I didn't say that the authors endorsed it, although "identification" connotes the finding of something that one considers factual. I suppose there is some sense in which one doesn't "endorse" facts. One just reports them. I regard a finding of a fact that the irrational is the feminine to be counter to all my understandings of human nature and therefore suspect just on the face of it. Secondly, given that the possession of reason is what distinguishes human beings from other species, and that reasoning is our species's primary means of survival, flourishing and personal growth, the irrational is the life-hampering or even life-destroying. So, to find the irrational to be the feminine is condemn the feminine. Unless of course, one's standard for value judgment is not life, but death. That's why I said that I didn't think the authors were aware that they were deeming the irrational the feminine. Frankly, doing that both horrifies and repels me. Sam Bostaph