Throng
Philosophim
Thus the transgender discourse in inherently misogynous. — Throng
Throng
Well, misogyny is a dynamic between powerful 'Men' in contrast with disempowered "Women". Males can exert that at any time because we can simply bash non-compliant females. That's why Afghan women live in black bags, and woe betide she who is seen! I don't knw if the males over there want to live as a "Woman". The "Woman" social body is not desirable over there because the living body is, and desire is so unbecoming of "A Man". It's "Her" fault that "Men" are craven, so "She" must not be seen.I don't think transitioning is innately misogynist or mysandrist, but much of the rhetoric around it is. — Philosophim
Philosophim
Fire Ologist
Words like woman and man aren’t fixed labels; their meanings come from how we use them in our lives, in law, in society, in everyday practice. Language isn’t a static system of definitions—it’s a web of practices, habits, and shared understandings. — Banno
Uh-huh. And this fluid, ever shifting approach then applies directly to words like "child" and "adult" and "consent." We're no doubt supposed to understand these words, not as a static system of definitions, but as a web of practices, habits, etc, so that we can't point at a statute and say, "This person was underage" because words like "underage" can't be understood in such static, rigid terms. — BenMcLean
multiple legitimate uses — Banno
Meaning is contextual: truth isn’t fixed by biology alone nor reducible to private claims. — Banno
Statements like “transwomen are women” can be true in some contexts (social, legal, identity based), and false in others (strict biological categorisation) depending on which use of the term is salient. — Banno
Attempts to privilege one use as “the only correct one” ignore the plurality of language functions and tacit prejudices about what counts as “rational” uses of terms. — Banno
flannel jesus
If language didn’t contain the static, ever, the notion of “shared understandings” is silly. How can two people share the same understanding if not even words can be fixed? — Fire Ologist
Philosophim
If language didn’t contain the static, ever, the notion of “shared understandings” is silly. How can two people share the same understanding if not even words can be fixed?
— Fire Ologist
This is a bizarre take. We know language isn't fixed. Surely you know the language you're speaking now didn't exist 2000 years ago. And after it did come into existence, it was spoken very differently from how it's spoken now. — flannel jesus
Fire Ologist
as long as it's static enough — flannel jesus
just relatively stable. — flannel jesus
If all words had fixed meanings, there would be one true correct language and all other languages would just be wrong. — flannel jesus
flannel jesus
that language cannot be a purely rule less enterprise. — Philosophim
Fire Ologist
Nobody said that though, — flannel jesus
flannel jesus
Ecurb
In order for the definition and use of a word to change (at all) from “x” to “y”, the word has to first be defined as “x”. Static enough is essential to communication among different people — Fire Ologist
Fire Ologist
People decide what words mean, — flannel jesus
People decide what words mean, — flannel jesus
definitions come later. — Ecurb
flannel jesus
So are transwomen women or not? — Fire Ologist
Fire Ologist
flannel jesus
Ecurb
So the word “woman” only functions relative to other words. That is the source of the confusion. I am saying the word “woman” functions relative to certain things. Otherwise, when a dude with a beard in a three-piece suit walks into the ladies room, we can’t tell him “Ladies” means “not you dude.” — Fire Ologist
Fire Ologist
You know what I mean? — flannel jesus
practical justifications — flannel jesus
trite things like semantic arguments — flannel jesus
Cis men don't have that, trans women do. — flannel jesus
The bathroom obsession…is ridiculous — Ecurb
flannel jesus
So are you fixing a difference between “cis men” and “trans women”? — Fire Ologist
Philosophim
Transwomen are people, deserving of our love and kindness and respect, and equal rights as fellow citizens. That all really has nothing to do with this philosophic question. Women people deserving all of these as well. And men. A few people (and a political ideology) don’t get to hijack the function of language and repurpose the word “women” just because they think that is the only way equal rights and respect can be distributed to the people who distinguish themselves as “trans”. — Fire Ologist
flannel jesus
isn’t a practical justification a definition? — Fire Ologist
Fire Ologist
flannel jesus
Fire Ologist
you can make that argument without referring to the definition — flannel jesus
cis man and trans man cannot refer to the same human. Those are antonyms. — flannel jesus
Ecurb
Women are women. So how can transwomen simply be the same as women? — Fire Ologist
flannel jesus
about without any definitions, can argue distinctions between two different things using words with no fixed definitions? I’m still trying to show that we need definitions at all. “Woman” is just the latest foil. — Fire Ologist
flannel jesus
Fire Ologist
What does this have to do with bathrooms? — Ecurb
Surely the way to allow people to feel comfortable in bathrooms is to allow those looking like and presenting as women to use the Ladies Room, and those presenting as men to use the Mens Room. — Ecurb
Perhaps women would be uncomfortable if someone who looked like a man entered their domain -- but why would anyone care if someone presenting as a woman did? — Ecurb
Fire Ologist
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