Simon Bridge said:
Generalizing from personal experience - well we all do that don't we. In a scientific forum, it is probably a good idea to be careful of subjective opinion based on personal experience and biased along social lines and when we are making a statement of fact backed by science. That would go double for a subject that has political overtones.
I thought it was generally known and accepted that men are often obliged to help women with the more physically demanding aspects of daily life (e.g. moving furniture, carrying heavy loads, etc.) and industry (e.g. logging, construction), and hence that paleolithic women may also have had trouble doing certain things without male help. If one demands that every statement, regardless of how controversial it may or may not be, be supported by scientific citations, then discussion of any sort (including this one) would become nearly impossible.
Simon Bridge said:
You seem to have gone from saying that women cannot survive without male assistance to saying that they can survive without the men, just that they survive better with men?
Surely the same is true of men too? i.e. perhaps humans survive best in a mixed gender group?
Perhaps you just happen to have talked to a lot of men - thus the bias?
I'd go along with that, however, I don't think anybody has made that claim so it is irrelevant.
The claim under examination is that "women are too weak to survive in the wild".
The question I am emphasizing is whether the difference in strength between men and women (other factors are irrelevant to this debate, as far as I can tell) would give a group of women a survival disadvantage, which is what I originally meant by the statement about women 'being too weak to survive...'. This is a decisive question regarding whether division of labor was a factor in the strength difference. If the answer is affirmative, that directly implies division of labor (unless someone can propose a different explanation for it). Thus, in order to argue that division of labor was not a factor in the strength difference between sexes, one must claim that the answer to that question is negative - i.e. the amount of bodily strength women possesses is optimal for all the tasks of paleolithic living, excepting war.
D H: I do not at all deny that our male ancestors engaged in combat with one another and that this would have favored the more muscular among them, which is obviously true, as illustrated by the data you posted (if you look at my original post I did briefly mention that men did this). I am only concerned with whether, in addition to that, women became weaker. If anything, men evolving greater strength for intraspecies combat could have encouraged a strength-based division of labor between the sexes, causing women to become less strong than they initially were.
None the less, D H, I now think you are correct that, at least for most of prehistory, intraspecies combat was the primary reason for superior male strength. Among other things, this would help explain why I have heard of ancient, as well as modern day, paleolithic- and mesolithic-type communities in Africa and pre-Columbian North America where women apparently did just about everything –including some physically demanding tasks – apart from hunting. For various reasons I wouldn’t rule out that division of labor became a factor at some point in our evolutionary history (perhaps primarily outside of Africa), which might explain why it is, to my knowledge, common in the civilizations of the last 2000-3000 years and why white women are less muscular than black women (here's my citation:
Am J Clin Nutr June 2000 vol. 71 no. 6 1392-1402 ), although the same goes for white men compared to black men. But it is not important to me what the exact story is, and we have probably answered the OP’s question as well as we can, so I feel no need to continue this discussion. Thanks all for informing my view of ancient human gender roles.