Jeremy Murray
I take exception to this statement. It shows a clear lack of having read the totality of my posts. — Questioner
Questioner
I read this thread from beginning to end before posting. I believe your 'stats' have already been debunked. — Jeremy Murray
Jeremy Murray
Questioner
I am non-partisan and ProTrans.
You, apparently aren’t, since you can’t be bothered to do basic research, as demonstrated by your lack of basic knowledge on the subject throughout the thread. Again, just do the Google search. Or try Ben Ryan and his hazard ratio sub stack. — Jeremy Murray
Jeremy Murray
Please share your research with us. — Questioner
Questioner
Here is Kinnon Makinnon's substack. Try anything he writes. You will find nuance. — Jeremy Murray
AmadeusD
Jeremy Murray
Joshs
So for you, trans identities are real and grounded aspects of personhood, not merely self-chosen labels or socially scripted performances. So on this view, gender names something like a unified affective-perceptual-behavioral style that arises from early brain development and is later shaped, though not created, by culture? A trans person is not inventing a story out of a set of disconnected traits, but is recognising a deep pattern in how they experience themselves and the world. Does this come close to a form of essentialism? Any other tweaks to this account? — Tom Storm
Questioner
Trans people definitively do not lack institutional support and accomodations in the West. — AmadeusD
So, is it just that other people don't accept your self-image? That's true of most people. It is rare to find a group lacking resilience such that the world not conforming to their self-image is considered a 'potentially fatal' aspect of their situation. — AmadeusD
But I think the analysis which starts with "you are telling me x, therefore x is the case" is probably the worst approach. — AmadeusD
You could apply this to young white men, who are in fact, not given support by institutions and are given the opposite. — AmadeusD
Schizophrenics are not upset because the world wont conform to their delusion - it is the delusion which supports the upset. I am not running together being trans and being schizophrenic, though they share aspects. I am merely trying to make it clear that taking the afflicted at their world is a problem. A big problem. — AmadeusD
Questioner
can you concede that you have significantly underestimated detransitioners? — Jeremy Murray
AmadeusD
This is not true in the US. They have been executive-ordered out of existence. — Questioner
I think this fails to understand how central gender identity is to transgender persons and that it often results in full-person rejection by those closest to them. — Questioner
An invalid "whataboutism" — Questioner
Ah, but you have introduced the words "delusion" and "afflicted" - signaling a prejudice that does not accurately describe the transgender experience — Questioner
Joshs
Schizophrenics are not upset because the world wont conform to their delusion - it is the delusion which supports the upset. I am not running together being trans and being schizophrenic, though they share aspects. I am merely trying to make it clear that taking the afflicted at their world is a problem. A big problem.
— AmadeusD
Ah, but you have introduced the words "delusion" and "afflicted" - signaling a prejudice that does not accurately describe the transgender experience — Questioner
It is a fact that some people are deluded. It is also a fact that some people are afflicted by delusion. There is absolutely nothing prejudiced about observing these facts — AmadeusD
The Hearing Voices Movement (HVM) takes a deliberately revisionary and, in some respects, deflationary position on the concept of delusion. Rather than treating delusions as inherently pathological false beliefs that arise from a diseased mind, the movement largely reframes them as meaningful interpretations of experience that emerge in particular social, emotional, and biographical contexts. This does not mean that the HVM denies the reality of distress, suffering, or impairment, but it does challenge the epistemic authority traditionally granted to psychiatric judgments about truth, falsity, and rationality.
In mainstream psychiatry, a delusion is typically defined by three features: it is a belief that is false, held with strong conviction, and resistant to counterevidence, and it is taken to be a direct symptom of mental illness. The Hearing Voices Movement explicitly resists this framing. From its perspective, the key problem with the concept of delusion is not merely clinical but philosophical and political: it collapses questions of meaning into questions of error, and questions of difference into questions of defect.
AmadeusD
Of those who do seek detransitioning - — Questioner
Delusion as false belief doesn’t necessarily describe the schizophrenic experience either. — Joshs
Questioner
Can you please clarify what you mean by "out of existence"? — AmadeusD
The vast majority of "rejection" trans people endure, as it were, is to do with their behaviour — AmadeusD
hen I think you'll find the vast, vast majority of people you claim this about are actually not going through this as-stated and self-perception has coloured their take. — AmadeusD
I know this firsthand from several personal friends or acquaintances. — AmadeusD
t's "apply your same logic and see where it leads". I can see why this isn't going particularly deep. If I were saying "yeah, well look at this" you'd be right. I didn't. I gave you another vessel to pour your view into and see how it looks. I take it that it looks ugly? — AmadeusD
It is a fact that some people are deluded. It is also a fact that some people are afflicted by delusion. — AmadeusD
AmadeusD
Gender ideology is internally inconsistent, in that it diminishes sex as an identifiable or useful category but nevertheless maintains that it is possible for a person to be born in the wrong sexed body. — Questioner
I think an important part of what I said is.. — Questioner
but the starting point has to be to believe them. — Questioner
Why? What did they tell you? — Questioner
It's invalid because young white men do not face the same misunderstanding, ignorance and prejudice that transgender persons do — Questioner
"Delusion" and "affliction" are not characteristic of the transgender identity. A delusion is a break from reality, and transgender identities are real. — Questioner
Questioner
massively apprecaite the far more nuanced and polite tone of this exchange. Sorry for any part i've had in creating the previously tension-laded one. — AmadeusD
Philosophim
Would it then follow on your view that the woman who uses a woman's bathroom because she looks like a woman rather than because she is a woman, is engaged in sexism? Or it this incorrect because she is not acting "over and against" sex? — Leontiskos
To speak quickly, I think one difficulty with the position is that sex and gender actually are interrelated in a social sense, especially if we consider everything pertaining to appearance as pertaining to gender. — Leontiskos
Second, it's not clear what the error actually consists in, namely, "Elevating gender over and against sex." It seems to me that if we enforce that consistently, then we can never talk about gender in a way that does not presuppose sex. — Leontiskos
If not, what does it mean to elevate gender over and against sex? And instead of mere examples I would need an actual explanation of what this means. (Does it mean something like believing that one's gender is more important than one's sex, and is contrary to one's sex, and acting on that belief while at the same time requiring others to do the same? I.e. creating public policies that are gender-based rather than sex-based?) — Leontiskos
AmadeusD
I do not see that as sexism. Sex expectations are biologically expected statistics and are not gender. Admiring and wanting the body of the opposite sex for yourself is an entirely different subject. — Philosophim
Philosophim
Many people are uncomfortable with the idea that innate brain schemes organize the processing of incoming stimuli such as to form a gender affective-perceptual ‘style’. Of course such a style, whether we label it with terms such as masculine, feminine or something other, is inseparably intertwined with cultural influences, but this doesnt negate the fact that we arrive into the world armed already with gender-based stylistic proclivities prior to our exposure to social influence. — Joshs
As a non-Kantian on the matter of gender. Philosophim would say that my awareness of my gayness as a gender was either concocted in my head by piecing together arbitrary fragments of behavior to force a narrative out of them , or forced on my via my unconscious exposure to some outside arbitrary narrative. — Joshs
Philosophim
I would say having surgery to appear as a (caricature, naturally) of the opposite sex is sexist pretty much by definition. I just don't think all sexism is bad. Clearly not, as law instantiates several instances of it. — AmadeusD
prejudice or discrimination based on sex OR
behavior, conditions, or attitudes that foster stereotypes of social roles based on sex — Philosophim
Philosophim
But, if you ask any cisgender male or female, they will tell you what it feels like to be a woman or a man.
— Questioner
We should ask Philosophim this question. I’ll bet you a twinkie he insists that there is nothing a priori it feels like to be a man or a woman, because these feelings are merely the result of arbitrary social conditioning, and the only feelings that aren’t socially imposed have to do with how a male body (not mind) feels different from a female body. — Joshs
I'm sorry that you face that prejudice and that ignorance. — Questioner
Philosophim
Delusion as false belief doesn’t necessarily describe the schizophrenic experience either. Thus the need for the ‘hearing voices’ movement. — Joshs
Joshs
As of yet, there is no brain evidence of gender… we actually have brain evidence that indicates a difference between male gay men and straight men. While nothing is conclusive, it’s been noted that some areas of the brain that are normally associated with women are more like women in gay male brains. Does that mean you're a female in a man’s body? I would never insult or imply such homophobic tripe. — Philosophim
Questioner
As of yet, there is no brain evidence of gender. — Philosophim
Philosophim
What DOES the possibility of a brain similarity between gay men and women mean to you? — Joshs
Do you think the region of the brain which differs between straight men and women is responsible for behavioral differences between the sexes? — Joshs
And if not, what do you suppose is the function of that sex-related brain region? — Joshs
Outlander
Questioner
compounded by the fact it's common knowledge women "don't have to be smart". — Outlander
If you're attractive, or you have something a man wants (you know what), you never really have to become educated or develop your character much beyond that of a child's. Men will literally open doors for you for no real reason other than the fact you exist. That's common sense. — Outlander
and perhaps even from a genetic background that generally retains youthful (female) characteristics. — Outlander
Women are attracted to straight lines — Outlander
The average man is a primal, low-brow being who cares primarily about one thing: His self. — Outlander
if you can't control yourself and look at another person, whoever they are, without having an overwhelming urge to fornicate, you have a mental disorder. — Outlander
the human experience, is so much greater than simplistic physical pleasures. It should be at least. Don't you agree? — Outlander
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