Hi Jim.
Thank you for your response to my question.
It is true that men and women have different types of hormones.
However I don’t se any research that shows that women are more emotional or less emotional than men.
One could argue that women cry more, which is actually a healthy way of dealing with sadness. However one could argue testosterone makes a person more aggressive, more angry: this makes men less able to control their rage, a much more dangerous emotion than sadness. One could pint to the fact that the vast majority of violent crimes such as murder, rape, mass shootings, etc are done by men. I think harming others and society by enlarge, is a much better indicator that someone is not in control of dealing with their emotions that someone crying or acting more emotional. I think this may be an inaccurate assumption you are dealing with in your logical arguments. True, no one person fits the general rule of thumb, but everyone has emotions and I haven’t seen any studies that indicate this premise is true. Yes different sexes has different levels of hormones, and I think it’s each persons job to learn to deal with them. But I don’t think the idea that women are less in control of their emotions than men is a valid assumption
I have heard from many men (many here on medium), anecdotally, that men are overall more lonely and expected to keep their emotions inside by society. I often here how men are not allowed to share their emotions, except anger and humor with each other. I’ve heard many men talk about not being able to share their emotions with anyone except their partners, and then they get frustrated when they can’t find partners to do this with.
Overall, I suggest not using this assumption in your logic, unless you see more concrete evidence to back it up. As a reader it gives the impression you have a bias and thus not a valid source.
I saw this as a mathematician who has a degree mathematics applied to logic.