Matthew Best
Penultimate Amazing
The last 11 words of that post are unnecessary.
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The clownfish rebuttal need not concern us when deciding on public policies for sex-segregated spaces in human societies. Nor need it concern us in a discussion of DSD conditions arising in humans. If that's where you have to go to find your contradictions, then you will end up far outside the problem space you started in, and have nothing useful to say about problems and solutions within that space. As we have seen.
No true Scotsmen ....
Little better than sticking your head in the sand. "Nothing to see here, move along ..." : rolleyes :
I thought the Quack-O-Meter takedown of Novella et. al. was quite effective, though. Your objection to that piece appears to be that it uses terms like "male" in a way that you don't, even though you're the only one who uses them as you do.Because you can't possibly unhorse people like Novella if you haven't a clue where they're coming from or how to interpret what they're saying.
I'd like to see how you could rationalize having one definition for 99.9% of the 7 million sexually-reproducing species on the planet and another quite contradictory one for one of them .... Some fancy footwork, indeed; championship quality special pleading:Clownfish aren't Scotsmen. We don't need to worry about solving for clownfish, when we're trying to solve for Scotsmen.
Am I correct in understanding that you believe that defining sex in mammals in terms of the binary developmental pathways for reproduction in mammals works just fine for mammals, but must be rejected because it doesn't also work for clownfish?
I thought the Quack-O-Meter takedown of Novella et. al. was quite effective, though. Your objection to that piece appears to be that it uses terms like "male" in a way that you don't, even though you're the only one who uses them as you do.
On a deeper level, the ‘patchwork’ definition of sex used in the social sciences is purely descriptive and lacks a functional rationale. This contrasts sharply with how the sexes are defined in biology. From a biological standpoint, what distinguishes the males and females of a species is the size of their gametes: males produce [present tense indefinite] small gametes (e.g., sperm), females produce [present tense indefinite] large gametes (e.g., eggs; Kodric-Brown & Brown, 1987)
That's because of your premise, because of your article of faith. Because you're dogmatically committed to the idea that every one, every member of every last sexually-reproducing species is either male or female - from birth to death. And probably beyond too ...![]()
You might try addressing Lehtonen and Parker's usage at #573, before we move on to Del Giudice.You - all - might try reading that article of Del Giudice's on "Ideological Bias in the Psychology of Sex and Gender".
I'd like to see how you could rationalize having one definition for 99.9% of the 7 million sexually-reproducing species on the planet and another quite contradictory one for one of them .... Some fancy footwork, indeed; championship quality special pleading:
AKA, "entirely unevidenced opinion" ....<snip>
It's also my position that your definition is 1) unclear, 2) stupid, and 3) useless for absolutely everything.
A "blonde moment"? Who knows.Any thoughts on Lehtonen and Parker's usage of male and female that I pointed out in post 573?
See above.You might try addressing Lehtonen and Parker's usage at #573, before we move on to Del Giudice.
Restricting solutions to a particular problem space or domain is not special pleading.
The simplest solution is to point out that clownfish aren't relevant to these questions about humans. You refuse to accept this solution, though. Why?
In classical logic, intuitionistic logic and similar logical systems, the principle of explosion (Latin: ex falso [sequitur] quodlibet, 'from falsehood, anything [follows]'; or ex contradictione [sequitur] quodlibet, 'from contradiction, anything [follows]'), or the principle of Pseudo-Scotus, is the law according to which any statement can be proven from a contradiction.[1] That is, once a contradiction has been asserted, any proposition (including their negations) can be inferred from it; this is known as deductive explosion.[2][3]
Where "others" should be taken to include Lehtonen and Parker, regardless of their hair color.You have any dictionary or journal articles that explicitly endorse that structure-absent-function schlock that you, Hilton and others are peddling?
I've already answered this, but once again, spectra require something you can measure as a continuous or discrete variable, like wavelength or hair follicles per mm².But those intersex people you said were neither male nor female - they a third sex in a spectrum of three or more, or are they sexless?
Trying to insist that the biological definitions that apply to some 7 million sexually-reproducing species shouldn't apply to one of them - which, mirabile dictu, happens to be us - IS.
: rolleyes :
I don’t know, but I’m certainly enjoying his posts. I think it’s a fascinating approach.
What are you coming to a forum like this for if diving into the semantics and peculiars of a hot-button issue to see what you can find at the bottom, strikes you as obnoxious and rustles your jimmies?
A "blonde moment"? Who knows.
The definitions of ‘sex’ and ‘sexes’ vary.
Where "others" should be taken to include Lehtonen and Parker, regardless of their hair color.
No, it doesn't:I've already answered this, but once again, spectra require something you can measure as a continuous or discrete variable, like wavelength or hair follicles per mm².
spectrum (noun):
2) Used to classify something in terms of its position on a scale between two extreme points.
‘the left or the right of the political spectrum’
2.1 A wide range.
‘self-help books are covering a broader and broader spectrum’
‘The budding writers touched upon a wide spectrum of issues ranging from suspense, fantasy, ghosts, sporting rivalry to philosophy and science fiction.’
‘You've seen their work in a wide spectrum of venues ranging from Fast Forward to Time magazine, and now you can see it in person.’
‘Economic geography supposedly has a wide spectrum of subjects, ranging from agrarian and pastoral economies to resource utilization and changes in land use.’
Examples don't count for much, particularly where they contradict the premise or definition in play.