In terms of identity men and women or trans do not exist. Those terms are societal shorthand - useful tools to make communicating a bit easier. But all that exists are unique individuals. The second the individual starts to accept these generalizations as actually defining them, the soul loses its wings. — Tzeentch
I suppose you could view it as a radical free choice position. — Tzeentch
I believe one can only explore that which is truly authentic to the self when one is free of external pressures on the mind. That includes both nature and nurture, and thus societally-constructed gender identities, whether they're traditional or trans.
In terms of identity men and women or trans do not exist. Those terms are societal shorthand - useful tools to make communicating a bit easier. But all that exists are unique individuals. The second the individual starts to accept these generalizations as actually defining them, the soul loses its wings. — Tzeentch
Culture exaggerates sexual differences where they statistically occur, and invents them everywhere else. — unenlightened
Thinking about the nature of biological differences and the political aspects of this has been an important area. It has led to people querying gender essentialism. It is likely that in the aftermath of postmodernism, there are still a lot of questions, especially the interplay of biology, culture and politics. — Jack Cummins
Do you mean to say that your soul, acting alone, based upon its nature, decided without constraint? Are you not then really just arguing that nature (as opposed to nurture) made you act as you did, meaning, basically, "you were born that way." — Hanover
The whole interplay between gender and racism in power is important as well as the way in which stereotypes impact on life. This involves the concept of otherness. — Jack Cummins
I don't think biological sexual differences are just "statistical." I think they are obvious and significant. To deny this is to ignore the evidence of your senses. — T Clark
If that were the case, there would be no need to differentiate them by artificial means such as designated clothing, hairstyles etc. — unenlightened
I don't think that's true. — T Clark
What is the need to differentiate the sexes by dress and hairstyle, then? — unenlightened
I agree with much of what you say, but I don't think Tzeentch's position requires that we be completely ruled by our nature. I think it would have to mean that our true self, our soul, comes from somewhere outside of either nature or nurture. — T Clark
I have already given you personal testimony that people cannot always 'obviously' distinguish the sexes. This is why they have tests in sport, and why we had a female pope. Some species do have clear markers for sex of size, or plumage or shape, but humans do not. Manboobs are generally smaller than womanboobs, but small womanboobs can be smaller than merely medium manboobs.That is to say, the boobs thing is a statistical difference. Nor does one sex have colourful plumage or horns. — unenlightened
The fact that there are strong, aggressive women and physically weaker, less assertive men is no evidence at all that there are not significant biological differences between men and women. — T Clark
Men almost never become pregnant. — unenlightened
I would add that I am trying to explore the ideas around essentialism, relating to gender and sexuality. — Jack Cummins
To what extent are men and women different, or what it means to be a man or woman and how this question is explored introspectively? — Jack Cummins
Suffice it to say, I am sympathetic to gender being performative and society enforcing/teaching individuals how to play the part (even if that part changes over time). — Ennui Elucidator
Even in your metaphorical language ("the soul loses its wings"), you allude to obvious limitations. — Hanover
In order for there to be "radical free choice" or anything near it, there would have to be no human nature. Nothing built in. We would have to be born as blank slates. — T Clark
During the last century there were major shifts in questioning racism and sexism. — Jack Cummins
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.