El Podcast

Society Is Being Feminized: Here’s What That Means (E195)


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Dr. Cory J. Clark breaks down how the rise of women in academia may be reshaping institutions—shifting priorities from merit and competition toward equity, harm avoidance, and social dynamics.

Guest Bio: Dr. Cory J. Clark is a psychology professor at New College of Florida whose research focuses on moral judgment, political psychology, and academic culture. She is known for her work on sex differences, self-censorship in academia, and her paper “From Warriors to Worriers: The Cultural Rise of Women.”

Topics Discussed
  • Sex differences in psychology and behavior
  • Feminization of academia and institutions
  • Rise of DEI, equity, and harm-avoidance culture
  • Cancel culture and social ostracism
  • Self-censorship and reputational fear in academia
  • Incentives behind academic research (publish-or-perish)
  • Mental health diagnosis inflation (ADHD, anxiety, autism)
  • Declining ROI of higher education
  • AI’s impact on education and student behavior
  • Power dynamics: students, donors, and universities
  • Main Points
    • Institutional Shift: As women gain power in academia and culture, institutions reflect more “female-typical” values like harm avoidance, equality, and social cohesion.
    • DEI Alignment: The rise of DEI frameworks aligns with these values—prioritizing equity over merit-based hierarchies.
    • Cancel Culture Mechanism: Social ostracism (cancel culture) mirrors female-typical conflict resolution strategies (exclusion vs. confrontation).
    • Self-Censorship: Academics fear reputational damage more than job loss, leading to widespread self-censorship—even among tenured professors.
    • Vocal Minority Effect: A small, highly active group drives outrage and cancellations, creating the illusion of widespread consensus.
    • Truth vs. Equity Tension: Male academics are more likely to prioritize truth, while female academics are more open to balancing truth with social equity goals.
    • Mental Health Expansion: Increased empathy and institutional incentives may be driving both better diagnosis and overdiagnosis of mental health conditions.
    • Broken Incentives in Academia: Publish-or-perish encourages quantity over quality, contributing to weak or misleading research.
    • Higher Ed Under Pressure: Declining ROI, AI disruption, and enrollment shifts may fundamentally reshape universities.
    • Future Uncertain: Cultural trends may continue—but could reverse if evidence shows negative outcomes.
    • Top 3 Quotes
      1. “It would be crazy to think you could change an institution from 100% men to majority women and see no change.”
      2. “Most academics don’t support cancel culture—but a very small, loud minority makes it look like they do.”
      3. “If you don’t know the truth, you can’t solve any problems—because you have no foundation to act on.”
      4. 🎙 The Pod is hosted by Jesse Wright
        💬 For guest suggestions, questions, or media inquiries, reach out at https://elpodcast.media/
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