Sex as a species expressed reproductive role means that terms like "man" and "woman" are sexes, not genders.Sex - A species expressed reproductive role.
Gender - A cultural expectation of behavior in regards to an individual's sex — Philosophim
Sex as a species expressed reproductive role means that terms like "man" and "woman" are sexes, not genders. — Harry Hindu
So then what would be the labels we place on different genders? — Harry Hindu
The terms man and woman indicate a person's age and sex, not gender. — Philosophim
Words can mean more than one thing. — Michael
But you defined gender as a cultural expectation. This means that for gender to change, the cultural expectation needs to change, not a person's personal feelings.We use the modifiers trans and cis to denote gender. You can be a man, and also be a cisman or transman. "Man" denotes your sex, the modifiers denote you are talking about male gender. — Philosophim
But you defined gender as a cultural expectation. This means that for gender to change, the cultural expectation needs to change, not a person's personal feelings. — Harry Hindu
I am noting that in the general context in regards to sex and gender, 'man' refers to a person's age and sex, not gender. — Philosophim
No problem. I really wasn't sure what you were after. Sorry about that — Patterner
A word's meaning is determined by how its users use it. If a sufficient number of English speakers use the word "man" to refer to both trans men and cis men, fully recognising biological differences between the two, then the word "man" refers to both sex and gender. — Michael
There's no divine dictionary that dictates what words mean. — Michael
Correct, but good vocabulary should be clear, unambiguous, and logical. — Philosophim
My question to you then is, "Why should we change the term man to mean gender instead of sex by default?" — Philosophim
Correct, but good vocabulary should be clear, unambiguous, and logical.
— Philosophim
No natural language is clear, unambiguous, and logical. Certainly not English. Maybe check out Loglan. — Michael
There's nothing about language that we should do; there's just what we actually do. — Michael
And what we actually[/i] do is use the word "man" to refer also to transmen. — Michael
What is this question doing on a philosophy platform? It warrants a biological truth, not argumentative conclusions. — Copernicus
I do not see any reason why this is not a philosophical topic. — Philosophim
This ignores the definitions I've given above — Philosophim
Because those questions have subjective answers and argumentative grounds. Biological issues are subject to experimental and empirical truths. — Copernicus
In regards to sex, yes. In regard to gender, no. — Philosophim
I am simply explaining the empirical fact that your definition is inconsistent with how English speakers actually use the words. — Michael
You can argue that one word or another shouldn't mean something, but that's not the same s arguing that it doesn't mean that thing. — Michael
Oh boy... we're differentiating sex from gender. I see. — Copernicus
That is the modern day terminology, yes. I note the definitions in the OP, do you disagree with them? — Philosophim
:100:A transman is a 'male who expresses with female gender'. A transwoman is 'a male who expresses with male gender'.
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
Yes. To me,men and women are sex.
And what you designated as gender could be termed as hormonal traits. — Copernicus
A related post from 2019 ...
https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/comment/336888 — 180 Proof
No, it is not an empirical fact that when people generally use the word man, that they are thinking it is equally as likely that it is an adult human female behaving like a man. — Philosophim
How is cultural expression "gender"? I think you coined the definition yourself. — Copernicus
No, it is not an empirical fact that when people generally use the word man, that they are thinking it is equally as likely that it is an adult human female behaving like a man.
— Philosophim
I didn't say that. — Michael
Yes, you logically said that. — Philosophim
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