Rolfe
Adult human female
There are moments when I wonder if we've all been the victims of an extraordinarily skilful piece of performance art here.
I think one of the problems is that if we found some unnecessary term that would include those Steersman considers unsexed, the sexed would fall comfortably among them, and the distinctive word for the what he considers fully sexed would simply become a sub-category, as "fertile" or the like now is, and nothing actually would be accomplished. You're just moving the vocabulary sideways.
I think one of the problems is that if we found some unnecessary term that would include those Steersman considers unsexed, the sexed would fall comfortably among them, and the distinctive word for the what he considers fully sexed would simply become a sub-category, as "fertile" or the like now is, and nothing actually would be accomplished. You're just moving the vocabulary sideways.
Irrelevant. Point is that there ARE stipulative, prescriptive definitions - which even MW's definition of "by definition" underlines. Which have a great deal of utility. Which you refuse to address. Classy ...Name one dictionary of English which (1) is explicitly prescriptive & (2) has been linked upthread.
Where, pray tell, do the definitions SAY anything about "offspring"?That article refers to "male offspring" and "female offspring" so it seems likely that the authors are willing to attribute sex to animals prior to attaining adulthood.
Female: Biologically, the female sex is defined as the adult phenotype that produces the larger gametes in anisogamous systems.
I really try not confuse trans issues and DSDs, so I'm not going down that path here and now.
What self-serving horse crap.Words don't have to mean the exact same thing at all times in all contexts, as Parker and Lehtonen have pointed out (bolded above).
Happy to admit that "dictionaries are widely regarded as prescriptive authorities," but I'm not about to use a book for purposes which the authors themselves have disclaimed.
I've got a really good idea. Since the words "male" and "female" are already taken and nobody but nobody is going to stop using them in the normal way no matter what Steersman says, and yet he thinks specific words are needed to denote "fertile male" and "fertile female", maybe he could suggest new terms?
Then we can all watch with amusement as he tries to clarify who exactly is covered by these new terms, right down to whether they're wearing a condom at the moment, or are on the pill...
So, in consequence and relative to which, one might tentatively suggest a couple of hyphenated words — based on Latin for some extra pizzazz — to cover all of those bases, to create a set of exhaustive categories, to name them for some as yet unspecified “adaptive or pragmatic purpose”, to wit: parit-ova (produces ova); sperma-facit (produces sperm); and, for the sake of completeness and to remove any possible “wiggle-room”, nec-non-parit-ova-genituram (produces neither ova nor sperm). In addition, since it is more or less a given that the process of sex is, by definition and by common understanding, fundamental to and itself the process of biological reproduction, we might also assert that those first two categories are or can be called the two sexes by virtue of being the only categories of those able to take part in reproduction.
There are moments when I wonder if we've all been the victims of an extraordinarily skillful piece of performance art here.
Post #772Where exactly have they disclaimed that?
Stipulation binds only the stipulators, unless their interlocutors agree to their prescriptions. So far, no takers.Point is that there ARE stipulative, prescriptive definitions...
Seems like a good time for aWell, we're getting a 24-hour break anyway.
You might consider the differences between accidental and essential properties, even the first paragraph of the article:Agree totally.
Meanwhile, I still don't know what to call that critter up in the corner of the room that is a spider in every respect except that it lost a leg in its adventures. Spiders are octopedal.
So what? They all have definitions that are clearly prescriptive - by definition:Post #772
Stipulation binds only the stipulators, unless their interlocutors agree to their prescriptions. So far, no takers.
I'm baaack! ... Did you miss me?Well, we're getting a 24-hour break anyway.
So...the lexicographers in question were explicitly disclaiming the idea that their book was prescriptive.So what?
I'll take awkward analogies which totally don't work for $500, Alex.As not everyone "agrees" to "prescriptions" about driving on the right side of the road, or about being law-abiding, or about paying their taxes...
Which of them claimed to be laying down prescriptive defintions?But by "no takers", you mean apart from philosopher of science Paul Griffiths, biologists Parker (FRS) & Lehtonen, and the Journal of Molecular Human Biology?
They laughed at Einstein. They also laughed at Coco the Clown.
So...the lexicographers in question were explicitly disclaiming the idea that their book was prescriptive.
I'll take awkward analogies which totally don't work for $500, Alex.
All of them in fact. Lehtonen (2017) for example:Which of them claimed to be laying down prescriptive definitions?
Female gametes are larger than male gametes. This is not an empirical observation, but a definition: in a system with two markedly different gamete sizes, we define females to be the sex that produces the larger gametes and vice-versa for males (Parker et al. 1972), and the same definition applies to the female and male functions in hermaphrodites.
None of them, in fact.All of them in fact.
In your entirely unevidenced opinion.None of them, in fact.
Don't pretend stipulation and prescription are equivalent, no one buys that ***
prescribe verb
pre·scribe | \ pri-ˈskrīb \
prescribed; prescribing
Definition of prescribe
intransitive verb
1: to lay down a rule : DICTATE
transitive verb
1a: to lay down as a guide, direction, or rule of action : ORDAIN
b: to specify with authority
Thesaurus
prescribe verb
Synonyms of prescribe
to give the rules about (something) clearly and exactly
in chess, you can move the various pieces only in certain prescribed ways
Synonyms for prescribe
define, lay down, specify
A stipulative definition is a type of definition in which a new or currently existing term is given a new specific meaning for the purposes of argument or discussion in a given context.
We can safely assume none of the authorities you've cited had the context of this particular discussion in mind.A stipulative definition is a type of definition in which a new or currently existing term is given a new specific meaning for the purposes of argument or discussion in a given context.
We can safely assume none of the authorities you've cited had the context of this particular discussion in mind.