Philosophim
LuckyR
Mijin
Gender: The non-biological expectations that one or more people have about how a sex should express themselves in public. For example, "Men are expected to wear top hats, women are not."
I do not think there is a debate as to the reality and usefulness of the terms above. — Philosophim
Even further, if William himself stated, "I cook in the kitchen, therefore I'm not a man", this would ALSO be sexist. — Philosophim
Philosophim
I would debate. — Mijin
It seems to be more complex than just the set of presentations -- most of us have met "tomboy" like women, or men who dress quite femininely (or even cross dress) who nevertheless would never consider themselves trans. — Mijin
And, linking back to sex, why do some trans people choose to have a sex change, or even just hormone therapy. — Mijin
Even further, if William himself stated, "I cook in the kitchen, therefore I'm not a man", this would ALSO be sexist.
— Philosophim
No-one says that though.
No-one says "I like soap operas, therefore I am a woman". — Mijin
Philosophim
Though folks who discuss these issues use terms like "I'm a man" and "you're not a man" casually (meaning that sex based language to describe either sex or gender identity at various times). — LuckyR
In addition, some of the subjective gender markers include changing one's look, obviously including surgery. — LuckyR
Philosophim
Sexism and misogyny — Malcolm Parry
Malcolm Parry
Misandry too. — Philosophim
Philosophim
Misandry too.
— Philosophim
I don't think that's an issue. There is one sex that has been discriminated against in history and had to fight long and hard for their rights. — Malcolm Parry
ChatteringMonkey
But maybe I'm missing something. I'm curious to see what other people think. — Philosophim
Philosophim
I think you are missing that genderroles were part of a culture that got us to where we are now. — ChatteringMonkey
And that every modern society where they are being eroded seem to be experiencing problems replacing itself with a next generation. — ChatteringMonkey
ChatteringMonkey
Do you have any proof of this? What seems to be the case isn't the erosion of gender roles, its the enrichment of society vs the cost of having children combined with birth control. Many people opt out of having kids because they value their luxury time more as well. Some men stay at home and take care of the kids now while their wives work, which is an erosion of gender roles. I'm just not seeing evidence that the decision to not have kids is because of the removal of gender roles in marriage. — Philosophim
Questioner
The elevation of gender over sex is social prejudice at best, social sexism at worst. — Philosophim
Gender: The non-biological expectations that one or more people have about how a sex should express themselves in public. For example, "Men are expected to wear top hats, women are not." — Philosophim
The question is about primacy of importance in regards to law and culture. Rationally, which is more important to consider? A person's sex, or their gender? — Philosophim
Gender claims are subjective beliefs, not objective facts. — Philosophim
Looking at gender, gender is a social belief that a sex should express itself a particular way. — Philosophim
Because gender is subjective and subject to the whims of an individual or group, — Philosophim
I just can't see any good reason to consider gender as anything more than a prejudiced and sexist social pressure. — Philosophim
We should seek to minimize gender as anything more than an ignorant and potentially bigoted human opinion about people based on their sex. — Philosophim
T Clark
Because gender is subjective and subject to the whims of an individual or group, and placing gender over sex in matters of importance matches the definition of sexism, — Philosophim
T Clark
To be clear, gender is purely a social expectation that has nothing to do with natural biology. — Philosophim
T Clark
Questioner
AmadeusD
I saw a clip yesterday of a transwoman (i suppose you could say influencer? I'm not sure as the media was second-gen commentary on her clip) claiming that the reason you have to consider her a woman is that she waits for her male partner to come home, and has baked brownies in the mean time.No-one says that though. — Mijin
T Clark
But I then don't know what it would have to do with. Gender appears to be stereotypes. — AmadeusD
Perhaps it is simplistic to say a male transgender person has a male brain, or a female transgender brain has a female brain – but the evidence that transgender brain structure and function are different from their biological (physical) sex is there if you care to investigate it. — Questioner
AmadeusD
LuckyR
To be clear, gender is purely a social expectation that has nothing to do with natural biology. If we said, "All men should get their left toe removed," that's changing your body for gender. There is no biological innate reason a man should get their left toe removed." If a person desires to cut their breasts off to resemble the chest of a man, that's someone trying to emulate sex expectations, not gender expectations of the other sex. That's trans sexual behavior, not trans gender behavior
Philosophim
Gender is one aspect of identity, and it’s our identity, produced by a brain, that determines how we perceive and react to the world. — Questioner
No, gender is not determined by external expectations, but by biological factors - how the brain functions:
… the existence of brain phenotypes in line with the idea of a brain sexual differentiation seems to be confirmed by the … reported studies, including both cisgender and transgender individuals.
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC7139786/ — Questioner
Perhaps it is simplistic to say a male transgender person has a male brain, or a female transgender brain has a female brain – but the evidence that transgender brain structure and function are different from their biological (physical) sex is there if you care to investigate it. — Questioner
Gender is part of cognitive identity, so definitely gender. Why should “law and culture” force people to be something they are not? In what situations is this justified? — Questioner
Of course, identity is subjective – it is produced in the brain of the subject. But subjectivity does not mean identity should be disregarded. Indeed, it should prevail. It is one’s lived experience – not an “opinion” - not a "belief" - but a reality. — Questioner
No, gender is not a social belief. It is a state produced by a functioning brain, encompassing differences in cognition among individuals, which lead to differences in behavior. Here is one well-researched area that would produce different experiences of reality (and thus different reactions to it):
“You see sex differences in spatial-visualization ability in 2- and 3-month-old infants,” — Questioner
Because gender is subjective and subject to the whims of an individual or group,
— Philosophim
No, gender is not based on a “whim.” — Questioner
I just can't see any good reason to consider gender as anything more than a prejudiced and sexist social pressure.
— Philosophim
But to not recognize the gender that one claims for themselves would be a prejudiced position, and put sexist social pressure on them. — Questioner
Or – we can just accept one’s lived experience that they claim for themselves. Believe them. — Questioner
In summary, gender/identity should take precedence over the physical attributes of the body. — Questioner
T Clark
Suffice to say that you making this claim doesn't make it so. — AmadeusD
This is one of a few topis that seems to have people A. telling you not to talk about it (or shaming you for it - which is utterly ridiculous) and B. straight-up not engaging in good faith discourse. Some of our best posters such as yourself and Banno do this. Its bizarre. Just absolute non engagement with what's presented. — AmadeusD
Philosophim
Because gender is subjective and subject to the whims of an individual or group, and placing gender over sex in matters of importance matches the definition of sexism,
— Philosophim
I’ll bypass most of your OP and just say taking gender into account is not the same thing as “placing gender over sex.” — T Clark
There’s more to say about your obsession with transgender issues, but I guess that wouldn’t be philosophy. — T Clark
To be clear, gender is purely a social expectation that has nothing to do with natural biology.
— Philosophim
This is clearly not true. For 99.7% of people, biological sex and gender match each other. — T Clark
Perhaps it is simplistic to say a male transgender person has a male brain, or a female transgender brain has a female brain – but the evidence that transgender brain structure and function are different from their biological (physical) sex is there if you care to investigate it.
— Questioner
The information included in his post puts the lie to just about everything you and Philosophim have to say on this subject. Maybe you guys will just lay off on your transgender obsession. Probably not. — T Clark
Philosophim
Well, if I say that women wear their hair long, that's a gender (social) norm. Hair is biology (like left toes), yet the choice of how to wear it is social. — LuckyR
Folks get plastic surgery to defy age. Facial skin is biology, but the choice to eliminate wrinkles is social. — LuckyR
Thus it's established that certain manioulations of our biological physicality falls under social (gender) events. — LuckyR
Questioner
The definition of gender is how one or more people believe a sex should behave socially. — Philosophim
Philosophim
The definition of gender is how one or more people believe a sex should behave socially.
— Philosophim
No, that is your definition, and it goes against commonly accepted research.
"Sex" is how you're built. "Gender" is a part of who you are.
According to the American College of Pediatricians:
Although often used interchangeably, the terms sex and gender are not synonyms. According to the fifth edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5), gender is defined as the “lived role” of male or female, resulting from the interaction of cultural and psychological factors with a person’s biological constitution. — Questioner
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