To be fair, I like living in the "first world", i.e. a world where we can afford to care about things that are not matters of life and death, or of societal survival.
Sure, but if one lives in a first world country and enjoys living in a first world country.... then ultimately we need to do the things that keep it a first world country, and do the things that ensure our children are the kinds of people capable of sustaining a first world country. It's not like once you achieve a particular level of development that's locked in and you can't fall back.
There is a theory that goes back at least to Weber's Protestant Work Ethic in 1905 that the success of the US was down to particular attitudes to work as a redirected religious calling. There are many such theories, and I don't intend to mount a defence of any of them as true. What I will claim is that cultures have particular properties, ideas, characters that mark them for success or decline. The West has been energetically pursuing a policy of destroying the aspects of the culture that made it powerful.
Rome was great. Then it became soft, and paid barbarians to fight so that Roman citizens didn't have to, or because they no longer could, or would. They came to lack the fire and drive to handle the world themselves and their civilization crumbled.
We act as if our dominance has been handed to us by God.
Because we live in the first world, we can afford to use up smoe recsources to make a minority happier than they would otherwise be.
Perhaps. Sometimes, in some ways. Because my house is strong, I can afford to take a way a brick, and another brick. That doesn't mean that I can completely disregard structural concerns about the stability of my house.
Also, while your discussion about differences between men and women are accurate, I don't think they should be imposed on people who don't want to live according to the stereotypes that describe the differences between typical men and typical women.
We all necessarily live in a world that imposes a "norm" on us and is full of expectations, to do otherwise is chaos. I don't care that you philosophically think it is "fair". Can a society be sustained that works on the principle you describe. I believe they tried something like it in the early Soviet period, and in Weimar.... there were elements of it in the French Revolution.
Has there ever been a stable society that ran anything like the way you imagine this ideal society would with everybody inventing themselves without judgement? This is the kind of thing that occured in late Rome where citizens were idle and decadent. Nobody who is busy contributing to society is idle enough to go about reinventing their own personal concept of gender or demanding access to women's bathrooms.
I'm not making a moral claim. I don't care whether people are atypical or not. I don't think though that a society will long survive if it spends it's time anaudinately focusing on reshaping society to meet the needs of men who want to use women's bathrooms. One of the things about living together in cities is that some people aren't going to fit in. That is a fact of life. Refusing to accept that is a denial of reality in favour of dreams.
If the different sex-based behaviors really are instinctive, then there's no need to have laws that enforce them.
That doesn't follow. In any case, I think you are against social norms as well.... so perhaps we should keep the line in the sand there?
They'll happen anyway for most people, and we should accommodate people who don't fit into the typical niche to the extent we can.*
At what cost? You can't change the definition of woman, normalise women having penises, remove the associations with bearing children and then pass that off as only having changed things for the tiny number of people with penises who want to be called women.
Men and women relate to one another through a whole bunch of cultural associations that have their roots in biology but are filtered through culture. Vast amounts of western literature is about the relationship of female fertility to the soil and the mystical connection to being able to bring life into the world combined. The idea of "woman" is tinged by Eve and Mary in the Bible.
There are all of these connections. You are tossing that away and replacing it with a new definition to please what minute percentage of the population? and somehow the only people impacted by it are that minute percentage of people. When you muck around with a societies' concept of gender you a messing with key concepts that have to work in order for society to reproduce itself.
Biut I think you have really done a good job of addressing some of the underlying philosophy of the discussion.
Thank you. I suspect I am coming at this from a rather different place to the normal forum perspective.
*ETA: And I think you would agree with that, and, really, you already have for the most part, and expressed it better than I did.
Well, I think the key question is "to the extent we can". Nietzsche talks about slave morality, where weakness is made a virtue replacing strength. Where I get concerned is when society seems to fixate on victims and make lifting up victims an absolute good and a driving purpose. This strikes me as the society wide version of an individual who prioritises sitting at home wallowing over some problem in their life over doing something useful like going to work.