Philosophim
No, physical characteristics are not involved.
— Philosophim
Of course they are. Beards, tats, body building, breast reduction... — Banno
Being transgender, perhaps, does not require it; but transgender folk do change their "biology" - your word. — Banno
They are two separate terms.
— Philosophim
Indeed, and these are neither exclusive nor complete. — Banno
I have. I'm not going to repeat myself unnecessarily.
— Philosophim
Ok. Then the point is rendered moot. — Banno
Back to call-and-answer, so not expecting much now. A pity. — Banno
Banno
Sure. But transgender people do change their biology. All transsexual people are transgender. Not all transgender people are transsexual. Transgender includes transsexuality.There is no requirement that changing your biology means you are a trans gender individual. — Philosophim
They have been exclusive in the context of this entire conversation. — Philosophim
Philosophim
Sure. But transgender people do change their biology. All transsexual people are transgender. Not all transgender people are transsexual. Transgender includes transsexuality. — Banno
If there is an ambiguity, set it out. Polysemous does not mean ambiguous. — Banno
Banno
You can be a trans sexual and decide to follow the gender of your natal sex. — Philosophim
At the very least, provide a link.Banno, go re-read as I noted, its already been said several times. I also never equated polysemous with ambiguous, please read my point again. — Philosophim
Philosophim
Ok, point taken.
But it remains that a transgender person may change their physiology. — Banno
Banno, go re-read as I noted, its already been said several times. I also never equated polysemous with ambiguous, please read my point again.
— Philosophim
At the very least, provide a link. — Banno
Banno
Why not? Seems odd to exclude them. But whatever.I just want to be clear the conversation has at no point involved trans sexuals or their particular considerations. — Philosophim
Churlish. Ok.No. — Philosophim
I don't understand. We agreed, I'd thought, that there need not be a single fundamental definition for a word, but that we might look to how a word is used in order to make sense of it's meaning. We'd agreed that "woman" might be considered to to mean "female adult human", or it might be "one who adopts a certain social role".
— Banno
Correct.
In your OP you claimed that "a trans woman is a woman" is false, on the grounds that a trans woman is not an adult human female. But if we understand "woman" as being used as "one who adopts a certain social role", then "A trans woman is a woman" is equivalent to "A trans woman adopts a certain social role" and is true.
— Banno
Also correct.
So contrary to the OP, there is an interpretation of "a trans woman is a woman" that is true.
— Banno
Not quite. Yes, there is an interpretation of 'a trans woman is a woman' that is true. — Philosophim
That it's overly simplistic, if nothing else.So are transwomen women? Are transwomen men? No. The terms man and woman indicate a person's age and sex, not gender. Are transwomen men who act with a female gender? Yes. Are transmen women who act with a male gender? Yes. — Philosophim
Banno
Do you think men fighting rather than women is a 'gender role' that has nothing to do with biology? It is clearly a biological difference we are talking about here that groups men as fighters and women as non-fighters. — I like sushi
I like sushi
Banno
I think you were saying what I said before:What do you think I was saying here? — I like sushi
That appears to say that there are biological reasons that women do not fight. — Banno
When we observe that historically men have been the ones who fight (in war, combat, etc.) rather than women, this is not merely a social or gender role but is rooted in biological differences between males and females. Therefore, biological sex is constitutive—not incidental—to at least some social groupings and social roles (such as “fighters”). — ChatGPT
Philosophim
I just want to be clear the conversation has at no point involved trans sexuals or their particular considerations.
— Philosophim
Why not? Seems odd to exclude them. But whatever. — Banno
That might be an end, then. — Banno
Banno
If you insist that only sex counts, then of course only reasons grounded in sex will seem “viable.” But that is a choice of rule—part of how you are choosing to play the language-game.I do not think there is a single viable reason to allow a trans gender person in cross sex spaces. — Philosophim
I like sushi
You would not consider that biology is actually far more constituitive to social grouping than you currently believe it is? Incidental sounds weak to me. — I like sushi
I like sushi
The biology is incidental to the social grouping, not constitutive of it. — Banno
Socially they are women and treated as women. The* (amened) simple fact that women give birth to children is not intrinsic to what it means to be a woman. My point was that over all human history (regardless of whether you use the specific term 'woman') people with breasts and people with penises are generally divided socially into reasonably clear cut groups. — I like sushi
Philosophim
If you insist that only sex counts, then of course only reasons grounded in sex will seem “viable.” But that is a choice of rule—part of how you are choosing to play the language-game. — Banno
Jamal
Obviously if "man" is only about sex, trans men are not men. But this "if" is what is being debated, so you're just begging the question.
The debate has been going on for years, and you have made no attempt to research it or address the arguments that defend the notion that trans women are women etc., i.e., the arguments that try to show that the terms "man" and "woman" are more complex than your snappy definition allows.
See for example the idea that "man" and "woman" are cluster concepts:
https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/feminism-gender/ — Jamal
So are transwomen women? Are transwomen men? No. The terms man and woman indicate a person's age and sex, not gender. — Philosophim
I'm not begging the question at all. Clearly defining terms then thinking if claims using those terms lead to logical outcomes is a normal discussion. You are very free to define 'man' in another way, you'll just need to argue why it is and if that definition makes sense in normal language use. If you want to argue a specific counter to the point I've made, feel free. — Philosophim
Now this is a proper logical fallacy called Ad Hominem. You're attacking assumptions and qualifications about my character instead of addressing the points. — Philosophim
Jamal
Language games are attempts to use language to confuse concepts. — Philosophim
2. A is building with building stones: there are blocks, pillars, slabs and beams. B has to pass him the stones and to do so in the order in which A needs them. For this purpose they make use of a language consisting of the words “block”, “pillar”, “slab”, “beam”. A calls them out; B brings the stone which he has learnt to bring at such-and-such a call. --- Conceive of this as a complete primitive language. — PI
7. We can also think of the whole process of using words in (2) as one of those games by means of which children learn their native language. I will call these games “language-games” and will sometimes speak of a primitive language as a language-game. And the processes of naming the stones and of repeating words after someone might also be called language-games. Think of certain uses that are made of words in games like ring-a-ring-a-roses. I shall also call the whole, consisting of language and the activities into which it is woven, a “language-game”. — PI
I like sushi
No, I think that's just logic. If spaces are divided by sex, then only sex should be considered for those spaces. — Philosophim
Philosophim
But since you seem to me now to be motivated by some idea of philosophical clarity and rigour rather than by prejudice, I think it's worth my explaining more carefully what I meant, because it's directly relevant to how the discussion is unfolding now. — Jamal
1. A man is an adult human male.
2. A trans man is not an adult human male.
3. Therefore a trans man is not a man.
(The same pattern for “woman”; and “male” understood biologically.)
In isolation, this does not technically beg the question, because the conclusion isn't present in the premises. — Jamal
But it does beg the question in the context of the debate, because the very meaning of "man" and "woman" is exactly what is disputed—and you stipulate one of the contested meanings as a premise. — Jamal
But sometimes people want to claim that man and woman are 'roles'. What's a role? A gendered label. Most of the world does not view man and woman by gender, but by sex, so the default goes to sex. However, we can modify the term to indicate 'male by gender' or 'female by gender'. — Philosophim
You insist on one definition but don’t properly engage with the arguments that challenge it. — Jamal
As Michael and @Banno have been getting at, there are serious philosophical arguments—cluster-concept analyses, social-kind analyses, externalist semantic approaches, etc.—that claim "man" and "woman" do not have the fixed boundaries your definition tries to impose — Jamal
Pointing this out is not an ad hominem, contrary to what you said here:
Now this is a proper logical fallacy called Ad Hominem. You're attacking assumptions and qualifications about my character instead of addressing the points.
— Philosophim — Jamal
The debate has been going on for years, and you have made no attempt to research it or address the arguments that defend the notion that trans women are women etc
— Jamal
Now this is a proper logical fallacy called Ad Hominem. — Philosophim
That your syllogism is valid is trivial. The entire debate is about one of the premises. Everyone already agrees that if "man" is necessarily biologically male, then trans men are not men. To repeat, the dispute is over the "if". — Jamal
NOTE: I haven't closely followed the discussion so if you have developed your argument to support the definition, I'd like to see it. But Banno seems to be mounting a strong challenge. — Jamal
Language games are attempts to use language to confuse concepts.
— Philosophim
I'm just going to butt in here to point out that the term has a technical sense, to be found in Wittgenstein's Philosophical Investigations — Jamal
Philosophim
As with every area that involves personal freedoms there are bad actors and good actors. I do think this topic has kind of started to level off now, but maybe not. It would be nice to see people acting on blind prejudices and just discussing in a reasonable manner. It can be hard sometimes though if the topic concerns yourself personally and there is an emotionally charged vibe in the room. — I like sushi
Philosophim
I should have known better. — Jamal
Jamal
Philosophim
Meaning all you have in response to an honest and friendly critique is rhetoric, so it isn't worth pursuing in the philosophical spirit in which I intervened on both occasions (page 2 and today). — Jamal
Each time, you respond not with argument but effectively by sticking your fingers in your ears and attempting to disguise it with bluster. — Jamal
I admit it’s particularly galling this time around because I was very deliberately friendly, attempting to re-open the exchange in good faith. — Jamal
Or am I wrong? — Jamal
I like sushi
Jamal
I recall I clearly pointed out how you are NOT being friendly or honest in your critique. I have yet to see you even attempt to tackle that, look inward a bit, or even an apology or an attempt to start over. Nice try. — Philosophim
By starting it off saying my original post was prejudiced without explaining why? Good faith wouldn't have been trying to defend yourself two months after the fact and complimenting another poster I've been discussing with as "Having a strong argument" without any reason why. Please. — Philosophim
Yes Jamal. You're wrong. You were wrong on your first logical fallacy post, wrong on the second double down post, and are wrong in trying to save face instead of moving on. I really have nothing else to say to you as you have done nothing to prove to me you have any intention of an honest debate. — Philosophim
our OP seems reducible to this syllogism:
1. A man is an adult human male.
2. A trans man is not an adult human male.
3. Therefore a trans man is not a man.
(The same pattern for “woman”; and “male” understood biologically.)
In isolation, this does not technically beg the question, because the conclusion isn't present in the premises. But it does beg the question in the context of the debate, because the very meaning of "man" and "woman" is exactly what is disputed—and you stipulate one of the contested meanings as a premise.
And in your concluding paragraph you say this:
"So are transwomen women? Are transwomen men? No. The terms man and woman indicate a person's age and sex, not gender." — Philosophim
So your OP effectively does this:
1. Assume the contested definition.
2. Derive a conclusion that follows only under that definition.
3. Present the conclusion as if it supports the definition.
This is classic begging the question. — Jamal
I wasn’t attacking your character. I was criticising your assumptions—specifically that you presuppose a contested definition and ignore the relevant existing counterarguments. That is a critique of reasoning, not of person.
This is where the two points connect. Saying "you haven't addressed X" is not personal; it is a point about dialectical completeness. My claim is that your argument stipulates the very definition of "man" and "woman" that's being disputed, and therefore does not engage with those philosophical analyses which define those terms differently. — Jamal
The debate has been going on for years, and you have made no attempt to research it or address the arguments that defend the notion that trans women are women etc — Jamal
Jamal
I'm sure Banno is perfectly capable of referencing that if that was his intention. From my point in the context of the discussion, I did not feel that Wittenstein's term was what was implied. Its odd that out of that entire discussion you pulled one line that really wasn't key to the core argument. Was this another attempt to make me look ignorant to persuade people I'm not worth listening to? Didn't really work Jamal. — Philosophim
Outlander
A few definitions first:
Sex - A species expressed reproductive role.
Gender - A cultural expectation of non-biological behavior in regards to an individual's sex — Philosophim
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