d4m10n
Penultimate Amazing
Interesting. What definition of "male" do you find non-problematic in the first phrase?"male sexual organs", and "female cells", and "male brains" - as phrases - are NOT the problem.
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Interesting. What definition of "male" do you find non-problematic in the first phrase?"male sexual organs", and "female cells", and "male brains" - as phrases - are NOT the problem.
LoL. You and Humpty-Dumpty:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Humpty_Dumpty#Lewis_Carroll's_Through_the_Looking-Glass
And the "right-wing-populist commentator" of Colbert's "acquaintance":
Steersman seems to have a very rigid and literal way of thinking. I'm sensing the problem from his point of view isn't just that he has this mad notion that all the dictionaries are saying something different from what everyone else believes they are saying, but that he believes that words must have one definition and one form of usage only, or else they don't mean anything.
A friend of mine is a science blogger and lecturer; just at the moment he's lecturing rather than blogging. Still a blogger when he's lecturing; still a lecturer when blogging. (Also, still a male even when he's not actively attempting to impregnate anyone.)It's what I would call the present habitual.
It's what I would call the present habitual. I posted about this point earlier. "I sing in a choir." That doesn't mean that, as I type, I am actually sitting in the village hall belting out the soprano part of Vivaldi's Gloria. It means that this is something I do habitually.
It came up because I'm learning Gaelic and in Gaelic the future tense is used for the same thing. "Bidh mi a' seinn ann an còisir," or "Seinnidh mi ann an còisir." Literally these sentences read "I will be singing in a choir," or "I will sing in a choir." Nevertheless they would be understood, depending on context, as a description of what I do habitually, not a declaration of intent to join a choir next month.
"Nì iad fìon blasta anns an Fhraing." Literally "They will make tasty wine in France," but the correct translation of the meaning is "They make tasty wine in France."
Present habitual in English, but in Gaelic I suppose you'd call it future habitual. Same thing.
A friend of mine is a science blogger and lecturer; just at the moment he's lecturing rather than blogging. Still a blogger when he's lecturing; still a lecturer when blogging. (Also, still a male even when he's not actively attempting to impregnate anyone.)
And, again, it's referring to the sex that habitually produces the gamete, in this context. Males are individuals of that sex.
That is so important. The "habitual" meaning in this context is not that every individual male must be in the habit of producing small gametes, but that males are members of the sex that (habitually) produces small gametes. In other words, it's a structural definition.
Every single person except Steersman seems to understand this readily enough.
Yes, quite agree.Sex in humans isn't a physical quantity, though.
Classes and categories are generally just abstractions, a perception that different things have properties in common. The only thing that's "really real" are the properties that determine category membership; note the "regarded", i.e., "perceived":
category (noun): A class or division of people or things regarded as having particular shared characteristics.
https://www.lexico.com/definition/category
And in the case of the sexes - at least as they're sensibly and logically defined by most biologists worth their salt - the "shared properties" that constitute "necessary and sufficient conditions" for category membership are "produces (habitually) ova" and "produces (habitually) sperm".
Those properties are quite real, but the categories themselves - "male" and "female" - are just abstractions that many people insist on turning into real things - the "sin", the logical fallacy of reification. Nobody HAS a "female" or a "male" - I defy anyone to measure the volume and size of their sexes, locate them so many inches to the east and south of their kidneys.
You might check out that Regenmortel essay which elaborates on those concepts in some detail, this section and the abstract in particular:
2. The logic of hierarchical virus classification
The root of the word classification is class, a term that refers to all the classes of viruses or organisms that have concrete objects as their members. Every membership condition determines a class and since whatever is said about a thing ascribes a property to it, properties and classes are related entities (Quine 1990: 22–24). .... Class membership is the logical relation that makes it possible to establish a bridge between two logical categories, namely an abstract class or taxon which is a mental construct and its concrete members that are objects located in space and time.
https://www.researchgate.net/public...tes_on_definitions_and_names_of_virus_species
Agreed. I was using male as an adjective rather than a noun.The dicks themselves are NOT males.
I really feel like we're making progress here, despite my thick pigheaded reasoning and admittedly short attention span. We've at least gotten to the point where we can agree that certain structures are typical of males, and that's what we usually mean by "male [structure]."They're PARTS OF males, or OF people who WERE males, or are TYPICAL OF males.
Agreed. I was using male as an adjective rather than a noun.
If I'm not mistaken, words by their lonesome are nouns; adjectives are attached to them; no attachment, not an adjective.In what sense, then, are these sex organs in the bucket male?
"progress", indeed. Bravo ...I really feel like we're making progress here, despite my thick pigheaded reasoning and admittedly short attention span. ....
Where we may yet disagree is on what makes something typical.
Sure. Why internal and non-functional testes in CAIS people don't make them males.What I mean is that there are two basic developmental pathways and some structures show up on one of those pathways but almost never in the other one.
Except they're NOT males or females; they're male babies or female babies. Nouns versus adjectives ...This is why > 99% of human infants can be declared male or female at birth, because they have sex-typical external genitals, which are statistically highly correlated with only one reproductive pathway.
: rolleyes : Bit of a stretch .... You SAID:
If I'm not mistaken, words by their lonesome are nouns; adjectives are attached to them; no attachment, not an adjective.
Bit of a stretch .... You SAID:
If I'm not mistaken, words by their lonesome are nouns; adjectives are attached to them; no attachment, not an adjective.
You're absolutely mistaken:In what sense, then, are these apples in the bucket green?In each of these examples, the final word in the string is being used as an adjective (as described by mainstream online dictionaries).
In what sense, then, are these gametes in the bucket small?
In what sense, then, are these people stranded in the desert thirsty?
In what sense, then, are these scriptures in the apocrypha Christian?
In what sense, then, are these sex organs in the bucket male?
: rolleyes :
A postpositive adjective or postnominal adjective is an adjective that occurs immediately after the noun or pronoun that it modifies, as in noun phrases such as attorney general, queen regnant, or all matters financial.
You are free to wait for at least a decade until they either ovulate or ejaculate and then run tests to see if the are producing viable gametes are or not; I'm going to go ahead and assign people to one sex or another based on obvious physiological differences.You first determine if an individual is a member of the category which is that primary variable...
If you're comfortable with calling babies either male or female, I'll count that as progress.Except they're NOT males or females; they're male babies or female babies.
You are free to wait for at least a decade until they either ovulate or ejaculate and then run tests to see if the are producing viable gametes are or not; I'm going to go ahead and assign people to one sex or another based on obvious physiological differences.
In statistics, a proxy or proxy variable is a variable that is not in itself directly relevant, but that serves in place of an unobservable or immeasurable variable.
If you're comfortable with calling babies either male or female, I'll count that as progress.