You say that genitalia is ‘hugely important’ for nothing rooms - why? There’s nothing, literally nothing, about language that makes this so. — StreetlightX
If you or anyone else is so threatened by gender unintelligibility that others must pay the price for your intellectual confusion speaks not to the problems of others, but to problems that are yours and yours alone. — StreetlightX
It's not the language that makes it so, it's the people using it. — Isaac
What concerns me when I hear, for example, about trans people wanting to change the wording on their birth certificate, wanting to enter the toilet room of their chosen gender etc is that we're losing this variety. — Isaac
I never said it was a choice. Having a mental or social disorder isn't a choice. Being born a man or woman isn't a choice. It was Artemis that was mentioning that it was a choice.I don't personally care about whether it's a choice or not. To me that looks like the wrong framing entirely. Harry Hindu is framing things that way, and I'm trying to follow him down his personal rabbit hole and place some landmines. — fdrake
Using your own example of a person disowning their socially constructed family, a man can't disown his mother and father and then start calling himself a daughter. It makes no sense, but according to you it does. How?Now... what if instead of disowning the entire social construction of gender and throwing the baby out with the bathwater, a person came to disown the gender associated with their birth sex? — fdrake
Using your own example of a person disowning their socially constructed family, a man can't disown his mother and father and then start calling himself a daughter. It makes no sense, but according to you it does. How? — Harry Hindu
Using your own source of Google for definitions, "man" and "woman" are biological entities, not social constructions. So it makes no sense to say "man" and "woman" are genders if genders are social constructions and not biological entities. — Harry Hindu
either of the two sexes (male and female), especially when considered with reference to social and cultural differences rather than biological ones. The term is also used more broadly to denote a range of identities that do not correspond to established ideas of male and female.
Using your own source "social constructions" are shared assumptions about reality. If gender were a social construction, then gender isn't "man" or "woman". Those would be the biological realities. The assumptions (and therefore gender) would be "women wear dresses and makeup and have long hair". You are confusing biological realities with shared assumptions about those realities. — Harry Hindu
Gender, as defined by your source, is a shared assumption. She identifies with an shared assumption, but her assumption isn't shared by others. Incoherent.Eventually Samantha identifies as a man and changes her gender expression and gender identity to male. — fdrake
It says that "gender is either of the two sexes (male and female) especially when considered with reference to social and cultural differences rather than biological ones."either of the two sexes (male and female), especially when considered with reference to social and cultural differences rather than biological ones. The term is also used more broadly to denote a range of identities that do not correspond to established ideas of male and female. — fdrake
Gender, as defined by your source, is a shared assumption. She identifies with an shared assumption, but her assumption isn't shared by others.. — Harry Hindu
So are you and Google being sexist and claiming that to be a woman, you must wear a dress, makeup and have long-hair? — Harry Hindu
Even here, you are talking about changing one's sex, not gender. Male and female are sexes according to you. You seem to be confusing your own distinction between sex and gender. Your distinction was incoherent so it is no surprise that you are confused by your own terms.Samantha is born a girl with girl bits. Her birth sex is female. Samantha is gender non-conforming. Eventually Samantha identifies as a man and changes her gender expression and gender identity to male. He changes his name to Sam to reflect this. As an adult, Sam has gender identity of male, gender expression of male, but Sam's birth sex was female, Sam's anatomy might still be female; that of Sam's birth sex; and even if Sam did take gender transition surgery or hormone therapy, nothing about that would change that Sam's birth sex was female. — fdrake
So again, you are confusing biological realities with social constructions. — Harry Hindu
Samantha is born a girl with girl bits. Her birth sex is female. Samantha is gender non-conforming. Eventually Samantha identifies as a man and changes her gender expression and gender identity to male. He changes his name to Sam to reflect this. As an adult, Sam has gender identity of male, gender expression of male, but Sam's birth sex was female, Sam's anatomy might still be female; that of Sam's birth sex; and even if Sam did take gender transition surgery or hormone therapy, nothing about that would change that Sam's birth sex was female
while simultaneously being aware of which bits are social construction and which aren't to the extent where you're pointing them out as a contradiction? Yeah. I don't think you're confused either, you're just pretending to be — fdrake
Look at the bold text.Samantha is born a girl with girl bits. Her birth sex is female. Samantha is gender non-conforming. Eventually Samantha identifies as a man and changes her gender expression and gender identity to male. He changes his name to Sam to reflect this. As an adult, Sam has gender identity of male, gender expression of male, but Sam's birth sex was female, Sam's anatomy might still be female; that of Sam's birth sex; and even if Sam did take gender transition surgery or hormone therapy, nothing about that would change that Sam's birth sex was female. — fdrake
Here you just provided the definition of "man" and "woman" as sexes. It then goes on to say that the sexes/genders aren't biological, or that sex/gender is a social construction. Is sex and species a social construction, because Googles does define "man" and "woman" as species-specific males and females?either of the two sexes (male and female), especially when considered with reference to social and cultural differences rather than biological ones. The term is also used more broadly to denote a range of identities that do not correspond to established ideas of male and female. — fdrake
Samantha is born a girl (sex) with girl bits. Her birth sex is female (see sentence 1). Samantha is gender non-conforming. Eventually Samantha identifies as a man (gender identity) and changes her gender expression and gender identity to male (see previous bracket). He (zomg, respecting the pronoun change of a fictional character!) changes his (see previous bracket) name to Sam to reflect this. As an adult, Sam has gender identity of male (see previous sentence), gender expression of male (see previous sentence), but Sam's birth sex was female (see sentence 1), Sam's anatomy might still be female (see sentence 1); that of Sam's birth sex (further reference to sentence 1); and even if Sam did take gender transition surgery or hormone therapy, nothing about that would change that Sam's birth sex was female — fdrake
You just said that both "man" and "male" are gender identities. So you're saying that sex and gender are the same thing and they are both social constructions? Why don't you just answer the questions as I posed them? Repeating the same BS that I'm questioning doesn't move the ball forward.Eventually Samantha identifies as a man (gender identity) and changes her gender expression and gender identity to male (see previous bracket). — fdrake
So you're saying that sex and gender are the same thing and they are both social constructions? — Harry Hindu
It's really gender secret way of maintaining itself in the face of its obvious contradiction. — TheWillowOfDarkness
The sex/gender split is outright saying trans women are really male (they have a "male body"). It does not recognise the trans woman is female, and so has a female biology, even if she has penis and no breasts (to use the crude example). — TheWillowOfDarkness
This isn't the argument that has been made. Go back and read the definitions provided by fdrake.Do you not understand what a homonym is? Words with the same spelling and pronunciation can mean different things depending on context. Sometimes "man"/"male"/"woman"/"female" are used to refer to biological sex and sometimes they're used to refer to gender. — Michael
It doesn't make that kind of distinction. Fdrake's definition of "man" and "woman" says that they are sexes. Now is it saying that the sexes are biological, or social in this context? It then goes on to say that "especially with reference to social and cultural differences than biological ones." Is it talking about the differences between cultures? If so, then in order to change your gender, you'd have to change your culture instead of your clothes, and changing your body doesn't seem to entail changing one's sex or gender.either of the two sexes (male and female), especially when considered with reference to social and cultural differences rather than biological ones. The term is also used more broadly to denote a range of identities that do not correspond to established ideas of male and female. — fdrake
It then goes on to say that "especially with reference to social and cultural differences than biological ones." Is it talking about the differences between cultures? I — Harry Hindu
No. Sex is anatomical. Gender is social. — fdrake
Eventually Samantha identifies as a man (gender identity) and changes her gender expression and gender identity to male (see previous bracket). — fdrake
Can you have a gender without having a sex? If not then how does one get a gender - by others labeling them, or by an individual searching their feelings? Is gender a shared assumption about a particular sex, or is it an individual feeling that someone has?Sex and gender correlate. The processes that give someone a gender are not the same as the ones that give them a sex. — fdrake
NO! That is your position! It is you and transgenders who put women in boxes and labeling them as a "woman" not because of their anatomy, but because of their clothes. Women don't have to wear dresses to be a woman. They are women as a result of how they were born. "Women wear dresses" is the gender binary, sexist position that you have and that transgenders reinforce.We agree that sex is anatomical, I think. We do not agree that gender is social. If you think that 'women wear dresses' as a norm is governed by anatomical or developmental characteristics, I don't know what to tell you; sperm meets egg => wear pink? — fdrake
It then goes on to say that "especially with reference to social and cultural differences than biological ones." Is it talking about the differences between cultures? I
— Harry Hindu
Sex characteristics are associated with gender archetypes. Gender archetypes are associated with sex characteristics.
Clearer? — fdrake
Sure we categorize the world with words. Sex is an anatomical category, not a social identity. "Sex" refers to those differences of anatomy and their related functions and behaviors that exist in 99.9% organisms of all species that use sex to procreate.The anatomical is the body, sex is social. Sex is a category into which someone placed or belongs. To be a man or woman on account of having a certain body is no less a norm than the question of wearing a dress, having long hair or partaking in a certain role in society. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Here we go again repeating myself. We're going in circles because you keep forgetting the other points I already made.People with male natal sex never have female natal sex.
People with female natal sex never have male natal sex.
People with male natal sex sometimes have female gender identity.
People with male natal sex sometimes have male gender identity.
People with female natal sex sometimes have female gender identity.
People with female natal sex sometimes have male gender identity. — fdrake
If "gender" is a social construction, then that means that their identity is a shared assumption of others, not personal inclination, and something that they can't change themselves, unless they move to a different culture. — Harry Hindu
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