They are judging their success by how many customers they're getting, if they're really having an impact, if they're happy... it's a very clear -
cut difference in attitude.
Not exact matches
Hansen and her colleagues Erin E. George, assistant professor of economics at Hood College, and Julie Lyn Routzahn, associate professor of economics and business administration at McDaniel College, measured the
difference in men's and women's responses to questions about their
attitudes towards borrowing money for luxury purchases and towards covering living expenses when income is
cut.
There's the usual tangle here of nature and nurture, the difficulty of holding which unresolved can tempt us to
cut the knot with a Gordian «All [men][women] are... such and so,» and «All [white][black][brown][yellow][red] people are... such and so,» whether based
in some essentialism or
in the view that social
attitudes and roles operate so broadly and effectively that the result is largely indistinguishable from that which would be produced by essential
differences.