My point has always been that gender is arbitrary - as in the various ways humans expect other humans to behave, while sex isn't. So, gender is meaningless in many circumstances, especially in a culture that supports the equal treatment and expectations of both sexes.Where you say "or" here that is where the distinction between sex and gender lies. So as long as you understand that there are these two components -- physiological characteristics, and human expectations (of various sorts, behaviors are just easier to point to) -- then you should be able to understand the distinction between sex and gender. — Moliere
Why don't you provide me the same courtesy I have shown you and try to address my points and answer my questions.I'm not sure how else to proceed other than ostensively, though. I don't have another tactic. I'm not throwing up my hands and blaming your ignorance, but I am ignorant on how else to proceed. — Moliere
I think the dustbin of philosophical history. — unenlightened
So Harry Hindu refuses to make the distinction we are using in this discussion — Banno
This is just another poorly veiled ad hominem attack. — Harry Hindu
Rubbish. We are trying to play chess while you refuse to acknowledge that the white pieces are different from the black pieces. — Banno
OK, so can we go with that? What might such gender norms look like? — Banno
And how would they be separated from sexual differences.?
Why don't you provide me the same courtesy I have shown you and try to address my points and answer my questions. — Harry Hindu
I'm using the terms as used in the dictionary. — Harry Hindu
EXCEPT when their interiority contradicts their exterior - as in when they believe that they are Jesus, an alien, or the opposite sex. Beliefs are interior and many of them are wrong. How do you go about consistently determining which feelings are accurate or not?Keeping in mind that my focus has mostly been on interiority, and there are people in a better position than I to answer these questions -- — Moliere
Isn't short or long hair PART of your physiology, just as being bald is? The length of one's hair does not determine sex, nor gender, as it varies across sexual and cultural boundaries. It is simply a human, not a "gender", trait of which both sexes can engage in.It seems to me that masculine and feminine are already separated from sexual differences. What does short hair, for instance, have to do with one's physiology? Sexual differences play a very minor role, at least when comparing the number of entities in the set of gendered entities, in marking what is masculine and what is feminine. — Moliere
So then the feelings that believers have would be the arbiter of the truth for the existence of their god? Again, how do you consistently determine which wide range of feelings human beings are capable of, are the arbiter of truth and which are not - other than the fact that human beings have feelings about certain things that often come into conflict and contradict others' feelings, like in the debate we have right now?So removing them entirely from the set of gendered entities is all that would be required. Feelings, as vague as that term is, would be the arbiter of identity rather than physiology. — Moliere
If they feel like the opposite "gender" then why do they need go about performing physical changes to validate their feeling? Why would they need to change the length of their hair, their style of clothes, hormone therapy, replacing their genitals, etc. if their feeling is all they need to validate the accuracy of their belief?Keeping in mind that my focus has mostly been on interiority, and there are people in a better position than I to answer these questions -- — Moliere
Isn't short or long hair PART of your physiology, just as being bald is? — Harry Hindu
How do you go about consistently determining which feelings are accurate or not? — Harry Hindu
So then the feelings that believers have would be the arbiter of the truth for the existence of their god? — Harry Hindu
If they feel like the opposite "gender" then why do they need go about performing physical changes to validate their feeling? Why would they need to change the length of their hair, their style of clothes, hormone therapy, replacing their genitals, etc. if their feeling is all they need to validate the accuracy of their belief? — Harry Hindu
And don't forget my question (one that I've asked half a dozen times with no answer (and no it's not rhetorical. I expect an answer if you expect me to understand what you mean about "gender")) about those that talk about how they feel like a different "gender", yet go about changing their sex via surgery? — Harry Hindu
The left is the majority, after all. — Coldlight
I think not. — Pattern-chaser
So? That has nothing to do with the right wing. There was a number of people who voted Trump only because they didn't want Clinton. The so called alt-right is a minority.Trump is POTUS — Pattern-chaser
I'm using the terms as used in the dictionary. — Harry Hindu
If someone is male, but wishes to be treated as a woman, I don't see an issue. If someone is female, but wishes to be treated as a man, no problem.
But if they are male and claim to be female, or if they are female and claim to be male - then there is something worthy of further discussion. — Banno
Does it matter at all if I, biologically male, ask you to address me as she/her or Ms? No. Not in the slightest. There is no issue to discuss here. How I identify, and how I request that you identify me, are choices that can be safely left to ... me. With no resulting harm to anyone. :up: — Pattern-chaser
It's the difference between John choosing the title she is addressed by, and Mary choosing the title by which John must be called. — Pattern-chaser
Perhaps Mary would have an issue if John preferred to call her Molly. Or Mark. I think in these circumstances that it is definitely the case that Mary's self-identification is preferred. — angslan
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