Manger Douse
Master Poster
- Joined
- Mar 27, 2010
- Messages
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Outstanding rebuttal, Ron Obvious. Just outstanding. And ironically enough, it confirms my own suspicions too. Byeeee!
That which can be asserted without evidence etc. etc
Outstanding rebuttal, Ron Obvious. Just outstanding. And ironically enough, it confirms my own suspicions too. Byeeee!
But what did he say about pronouns?
That which can be asserted without evidence etc. etc
Take it up with the APA. They'd be really interested to hear your critique of their scientific expertise and experience, I'm absolutely sure of it.
I don't claim to be particularly special or immune from any of this. If you are going to make any kind of judgement about what the consequences of actions or ideas are, you need to have some kind of theory. There's an old quote that I like - "I'm not against theory, I'm in favour of thinking".You know, Shuttit, it seems to me you're a bit guilty of that attitude yourself.
I'm not sure that is quite what I think, but I won't quibble. Look, you have your theory that you follow just as much as I do, one can't help it. Feminism, even the older style you follow, is a call for the radical changing of society over a period of many decades. You can't do that, and not approach it with some set of assumptions about the world that make that seem like a plausible undertaking. You need, I think, to have some kind of enlightenment idea of the perfectibility of man and society in there. If you are going to focus on some programme of implementing policies that you think would work in an ideal world, you need to have some kind of idea that that is the road that leads you progressively closer to your goal. I'm not going to derail the whole thread, but there are a whole bunch of ideas like this that, with some variation, one needs to have to believe the project is practical.You've repeatedly posted that in your opinion women are going to lose, with the implication that we shouldn't fight for our rights, and even that we're unjustified in trying to fight for our rights because we will lose, and then we won't have these rights any longer, so we're fighting for an illegitimate aim.
Apologies. That is my fault. I honestly mostly think that the whole project is an exercise in sawing off the branch one is sitting on. I apply that much more broadly than feminism though.You may not mean this, sometimes I don't know when your tongue is in your cheek and when it isn't, but that's how it comes over.
Perhaps, but I also think that history is there to be learned from. Does it provide certainty? No... but it is about the only guide we have to what the long term consequences of our actions are. Is it not at least worth asking the question, is this war winnable? Will fighting it make the world better or worse? Why do some people think this war is a bad idea? What would the potential downsides be that would make the war a mistake? Maybe one fights the war anyway, but with an eye perhaps on these questions.Nobody has a crystal ball. If we don't fight we will certainly lose. I do not regard "you're going to lose so you shouldn't be fighting" as a legitimate argument.
You misunderstand me. I am not joining a side in order to be on the winning side, if I am even on a side. You think I am disagreeing with the enlightenment and liberalism for some personal advantage? I'd be a feminist and have a corporate approved set of beliefs, and not have to waste half so much time coming to a counter-cultural set of conclusions, if that was my motive. I genuinely think the long run effects of these ideas are enormously destructive. I think, in the long run, feminism hurts women at least as much as it does men.I also regard trying to figure out who is going to win, then joining that side in order to be on the winning side, as a contemptible position.
Take it up with the APA. They'd be really interested to hear your critique of their scientific expertise and experience, I'm absolutely sure of it.
I don't see what this has got to do with religion - what did Jesus say about pronouns?
Take it up with the APA. They'd be really interested to hear your critique of their scientific expertise and experience, I'm absolutely sure of it.
Here's a good one from our very own Ziggurat:
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showthread.php?p=13746973
And here's a paper to head off any ad-homs about our very own Ziggurat
https://ohchr.org/Documents/Issues/...1214_JamesCantor-fact-checking_AAP-Policy.pdf
I look forward to your debunking of their debunking
As far as I can tell, the beginning and the end of LJ's appeal to science is what he infers from the APA deciding that trans identity without mental distress is not a mental disorder.
As far as I can tell, the beginning and the end of LJ's appeal to science is what he infers from the APA deciding that trans identity without mental distress is not a mental disorder.
From this he has imagined, whole cloth, a scientific finding that trans identity is a "valid lived condition", akin to race and sexuality, fully backed by the mainstream medical community with all kinds of data and other evidence to support it. All we have to do is look at the fact that the APA currently sees no scientific basis for concluding that trans identity without distress amounts to dysphoria, and everything else he asserts becomes self-evident. Or so he would have us believe.
Only problem is, we're not believing it.
Outstanding rebuttal, Ron Obvious. Just outstanding. And ironically enough, it confirms my own suspicions too. Byeeee!
Food for thought.There was an interesting online article 'On sex and gender identity: perspectives from biology, neuroscience and philosophy' posted in another thread a while ago which included discussion of this issue about mental states.