I don't understand the point you're trying to make here.No, it's that magic thing about money: if you have it, you can be any damn thing you want to be. — frank
That wasn't the problem I said that you have. Another problem you have is that you don't pay attention.Harry, I've never thought that sex is a social construct. — fdrake
You're not paying attention either.Our identities are social constructions. You seem to.misundertand what I mean by social constuction. — TheWillowOfDarkness
No. I make observations and notice that many bodies share similar features and functions to the point where 99.9% fit neatly into two categories. There are anomalies in nature because natural selection doesn't plan ahead. What does it mean to be an anomaly? It means that you don't fit neatly into those two categories that 99.9% of others fit into. It means that you are a different category, not the opposite of one of the other categories. The fact that anomalies exist isn't a good reason to dispose of our categories or to be sexist.You are mistaking your notion of sex for the body. As I said earlier, you are reasoning backwards. Instead of working from bodies which occur and are observed, you are trying to define what bodies exist by your expectation of what they must have. Deers don't need to be male to have antlers, humans don't need to be female to have breasts. For either to have a body, they only need existence of that body. — TheWillowOfDarkness
If identities are socially constructed, then that means that they are identities that are given by others, or assumed by others, not by an individual by themselves. — Harry Hindu
We already went over how one gets various identities. Your problem is that you are confusing biological real identities (being born with certain body parts and functions) with SHARED ASSUMPTIONS ABOUT THOSE IDENTITIES. — Harry Hindu
No, it's about what you think — Harry Hindu
What is a social construction? What does it mean to be sexist? — Harry Hindu
No, sexist assumptions are assumptions that have nothing to do with one's sex - like what kind of clothes you should wear and what kind of job you should have because of your sex. It is sexist to say that women shouldn't be able to join the military. It isn't sexist to say that women have vaginas.My point is that your account of sex is just another layer of these sexist assumptions. — TheWillowOfDarkness
What does anyone need a dangling anatomy between one's legs that urinates and fertilizes women's wombs to have a "penis"? We don't need words to categorize the world. We don't need words to notice the similarities and differences between people. We simply need eyes and a brain. We only need words if we want to communicate those differences and similarities to other people. I don't need the words "penis", "vagina", "man", "woman" etc. to notice the similarities between certain body parts on different individuals and how others share different body parts, but there are only two groups. I don't notice anyone with a completely different body part than the two that I see on everyone. We don't have three, four, or even ten different kinds of sex organs. We only have two.What does anyone any one need a penis to be a man, a womb to be a woman?
There are no "real biological idenities" because they fact of an identity is a different to existence of a biologcal feature. Such a notion of real biological identities are just another sexist assumption about about a body and how it belongs. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Then why do people claim to have an identity of man or woman based on their style of dress and hair? You seem to be denying the existence of gender as an identity.Just as an identity is not one's hair or dress, it is not one's biological features either. — TheWillowOfDarkness
I've asked those questions numerous times and you're just now finding it interesting?What is a social construction? What does it mean to be sexist? — Harry Hindu
So just because I find this interesting. — fdrake
You win a gold metal for the mental gymnastics, fdrake.I take a naturalistic view on social construction. That might seem like a contradiction in terms, but it's quite a defensible thesis. — fdrake
I see the exact same thing of leftists throwing about this claim that "gender is a social construction", without ever explaining what a social construction is. It's why I've had to ask the question several times of you - that you are just now finding interesting. :brow:The general reputation of social construction is the kind of thing you'd expect to see on Tumblr or out of the mouths of over zealous social anthropology under graduates: "Morality is just a social construction!", without ever explaining what a social construction is, this 'just' is the operative word, not the 'social construction' part. — fdrake
The general reputation of social constructions is that they have very little to do with anything material; this conception sees them as they're cultural artefacts, floating social facts, generated by the aggregate of individual assumptions and perception we have about shared practices. You can turn the causal structure on its head and get the same idea; the cultural artefacts and floating social facts generate the aggregate of individual assumptions and perceptions we have about shared practices.
You seem to want to situate identity in either of these conceptions; either individual identities partake in the generation of social conditions; as if they are prior to them; or social conditions partake in the generation of identities. You also seem to insist on a purity of definition, social constructions and identities and never the twain shall meet, based on your metaphysical intuitions about social constructions and identities.
In opposition to this, I see it reciprocally; people partially construct social stuff, social stuff partially constructs people. It's a blending on all levels; a reciprocal dependence that undermines any demand for their scission. There are points of overlap, and processes outside of the two.
I'd like you to bracket and articulate these assumptions so we can discuss them. We'd probably make more progress that way than talking cross purposes. — fdrake
I've asked those questions numerous times and you're just now finding it interesting? — Harry Hindu
Social constructions are ideas about the physical world — Harry Hindu
They can be expectations or assumptions of some physical person — Harry Hindu
We all have certain functions and limitations based on our physiology. — Harry Hindu
When these expectations and assumptions begin to split from from those actual functions and limitations, they come racist, sexist, etc. — Harry Hindu
They being to force people into boxes that that have nothing to do with their physiological functions and limitations, yet they are based on those functions and limitations — Harry Hindu
. Saying that blacks are criminals because they are black is racist because it is an assumption about a person based on the color of their skin - their physiology. — Harry Hindu
split (assumptions and expectations) from those actual functions and limitation (of bodies)
No, I provided the definition of social construction from your source - Google. You provided definitions of "gender" as a social construction, but never clarified what you meant by "social construction", so I went to your source and provided it for you. You are contradicting yourself if you suddenly don't like your own source of definitions when it doesn't fit your convoluted sense of the relationship between sex and some assumption about one's sex. Remember that you confused the sex terms of male and female with your supposed gender terms of man and woman?What you've actually done every single time (and I've checked) you've used the term 'social construction' in our discussion, you've assumed that my account of them is the same as your account of them. — fdrake
Does the UN create social constructions for all the other cultures of the world? Is Iran going to use that same definition that the UN is using? The UN is a political entity, not a scientific one. This is a scientific issue, not a political one. That's part of your problem.And you insist on this so much that you're committed to the belief that the UN has no freakin' clue what the definitions it uses mean. — fdrake
The following isn't consistent.If you bracket your assumptions above, you're way more likely to see my account as internally consistent. — fdrake
The general reputation of social constructions is that they have very little to do with anything material; — fdrake
So, do social constructions involve material things, like people and their actions, or are they just ideas that stay in our heads?No, institutions are social constructions and are not just ideas. We do not think the law into being, we must act and think together to bring it about. Corporate persons are not ideas, they are legal persons, which are social constructions in the above sense. — fdrake
How does this address anything that I've said? We don't have shared assumptions about people with or without spleens. We have share assumptions about people with vaginas and penises. If we assumed certain behaviors of people that have spleens as opposed to those without that have nothing to do with them having a spleen or not, we would be engaging in spleenism, as opposed to sexism. So if we assumed that Boris should wear boots because he has a spleen and all others who had their spleen removed should wear sneakers, then what does your style of shoes have to do with you having a spleen or not? Is it okay for Boris to wear sneakers and announce that he feels like he doesn't have spleen when his CT scan shows that he does? Is it okay for Boris to announce that he is identifies with being spleenless when he wears sneakers? Doesn't that reinforce spleenism?This is true, but one wonder's how Boris Johnson's spleen constrains his politics. Also see above points. This joke illustrates your all too hasty collapse of social ontology into individuals' bodies. — fdrake
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.