Jeremy Murray
it misses that, assuming 'trans' is a "true identity" in the way claimed by the more committed TRAs, then it is imperative that we accept that reality and adjust our priors so as to make room for its truth — AmadeusD
Clarendon
Banno
AmadeusD
Trans is a 'true' identity, and has existed historically everywhere. — Jeremy Murray
So, are transwomen women? Well, if a transwoman is someone who identifies as a woman but would not be considered one by a biologist in the grips of the definist fallacy....then some of them might be, and some of them might not be. It depends on whether they answer to the concept of a woman - a concept that is not amenable to definition and that biologists are not authorities about. — Clarendon
Philosophim
Let's do some entry level metaphysics: first, not every concept can be defined, for that would generate an infinite regress in which it turns out nothing can be defined.
Thus, if there are true definitions, then there are concepts that cannot be defined. — Clarendon
Most people don't realize this and believe - fallaciously - that unless one can provide a definition for a concept, one doesn't understand it or have it. That's demonstrably false. — Clarendon
And so they offer a different definition: that a woman is someone with immobile gametes, because when biologists look in detail at women's bodies, they find they all have that feature. And biologists - who are not metaphysicians and are just as capable of fallacious reasoning as the next person - reason that as all women they've examined have immobile gamates, then that must be what makes a woman a woman. That's fallacious. — Clarendon
Plus we can easily imagine someone who answers to the concept of a woman, yet does not have immobile gamates or any at all. — Clarendon
Is there currently a huge debate over the correct definition of a woman? Yes, that's obvious. — Clarendon
Philosophim
But as you will see, these fora are the natural home for fallacies of definition. — Banno
Banno
Philosophim
The presumption that there is one correct meaning for "woman" is only one small part of the problem, as is the very notion that for each word there is such a thing as its meaning, given by a statable definition, and the task of the philosopher consists at least in part in making this meaning explicit. — Banno
Banno
Janus
Mikie
Mikie
If people adhering to different definitions of the terms 'woman' or 'man' believe there is but one correct definition, and that it is the one they hold, as though there could be some determinable fact of the matter, then they are arguing with closed minds and will inevitably talk past one another. — Janus
flannel jesus
Philosophim
I think it a pretty good OP, of a sort. But a part of the issue is the very idea of starting with "explicit meaning in the phrasing of the term". — Banno
I think it a pretty good OP, of a sort. But a part of the issue is the very idea of starting with "explicit meaning in the phrasing of the term". — Banno
The thread might best be understood as a negotiation between the players here, looking for agreement on a way to use the words women, man, gender, male, female, and so on. But folk talk as if there are correct and incorrect ways to use the term, to which each has some private access, their use being the right one, the other uses being wrong for various reasons. — Banno
Philosophim
I think this is a topic where philosophy (if we can call it that) is employed for an agenda and begins to look absurd. — Mikie
What is being presupposed by the word “trans” anyway? From what to what? One sex to another, or one gender to another, presumably. I hold that the latter is absolutely possible — the former isn’t. — Mikie
We can define things any way we like. There is not one “true” definition of anything, except maybe in mathematics. — Mikie
I’ll call anyone what they wish to be called. I’ll call you Janus the Great if you prefer— but before I actually believe it, I’d need to see some evidence or a convincing argument. — Mikie
Philosophim
If gender is entirely and exclusively a social construct, as many feminists and even trans people like to say, then trans women are just men who want access to women's spaces. — flannel jesus
On the other hand if gender has a real biological/psychological basis, then it seems at least imaginable that there could be people born with a penis but who are nevertheless psychologically or neurologically "female". — flannel jesus
Philosophim
I think this largely boils down to semantics and modern discourse not having the words to talk about this in a way that makes sense. — MrLiminal
To my mind, this discussion makes more sense if you equate "sex" with biological sex and consider "gender" as a type of social class that is different from but heavily informed by society's interpretation of the roles a person should fill based on biological sex. — MrLiminal
The gender/sex split has, in my opinion, greatly confused modern discourse on this as people constantly conflate the two. — MrLiminal
Mikie
Philosophy is employed here for thinking about a topic that confuses many people. — Philosophim
Mikie
It is the later. The OP essentially notes that 'woman' without adjectives or modifiers normatively means "Adult human female". "Trans" adjusts woman to mean, "A person who takes on the non-biological gendered behaviors that society expects an adult human female to exhibit". — Philosophim
Philosophim
I should preface this by saying I don't think gender should exist at all, as it places unnecessary limitations on people for acting outside of what we as a society consider normal or expected for a certain sex. — MrLiminal
Currently the question "Are trans men/women men/women" feels like it falls into the same trap as "Is water wet?" The question itself is inherently vague in a way that invites misinterpretation and arguments. — MrLiminal
Janus
I’ll call anyone what they wish to be called. I’ll call you Janus the Great if you prefer— but before I actually believe it, I’d need to see some evidence or a convincing argument. In a trans case, I’ve yet to see such an argument. — Mikie
Banno
AmadeusD
This is put to the lie by the fact that we often communicate by breaking the rules. Davidson's Nice Derangement of Epitaphs ably demonstrates — Banno
which will be true in most cases. — Banno
Banno
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