Comments

  • Gender elevated over sex is sexism
    I cited papers, not Chatgpt
    — Questioner

    Your source has https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0091302211000252?utm_source=chatgpt.com <-

    You need to be reading your own papers please, not typing into chatGPT and citing things. Do your own research, ChatGPT is not yet a good source of research.
    Philosophim

    there's no difference between using Chatgpt as a search engine and using Google as a search engine

    I quoted the papers, not Chatgpt

    The site has citations to several articles, its one of many things to read. The real enemy is "I will not read or listen to you because you have an agenda".Philosophim

    But if the source begins with misrepresentations, I am unlikely to consider them unbiased, and therefore likely to call into question anything else they say

    This is not a gender study, this is a sex differences study. We have to be careful to not accidently conflate the wrong meaning of gender in the discussion. We are using gender as the sociological concept, not a synonym for sex. Sex expectations are biological. Remember that gender is "Women should wear top hats." If we could find a brain section that correlated with this sociological belief, then we could demonstrate gender in the brain.Philosophim

    But I am not using gender as a sociological concept, but an aspect of identity at least in part determined by brain function.

    No, it is not the type of hat one should wear, but patterns of thinking that emerge from neurological function.

    this is a sex differences evaluation, not a gender evaluation of the brain.Philosophim

    How do you think the differences in male and female brains are manifested?

    And I could easily ask "Why are you so fixated on the notion that gender might be determined in utero?"Philosophim

    Because that is what all the evidence points to.

    What if we could isolate it to a misunderstanding and train the person to simply have a better understanding of their body?Philosophim

    This sounds dangerously like advocating for "conversion therapy" which has been been roundly denounced by all major medical associations. Conversion therapy is unsuccessful and in fact leads to psychological distress. If you are looking for a science-backed approach, this is not it.

    You can find a long list of medical associations at this link that have made a statement in favour of gender affirming care. Here is one typical statement, from the American Psychological Association:

    This policy statement affirms APA’s support for unobstructed access to healthcare and evidence-based clinical care for transgender, gender-diverse, and nonbinary children, adolescents, and adults.

    Furthermore, this policy statement addresses the spread of misleading and unfounded narratives that mischaracterize gender dysphoria and affirming care, likely resulting in further stigmatization, marginalization, and lack of access to psychological and medical supports for transgender, gender-diverse, and nonbinary individuals.”

    "The American Psychological Association has adopted a resolution opposing efforts to change people’s gender identity, citing scientific research showing that such actions may be harmful.

    The resolution, adopted by APA’s governing Council of Representatives on Feb. 26, aligns with the association’s stance against similar efforts aimed at changing people’s sexual orientation.

    “There is a growing body of research that shows that transgender or nonbinary gender identities are normal variations in human expression of gender,” said APA President Jennifer F. Kelly, PhD. “Attempts to force people to conform with rigid gender identities can be harmful to their mental health and well-being.”


    I hope you will pay particular attention to the last paragraph of the copied statement.

    you still have not demonstrated why gender is not prejudice, and sexism when taken as being more important in law and culture than sex.Philosophim

    I think I have. Gender-affirming care is about affirming identity, not enforcing whatever cultural mores may exist. Besides, your position assumes that all of the male gender, or all of the female gender, hold the same cultural mores, and this is of course a false premise.
  • Gender elevated over sex is sexism
    Please do better than chatgpt again.Philosophim

    I cited papers, not Chatgpt


    I went to this paper, and the first sentence literally read:

    Both transgenderism and homosexuality are facets of human biology, believed to derive from different
    sexual differentiation of the brain.


    Another general site with more studies demonstrating the brain science is still very much not settled. https://www.transgendertrend.com/brain-research/Philosophim

    This is not a scientific site, but a site with an agenda.

    A couple of the claims they make:

    "scientists have found no separate innate ‘gender’ area of the brain which is fixed at birth." - No sh*t - that has never been claimed. Please re-read my cites.

    "there is no 100% ‘male’ or ‘female’ brain" - again, no-one has ever claimed this

    "In reality male and female brains do not look very different from each other." - the valid research does not look at "what brains look like" - but how they function

    So, I would advice some critical reading on your part.

    HeM = Heterosexual Male
    MtF-TR = Male to female transgender (post hormone therapy which is known to alter the brain)

    "Like HeM, MtF-TR displayed larger GM volumes than HeW in the cerebellum and lingual gyrus and smaller GM and WM volumes in the precentral gyrus. Both male groups had smaller hippocampal volumes than HeW. As in HeM, but not HeW, the right cerebral hemisphere and thalamus volume was in MtF-TR lager than the left. None of these measures differed between HeM and MtF-TR. MtF-TR displayed also singular features and differed from both control groups by having reduced thalamus and putamen volumes and elevated GM volumes in the right insular and inferior frontal cortex and an area covering the right angular gyrus.The present data do not support the notion that brains of MtF-TR are feminized. The observed changes in MtF-TR bring attention to the networks inferred in processing of body perception."
    Philosophim

    That study is from 2011 and used MRI. There is more recent research that uses fMRI and contradicts those findings.

    Overall our neuroimaging results suggest that the basic visuospatial abilities are associated with different activations pattern of cortical visual areas depending on the sex assigned at birth and gender identity.

    https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC9010387/

    Taken together, these four structural MRI studies provide preliminary evidence that regional cortical volumes can be modulated by gender attributes, especially in the frontal lobe.

    https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1053811922008539

    Females had greater GMV in several areas including the thalamus, postcentral gyrus, triangular part of inferior frontal gyrus, orbital part of middle frontal gyrus and medial superior frontal gyrus in both hemispheres, middle occipital gyrus and middle cingulate gyrus in the left hemisphere, and the inferior parietal lobule and caudate in the right hemisphere, and bilateral cerebellum. Males had greater GMV than females only in the right inferior occipital gyrus.

    https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/human-neuroscience/articles/10.3389/fnhum.2020.00244/full

    Our stDNN model accurately differentiated male and female brains, demonstrating consistently high cross-validation accuracy (>90%), replicability, and generalizability across multisession data from the same individuals and three independent cohorts (N ~ 1,500 young adults aged 20 to 35).

    https://www.pnas.org/doi/abs/10.1073/pnas.2310012121

    So - the question that remains is - why are you so fixed against the notion that gender might be determined in utero?
  • Gender elevated over sex is sexism
    compounded by the fact it's common knowledge women "don't have to be smart".Outlander

    I'm not sure where you're from, but this is not true in my neck of the woods.

    If you're attractive, or you have something a man wants (you know what), you never really have to become educated or develop your character much beyond that of a child's. Men will literally open doors for you for no real reason other than the fact you exist. That's common sense.Outlander

    No, sorry, that's 1950s

    and perhaps even from a genetic background that generally retains youthful (female) characteristics.Outlander

    I can't imagine what "genetic background" this is

    Women are attracted to straight linesOutlander

    Or to a man's kindness

    The average man is a primal, low-brow being who cares primarily about one thing: His self.Outlander

    This does not describe the many men I know.

    if you can't control yourself and look at another person, whoever they are, without having an overwhelming urge to fornicate, you have a mental disorder.Outlander

    I just don't think this accurately describes the average person. (Maybe Trump)

    the human experience, is so much greater than simplistic physical pleasures. It should be at least. Don't you agree?Outlander

    For sure!
  • Gender elevated over sex is sexism
    As of yet, there is no brain evidence of gender.Philosophim

    During the intrauterine period a testosterone surge masculinizes the fetal brain, whereas the absence of such a surge results in a feminine brain. As sexual differentiation of the brain takes place at a much later stage in development than sexual differentiation of the genitals, these two processes can be influenced independently of each other.

    https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0091302211000252?utm_source=chatgpt.com

    Most of the anatomical, physiological and neurochemical gender-related differences in the brain occur prenatally. The sexual differences in the brain are affected by sex steroid hormones, which play important roles in the differentiation of neuroendocrine system and behavior.

    https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/24592097/

    … our gender identity (the conviction of belonging to the male or female gender) and sexual orientation are programmed into our brain structures when we are still in the womb … There is no proof that social environment after birth has an effect on gender identity or sexual orientation.

    https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/19403051/

    On average, males and females showed greater volume in different areas of the cortex, the outer brain layer that controls thinking and voluntary movements. Females had greater volume in the prefrontal cortex, orbitofrontal cortex, superior temporal cortex, lateral parietal cortex, and insula. Males, on average, had greater volume in the ventral temporal and occipital regions. Each of these regions is responsible for processing different types of information.

    https://www.nih.gov/news-events/nih-research-matters/sex-differences-brain-anatomy

    In all supratentorial regions, males had greater within-hemispheric connectivity, as well as enhanced modularity and transitivity, whereas between-hemispheric connectivity and cross-module participation predominated in females.

    https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.1316909110

    In sum, these results demonstrate that stDNN together with IG procedures, which capture dynamic brain characteristics and their importance to sex differences classification, identifies sex-specific brain features that are differentially predictive of cognitive profiles in females and males.

    https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.2310012121
  • Gender Identity is not an ideology
    Hmm, tough one. I can't say this strikes me as 'right'. Emotions seem to come from (or at least arise in) the mind. Not being able to adequately parse the mental states that accompany what we routine call.. pick your poison: sadness, exultation, disappointment etc..AmadeusD

    That the body reacts faster than the mind is well established scientifically:

    Your body reacts before your mind during triggers because your nervous system constantly scans for danger through a subconscious process called neuroception. This automatic threat-detection system, located in primitive parts of your brain, evaluates safety and risk without requiring conscious thought.

    I would want to see a comparison with autistic non-trans people and non-autistic trans people.AmadeusD

    Well, this would go against well-established practices of how the scientific method is used. In any one study, there must be one independent variable and one dependent variable, and all other variables that might affect the outcome of the dependent variable must be controlled. So looking at autistic/nonautistic/trans/cis - introduces too many variables.

    Because they adequately explain the results.AmadeusD

    Well, this introduces a totally new hypothesis and suggests a new study to be done!
  • Gender Identity is not an ideology
    This may become redundant, but I don't understand either of these as processes. They appear to be either conditions or facilities (one of which I have been diagnosed with in the past). Onward..AmadeusD

    yes, honestly, I did too wonder too if I was choosing the right word. I changed it to "elements" and then changed it back. Facilities or capacities may be better words.

    It seems more correct that this is an issue identifying and processing emotions and noting them via body language or subtle spoken language. Its a very "spectrum" condition. I was diagnosed with it as an aspect of DsD at one point. It is known as "emotional blindness". Careful not to conflate the former, which is the body's ability to process internal signalling like temperature, hunger and muscle tension with the latter, which is problems processing emotions.AmadeusD

    Good addition to the discussion. Yes, I do understand that interoception and alexithymia are two different aspects of internal body function, but they are connected in the loop that contributes to self-identity.

    When we cite "emotional blindness" - to what are the emotions blind? Clues and signals from the body.

    This indicates an overlap between trans and autism spectrum disorder. This is expected by most who do not take trans as a standalone mental state. It actually indicates that what's being discovered is high levels of autism in those claiming a trans identity. Two ways of looking at hte same coin.AmadeusD

    Not exactly. From what I read, being "nonautistic" was a controlled variable in the study, since autistic persons tend to have higher rates of alexithymia. The two relevant variables in the study were transgender vs. cisgender.

    These terms do not make sense, I don't think - you are, biologically, your body (well - not quite. But you cannot escape your body in any way). You cannot be biologically disconnected from it in any way other than to remove parts of it (lets not go there). I don't know what you might mean by "literally" in this case.AmadeusD

    I don't mean connected by muscle, blood and bone, but by the electrochemical signals coursing through your nervous system. Nervous system communication is confused and can result in depersonalization.

    As with the previous note above, that conclusion could (and I read the majority of the paper) equally indicate that being focused on oneself for long enoguh will do the trick. That seems true.

    The suggestion in the paper could be correct, but it could also simply mean that TW who have been self-obsessed for a long enough time increase their bodily awareness and therefore interoception. It could just be a matter overcoming an internal ignorance.

    I don't know - but it's hard to read those papers (particularly in the middle of hte replication crisis, and with such incredibly small sample sizes) as showing much.
    AmadeusD

    It all made perfect sense to me. I can't see a reason to introduce self-absorption or an "internal ignorance" into the discussion.
  • Gender Identity is not an ideology
    I’ve been reading this morning about two psychobiological processes: interoception and alexithymia – and especially as to how they relate to transgender persons and self-identity.

    Interoception is the ability to connect with and interpret the body’s internal signals. A sensory, or neurophysiological capacity, it’s like a data stream coming from the body to the brain.

    Alexithymia is a difficulty in interpreting those signals. Signals may be received, but it’s not always possible to make sense or meaning out of them. (The result of alexithymia is often a feeling of disembodiment.)

    Research shows that the lower interoceptive coherence in transgender individuals corresponds with worse mental-health outcomes.

    Further research shows that “nonautistic transgender participants reported significantly higher mean levels of alexithymia than nonautistic cisgender participants, and that there was a significant overrepresentation of individuals in this group who met the clinical cutoff for alexithymia.”

    Transgender individuals experiencing dysphoria are literally and biologically less connected to their bodies.

    This interferes with the construction of self-identity, which naturally relies on the signals interpreted by the brain. Only if you feel connected to your body can you say, “This body is me.”

    And indeed, studies show that gender-affirming care improves interoception and decreases alexithymia – a decrease associated with increased emotional clarity:

    “Alexithymia changes were found after gender-affirming hormone therapy for transgender women in both fantasizing and identifying … These findings suggest a considerable influence of estrogen administration and androgen suppression on brain networks implicated in interoception, own-body perception and higher-level cognition.”

    This also appears to support the research that shows that gender transition, by treating self-alienation, restores and strengthens diachronic unity.
  • Gender Identity is not an ideology
    All of this to say that it's not ideology-neutral either way, which was part of your original claim.ChatteringMonkey

    My claim was that identity is not ideology. Ideology may be constructed around that - like whether or not to provide a safe space for transgender persons to be themselves. If religious dogma interferes with that, that is using ideology to suppress identity.
  • Gender elevated over sex is sexism
    massively apprecaite the far more nuanced and polite tone of this exchange. Sorry for any part i've had in creating the previously tension-laded one.AmadeusD

    Nothing to be sorry about. I appreciate your attention, and your sharing your point-of-view.

    Suffice to say I disagree with your approach to transgender identity, but I feel that we have reached the point in the conversation where I would fall to repeating myself, or arguing, so I'll leave the last word on this to you.
  • Gender Identity is not an ideology
    That seems ideological. Yaniv is probably a good, while comedic (from a detached perspective anyway), example there.AmadeusD

    Yaniv has caused more harm than help to the cause of transgender persons, so not quite so comedic. I don't think she is representative of the vast majority of transgender persons, and should not be used as the example to represent the community. She is no more representative of that community than Trump is of the American people.
  • Gender Identity is not an ideology
    Any religious, cultural or civic traditions... like marriage is a Christian tradition.ChatteringMonkey

    I think this is the crux of the matter for you? Well, Christian marriage is certainly available to those who desire it, It's not going away. But some chose alternative lifestyles. Why should they not be given that choice?

    Or we're fine to just assume it as a dogmaChatteringMonkey

    I think framing human rights as dogma in a negative light, yet advocating for Christian marriage for all, is somewhat an inconsistent position.

    Human rights are the result or end-product of a constant process of questioning and critiqueing traditions. They became detached from any living tradition... bloodless and abstract.ChatteringMonkey

    Some traditions should be questioned and critiqued.

    Are you serious? You asked me what I meant with actively promoting (as opposed to tacitly allowing), and I gave you the answer.ChatteringMonkey

    You didn't cite active promotion, you cited nuisances. No-one is taking out ads in the newspapers, "Become transgender today!" No-one is coercing anyone to become transgender.
  • Gender Identity is not an ideology
    A functioning society is prior to individual human rights, because without a functioning society there is no way to protect any kind of rights. Traditions are typically a key factor of how those societies are ordered and remain functional.ChatteringMonkey

    What kind of traditions are you talking about?

    If that means one needs to constantly fight said traditions until there is no more oppression, that essentially means you will end up dissolving the very foundation that enables one to even talk about rights.ChatteringMonkey

    I think the best foundation of a society is one that includes basic human rights.

    Tradition is good, too, but tradition should not be elevated to something untouchable when said tradition interferes negatively in the lives of others. Slavery was once a tradition, too.

    There's nothing rationally 'necessary' about human rights. They came out a particular Western tradition, out of Christian and Greco-Roman notions of natural law, that diverged from how the rest of the world saw things.ChatteringMonkey

    The Universal Declaration of Human Rights came out of the abuses of WW2.

    1) the idea that we should attach rights to an abstract notion of the individual removed from cultural, familial and societal contexts is I think antithetical to how human beings naturally tend to behave.ChatteringMonkey

    How do the protection of human rights erode attachment to family, culture, or country?

    From the occasional reporting about say a gay-pride event in mainstream media, at a certain point LGBTQ+ issues became front and center in a deliberate attempt to 'normalize' it to the general public. First in the US, and then with some delay in Europe, with interviews, seperate LGBTQ+ sections in newspapers, opinion pieces etc etc...

    Edit: Also the whole pronoun debate. It doesn't get any more 'normative' than demanding everybody to change how to use language.
    ChatteringMonkey

    Eek, you're getting into nuisances here. Like, kinda like, whining.
  • Gender Identity is not an ideology
    So to on the TRA side with the Zizians and plenty of small (and yes, mainly inconsequential) militias arming to the teeth and going after those they decide are wrong, or individuals like Jessica Yaniv waging legal wars against people due to her clear delusional world view.AmadeusD

    Yes, there are extremists in all groups. But the outliers should not decide the rule. We need to look to leadership to provide the greatest benefit for the greatest number of its citizens. For example, the policy coming out of the Trump administration has led to transgender persons fearing for their lives.

    and it does clearly seem to be a 'worldview'. So, to me, 'being trans' is clearly not an ideology, but the worldview it tends to embed within can be. There are plenty of trans people who entirely reject the worldview that tends to come along with trans identity - this is the biggest point to me in assessing the factions at play.AmadeusD

    I like that you introduced the word "worldview" - good word. Although, I am not sure what you mean by the "trans identity worldview."

    I can retort to this by asking, what evidence do you have that any family outside the "father-mother-children" paradigm is less stable?
    — Questioner

    https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC10313020/?utm_source=chatgpt.com
    AmadeusD

    No, sorry, that study does not apply, since it compares stable families with families that have dissolved. Not the same thing at all as comparing cisgender parents to transgender parents.
  • Gender elevated over sex is sexism
    Can you please clarify what you mean by "out of existence"?AmadeusD

    Sorry, I should have been more precise. I meant the executive order Trump signed January 20, which in part states:

    Sec. 2. Policy and Definitions. It is the policy of the United States to recognize two sexes, male and female. These sexes are not changeable and are grounded in fundamental and incontrovertible reality. Under my direction, the Executive Branch will enforce all sex-protective laws to promote this reality, and the following definitions shall govern all Executive interpretation of and application of Federal law and administration policy:

    (a) “Sex” shall refer to an individual’s immutable biological classification as either male or female. “Sex” is not a synonym for and does not include the concept of “gender identity.”

    (b) “Women” or “woman” and “girls” or “girl” shall mean adult and juvenile human females, respectively.

    (c) “Men” or “man” and “boys” or “boy” shall mean adult and juvenile human males, respectively.

    (d) “Female” means a person belonging, at conception, to the sex that produces the large reproductive cell.

    (e) “Male” means a person belonging, at conception, to the sex that produces the small reproductive cell.

    (f) “Gender ideology” replaces the biological category of sex with an ever-shifting concept of self-assessed gender identity, permitting the false claim that males can identify as and thus become women and vice versa, and requiring all institutions of society to regard this false claim as true. Gender ideology includes the idea that there is a vast spectrum of genders that are disconnected from one’s sex. Gender ideology is internally inconsistent, in that it diminishes sex as an identifiable or useful category but nevertheless maintains that it is possible for a person to be born in the wrong sexed body.


    The vast majority of "rejection" trans people endure, as it were, is to do with their behaviourAmadeusD

    I think an important part of what I said is "rejection by those closest to them" and it is wholly unfounded that this rejection stems from their "manic behavior"

    hen I think you'll find the vast, vast majority of people you claim this about are actually not going through this as-stated and self-perception has coloured their take.AmadeusD

    Sorry, this goes against everything I have read about the subject. No doubt, it is complicated, psychologically, but the starting point has to be to believe them.

    I know this firsthand from several personal friends or acquaintances.AmadeusD

    Why? What did they tell you?

    t's "apply your same logic and see where it leads". I can see why this isn't going particularly deep. If I were saying "yeah, well look at this" you'd be right. I didn't. I gave you another vessel to pour your view into and see how it looks. I take it that it looks ugly?AmadeusD

    It's invalid because young white men do not face the same misunderstanding, ignorance and prejudice that transgender persons do

    It is a fact that some people are deluded. It is also a fact that some people are afflicted by delusion.AmadeusD

    "Delusion" and "affliction" are not characteristic of the transgender identity. A delusion is a break from reality, and transgender identities are real. Also, you would no more say that a cisgender male is "afflicted" by his brain because it is a male brain - it is just the brain he has. Same idea with transgender people - it is just the brain they have.
  • Gender Identity is not an ideology
    No it's meant to imply that it is an experiment that hasn't been shown to work in the longer term, as opposed to other traditions.ChatteringMonkey

    Oh, so you are arguing against individual human rights. Sorry, this just opens the door to all kinds of suppression and oppression done in the name of "tradition."

    Yeah but pointing to Universal rights is a bit like pointing to the bible to argue in favour of some Christian teaching... it's only convincing to those that already believe in it.ChatteringMonkey

    I can't agree with this analogy. Universal human rights is a rational response to abuses of the past. Christian teaching from the Bible is based on ancient stories. But I will say I do believe that Jesus would be totally on board with universal human rights.

    But if your argument is that you do not believe in basic human rights, you have lost me.

    Allowing more and more exceptions does erode the norm, that's just how human psychology works.... The idea "Why should I adhere to the norm if other shouldn't?" creeps in.ChatteringMonkey

    What "more and more" - this seems a fear-based response.

    Also there is a difference between tacitly allowing some people to deviate from the norm (like it was before say 2010) and actively promoting it like it is some kind of new norm (after 2010).ChatteringMonkey

    I'm not sure what you mean by "actively promoting"

    Have you just made these up by theorising about it or is there actual evidence that these are indeed the characteristic that make a stable society? The proof of the pudding is in the eating.ChatteringMonkey

    I can retort to this by asking, what evidence do you have that any family outside the "father-mother-children" paradigm is less stable?

    In any case, certainly you are not arguing against those characteristics contributing to a society's stability?

    Again, this only follows if you already believe we should view these things solely from the point of view of individual rights. Not everybody does.ChatteringMonkey

    This opens the door to harm done to others.
  • Gender Identity is not an ideology
    Who's "them"? Trans people???RogueAI

    I think you are referring to this:

    the current US government gave them an inch, and they took a mile.Questioner

    if so, no, I meant the anti-transgender faction
  • Gender Identity is not an ideology
    I think the issue is viewing everything from a point of view individual rights to begin with, that is an ideology in itself,ChatteringMonkey

    Yes, I did say that. It's an ideology adhered to by a wide swath of different groups

    nd historically a pretty unusual one at that.ChatteringMonkey

    is this meant to discredit it?

    We have many norms that have little to do with individual rights, but are aimed at making society work collectively. And they can even be arbitrary (non-natural) to some extend, and still be important to be followed. It's important that everybody drives on the right or the left side of the road for instance to avoid a mess in traffic... it really doesn't matter what anyone's preferences are on the issue.ChatteringMonkey

    What side of the road a society drives on does not interfere with anyone's personal rights.

    Active anti-transgenderism interferes with Article 12 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights:

    No one shall be subjected to arbitrary interference with his privacy, family, home or correspondence, nor to attacks upon his honour and reputation. Everyone has the right to the protection of the law against such interference or attacks.

    One could see the institution of hetero-sexual marriage and gender-roles in something of a similar way, in that is presumably beneficial for a stable society to have man an women committed to each other and to the families they raise.ChatteringMonkey

    Yes, stable families are good for society. But this particular "norm' does not work for everyone. Besides, it's an inaccurate presumption that anything outside the "norm" is bad for society.

    The characteristics that make a society stable are trust, fairness, inclusion, safety, mutual support, respect, honesty, compassion and empathy - and there is no indication that transgender persons cannot contribute in these ways.

    People like their norms and get angry, like in traffic, if they get broken. I do think that is something that comes natural to humans. We get educated into following a certain set of norms, ideals and role-models and we then usually spread those in turn to the next generations etc and that ultimately produces a certain kind of society... we are mimetic beings is you will.ChatteringMonkey

    Anyone who gets angry at transgender persons for living their lives according to their own (nonharmful) "norm" needs to check their judgement at the door.

    Contrary to what most seem to believe, Liberalism, individualism and the promoting LGBTQ+ rights is a certain way of viewing and organising the world. It does promote certain kinds of ways of living that are different from say those that Christianity promotes.... there's no 'ideology-free' society.ChatteringMonkey

    if a society is to respect human rights, respecting the rights of transgender persons comes under that umbrella. it is not a category unto itself.
  • Gender Identity is not an ideology
    That's scary.RogueAI

    the current US government gave them an inch, and they took a mile.
  • Gender elevated over sex is sexism
    can you concede that you have significantly underestimated detransitioners?Jeremy Murray

    No. The stats I find this morning are similar to the stats I have previously posted:

    The point-prevalence proportions of shifts in requests before any treatment ranged from 0.8–7.4%. The point-prevalence proportions of GnRHa discontinuation ranged from 1–7.6%. The point-prevalence proportions of GAHT discontinuation ranged from 1.6–9.8%.

    Of those who do seek detransitioning -

    Of those who had detransitioned, 82.5% reported at least one external driving factor. Frequently endorsed external factors included pressure from family and societal stigma.
  • Gender elevated over sex is sexism
    Trans people definitively do not lack institutional support and accomodations in the West.AmadeusD

    This is not true in the US. They have been executive-ordered out of existence.

    So, is it just that other people don't accept your self-image? That's true of most people. It is rare to find a group lacking resilience such that the world not conforming to their self-image is considered a 'potentially fatal' aspect of their situation.AmadeusD

    I think this fails to understand how central gender identity is to transgender persons and that it often results in full-person rejection by those closest to them.

    But I think the analysis which starts with "you are telling me x, therefore x is the case" is probably the worst approach.AmadeusD

    I think this fails to understand that the best person to tell you who they are is the person telling you who they are.

    You could apply this to young white men, who are in fact, not given support by institutions and are given the opposite.AmadeusD

    An invalid "whataboutism"

    Schizophrenics are not upset because the world wont conform to their delusion - it is the delusion which supports the upset. I am not running together being trans and being schizophrenic, though they share aspects. I am merely trying to make it clear that taking the afflicted at their world is a problem. A big problem.AmadeusD

    Ah, but you have introduced the words "delusion" and "afflicted" - signaling a prejudice that does not accurately describe the transgender experience
  • Gender elevated over sex is sexism
    Here is Kinnon Makinnon's substack. Try anything he writes. You will find nuance.Jeremy Murray

    Thank you for that, but I cannot say that it revealed much to me that I didn’t already know, or posted about.

    Transgender persons experience psychic distress. Yes, they do, no sh*t, but let’s be clear this co-relation does not indicate a causation - that transgenderism does not cause the mental stress per se, but rather it boils down to a lack of support.

    As the article makes clear:

    … high levels of psychosocial stress and elevated scores on the nonsupport scale, reflecting a strong perception of lack of social support.

    … it may reflect a heightened need to communicate suffering, possibly as a response to stigma or barriers to being taken seriously in clinical settings.

    … Elevated externalizing patterns and substance-related problems may reflect maladaptive coping strategies developed in response to chronic minority stressors such as discrimination or interpersonal rejection.


    And the treatment required focuses again on social support -

    … a trauma-informed approach that builds resilience against chronic social stressors and discrimination is also likely beneficial.

    … developing social connections to buffer against the observed pattern of social inhibition and perceived stigma.

    … There is an urgent need to address suicidality and the perceived lack of support.
  • Gender elevated over sex is sexism
    I am non-partisan and ProTrans.

    You, apparently aren’t, since you can’t be bothered to do basic research, as demonstrated by your lack of basic knowledge on the subject throughout the thread. Again, just do the Google search. Or try Ben Ryan and his hazard ratio sub stack.
    Jeremy Murray


    Please share your research with us.
  • Gender elevated over sex is sexism
    I read this thread from beginning to end before posting. I believe your 'stats' have already been debunked.Jeremy Murray

    Lol, I do wonder who is standing on ideology
  • Gender elevated over sex is sexism
    'according to Google'.Jeremy Murray

    I did include another source.

    yours that are so clearly ideologicalJeremy Murray

    No, I quoted statistics

    so clearly informed by ideology onlyJeremy Murray

    I invite you to read the totality of my posts before making this presumption.

    If your goal is advancing the position of trans people, you owe it to them to do better research.Jeremy Murray

    I take exception to this statement. It shows a clear lack of having read the totality of my posts.
  • Can a Thought Cause Another Thought?
    You sure about that?creativesoul

    I'm not sure which part you mean, but yes, our well-developed theory of mind separates us from other primates.

    here's a fascinating book called Baboon Metaphysics: The Evolution of a Social Mind, by Cheney and Seyfarth, that makes a strong case that baboons have a more-than-rudimentary "theory of mind" which allows them to make predictions based on what they believe other baboons are thinking.J

    Sounds like a fascinating book, thanks for the recommendation. Yes, I have read that other primates do have at least some capacity to develop theories of mind, but that they are not anywhere near as developed as the human capacity.

    For example, only the human capacity for theory of mind led us to apply this ability to supernatural beings (gods) - paving the way for the development of religion.

    And even to objects - like Wilson the volleyball in the Tom Hanks movie Cast Away
  • Can a Thought Cause Another Thought?
    knowing which sorts of thoughts and/or beliefs only humans are capable of formingcreativesoul

    Well, only humans have a well-developed mental capacity called "theory of mind." it's the ability to make inferences about what is in the mind of others - reading another's mind - being aware that the thoughts of another mind may be different from ours. It was a crucial step in our evolution as a social species.
  • Gender elevated over sex is sexism
    I’ll bet you a twinkie he insists that there is nothing a priori it feels like to be a man or a woman, because these feelings are merely the result of arbitrary social conditioning, and the only feelings that aren’t socially imposed have to do with how a male body (not mind) feels different from a female body.Joshs

    Well, that would be a very ignorant position.

    Philosophim would say that my awareness of my gayness as a gender was either concocted in my head by piecing together arbitrary fragments of behavior to force a narrative out of them , or forced on my via my unconscious exposure to some outside arbitrary narrative. In either case, I caused myself all that suffering for no good reason other than my own whims.Joshs

    I'm sorry that you face that prejudice and that ignorance.
  • Gender elevated over sex is sexism
    Many people are uncomfortable with the idea that innate brain schemes organize the processing of incoming stimuli such as to form a gender affective-perceptual ‘style’.Joshs

    Well said. But I do wonder whether it is a matter of discomfort or an inability to comprehend.

    Of course such a style, whether we label it with terms such as masculine, feminine or something other, is inseparably intertwined with cultural influences, but this does negate the fact that we arrive to the world armed already with gender-based stylistic proclivities prior to our exposure to social influence.Joshs

    Again, well said. But we must understand that external stimuli are in and of themselves no more than that - stimuli - and the telling is in how they are perceived and processed by a living brain.

    Those who oppose such a notion simply don’t see any overarching categorical pattern uniting the myriad behaviors and perceptions people report as belonging to their experience of their gender as individuals or as belonging to a group.Joshs

    I think with this failure "to see" is a failure "to look."

    arbitrarily invented in one’s imagination or is learned from others.Joshs

    This may very well be, for those who cannot grasp the concept of a gender-based mind, who insist that gender is something externally imposed, rather than the result of neurological patterns.

    only the claim by those who say gender is a core part of their beingJoshs

    But, if you ask any cisgender male or female, they will tell you what it feels like to be a woman or a man.

    So, I find it curious that when a transgender person says, 'I feel this way or that way." - many do not believe them and search for spurious arguments to discredit them.
  • Gender elevated over sex is sexism
    (Does it mean something like believing that one's gender is more important than one's sex, and is contrary to one's sex, and acting on that belief while at the same time requiring others to do the same? I.e. creating public policies that are gender-based rather than sex-based?)Leontiskos

    If I may - it means that your identity formulated by your brain should take precedence over whether or not you have ovaries or testes.
  • Gender elevated over sex is sexism
    Women are subjects, not objects.Philosophim

    I'm using the terms here metaphorically and structurally, not literally or grammatically

    “Subject” = locus of agency and perspective
    “Object” = target of action without agency

    Again, a person is not an object, but a subject. Unless you're talking English grammar? In which case we're talking about very different things.Philosophim

    See above

    If I view that the men should not cry, that is a gendered identity. If I view that women should always agree with men, that is a gendered identity.Philosophim

    No. This is not at all how I have been using the term "identity."

    What you describe is sexist, but there is nothing linking these examples with the experience of a transgender person.

    Sexism is an action that elevates one's prejudices over the biological reality of the the person.Philosophim

    To apply this to transgender persons, you would have to characterize their gender identity as a "prejudice" and I hope you can see that this is not the case.

    is to propose a trans person claims an identity, then indicate why its true.Philosophim

    To whom? the gender police?

    That keeps the logic organized and clear for both parties.Philosophim

    I'm not clear why anyone should justify their identity to another party.

    o be transgender, you must first have a gendered opinion about the sexes. Men act like X, Women act like Y. Then, you have to pick the gender that is opposite to your sex and act that way while rejecting acting like the gender of your sex.Philosophim

    Again, a profound misunderstanding of what transgenderism is

    Also, we do not take AI summaries on this board.Philosophim

    Are you sure about that? I have seen them in other threads. And the rules simply state that members are not to use AI to write their posts. I have written my own posts.

    I've just noted that gender is a prejudice, and that elevating that prejudice over sex in importance fits the definition of sexism.Philosophim

    Gender is most assuredly not a "prejudice" - again:

    Sexism is relational - anyone can be sexist - whether or not they are transgender - if they hold sexist views towards others - but transgenderism is about identity - it is not relational. Your point-of-view fails conceptually. Sexism is an attitude. Transgender is an identity condition.

    This is just a basic stability of self. Anyone without psychosis has this. I have changed roles many times in life but I understood that all of those roles were a part of me.Philosophim

    yes, diachronic unity is something to be maintained, even with life changes

    It doesn't mean that identity accurately represents reality, is healthy for the individual, or should be entertained. I loved speeding when I first drove. It was part of my identity. It was something I had to get under control because it was inappropriately expressed on public roads. You can be sexist, and that be a part of your identity. No break in diachronic unity.Philosophim

    It appears you have no conceptual understanding of what I have been trying to explain to you.

    My point that it is that my claim that gender elevated over sex is sexism has not been refuted by any of your arguments so far.Philosophim

    No. Transgenderism in and of itself is not sexism. I've provided you will ample counter-arguments to this, but you're holding on to your prejudice with both hands, and maybe one foot.

    So to my point again, if you deny yourself the right to cry because as a man, you believe you shouldn't cry, you're making your bodies natural capabilities inferior to your gender identity of yourself. That is sexism. I don't see any way around it.Philosophim

    Anyone's ideas about whether or not men should or should not cry is immaterial to the transgender experience. Yes, any individual can be sexist - cis or trans -

    But sexism is about some people reducing others - not about which identities exist. Sexism exists in the attitude and the behavior, not in the very nature of being.
  • Gender elevated over sex is sexism
    Remember that my definition of gender is aligned with gender theory and you have not shown any credible evidence or argument that would demonstrate I have not.Philosophim

    Well, I disagree, but I'll try to add more to it here in this post.

    If I tell a woman, "Women shouldn't work" when they are clearly working and there is no reason why they shouldn't work besides my personal feelings on the matter, I'm telling them they shouldn't commit an action. Where's the object?Philosophim

    The women who you think should not work.

    That would be interpersonal sexism between two subjects.Philosophim

    Not quite. In any one example of interpersonal action, there is the sender of the action (the subject) and the receiver of the action (the object)

    But a subject can also be sexist towards themselves. There are men who think they can't cry. There are woman who think they should always agree with what a man says. You can absolutely have sexist perspectives of yourself.Philosophim

    But this is something different than what we have been talking about. it's got nothing to do with gender identity and transgenderism.

    Sexism is an attitude. Attitudes are formed in the brain. Are you suggesting that if a person claims a transgender identity they’re being sexist against their penis or vagina?

    When a transgender person claims their true identity, it is not so they can fulfill some expectations society places on this or that gender, or even expectations as that person might see them. It is about being who they are in their head, and a chief element of that is “diachronic unity.” More about that later, but first a little background info:

    Gender is a biological reality involving patterns of identity produced by the brain. The prenatal hormone environment during fetal development is crucial to this brain organization. Thyroid hormones, progesterone, and steroids are critical regulators of fetal neural differentiation. They direct development of the hypothalamus, the amygdala, and connectivity patterns. That’s the biology.

    It’s important to remember that fetal body sex-differentiation (during the first trimester) is a separate process from brain organization and differentiation (in the third trimester). Studies show that transgender persons’ brain patterns align more closely with their experienced gender than with the brains of cisgender persons of the same physical sex. These patterns - related to emotional processing, body perception, self-representation, and social cognition – emerge from neurological networks and influence gender identity.

    And gender is indeed part of identity. Lots of research into gender identity has been done, including investigating the relationship between transgender transition and “diachronic unity.” Diachronic unity describes a stable sense of self across time, like a self-continuity. If the unity is intact, then memories linked with an internal narrative are able to say – “That was me then, this is me now, and I am the same person.”

    The interesting thing is that gender transition does not fragment diachronic unity – it restores and strengthens it. Before transition, transgender persons feel alienated from themselves, and it’s hard to imagine a future self. But following transition, their internal narrative becomes more coherent and they feel more connected to their current self. They have reclaimed their identity.

    I found three research papers supporting these conclusions. Here are AI summaries of the three papers:

    Autobiographical memory phenomenology in transgender and cisgender individuals

    Finds that transgender participants rate memories from after coming-out with higher phenomenological quality than memories from before coming-out, and that these changes relate to well-being — i.e., coming-out/transitioned periods are experienced as more connected to the current self, supporting phenomenological continuity

    The phenomenology of gender dysphoria in adults

    Synthesizes qualitative literature showing that gender dysphoria often produces alienation from one’s life narrative and body prior to transition, and that many respondents describe transition and affirmation as restoring coherence and ownership of their life story. (Qualitative evidence that transition often repairs disrupted self-continuity.)

    Exploring trans people’s narratives of transition

    Qualitative interview study in which participants narrate transition as a process of re-emplotment of life events; many describe the post-transition narrative as the one that best fits their autobiographical story — again, consistent with increased diachronic unity after transition.

    How would you reconcile these findings about restored diachronic unity in transgender persons who have transitioned to your theory that transgenderism is sexist?

    when you elevate your gender over your sex, you make your sex inferior to gender. And that is where sexism occurs.Philosophim

    This represents a profound misunderstanding of transgender identity, and the challenges they face as they seek a life in which they can live as who they really are.
  • Gender elevated over sex is sexism
    But gender is based on sex. Its a belief that a person should act in a certain way in society without regards to biological limitations.Philosophim

    Hello, I'm back. I see you are still incorrectly defining gender, but I will proceed...

    It is when the prejudice of gender elevates itself above the reality of sex that it becomes 'sexism'.Philosophim

    I have figured out another aspect of your theory that is troubling.

    You’ve been using the word “sexism” to describe a transgender person’s insistence that they put their gender above their sex.

    But – sexism is not a solitary feature. It is relational. It requires both a subject and an object.

    The subject would be the person (or group or institution) that expresses sexist beliefs or practices.

    The object would be the person (or group) that is being devalued because of sex (or gender).

    So, a person (the object) has to be positioned as inferior because of their sex or gender, by the person (or group) applying the belief (the subject). Sexism is not a private belief, but exists in power and practice.

    So, in your theory, who is the object? And who is the subject?
  • The case against suicide
    The question is badly formulated. If someone owns a life, that is slavery.Ludwig V

    Well, since we were talking about suicide, I thought it understood that we were talking about the life in question. Sorry for the imprecision.

    What about capital punishment? I oppose that.Ludwig V

    On principle, so do I.

    euthanasiaLudwig V

    Just a note - if it's assisted death we are talking about, it is not referred to as euthanasia, which removes the agency of the person making the decision.
  • Gender elevated over sex is sexism
    lots of people are anti-trans: sure. It's been whipped up as the moral panic of the day.Mijin

    They've been force-fed that this is the prime issue to care about, and it works because it's easy to sell the idea that something that makes a person uncomfortable must therefore be immoral.Mijin

    You’ve hit the nail on the head with this. Give the people something to be disgusted about, and you can con them into accepting all sorts of damaging policy.

    In the US, the push to deny transgender persons their rights has been a real distraction – a bugaboo - and a convenient excuse for the administration to gut medical research, science, and the civil service, and transform the military. The US even voted against the recent UN resolution titled “Safety and Security of Humanitarian Personnel and Protection of United Nations Personnel” (a recurring UN General Assembly topic, addressing threats like violence, kidnapping, and attacks against aid workers and UN staff, aiming to ensure their protection through international law and host country responsibility.) - citing “radical gender ideology” as one of the reasons for such a huge policy shift.

    The resolution passed at the UN, in a vote 153-1. The US was the only country that voted against it.

    Laws should never be based on disgust. As Hannah Arendt tells us in The Origins of Totalitarianism - disgust can be used to justify damaging ideological outlooks and moral standards that do not align with basic human rights.

    Consider the first paragraph of the UN’s Universal Declaration of Human Rights:

    Whereas recognition of the inherent dignity and of the equal and inalienable rights of all members of the human family is the foundation of freedom, justice and peace in the world …

    And so, the following position from @Philosophim presents as being based on disgust, rather than sound philosophy:

    “I'm just noting it is sexist if they think their gender should be elevated over their sex.”

    Imagine referring to people who wish to live in the gender their brain tells them that they are - as sexist!

    As if the obligation to accommodate the prejudices of others should supersede Article 12 of the Declaration of Human Rights:

    No one shall be subjected to arbitrary interference with his privacy, family, home or correspondence, nor to attacks upon his honour and reputation. Everyone has the right to the protection of the law against such interference or attacks.

    What should be “elevated” is the human right to transgender persons to live an autonomous, authentic life free from persecution - that right should be elevated above living their lives according to the expectations of others, especially when those expectations are grounded in a disgust for a state of being they do not understand.
  • Gender elevated over sex is sexism
    In every other case it applies, what makes trans gender special?Philosophim

    Again, why? You may be right. But without a good reason we can't know that. For a claim about reality to be valid, there needs to be a situation in which the claim is correct, and a situation in which the claim is incorrect. Otherwise we're not talking about something real.Philosophim

    I have sufficiently answered these questions in previous posts. Your position is predicted on the inaccurate premise that transgender persons are not who they say they are, and this is just false.

    there are people who detransition who claim they had their identity wrong.Philosophim

    Not according to my research:

    The most common reasons cited (for regret) were pressure from a parent (36%), transitioning was too hard (33%), too much harassment or discrimination (31%), and trouble getting a job (29%).

    The detransitioning rate is actually pretty low. According to Google - A 2021 systematic review and meta-analysis of 27 studies, pooling data from over 7,900 patients, found the pooled prevalence of regret after gender-affirming surgery to be approximately 1%. When detransition does occur, it is often temporary.

    The detransition rate varies from country to country, depending mostly on the level of community support. In Denmark, the regret rate is 0.06%, in the UK is 0.47%, in Australia it’s 1% - but in the US it’s closer to 8% - (where external factors like family pressure, societal stigma, and discrimination are higher) – but of those, about 62% later retransitioned.

    ***

    In any case, it seems we cannot agree on the most basic definitions and facts and have fallen into repeating ourselves, so I will bow out of the conversation now.
  • SEP reading on possibility and actuality
    Do we have one thing, Nixon, or two things, Nixon and that-which-makes-Nixon-what-he-is-and-not-another-thing?

    I'll opt for one thing, not two.
    Banno

    I would say that the function (the mind) cannot be separated from the structure (the brain) so we have one thing, not two things. It's not a dualism.

    I would also say that of the billions of brains that have ever existed, no two were structurally identical, so the mental output is unique to each individual.
  • Gender elevated over sex is sexism
    The sentence you have quoted is a criticism of T Clark. Not you.AmadeusD

    Please don't gaslight me. You made a presumption about something I said or did.

    and can be misaligned (wrong) or there is a failure in one or other of those elements, to be objectively anything. This would mean gender isn't real,AmadeusD

    The conclusion does not follow from the premise.

    What I would say is that if you have a male body and female brain something has gone wrong. They are not aligned, and, on the vision needed for your side of the argument, cause you immense distress to the point that society is obligated to affirm you and adjust itself to your self-perceptionAmadeusD

    When terming "difference" as "wrong" - judgement comes into the equation.

    The "obligations of society" to accommodate difference should not be the sticking point.

    We don't have a fixed identity. No one does. Our 'self' obtains in a set of dispositions, feelings and reactive faculties which are different moment-to-moment. The 'seat' of our self-perception is reflexivity observation of the world around us (one reason why, if gender is a social construct, you don't get to choose your own!). It is simply reading the room and understanding what it says about your mishmash of "selfhood". Perhaps my rejection of fixed identity also means there's not much more to say.AmadeusD

    You are talking about changes in outlook, not identity.

    But, granted, our identity may get fine-tuned as we process new stimuli, and develop our mental faculties. But there are some parts of it that are fixed, determined by the basic structure of the brain.

    I also have some trouble with describing the seat of self-perception as observation - since observation is by itself only stimuli and has no effect on us until we analyze and respond to it.

    That said, it is largely true, so what do I make of this? Well, given that these are networks in neural pathways, they are subject to change through out ones life and thinking can quite literally change one's neural situation significantly. Is the idea here that one can be trans at t1 and not at t2, or vice verse, swings and roundabouts? That's not meant to be reductive - it seems required to put too much into this piece of neural data. I would add to this a bit of a can of worms, in that psychedelic psychotherapy seems to intensely change how we process both types of information (disclosure: friends of mine do this work and I used to have a hand in designing similar studies locally).AmadeusD

    Yes, how much easier it would be to just believe it when someone says, "I am transgender."

    I'm wondering why we don't do that?

    We gain identity, at all, from how we are treated as babies and young children. We don't get active in creating an identity for some years which should give you pauseAmadeusD

    Yes, I agree. I did not say gender was the whole of identity, only part of it. That a newborn is born with some identity I think is a reasonable claim to make.

    If you're identity exists in your head, you act it out as an expected set of behaviours so others around you see you as your internal identity.AmadeusD

    Identity does not only exist when it is being expressed, but when you are all alone with nothing but your thoughts. Otherwise, it would be like saying the Sun only exists when you see it.
  • Gender elevated over sex is sexism
    Just because we can identify ourselves as "X" it doesn't mean we actually are "X".Philosophim

    This does not apply to transgender persons.

    In other words, an identity claim can be incorrect.Philosophim

    This does not apply to transgender persons.

    There is nothing innate in one's identity that has any value apart from an emotional feelingPhilosophim

    But there is. It's a mental understanding of who you are.

    So if I identified as a female, when its objectively true that I'm a male, I would be wrong. My feelings or desire that it be true are irrelevant.Philosophim

    No. Your identity is produced by your brain, not your body.

    To be transgender is not based on a wish that it be true - it is true.

    Do you not understand that to declare yourself transgender makes things a lot harder for a person, not easier, and one would only do so if it was the only way they could be their authentic self?

    Gender is again, a subjective belief that a sex should act in a particular way in society.Philosophim

    No. Gender is an internal, emergent property of the brain.

    Expectations flow from it, not into it.

    What is sex to you? What is gender?Philosophim

    Sex is the biological differentiation to male or female of physical structures in the human body.

    Gender is the male or female differentiation in the brain.

    Should gender ever be elevated over sex?Philosophim

    It sounds like you're asking for permission to deny transgender persons their authenticity.
  • Gender elevated over sex is sexism
    First, you speak about identity. What is identity to you?Philosophim

    I learned a new word in the thread "SEP reading on possibility and actuality" - and thought it might be a concept that can be applied to this thread, and your question about identity.

    The word is "haecceity" - often termed as "thisness" - the essential presence that causes something to be an individual.

    If we look at this from a biological standpoint, we can consider the human brain in terms of its structure and function. The brain is the structure, and the function of that structure is to produce the mind. The mind consists of all the mental output of one's brain, and that mental output produces an individual's "thisness" - or "haecceity" - the sum total of that person's reality.

    In that reality, is that person's concept of self - their identity.

    Identity is not external to a person, but part of their "thisness" - their "haecceity"
  • The case against suicide
    Did you understand that by "begging the question" I meant the logical fallacy of assuming what was to be proved? For it seemed to me you were making an implicit argument concluding that suicide is (sometimes) morally permissible. But then in your reply you used "begs the question" in another sense.Gregory of the Beard of Ockham

    Sorry if I used the phrase incorrectly. I meant "raises another question"