angrysoba
Philosophile
At least partially, yes.
Partially? No, completely.
At least partially, yes.
At least partially. It is likely to be influenced by external factors such as the environment in which a person was raised. It seems likely to me that people who are raised in an environment where the gender binary is not strongly emphasised will have a less strong personal idea of what gender is.Partially? No, completely.
Mmmm hmmmm. Well, feel free to try to defend your analogy that sex is like height. I'm still wondering what feelings you have that arise solely from your being whatever sex you are, and from no other sources, and how you tell.
No. The analogy isn’t worth pursuing and it doesn’t illuminate anything.
If sex is a biological set of characteristics then we don’t need to describe it in terms of how it feels.
Especially since, as was my point, it's impossible to determine how it feels.
"Male" can describe both "biological sex" (which for the purposes of this discussion I will assume is a real thing and defined accurately) and gender identity.
But again, don't conflate the two.
You literally said that male is not a gender identity. How does that not deny the validity of someone whose gender identity is male?
Excellent! As I said, you're starting to understand. Gender does not have an objective definition, and means different things to different people.
If I cosplay as Justin Trudeau, do I know what it is like to be black?And also people can simulate height changes by standing on objects.
That has nothing to do with what I said, though. All I'm saying is that I know what it is to be as tall as I am, but not what it is to be, say, taller. I know what it is to be a man but not a woman.
It's impossible to determine how I feel? Sorry, I don't get your point.
Describe how it feels to have your blood type. Distinguish those feelings from how people with different blood types feel from having their blood types. Can you do it?
The point is that if you have always experienced a state, for every instant of your existence, without ever having that state change or be switched off, you cannot distinguish which feelings you have are caused by that state.
That is a ridiculous question not at all analogous to height or sex because it contains no observable states for my feelings. I can observe my height and weight and some of my sexual characeristics, and my feelings, but I can't know those of other people. I can only extrapolate from observing their behaviour.
That was not my claim. This is the second time I correct you on this: am I not talking about distinguishing anything; only about knowing what the current state feels like.
Either way, we do not define biological sex by what it feels.
You can observe some of your sexual characteristics but not all of them.
If you cannot distinguish the feelings that come from being A from the feelings that come from being B because you have always been both A and B, then it means you do not know what feelings come from being A. Hence you do not know how it feels to be A. You can only answer for the feelings that come from AB. For all you know, every feeling you have arises from being B, and A is completely without feeling entirely. You have no way to tell.
Obviously, but so what? I observe enough to know that it's like in basic terms. No one claimed that you can know everything about it. It's not a requisite in order to know what it's like.
Sorry, I'm not sure I'm parsing this right. What's A and B in this instance?
I'm not saying you need to know everything about it. I'm pointing out that if you always experience several things, and never don't experience all of them simultaneously, and never experience just one by itself, you cannot determine how any one of those things actually feels. You know only the combination, not the individual components.
Ok I understand now.
That might be true if we were all in isolation. But as it stands we interact with one another all the time and we can observe that the group with which we share characteristic A also shares some behaviours and reported feelings and such, regardless of whether they share characteristic B. By observation of other people we can, quite trivially I think, draw generally correction conclusions.
True-- but that suggests that what we think is caused by biology (or physics or chemistry) is actually created by social interaction.
We won't know unless we can conduct some extremely unethical and probably physically gruesome experiments.
Why?
Rather recently it was. And on this very forum some people have argued in favour of using sex/gender registration on birth certificates for new forms of discrimination, for example for determining which restroom one is allowed into.Not in the US, it isn't.
Not sure why you use Germany as an example, but it is an interesting case. In Germany people can request to be registered "neutral" on their birth certificate.I doubt it is in Germany either. And I also doubt that where it DOES matter for those issues they take the ideas of "gender identity" as different than biological sex seriously to begin with.
It is what happens. You just don't know what "assigning gender" means.Even supposing we stop recording that, it still has **** all to do with this nonsensical notion that doctors "assign" gender. That isn't what happens.
Rather recently it was. And on this very forum some people have argued in favour of using sex/gender registration on birth certificates for new forms of discrimination, for example for determining which restroom one is allowed into.
It is what happens. You just don't know what "assigning gender" means.
It is what happens. You just don't know what "assigning gender" means.
Whipping out you primary sex characteristics can get you into a bit of legal trouble, even in the West.Yes, but people knowing your sex is generally not a problem. So why is it a problem here?
Yes, they are.Aren't sex and gender different?
You can change sex. Though one cannot go from one end of the spectrum of sex all the way over to the other side.I thought you couldn't change sex.
Whipping out you primary sex characteristics can get you into a bit of legal trouble, even in the West.
People generally don't know your sex; they infer it from your gender presentation.
Yes, they are.
You can change sex.