That is an odd turn of phrase. I don't sit back and observe myself being male. Yet the notion that I experience being male implies something like that.
I don't experience being a man.
Being a man is not something that happens to me, in the way I experience a film or a pain.
I know when I am feeling pain and when I am not; when I am attending a film and when I am not. But I can have no idea of what it would feel like to not be a man. similarly, I cannot have any idea of what it might feel like to be a woman.
That's a superficial argument, but it goes much deeper than that. Suppose a woman imagines herself with a penis, testicles, extra testosterone and whatever. She claims that she feels like a man... But how could we tell she was right? How could we tell that what she felt was really what it feels like to be a man?
It simply can't be done. There is nothing it feels like to be a man.
One does not experience one's gender. Perhaps one lives it. — Banno
In a case of bodily dysphoria it is open to others to say that the feeling that the limb does not belong to the patient is pathological; that it is the feeling that needs to be treated, not the limb.
If our conception of transgender is also based solely on a feeling, then it also remains open to others to say that the feeling that the genitals do not belong to the patient is pathological; that it is the feeling that needs to be treated, not the body.
The idea that gender is determined by feeling leaves itself open to this criticism. What's the answer?
And this is where Rebecca Reilly-Cooper's discourse becomes a great strength: at it's heart, the concept of gender is no longer defensible.
So the answer to my question, "how best to think about the challenge of transgender?", is to admit that gender is a social construct that we are better off without. — Banno
Gender is just another faucet of the interior — Moliere
Over the last 2 weeks, how often have you been bothered by any of the following problems?
Little interest or pleasure in doing things?
Feeling down, depressed, or hopeless?
Trouble falling or staying asleep, or sleeping too much?
Feeling tired or having little energy?
Poor appetite or overeating?
Feeling bad about yourself — or that you are a failure or have let yourself or your family down?
Trouble concentrating on things, such as reading the newspaper or watching television?
Moving or speaking so slowly that other people could have noticed? Or so fidgety or restless that you have been moving a lot more than usual?
Thoughts that you would be better off dead, or thoughts of hurting yourself in some way?
Is there a way to edit the name of this thread? — Banno
I for one am not willing to accept that 4 or 5 year olds declaring that they want to be the opposite sex should be given the benefit of the doubt. To put it bluntly, I am suspicious of the parents, cooperating school authorities, and medical officials who aid or allow children to act out any sort of transsexual fantasy. It would not be the first time that incredibly naive (or stupid) theory was applied to young children. It also wouldn't be the first time that parents imposed inappropriate ideas on their children. — Bitter Crank
The great hazard with feelings is that they can change, so I'm inclined to indorse any notion that where feelings are part of the mix, that they be addressed and resolved before anyone cuts anything. — tim wood
...her suggestion that gender is indefensible is a performative contradiction. — unenlightened
SO gender is fine, provided we don't take it seriously.
Fine. — Banno
How's that? I don't see your argument. — Banno
Is that possible to exist "in between"? I've met a transgender who said: "Today mourning I felt as if I was a man, and later as if I was a woman..." So, is that possible to avoid the binary in self-identification?The problem here is the binary. Many transgender people say that they are non binary. However, the binary has implications. — Blue Lux
Here is the problem: to become a transgender by many people ( and, by transgenders themselves) is understood as a manifestation of their freedom, as a free choice of a new identity. Yet, isn't this process is guided and taken up by mass-media and by so many institutions and organizations? So, it is rather taking part in a mass movement than a free choice of an individual identity.Well, 'trans'gender means to go beyond gender. So. You can be whatever you want to be. You can describe yourself in any manner. That is your freedom. — Blue Lux
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