
American Thought Leaders The Feminization of Society and the Stigmatization of Normalcy | J.D. Haltigan
Mar 20, 2026
J.D. Haltigan, a developmental psychologist and social science scholar, explores rising valorization of mental illness and a perceived feminization of institutions. He links sex differences in empathizing vs systemizing to social movements, social media’s role in normalizing sick‑role identities, and concerns about declining norms and discipline. Short, provocative, and wide‑ranging.
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Sex Differences In Systemizing Versus Empathizing
- Men tend to systemize and women tend to empathize, a pattern J.D. Haltigan links to evolutionary and autism literature.
- Haltigan cites Simon Baron-Cohen's work and his own research on sex differences in autism and mood disorders to support this distributional claim.
Mental Illness Becoming An Identity
- Destigmatization of mental illness has shifted toward valorization, where disorders become identity markers rather than problems to treat.
- Haltigan notes social media rewards people who claim disorders, reinforcing a 'sick role' identity especially for mood disorders.
Haltigan's Research Journey From Forensics To Evolutionary Psychology
- Haltigan describes his academic path from forensic work and residential care to a PhD in developmental psychology and evolutionary approaches.
- He recounts observing adolescent behaviors firsthand and shifting toward nature-oriented explanations in postdocs.





