 Harp Collins presents Inferior, How Science Got Women Wrong and the New Research That's Rewriting the Story by Angela Saini, read by Tanya Rodriguez. Introduction. For centuries, scientists have influenced decision-makers on important issues including abortion rights, granting women the vote and how schools educate us. They have shaped how we think about our minds and bodies and our relationships with each other. And of course, we trust scientists to give us the objective facts. We believe that what science offers is a story free from prejudice. It is the story of us, starting from the very dawn of evolution. Yet when it comes to women, so much of this story is wrong. I must have been about sixteen years old on the playing field of my school in South East London watching a homemade rocket zoom into the sky. It was a sunny Saturday afternoon. Fresh from the nerdy triumph of having been elected chair of the school's first science society, I'd organised a day of building small model rockets before setting them off. I couldn't think of anything better. The night before, I calculated whether we had enough construction materials for the crowds that were sure to come. I shouldn't have worried. On the day, I was the only one who turned up. My chemistry teacher, Mr. Easterbrook, a kind man, stayed and helped anyway. If you were the geek growing up, you'll recognise how lonely it can be. If you were the female geek, you'll know it's far lonelier. By the time I reached sixth form, I was the only girl in my chemistry class of eight students. I was the only girl in my mathematics class of about a dozen. And when I decided to study engineering a couple of years later, I found myself the only woman in a class of nine at university. Things haven't changed much since then. Statistics collected by the Women's Engineering Society in 2016 show that only 9% of the engineering workforce in the UK is female, and just over 15% of engineering undergraduates are women. Figures from WISE, a campaign in the UK to promote women in science, engineering and technology, reveal that in 2015 women made up a little more than 14% of their workforces overall. According to the National Science Foundation in the United States, although women make up nearly half the scientific workforce there, they remain underrepresented in engineering, physics and mathematics. Standing on that playing field by myself aged 16, I couldn't...