How is it rational see a biologically male sex and a psychologically female gender as a woman, or a biologically female sex and a psychologically male gender as a man? — praxis
Do you think other people owe it to you to accept you and comprehend you?
— baker
They owe it to themselves to understand themselves, because failing to do so will cause unhappiness both in isolation and with others. — Joshs
We are born with many personality traits that are robust and stable. to recognize them in others is to see their style, the art of their being with you. Recognizing the art of their personality style allows you a greater intimacy with them. Gender behavior is an art of being, and not seeing it deprives both you and others of this intimacy of relation. — Joshs
Do you believe there is such a thing as psychological gender, apart from biological chromosomal sex?
Paychological gender would refer to a brain-wiring that produces what I call a perceptual-affective masculine or feminine style. This difference in behavior is what allows dog experts and breeders to tell male dogs from
female dogs based on their behavior. — Joshs
Do you think the same brain-wiring difference separates human males and females?
Just shows you what lengths people will go to to find self-acceptance in a culture where the concept of psychological gender is still uncomprehended. I’m glad you at least comprehend the distinction between biological sex and gender. You will help to one day make such surgeries unnecessary. Because, of course, that’s the only thing that’s really going to stop it. — Joshs
It’s interesting and perhaps revealing that your description of gender mentions only who one is sexually attracted to, and nothing about what I would consider to be a more central aspect of gender for many in the gay community , which has to do with a global perceptual-affective style, of which sexual attraction is merely one small aspect. For those who dont grasp this , it is incoherent to talk about gayness outside of sexual attraction, and I think that is part of the problem. — Joshs
It isn't rational within the context of our current linguistic paradigm. — Garrett Travers
Linguistic paradigms are ever-changing; they are not determinate objects. Even if they were not constantly evolving, who could be qualified to establish the supposed boundaries of a linguistic paradigm? — Janus
OK, seems I misunderstood you — Janus
That may well be true, but doesn't apply to my case, since I wasn't getting heated. I was merely pointing out what I thought was an inconsistency with actuality in what you were saying. I hadn't realized you were talking about others with authority stipulating the boundaries of the current linguistic paradigm (or, more accurately imagining that they are). — Janus
Or, threaten your job because you won't accept Joseph Smith as prophet? There is nothing different between any paradigm. — Garrett Travers
Yes, or threaten your job because you do accept Joseph Smith as a prophet, for that matter. — Janus
A more apt analogy would be for them to threaten your job for being anti-Mormon, which they probably would. — Hanover
The key around this, is to know what one's brain is doing. But, people aren't being educated on such things, now are they? — Garrett Travers
A more apt analogy would be for them to threaten your job for being anti-Mormon, which they probably would. — Hanover
would enable you to distinguish between an irrational and a rationally valid train of thought I would hazard to assert. — Janus
One might argue that we don't know what the future of neuroscience might bring to the table, but I think it is precisely for that reason that we should stick to what it is capable of right now. — Janus
Promissory notes as premises do not good arguments make. — Janus
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