angrysoba
Philosophile
Not if you deny the concept of sex altogether.
No, but you end up in some weird world where it is, "you like blue toys and cars? You are a boy! You like pink toys and cooking? You're a girl!"
Not if you deny the concept of sex altogether.
I don't. It's not up to me. It's not up to anyone really is it?
If someone tells me they are a woman, or appears to me to generally act in a way I might expect a woman to then I am happy enough to think they are a woman.
My bed isn't a public space. What a weird question.
No, but you end up in some weird world where it is, "you like blue toys and cars? You are a boy! You like pink toys and cooking? You're a girl!"
I suggest you open a entry level biology textbook for special needs students if you have a problem understanding what human females are.
Yes it's either that or inventing a fantasy world where there's no difference between the sexes except gross external physical anatomy. It's that simple folks!
At any rate, Blanchard's work and followers are one 'side' but the other 'side' actually are many competing theories and research that actually argue with each other on the details but don't even take his work as worth exploring. This is akin to evolution, just with a lot less data to work with. Specifically discrediting Blanchard isn't something most would even think to engage in because his work has simply bore no fruit to address predicatively. That said, his methods specifically have been taken apart and found not just lacking, but ridiculous. For example, using his definition of 'autogyophile' and apply it to cis women results in 90%+ being categorized as 'autogynophiles', and a more rigorous application (stricter than Blanchard uses) resulting in almost %30 being 'autogynophiles'. That means that using Blanchard's own hypothesis, trans women being autogynophiles would mean they are more like cis women than less like them in that regard. If Blanchard had decided to bother using a control group, perhaps he would have found that himself. Or if he had bothered to use samples that were not from the same clinic. Or if his results had ever been replicated. Basic scientific method issues arise from his work that would normally get any actually skeptical community to laugh his 'study' out the door as, at best, a poorly done pilot study.
Back in high school philosophy class (yeah, it was a thing for me) the teacher taught me about valid arguments and about sound arguments, but never about "legitimate" arguments. I also took Philosophy 101 in college, and the professor affirmed my high school teacher's definitions, and once again left off the description of "legitimate".
Meanwhile, your argument above has the form:
Some arguments that involve comfort levels are not legitimate.
The arguments against allowing biological males into women's only spaces involve comfort levels.
Therefore, the arguments against allowing biological males into women's only spaces are not legitimate.
The Philosophy 101 professor covered that form of argument on day 1, under the general heading of common forms of invalid arguments. Note that it is an invalid argument regardless of whatever the definition of legitimate is.
It seems to me that your declaration of a lot of arguments as illegitimate, whatever that means, is a declaration that you aren't really interested in actual debate. You have already declared the arguments illegitimate, and while you haven't provided a definition of illegitimate, it sounds like it is probably bad.
Ok. I will. Let's see if you are actually interested in debate.
Women in our society do not generally take their clothes off in front of men. (The obvious exceptions apply. I assume I don't have to describe them.) They feel discomfort when doing so. Whether that discomfort is a result of societal conditioning or is an instinctive aspect of modern humans is subject to debate, but it is real. From the perspective of the women in the locker room, there is absolutely no difference between a transwoman and a man. They are naked males in the women's only space.
In some cases, people try to equate the discomfort felt in the presence of transwomen to the discomfort than an older generation might have felt to sharing a locker room with black women. This comparison fails for several reasons. First, the discomfort is not caused by being in the presence of a transgender person. It is caused by being in the presence of a male. To say that the people are practicing discrimination against transgenders is to misidentify the discriminant. They are discriminating against men, not against transgenders.
Second, society as a whole has examined the discrimination that affected black people in ages past, and came to the conclusion that there is no difference between black people and white people that ought to justify creating a separate space for the two sorts of people. It was understood that generations of teaching had said that it was inappropriate for blacks and whites to undress together, but that teaching was examined and found to be unsound. The premise that blacks and whites shouldn't share such a space was considered incorrect. Their dark skin really didn't matter, and there was no other discernible difference. In the case of males and females being naked together, we did not reach the same conclusion. The fact that males can impregnate females, or engage in penetrative sexual intercourse with them, was decided to be a big deal. All of the feelings, emotions, and general attitudes related to sexuality were deemed to be significant. Therefore, we continue to segregate males and females. We do so because people are uncomfortable being naked around the opposite sex. Perhaps in some future society it will not be so. I cannot foretell the future, but for now, we have decided it is real.
So, the only question left is whether a person who declares themselves to be a sex (or gender, or whatever) that is different from the one that their biology dictates should be treated in accordance with their self declaration, or in accordance with their objectively measured biological characteristics.
I can continue this later, but I'm sure you can see where this is going, and I must get back to a project. The important part is to note that we do indeed separate men and women. The real question is what criteria we ought to use in order to make that separation. Should it be self-declaration, or biological characteristics. I am prepared to argue, if it is necessary to do so, that biology should be paramount in making that decision.
Canada bans knives that do not look like knives (like a tube of lipstick for example) because it makes it very easy to get them into places knives should not be.
Should we get rid of this law because at the end of the day getting stabbed is getting stabbed?
I don't. It's not up to me. It's not up to anyone really is it?
Reducing the issue to something as absurdly diluted as that, then attempting spectacularly inappropriately to arrange it as a parallel to something like your discomfort of the same thing, and the absurd effort to equate your silly "result" to discomfort anyone might harbour with respect to other groups in which most discrimination law operates in the opposite way (for precisely the reasons you either miss or attempt to wave away) . . . are I think the main areas in which you are on the wrong planet with this.Women don't feel comfortable undressing in front of men.
[ . . . ]
Also note that you are now classifying transwomen as men apparently. Which is problematic.
Also note that you are now classifying transwomen as men apparently. Which is problematic.
That reference was the best laugh in a while. Of course women will get arousal from the thought of themselves as women because they are women. The equivalent definition for the paraphilia for women is not "are you aroused by the thought of yourself as a woman?" but "are you aroused by the thought of yourself as a man?" You can't just take a definition which was specifically designed for one sex (male transsexuals in this case) and apply it to the other sex without correcting for that. By your logic I can claim that 95% of women are homosexual:
Step 1: I restrict consideration to male persons, and state a definition for homosexuality appropriate for that group, namely "are you aroused by the thought of sex with a man?"
Step 2: I now apply that definition to the other sex without correcting for that, and ask a bunch of women "are you aroused by the thought of sex with a man?" I find almost all of them say "yes."
Step 3: Profit! I've just proven that most women are homosexual.
It means you must stop or else face a public shaming.What does "problematic" mean in this context?
You are correct. That is precisely what I am doing, and which I intend to continue doing.
Exactly. You intentionally choose to define woman in a way as to exclude transsexual women, even though they can be more womanly and feminine than some "biological females" could ever hope to be.
I guess we move in different circles. but in all honesty in 40 odd years of being a man I can.count the number of penises I have seen using my fingers. Everywhere I change usually has private spaces for people to be naked and in toilets I can either use a cubicle or just not look. Am I unusual?
To get to the bottom of this we need to determine ehat the real issue is.
For some people, they object to the very idea that a transwoman is a woman regardless
For others they just dont like the idea of people with penises sharing their spaces regardless of whether they are on display or not.
For others apparently they worry about assault.
So what percentage of the problem is honestly 'small risk that may inadvertantly glance at a penis?' And why to be frank is it such a big issue? I mean I dont want to see penises either but i still have to share a bathroom with other people who have them.
Also, why is there apparently never the opposite complaint about female bodies in male spaces?
That depends. If a trans woman already has a GRC, then the National Offender Management Service says she should be housed in a women's prison.
There is provision for any female prisoner - trans or not - to be housed in a men's prison if she's deemed especially dangerous.
It's more complex if she doesn't have a GRC.
In England and Wales, she can only be located in a women's prison if she's had a case conference.
Case conferences are told to watch out for evidence that the offender's decision to transition is related to their sentence length or a way of gaining access to future victims.
A woman is someone or something that acts, looks or otherwise behaves in a manner of a female human. I have no apprehensions of recognizing that even a machine made in form of female human could potentially be more of a woman than a "biological female". I can only imagine how triggered all those feminists are by the possibility of being out-competed machines. Hah!
The most contentious part of this thread is the discussion of a small number of individuals who don't fit that description except to the extent of claiming that they do.