Transgender man gives birth

I'm not sure I see that as a mental disorder in the sense that we usually think of them (i.e. as a disease). Yes, it's not what is seen in most individuals, but then genius is also not what is seen in most individuals, and we don't consider that a mental disorder in and of itself.

If a person believes they are not human but actually an alien being, you would say that is unambiguously a mental disorder, yes?

What changes when a female thinks they are a man? The disorder may be organic in origin but it's still a disorder, no?
 
If you mean observable as in visually, tactically, or chemically, then no, I don't agree. Just because I can't observe someone's mental process doesn't in and of itself make it less valid as a measurement.

Well since it can't be measured, doesn't it make it an invalid measurement by definition? For instance, we never ask people how tall they feel they are, or how much they feel they weigh.

How someone FEELS is not "wrong" per se. If I say I feel hot, you can't say that I don't feel hot, just because it's 10 degrees in my house.

That's a bit disingenuous though, isn't it? If you say you feel hot, I can say that you are wrong because it's just 10 degrees in your house. Not that you don't feel hot. See the difference there?

I'm not sure I see that as a mental disorder in the sense that we usually think of them (i.e. as a disease).

I would classify a persistent perception that is contradicted by reality to be a mental disorder, personally.
 
The word is quadruped.

No, quadruped means that you walk on four legs. Tetrapod means you have four limbs. Quadrupeds may all be tetrapods but the reverse is not true (e.g. birds and humans). My point was that losing an arm doesn't mean you're no longer part of that classification.
 
Since I know your style, I can already see where your broken line of reasoning is heading. Unless I provide a video of someone being held at gunpoint being forced to say "xim", you'll say they're not being made to do it.

So much for my attempt at using plain English.

My "broken line of reasoning" is simply asking you to substantiate your claim that you - or any one else - are somehow being forced to learn a list gender variant terms, or whatever they are.

Clearly that substantiation will not be forthcoming, in plain English or any other language.

And coming from someone who delights in mocking those who exaggerate the problem of racially motivated hate crimes, the irony of your hand-wringing over this ridiculous and nonexistent problem is rather enjoyable.
 
I love the way people want to narrow and restrict the discussion. Let's get one guy to say that he won't call someone by their chosen gender if it doesn't match their actual, biological, reality. Then, we can say that the whole debate is about being rude to people at work.

No one is narrowing or restricting anything.

The question of how to address transgender people is exactly where this thread started:
Someone please explain to me why I should be required to call this person a "man", even though "he" has become pregnant and gave birth to a child.
 
If you mean observable as in visually, tactically, or chemically, then no, I don't agree. Just because I can't observe someone's mental process doesn't in and of itself make it less valid as a measurement. In that case I may need more to go by. How someone FEELS is not "wrong" per se. If I say I feel hot, you can't say that I don't feel hot, just because it's 10 degrees in my house.



I'm not sure I see that as a mental disorder in the sense that we usually think of them (i.e. as a disease). Yes, it's not what is seen in most individuals, but then genius is also not what is seen in most individuals, and we don't consider that a mental disorder in and of itself.

I would be perfectly willing to consider those individuals as intersexed, and I think it is a sep in the right direction that the phenomenon of intersexed individuals is being recognized and accepted. If that were good enough for the advocates, I doubt there would be any problem.

Unfortunately, that's not good enough. The advocates insist on binary gender identification, and that the gender identification must be based on psychology, not anatomy.
 
If a definition is "this or that", and the object in question satisfies one of those senses, then the definition doesn't exclude the object in question.
It doesn't need to. You determine the relevant sense from context, not the other way around.

The relevant sense is usually "gender" in our day-to-day lives, because that the sense that implicates social differences.

If your definition of woman begins with "A biological female or...." and a person is a biological female, then the person is, by that definition, a woman. Transmen are biological females.
Everyone understands that--it's kind of what transman means.

Which is why I think your claim that denying this is part of the trans orthodoxy is silly. It is, at best, a radical view which undermines the case for trans rights.

Reminder of the challenge for anyone who missed it:

Provide a definition of "woman" that
1. Includes transwomen
2. Excludes transmen
3. Is not circular.
If it's really that important to you, you can just ignore the first sense I provided. A woman would then be any adult human who exhibits the gender attributes (especially gender identity) traditionally associated with females.

It seems rather pointless, since that's just not how language works.

Meadmaker said:
To the best of medical knowledge as it exists today, there is no such thing as "female brain composition", but that doesn't exclude the possibility that such a thing will be discovered in the future. We don't know enough to say such a thing does or does not exist.
There are in fact statistical differences in the brain structure of males and females, and transgendered people cluster with those who share their gender identity.

The only thing that prevents us from calling it as a special case of intersexuality today is that it's not clear which direction the causal arrow points.
 
A woman would then be any adult human who exhibits the gender attributes (especially gender identity) traditionally associated with females.

All that accomplishes is push the circularity aside into the female term. What's a female? A woman.

There are in fact statistical differences in the brain structure of males and females, and transgendered people cluster with those who share their gender identity.

The only thing that prevents us from calling it as a special case of intersexuality today is that it's not clear which direction the causal arrow points.

That's interesting, and relevant. I would like to know more about it.....if time permits.
 
If a person believes they are not human but actually an alien being, you would say that is unambiguously a mental disorder, yes?

What changes when a female thinks they are a man? The disorder may be organic in origin but it's still a disorder, no?
People who are transgender don't believe that they have "man parts" or "woman parts" contrary to the physical manifestation. They believe that their parts do not correspond to how they perceive themselves in the societal context of male vs female. Still not convinced that constitutes a mental disorder.
 
People who are transgender don't believe that they have "man parts" or "woman parts" contrary to the physical manifestation. They believe that their parts do not correspond to how they perceive themselves in the societal context of male vs female. Still not convinced that constitutes a mental disorder.

If one perceives things that don't correspond with objective reality . . .isn't that a delusion -a defining characteristic of many mental illnesses?
 
If one perceives things that don't correspond with objective reality . . .isn't that a delusion -a defining characteristic of many mental illnesses?
You are assuming an objective reality based on a narrow set of criteria. Suppose the only measure you have to determine someone's gender is their voice. I have been mistaken for a man on the phone MANY times. Does the fact that my perception contradicts what you are using as a metric mean that I am wrong and you are right, or that I am delusional, mentally ill?
 
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The dictionary, with which we define the terms we use in language.

Okay, we could discuss dictionaries in general, their descriptive rather than prescriptive nature, their limitations, but we can skip that for the moment. Here's the Merriam Webster definition of gender.

https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/gender

1)
a : a subclass within a grammatical class (such as noun, pronoun, adjective, or verb) of a language that is partly arbitrary but also partly based on distinguishable characteristics (such as shape, social rank, manner of existence, or sex) and that determines agreement with and selection of other words or grammatical forms
b : membership of a word or a grammatical form in such a subclass
c : an inflectional form (see inflection 3a) showing membership in such a subclass

2)
a : sex the feminine gender
b : the behavioral, cultural, or psychological traits typically associated with one sex


Clearly, we're not talking about definition #1a, b or c.
You seem to like definition #2a, but it seems clear to me that when trans people refer to their gender they are referring to something closer to 2b.

Now since you said the dictionary was that "with which we define the terms we use in language. " surely you must accept that 2b is a valid use of the word and that it does not in that usage refer to chromosomes or genitals.



While I'm at it, could you tell me which scientific discipline defines the word "table"?

If the meaning of table and what qualified as one were in hot dispute, I'd imagine that looking to fields that study tables would be quite useful.

Philosophers and sociologists and psychologists all study gender. If you insist that you're dictating a particular truth about gender, surely academic standards of terminology might come in handy.


I think determining things by observation is acceptable behaviour, yes. But the problem here is that, as usual with this topic, you're trying to mix morality with objective definitions. And also adding "insisting" to the sentence, which seems there to put a spin on the discussion.

We're talking about the behavior of calling someone by pronouns that they maintain are not desired or appropriate. Insisting seems like a very mild way of putting it, but if you insist ;) I'll say "firmly maintain" instead.

You're right we're looking at both moral and factual questions. I'll do my best to untangle them.

The question of whether it is right or appropriate to say something is always a moral/ethical question, regardless of whether or not what you say is factual. The factual nature of a statement can impact it's moral standing, it does not determine it.

So, to get back to the issue, let's start with the factual claim.

A trans man claims to have a masculine gender even though his sex is female.

The behavior we're investigating is firmly maintaining the practice of referring to this person as "she" and "her" despite this person's express communication of a preference to be thought of as a man and referred to by the pronouns "he" and "him".

Now correct me if I'm wrong, but your position seems to be that this person is incorrect in maintaining a masculine gender and the use of those pronouns, and because of that fact you feel morally/ethically justified in using "she" and "her" and referring to this person as a woman.

This person is clearly not referring to their DNA or genitalia when they define their gender, so one would not use definition of gender 1a to determine the truth or falsity of this person's statements. The truth or falsity would rest somewhere within behavior, culture or psychology. Now an academic definition would give us more specificity, but since we're not using those, and the dictionary has defined our term, the truth rests on there simply being some element within those three domains that is masculine.

Your previous standard of determining the truth value of their statement seems flawed from this perspective. Not being a psychologist or privy to a detailed psychological definition of gender, it seems from an epistemological point of view that one ought to rely on this person's self report of their psychological state. They have far more access to both the information and the standard than you and no particular reason for dishonesty. While delusion is possible, I suppose, we'd need to more specifically define what psychological state was misperceived.

Now back to the moral/ethical part of it. Engaging in a behavior with no practical workplace value, targeted toward a particular coworker, repeatedly over their objections is hard to justify.

Peeking in someone's cubical and mooing at them, even after they repeatedly made clear it was very unpleasant would be at a minimum, a jerk move. Now if your action directly irritated a reasonable sensitivity, for instance, if you poked your head in an overweight coworker's cubical and yelled "you're fat" on a daily basis, after they made it clear that it hurt them, that would be harassment. Even though the statement "you're fat" is true, it's still a major jerk move.

The behavior we're discussing more broadly is such a jerk move, but to add to that, it isn't even true. The coworker described earlier is not objectively of a feminine gender. So you would be both ethically and factually wrong to insist on referring to him as such.
 
Cavemonster, thank you for your non-polemical contribution to this thread. Seriously, thank you!

You seem like the person I should ask a question that has been nagging me for a while: How do I make sense of the claim that gender is fluid, with respect to those who use pronouns like 'xim' and 'xer'?

I understand the distinction between sex and gender, I "get" biological males/females having an internal understanding of their gender as woman/man, respectively. What I don't understand is this idea that gender is "fluid", and that there exist third/fourth/fifth, etc. genders. I don't understand what is meant by a trans person saying they are "gender non-conforming". This is where I get lost. Any help?
 
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You could. It would be laughably terrible. But yeah, you could make it.


And the inability of children to give informed consent, the significant imbalance in the power dynamic between and an adult and a child… etc.

I don't disagree with those reasons at all. But the question is at what point does liberalism evolve to the point where it does disagree? If you had asked the average liberal 40 years ago, what they thought of gay marriage, they probably would have laughed. Transgender in the military? It was a running joke on MASH that was a dodge to get out of the military.

Okay, so maybe the liberals don't go for the real predators, the guys raping babies. But they find someone like Mary Kay Letourneau. She got off extraordinarily light as it was; for her first conviction of having sex with a sixth-grader (one whom she was teaching) she got 6 months, 3 suspended. Second time around (with the same kid) she got 7-1/2 years, but served less than 6. And then after she got released, they were married (apparently separated since, but their marriage lasted 13 years, not bad by today's standards).

Those kinds of female teacher/male student caught having sex stories come up periodically. Around here the reaction mostly seems to be, lucky guy! So you start with the women. But then comes the fairness argument. Mary Kay had sex with her student who was 12, why is this guy in prison for 20 years having sex with a female student who was 13? And I assume there will be some gay cause celebre about a man who was after all only showing a youngster how to become comfortable with his own sexuality.

The idea that liberals will cease trying to preen themselves for being more tolerant than their elders is patently absurd. Indeed, that is exactly what the person I was originally responding to was doing. His grandfather was racist. Mom was more tolerant but still homophobic. Him perfectly tolerant in every regard. I'm guessing his descendants will find his blind spot, whether it's pedophobia or something else that we all take for granted.
 
My "broken line of reasoning" is simply asking you to substantiate your claim that you - or any one else - are somehow being forced to learn a list gender variant terms, or whatever they are.

Well IF there's a law that says that you can't intentionally or repeatedly fail to use somene's prefered pronouns, and IF the list of pronouns goes well beyond "he" or "she" and into "xer" and others, then it stands to reason that you have to learn the list.
 
You seem to like definition #2a, but it seems clear to me that when trans people refer to their gender they are referring to something closer to 2b.

I like both 2a and 2b. I just don't view it as meaning that a biological woman can have a male gender. Gender is the social expression of biological sex.

If the meaning of table and what qualified as one were in hot dispute, I'd imagine that looking to fields that study tables would be quite useful.

Philosophers and sociologists and psychologists all study gender. If you insist that you're dictating a particular truth about gender, surely academic standards of terminology might come in handy.

You didn't answer my question: from which scientific field does the definition of "table" come from?

We're talking about the behavior of calling someone by pronouns that they maintain are not desired or appropriate.

No, as noted earlier, we're talking about whether someone is a woman because she believes or claims to be a woman. (snip) Anyway, you seem to agree that we should deal with that first:

So, to get back to the issue, let's start with the factual claim.

Ok so:

A trans man claims to have a masculine gender even though his sex is female.

(snip)

Now correct me if I'm wrong, but your position seems to be that this person is incorrect in maintaining a masculine gender and the use of those pronouns, and because of that fact you feel morally/ethically justified in using "she" and "her" and referring to this person as a woman.

Wait a second. You've just switched from the factual to the behavioural again. And no, that's not my position. My position is that the person is factually incorrect. If they persist in this counter-factual belief, I don't think it's helpful to go along with the delusion and confirm it. However, that does not mean the person shouldn't get support and encouragement if they want to get a sex change and become their target gender.

This person is clearly not referring to their DNA or genitalia when they define their gender, so one would not use definition of gender 1a to determine the truth or falsity of this person's statements.

That makes no sense. If I say that my car is a planet because I define planet as things with four wheels, you can sure as hell use the real definition of planet to tell me I'm wrong.

Not being a psychologist or privy to a detailed psychological definition of gender, it seems from an epistemological point of view that one ought to rely on this person's self report of their psychological state. They have far more access to both the information and the standard than you and no particular reason for dishonesty.

They really don't. Do you have access to your brain processes? I don't. I mean, true, I'm no shrink, but if someone claims to be Napoleon, I don't think we "ought" to rely on this person's self-report.

The disconnect, of course, is that your definition of gender is simply "what a person feels their gender is like", which I obviously disagree with.

Now back to the moral/ethical part of it.

Not yet. Not until we resolve the factual issue.
 

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