. Sy Montgomery, Walking with Apes (New York: Houghton Mifflin, 1991).
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| 14. Shirley Strum, Almost Human: A Journey Into the World of Baboons (New York: Random House, 1987)
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| 15. Margaret Power, The Egalitarians (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1991)
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| 16. Patricia Braus, How Women Will Change Medicine, American Demographics, November 1994.
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| 17. Ibid.
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| 1. Leo Frobenius, DerKopfals Schicksal (Munich, 1924), 88, translated by R. F. C. Hull, in C. G. Jung and Ce. Kerényi, Essays on a Science of Mythology, Bollingen series 22 (New York: Pantheon Books, 1949), 141-42.
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| 2. Marguerite Mitscherlich, The Peaceable Sex: On Aggression in Women and Men (New York: Fromm International Publishing, 1987).
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| 3. See Ashley Montagu, On Being Human (New York: Dutton, 1976); Montagu, Growing Young .
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| 4. The cradle, the best mother's aid and baby's comfort ever invented, and physiologically and psychologically most beneficial to the baby, was discarded on the recommendation of (male) pediatricians in the 1920s; by the end of the 1930s it had virtually disappeared and was replaced by the utterly unsatisfactory crib. On this subject and the importance of rocking, see Montagu, Touching .
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| 5. William E. Ritter, Darwin and the Golden Rule (New York: Storm Publishers, 1954), 203.
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