There are almost an infinite amount of qualifiers one can add to any comparison. Heck, you could even make an apples to apples comparison an apples to oranges comparison. They fell from different trees. They have different weights. One came from the side of the tree that got more sunlight. — Taneras
At the end of the day its true that for the vast majority of people, their gender, socially constructed or not, matches their biological sex. — Taneras
By definition it has to be only transgendered people. Trans/cisgender is a dichotomy. Your gender identity either matches your biological sex or it doesn't. — Taneras
The problem I generally see with what you've said is that many people who push for more than two genders see gender identity/roles as very rigid. If you're a male you have to like all sports, fast cars, beer, young women, big houses, grilling meat, cigars, fancy watches, etc. If you like all but one of those well sorry you're not actually a male, you're somewhere between the male and female spectrum. Most people do not see gender identities as that rigid. And before you suggest that there aren't any reliable numbers for that just look at the 99.9% of people who are cisgender but don't fit the ken/Barbie doll check list for male and female. — Taneras
Yet their innate gender identity is conforming to the binary gender system. I pointed this out in the OP. — Harry Hindu
If gender is a social construct, then a gender's binary, ternary, decimal, unitary or sexagesimal quality is just another social construct. At any point a citizen of some culture could revolt and claim yet another "gender", but if it's not recognized by the culture, then it isn't what society defines as "gender". In essence, the individual would be non-gendered, or not part of that cultural heterosexual game that heterosexuals play. That isn't to say that they are unequal. — Harry Hindu
A comparative example would be the identity of "uncle". "Uncle" can refer to the biological relationship between a male and his sibling's offspring, or could refer to the socially constructed idea of a male mentor, or role model, for a young person. If a male doesn't engage in the act of the socially constructed version, does he reserve the right to redefine "uncle" for his own purposes and declare that the term needs to be redefined to suit his own subjective idea? No. Of course not. In essence, they would be a non-uncle, or non-participants in that cultural construction. — Harry Hindu
The alternative hypothesis that I presented is far more parsimonious and is able to explain why even transgenders exist. — Walter Pound
Needless to say there was hardly any gender identification before gay pride took over — kill jepetto
The classic "born in the wrong body" idea of a trans person, for example, is built out of our social expectations regrading bodies and gender/sex. If one body's didn't matter to gender/sex, there would be no need for someone to switch identities because of their sense of body. A person with a penis and dysphoria, for example, could go through a body changes, have SRS, yet have no need to become "female." — TheWillowOfDarkness
I think this conflates genetics with brain structure. — Walter Pound
I am not arguing gender is 100% biologically informed. I am saying people don't gender themselves based on whether they played with trucks or ponies as a child. — Judaka
You are conflating social construction with personal choice.If gender is socially constructed then that means it's a learned behaviour which means you can unlearn it. — Judaka
There is no "maybe" about it. The claim that sex is a social construct undermines centuries of scientific knowledge (and I was lambasted for questioning the status quo).Maybe, but I'm not interested in the ad hoc "just so stories" of evo psych preachers here. You don't go to the Flat Earther for an account of Earth in 3-dimensions.
I'm interested in people who are studying the subject in question, gender and sex, in relation to individuals, identities an society. — TheWillowOfDarkness
The phrase "gender is a social construct" refers to the binary gender system. The criticism is that it excludes transgender people, who feel they should not have to conform to either traditional gender role, but instead their "innate" gender identity. — Echarmion
Yet their innate gender identity is conforming to the binary gender system. I pointed this out in the OP:
Well, you might ask, if not for pink over blue, how does a person determine their gender? If gender is a social construct, then the only way for a person to determine their gender is to choose one’s gender based on gender stereotypes present throughout a culture. — Harry Hindu — Harry Hindu
I don't see how that follows. — Echarmion
Wouldn't you say that it would be useful for cisgenders to be able to recognize each other without having to look down people's pants (before getting to the bedroom) - maybe even more so now that we have this sexual/gender flux?No disagreement here. Calling something a "social construct" is not a criticism in and of itself. Constructs can and should be judged on their usefulness and consequences. — Echarmion
Being a non-uncle has no consequences apart from your own choice to not participate, which is why I chose that as an example of how we should view non-gendered people, which was the whole point of my argument.Being a nonparticipant in a social construct carries consequences though. Which is why non-uncles may have legitimate reasons to campaign for amendments to the construct of an uncle. — Echarmion
Yes, yes. We've already moved past that part. This is the assumption that the OP challenges. It is now up to you to move the ball forward with a new argument that addresses the logical inconsistencies that such a definition entails. — Harry Hindu
Wow. Just, wow. If I had posted anything like this about transgenders, my posts would be deleted and I'd be called a "bigot". You can take David Reimer's word for it if you'd like. He specifically blames Dr. Money for his problems and his gender dysphoria. Here's the link to the documentary that the BBC article summarizes: — Harry Hindu
So where is the consistent benchmark that we use for determining the validity of someone's feelings and claims as evidence for the gender or their confusion as to what their gender is? Is a transgender's brain malfunctioning? — Harry Hindu
believing that there are no sex differences and that apparent differences are due to socialization alone. — Walter Pound
My point is that there is no logical inconsistency, but that people need to carefully differentiate between biological sex and constructed gender. When you do that, there is no logical inconsistency. — NKBJ
No one (at least in the broader, conventional conversation in society) is claiming that. The whole idea is that gender is distinct from biological sex. — Terrapin Station
Liking something is a preference and a feeling. Your preferences are part of what define you.I don't think you CAN feel a certain gender. You can like certain ways of talking, acting, and looking more. But that's not a "feeling" in the sense of identity. Like, if I dye my hair, it's not cause I "feel" like a brunette, it's cause I like to look that way. — NKBJ
TheWillowOfDarkness claims that sex is just another social construct. — Harry Hindu
The logical inconsistency is in how you are conflating social construct and some personal preference. — Harry Hindu
If gender is a social construct and a stereotype, then abolishing those stereotypes effectively abolishes gender. Gender would then be a non-existent thing. — Harry Hindu
Okay, so you can claim anything that you want but that doesn't mean you are right. Isn't that why we have things like evidence? Doesn't David provide that? Where's yours?David Reimer can blame anyone he wants for his mental issues, that doesn't mean he's right about the source of them. — NKBJ
So, does that mean that you disagree with TheWIllowOfDarkness?Hence why I wrote "(at least in the broader, conventional conversation in society)" — Terrapin Station
So, does that mean that you disagree with TheWIllowOfDarkness? — Harry Hindu
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