...to be understood as someone who is properly, female/male, not just a woman/man. — TheWillowOfDarkness
respecting the interiority of others without compromising your own - or if you want to put it in terms of harm, that treating people like objects is inherently harmful. — angslan
1 - The trans claim is not that there is a definitive or necessary connection between chromosomes and gender-identity. The trans claim is not that there is a definitive or necessary connection between outward appearance and gender-identity. If it were, the claim would insinuate that there are no trans people - a self-defeating claim. I think we might both agree on this issue - I am not sure. — angslan
2 - The use of gendered language predates critical interrogation of the distinctions between sex, gender identity, gender roles, and the like. There is not one true, physiological etymology or definition of "woman" and "man" in use over the past few hundred years - this word is bound up in the fusing of sex, gender identity and gender roles. Thus, the word today is the child of this "de-fusing". The claim that it historically denoted physical appearance and that this is the "true, correct" or "objective" use of the term is a little blind to the history of sex and gender (and falls foul of the etymological fallacy anyway). I think we might be able to both agree on this - but perhaps we are not there yet. — angslan
To (d) the objection is that A has special access to knowledge about themselves. This is two-pronged objection - first, that we believe people who make authentic statements about their identity, and two, that objective comparison of internal identities is impossible. — angslan
I think that you have expressed that some feminists feel that applying the word "woman" to someone outside of their conceptual categorisation of "woman" is compromising, or inappropriate to, their identity as women. I think that to make such a claim requires a strict categorisation of "woman". It also requires a protective approach to that categorisation. Such a strict categorisation requires a conceptualisation of (i) how it feels to be a woman, (ii) the experiences and circumstances of women, (iii) the treatment of women, or some combination of more than one. The reason that categorisation needs to be strict is that there is a resistance to permitting new members to the category (in some cases, as you note, the chromosomes you were born with and not even the sexual organs that you currently have - very strict!). — angslan
The bigotry isn't a question of specific intention. It's in the very concepts Harry is using. In taking a position trans people are deluded, they's taken a position trans people are mistaken, trans identities aren't real and values they ought to be rejected in favour of "telling the truth." — TheWillowOfDarkness
Words are based (insofar as possible) on features available to everyone, because words belong to everyone. It's not that physiological features have primacy because they're more important than how you feel. It's that physiological features have primacy because they are most available to everyone and language is a communal thing. — Pseudonym
The trans claim is implicitly that there is a connection between chromosomes and gender identity. — Pseudonym
If there were no connection, than a man (who feels like a woman) could still be called a man (based on his chromosomes) because there's nothing 'not man-like' about the way he's feeling. — Pseudonym
That a person thinking and feeling that way can't be a 'Man' they must be a 'woman', because that's one of the ways 'women' think and feel, not one of the ways 'men' think and feel. — Pseudonym
The word 'Woman' was used to describe those people with particular physiological characteristics. That's just an historical fact without any judgement value. — Pseudonym
Men who have these thoughts/feelings that they call 'like a woman' have requested that they be labelled by the term currently used as the default label for anyone with breasts and a vagina. — Pseudonym
but I'm pretty sure that there was no sense in which "woman" was used to describe anyone other than a person with (at least some of) the physiological characteristics associated with two x chromosomes until maybe forty or fifty years ago? — Pseudonym
When a midwife says "it's a girl" she's not doing a psych analysis. — Pseudonym
Yes, the claim that some feminists are making (that their identity is being undermined by people claiming to 'feel like a woman') requires that the category "women" be defined. But so does that claim "I feel like a woman". There must be something it is like to be a woman in order for someone to feel it. It may not be a tightly defined thing — Pseudonym
A private language simply doesn't make any sense, how would you know if you were using the terms correctly? — Pseudonym
Yes. Some people are sometimes deluded. You're begging the question. If you start from a neutral position that it is possible for people to be deluded about things (to believe things which are not the case) then you cannot argue that the possibility of a group being deluded can't be discussed because to do so would be to argue that such a group are mistaken.
Anorexics are deluded. They think they're fat when they are not. They are mistaken. They're not 'really' fat such that we should put them on a diet. They're 'really' deluded so we should help then realise a position which is more 'true'. Agrophobics are deluded, they think wide open spaces are threatening when they are not. Depressives are deluded, they think that their circumstances contain more negatives than they do. — Pseudonym
As though we haven't been able to have some sort of discussion regarding what people feel like or who they are? — angslan
Only if feeling is external. It's not. You are actually begging the question here - this conclusion of yours is only possible is you necessitate a connection between chromosomes and feeling in the first place. — angslan
If this is really the basis of your claims, then you are not doing the listening (or the reflection) that you are asking of others. — angslan
You say this as if other people have to label people - what we are talking about is people telling us their authentic feelings. They are not saying, "I can't be called a man because men don't think this way." They are saying, "I feel like a woman." — angslan
The word 'Woman' was used to describe those people with particular physiological characteristics. That's just an historical fact without any judgement value. — Pseudonym
This is another fundamental misunderstanding - perhaps you did not read my post, or you haven't looked at the history of sex-gender terms and thinking? — angslan
Not to be nit-picky, but just to point out the fuzziness of these sets - not all people with breasts have a vagina, and not all people with XX chromosomes have either or both. — angslan
The problem with simply using a list of physiological features is capturing the fuzziness. Someone with a penis would not be called a woman, but someone born, for some genetic reasons, without a uterus, but with breasts and a vagina would be. It's not that anything goes, just that the definition is not a simple list. — Pseudonym
But she may not be making a commentary on gender as much as on sex. — angslan
two women, with breasts and vaginas and XX chromosomes that they've had since birth and both of whom feel like women can feel completely differently to each other - and yet still feel like women. — angslan
The same way you learn someone's name. How is this harder, or more morally complex, than that? — angslan
'm not begging any sort of question. I'm coming form a position which recognises the trans person cannot possibly be deluded in this way because their experience is defined in recognising the bodily states they have. — TheWillowOfDarkness
My point is the delusion story has nothing to do with bodies. — TheWillowOfDarkness
...after the analysis you've put in so far the best you've got is "if you don't agree with me you must not be trying hard enough"? — Pseudonym
So if a girl (who thinks she is a boy) is addressed as "girl", that would be fine because 'girl' is a sex distinguishing term? — Pseudonym
Are you suggesting it's not true that the word "woman" was not, in the past, used to describe those people with particular physiological characteristics? — Pseudonym
A personal name is not a category. People called Bill are not claiming to be similar to other people called Bill. They're not claiming, based on private feelings to be part of the set {all people called Bill}, the only criteria for membership of the set {all people called Bill} is being called Bill. — Pseudonym
A personal name is not a category. People called Bill are not claiming to be similar to other people called Bill. They're not claiming, based on private feelings to be part of the set {all people called Bill}, the only criteria for membership of the set {all people called Bill} is being called Bill. — Pseudonym
I conflate sex/gender precisely because you have yet to establish a real, objective distinction between them. — Harry Hindu
What I'm arguing about is very simply that the effect on your identity of having a word used about you. . . is no greater than the effect of using a word about someone on the identity of the speaker. — Pseudonym
I mean, you're really not representing trans claims accurately at all. No matter what I've said to you, you've gone back to the same set of misinformation regarding trans claims. — angslan
'm not sure babies have such complex thoughts that they can clearly communicate to a midwife (which is the context of this statement). — angslan
I feel that there is a clear decision here to ignore the things said in posts - you've heard my answer on this twice now. — angslan
This doesn't present to me why it would be more difficult or more morally complex to learn someone's gender from them than it is to learn their name, however. — angslan
Without reference to the bodies in this way, there is no longer a standard for their feelings being false in the claimed sense of delusion. — TheWillowOfDarkness
If a mistake about the body is not at stake, we no longer have a clear reason for saying someone feelings "are false." — TheWillowOfDarkness
When someone sets out such an identity, they are only speaking for themselves. They are only talking about their feelings of sex and gender. If someone has feelings claiming to be a woman, said feelings don't act to report how anyone else is a women. Each woman has their own feelings which report (or do not report) the fact of their identity. — TheWillowOfDarkness
So to call someone a woman is equivelant to saying I am a woman? There is not a difference between the third and first person uses? Is that what you're saying? — Moliere
I recognize that for some feminists it does not work this way, though I'd like to know why. But it's worth noting that for some feminists it does. — Moliere
This is just bare assertion. Do you have an argument demonstrating how this is the case, or is it just a statement of what you would like to be the case? — Pseudonym
No, I said that if one effect was no greater than the other, not one effect is identical to the other — Pseudonym
the effect on your identity of having a word used about you — Pseudonym
is no greater than the effect of using a word about someone on the identity of the speaker. — Pseudonym
I'm not trying to make a democratic argument, but a rational one. — Pseudonym
Delusion usually implies some sort or misread phenomenological presence in the world. Seeing something which isn't there. — TheWillowOfDarkness
I would have thought the logical inference at play was obvious... we are speaking about an individual's feelings about their own identity. The very concept we are using is limited to a feeling about her own identity. She not feeling about other women's identity in this instance. The feeling is a sense of her own. — TheWillowOfDarkness
I'm making an argument about what is logically implied by trans claims. — Pseudonym
No, the point is that the midwife is using a term based on physiological features which, later on in life, you like us to use based solely on psychological features. Why on earth would you want to go through this rigmarole rather than just have two different words? — Pseudonym
No, the point is that the midwife is using a term based on physiological features which, later on in life, you like us to use based solely on psychological features. — Pseudonym
Yes, only this time I'm asking you for some evidence to back it up (a request you have conveniently ignored). You're making an empirical claim here. That the word was used a certain way hundreds of years ago. — Pseudonym
It is more morally complex because a category name implies other members of that category, a non-category name carries no such implication. I can say "bill is an idiot" and be referring only to a particular person called Bill. This is because although there are other people called Bill, Bill is not a category, the other people are called Bill entirely incidentally. There's is no equivalent with the term "woman" I can't say anything of women without implying that the same applies to all women. — Pseudonym
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