What I'm saying is that if gender and sex are not the same thing, the discussing intersex is off-topic. — Harry Hindu
If women's bathrooms are not exclusively for biological females, and vice versa for males, then your argument would allow animals to use the public restroom. — Harry Hindu
Homosexual relationships are inherently unnatural and, the studies clearly show, are ultimately harmful and costly for everyone. Society cannot give its stamp of approval to such a dangerous lifestyle. If we change marriage for this tiny, modern minority, we will have to do it for every deviant group. Polygamists, polyamorists, pedophiles, and others will be next in line to claim equal protection. They already are. There will be no legal basis to deny a bisexual the right to marry a partner of each sex, or a person to marry his pet.
You're not answering my question. Why do you group trans-people with people defined by their sex if sex and gender are separate things? You are making a category mistake. — Harry Hindu
The men's bathroom is exclusively for men and intersex people. Women's bathrooms are for women and intersex people. — Harry Hindu
Because sex and gender are separate. — Harry Hindu
So you're comparing apples and oranges, right? — Harry Hindu
Intersex people can use whichever bathroom they want. What does this have to do with trans-people? A vast majority of trans-people are not intersex. — Harry Hindu
Right, but if sex and gender are separate, then why isn't your rebuttal that we are off-topic rather than assume the premise that sex and gender are the same which is where the bathroom, sports and prisons issues are rooted? — Harry Hindu
You keep bringing up intersex. — Harry Hindu
Why have a discussion about bathrooms, sports, and prisons if sex and gender are separate things and bathrooms are divided by sex, not gender? — Harry Hindu
Why did you oblige them and not just say they are off-topic? If I recall, you brought up sex earlier in the thread. — Harry Hindu
But why are we discussing sex — Harry Hindu
Intersex is not a trait that is passed down to the next generation — Harry Hindu
Sure, genetic disorders can be passed down to the next generation. — Harry Hindu
Intersex is not a trait that is passed down to the next generation like the traits that natural selection promotes for evolving into a new species. — Harry Hindu
A 46,XY mother who developed as a normal woman underwent spontaneous puberty, reached menarche, menstruated regularly, experienced two unassisted pregnancies, and gave birth to a 46,XY daughter with complete gonadal dysgenesis.
Is there ambiguity in being a human? — Harry Hindu
The point is that it isn't an counterexample if we go by the definition that being anything means having a majority of the traits for that thing. — Harry Hindu
That is total number of cases of this disorder that are known. I would say 28 out of say 12 billion. is not statistically significant number to overhaul the binary nature of sex. — Malcolm Parry
Can one be unambiguously human? — Harry Hindu
I think your question was an attempt to undermine the concept of biological sex. — frank
It's not important to categorize those people as male or female. — frank
But then why are people born with less than 10 fingers, or born without legs still considered human? Isn't being human more than just having 10 fingers and two legs? Aren't there multiple traits that make one a human, and not just one? Wouldn't this mean that if you have a majority of those traits you're considered a human? Why would that not be the same for sex? — Harry Hindu
I don't know why it's important to work that out. It remains true that a biological male has XY AND no-XX. A biological female has XX AND no-XY. Simple. — frank
A man has XY & lacks XX. — frank
I was corrected by AmadeusD.
Even if there are 500 anomalies that is exactly what they are. No spectrum — Malcolm Parry
I was interested in the syndrome did a bit of googling and the conclusion was that some people were a bit of both. It was a syndrome with 500 known cases. I was corrected by a poster and was happy to be corrected because tiny pockets of developmental defects doesn’t seem change the science of 8 billion people on the planet.
Why is the change for the worse? — Malcolm Parry
If they have active SRY, they are male. IN a female, there is no SRY active in/on any cells. — AmadeusD
A 46,XY mother who developed as a normal woman underwent spontaneous puberty, reached menarche, menstruated regularly, experienced two unassisted pregnancies, and gave birth to a 46,XY daughter with complete gonadal dysgenesis.
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Both the mother and daughter had normal SRY (sex-determining region of the Y chromosome) sequences...
Chimeras are the result of fusion of two zygotes to form a single embryo, producing an individual with genetically different kinds of tissue. If the fused zygotes are of different sex, the individual develops both ovarian and testicular tissues. The majority of these people are best reared as females and many pregnancies with living offspring have been reported in persons reared as females, and several cases has fathered a child.
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A scenario is presented here for a woman to have a son without a father: she is a chimera of 46,XX/46,XY type resulting from the fusion of two zygotes of different sex types and she develops both ovary and testis in her body.
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Both gonads are functional and produce spermatozoa and oocyte respectively after puberty. At the time of ovulation, estrogens increase the motility of the oviduct on the left side which results in a negative pressure in the tube and oocyte and sperms are picked-up into the tube with the help of this vacuum effect, taking both gametes to the fertilization site in the oviduct. Since the sperm contains a Y chromosome, this fertilization gives rise to a XY male embryo.
If you disagree with my responses, that's fine - but you're arguing as if I haven't put a nice lid on it, from my side of things. — AmadeusD
You know what, let's just all pretend we are all biological essentialists/determinists. — substantivalism
rather than some psychiatrist just says so — Harry Hindu
Most reasoning of this kind is not fallacious, and much of our knowledge properly comes from listening to authorities.
Appealing to authority IS a logical fallacy. You need to reconcile what you just said with this simple fact. — Harry Hindu
An argument from authority is a form of argument in which the opinion of an authority figure (or figures) who lacks relevant expertise is used as evidence to support an argument.
I suppose the rational counterargument would be: ridiculously rare genetic abnormalities aside, how does that change a thing? — Outlander
46,XX/46,XY is either a chimeric or mosaic genetic condition characterized by the presence of some cells that express a 46,XX karyotype and some cells that express a 46,XY karyotype in a single human being. Individuals with these conditions are classified as intersex.
They believe they are man when they are a woman. That is the delusion. — Harry Hindu
Pleading to authority is a logical fallacy. — Harry Hindu
But they are either male or female. They aren’t both. — Malcolm Parry
Have you details of a person who is both male and female? — Malcolm Parry
The historically recent phenomenon of trans people... — Baden
The galli eunuch priests of classical antiquity have been interpreted by some scholars as transgender or third-gender. The trans-feminine kathoey and hijra gender roles have persisted for thousands of years in Thailand and the Indian subcontinent, respectively. In Arabia, khanith (like earlier mukhannathun) have occupied a third gender role attested since the 7th century CE. Traditional roles for transgender women and transgender men have existed in many African societies, with some persisting to the modern day. North American Indigenous fluid and third gender roles, including the Navajo nádleehi and the Zuni lhamana, have existed since pre-colonial times.
Some medieval European documents have been studied as possible accounts of transgender persons. Kalonymus ben Kalonymus's lament for being born a man instead of a woman has been seen as an early account of gender dysphoria. John/Eleanor Rykener, a male-bodied Briton arrested in 1394 while living and doing sex work dressed as a woman, has been interpreted by some contemporary scholars as transgender. In Japan, accounts of transgender people go back to the Edo period. In Indonesia, there are millions of trans-/third-gender waria, and the extant pre-Islamic Bugis society of Sulawesi recognizes five gender roles.
In the United States in 1776, the genderless Public Universal Friend refused both birth name and gendered pronouns. Transgender American men and women are documented in accounts from throughout the 19th century. The first known informal transgender advocacy organisation in the United States, Cercle Hermaphroditos, was founded in 1895.
It is you that is focused on the bathroom issue when I have shown that is a symptom and not the cause. It is illogical to even discuss bathrooms when you haven't ironed out the psychological issue first. — Harry Hindu
The most relevant issue that you are avoiding is how do we determine when someone is telling the truth when they say they are a man or a woman? — Harry Hindu
If trans-people's safety are threatened in bathrooms, then what makes you think a trans-man will be safe entering a men's bathroom? When you actually dig deep and think beyond the statistics you are providing, it doesn't make a whole lot of sense, or is realistic. — Harry Hindu
Among transgender men who used women’s restrooms (i.e., according to their sex assigned at birth), about 10% were denied access, and nearly 11% experienced verbal harassment in the past year, compared to those who used men’s restrooms (5% and 7%, respectively).
Among transgender women who used men’s restrooms (i.e., according to their sex assigned at birth), 7% were denied access, and nearly 9% experienced verbal harassment in the past year, compared to those who used women’s restrooms (5% and 7%, respectively).
Where are the statistics that show that trans-people are disproportionately assaulted in bathrooms as opposed to other places? — Harry Hindu
“Current policy debates about transgender people’s access to restrooms are based on a narrative, asserted without evidence, that safety and privacy in women’s spaces are at risk,” said lead author Jody Herman, Senior Scholar of Public Policy at the Williams Institute. “However, research shows that transgender people are the ones who face harm from others in these spaces, including being denied access, verbal harassment, and physical assault. Moreover, they are at greater risk of harm when laws require them to use restrooms according to their assigned sex at birth.”
