Non-binary people aren't necessarily genderless. — Pfhorrest
It's just another thing that people can manipulate others with; as such, it's yet another cause of concern, yet another thing to be prepared for.I did, and the notion that someone who otherwise has no actual power over you could just make something up (completely setting aside whether it's actually made up) and thereby wield something worth being afraid of over you suggests a problem on your end. — Pfhorrest
The 'problem' (if you believe in problems) is the fact that we can alter our DNA. — TaySan
I hear the term non-binary more and more including in many online surveys yet according to Wikipedia anyway only about 10,000 people in the world identify as non-binary amongst billions of people. Isn't it a little extreme to let such a small group try to dictate whether or not a person can denounce all gender? Lol. It's fine to be more masculine or feminine, but one can't really say they are genderless? — TiredThinker
Does this mean that "doe" and "buck", and "queen" and "drone" are social distinctions? Biology points to morphological, physiological and behavioral differences of not just male and female but between humans and deer and bees. "Man" and "woman" are terms that refer to both sex and species whereas "male" and "female" point to just the sex.Male and female are the physical distinction, it’s man and woman that are the social abstraction therefrom. — Pfhorrest
Which is it? Is there no correct usage, or does common curtesy determine correct usage?Says...? That is my preferred usage, too, but not everyone's. The point being that there is no correct usage, just convenience.
There are hermaphrodites and such physical variations; so the physical distinction is not so solid.
And, apparently, the traits that go with 'man' and 'woman' are also malleable.
Recognising variation is just being honest. Accepting someone's preference to be called "they" is common curtesy. — Banno
Great question. It seem obvious to me that there are people that can identify as something that they are not. What makes sex/gender so special that people that identify as something that they are not and then their assertions simply accepted without question? Take, for example, my assertion above that I am a Dark Sith Lord. Why do you question my self-identification, but not a man who says that they are not a man, but something else?What's a non-binary? Neither male nor female I suppose. My hunch is that there's a lot that's involved in gender determination and as we all know that translates to more ways for things to go wrong and I don't mean that in a disparaging way against any of the myriad gender identities that are around. — TheMadFool
Which is it? Is there no correct usage, or does common curtesy determine correct usage? — Harry Hindu
My issue is not with whether people choose to identify as non-binary, but with the projection of expectations upon others based upon this choice. Language evolves as a function of collective use, not selective pressures. And it is a slippery slope. What is to prevent me from identifying as a completely unique gender, and applying all kinds of linguistic constraints which other people then not only have to respect, but follow in general usage? If a minority of a few thousand has this authority, why not a minority of a few hundred? Or one? — Pantagruel
Exactly. There are ways to make oneself seem special and thus demand to be given special status and to be allowed not to play by society's norms. In a culture that has a strong tendency toward political correctness, such people who demand such special status can do very well, as the politically correct majority tries to accomodate them.Great question. It seem obvious to me that there are people that can identify as something that they are not. — Harry Hindu
Good question.What makes sex/gender so special that people that identify as something that they are not and then their assertions simply accepted without question? Take, for example, my assertion above that I am a Dark Sith Lord. Why do you question my self-identification, but not a man who says that they are not a man, but something else?
It's not a non sequitur. It's a question asking you how you reconcile your own contradictory statement.I don't understand how your mind works, Harry. THis seems to me to be a non sequitur. — Banno
It seem obvious to me that there are people that can identify as something that they are not. — Harry Hindu
I believe that there are people who are truly repulsed by their own body, due to their sexual characteristics. This makes them reject their own sexual nature, and identify with its opposite, or with an alternative. — god must be atheist
You seem perplexed, Banno. My point was that you are wrong on both counts. There is a correct usage but it has nothing to do with common courtesy. Science doesn't concern itself with common courtesy. It just calls it how it sees them.That is my preferred usage, too, but not everyone's. The point being that there is no correct usage, just convenience.
There are hermaphrodites and such physical variations; so the physical distinction is not so solid.
And, apparently, the traits that go with 'man' and 'woman' are also malleable.
Recognising variation is just being honest. Accepting someone's preference to be called "they" is common curtesy. — Banno
I was going to say the same about you and my posts.Harry HIndu, you completely misread my post. — god must be atheist
What REASON would they be repulsed? Why are others not repulsed? It seems to me that it is a difference in beliefs about bodies.Well, it isn't, if you read my post again. The people see their sex/gender. There is no belief, no mistake about it. They are repulsed by it. No belief, no mistake about it. — god must be atheist
That's what a social construction is - a SHARED belief, not an individual belief that contradicts the social construction. So is gender a social construction, or a personal inclination?You go on believing that my belief is about somebody else's belief, and that an obvious thing like being male or female must not be a topic of belief. — god must be atheist
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