#1- Sexual characteristics vary amongst males and females, such as weight, height, strength, and cup size. Penis and clitoris size also vary along a spectrum.
Yep. those are
characteristics of the sexes, but they are NOT, repeat NOT the sexes themselves.
A 6ft, 300lb male is a male
A 5ft 10in 250lb males is a still male
One of them is taller and heavier, BUT HE IS NOT MORE MALE, OR LESS MALE!!!
As you say "It can only be one of them." I say that's ◊◊◊◊◊◊◊◊.
Humans are 100% anisgamous. They can produce either large gametes (ova) or small gametes (sperm). In some rare cases, they may even be able to produce both - but those rare inviduals are NOT a third sex, they are usually male.
Show me a candidate person who is something other than male or female, whose body is organized around producing gametes that are neother sperm nor ova. You won't be able to,
because no such person exists.. There are over 7 billion humans on the planet
and there is not one of then that produces a third type of gamete.
#2 spectrums do not have to be continuous, again ◊◊◊◊◊◊◊◊.
If I have a spectrum distribution of the weight of 500 males between, say, 100kg and 200kg, but there are gaps where no-one in the sample has weights of exactly 121.5 kg, 133.4kg, 141.7kg etc, that spectrum is still continuous, because there is a still a place for samples of that weight.
#3 more male or less male, more female or less female, again there is wide variation in the sexual characteristics of both males and females, so a spectrum
There is no such thing as
more male or
less male....
"maleness" is not a variable characteristic of males, and
"femaleness" is not a variable characteristic of females. Even accepting, for argument's sake, that there were, how would it be measured? What calibration scale would be used? Are there SI units of "maleness, and if so, what are they?
No, this concept is a figment or your imagination - it only exists in your mind.
The sex of a person is a condition, and males and females get different treatment based on their sex, you do understand that, have you been to a gynecologist lately?
The sex of a person is NOT a condition. It is a characteristic.
Condition refers to a diagnoable health issue or illness. Diagnosis is usually based on symptoms, diagnostic testing and other criteria.
People may be diagnosed with conditions that relate to their sex, but that is not the same thing as being diagnosed with being female!
#4 You are a body typist, shame on you.
I refer to body type scientifically, not asthetically