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Vompatti
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Posted: October 05 2016 at 13:17 |
The requested page "/article/389862" could not be found.
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A Person
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Posted: October 05 2016 at 13:44 |
Dean wrote:
A Person wrote:
I think, as far as kids go, that if they are old enough to have gender
and its roles and functions forced upon them, they are also capable of
responding to and learning that gender is socially constructed, is
something that is more done than something that is.
Obviously, I would not be able to teach them this. I do not have a
degree in sociology/gender studies or in education. But the fact that
kids are capable of implicitly understanding gender, are capable of
being able to say things like "those are girl's clothes", etc.
makes it seem entirely possible to me that this sort of topic could be
included in elementary social studies at a basic level.
|
You obviously aren't a parent either (Sorry, couldn't resist. )
Gender
is a sociological construct but sex isn't - no amount of education can
affect anyone's biological sex and when that biology kicks in there is
nothing you can do to stop it.
Educate the grown-ups first - once they "get it" the rest will follow. |
Personally,
I don't view "biological sex" as a thing that exists. I mostly am in
agreement with Judith Butler, who does not view the sex/gender dichotomy
to be real.
This
gives a good short explanation. I also think this quote from an
Endnotes article on the topic of
gender
is a short and simple way to put it:
Sex is the flip side of gender. Following Judith Butler, we criticise
the gender/sex binary as found in feminist literature before the 1990s.
Butler demonstrates, correctly, that both sex and gender are socially
constituted and furthermore, that it is the “socializing” or pairing of
“gender” with culture, that has relegated sex to the “natural” pole of
the binary nature/culture. We argue similarly that they are binary
social categories which simultaneously de-naturalise gender while
naturalising sex. For us, sex is the naturalisation of gender’s dual
projection upon bodies, aggregating biological differences into discrete
naturalised semblances.
While Butler came to this conclusion through a critique of the existentialist ontology of the body,22
we came to it through an analogy with another social form. Value, like
gender, necessitates its other, “natural” pole (i.e. its concrete
manifestation). Indeed, the dual relation between sex and gender as two
sides of the same coin is analogous to the dual aspects of the commodity
and the fetishism therein. As we explained above, every commodity,
including labour-power, is both a use-value and an exchange-value. The
relation between commodities is a social relation between things and a
material relation between people.
Following this analogy, sex is the material body, which, as use-value to (exchange) value, attaches itself to gender. The gender fetish
is a social relation which acts upon these bodies so that it appears as
a natural characteristic of the bodies themselves. While gender is the
abstraction of sexual difference from all of its concrete
characteristics, that abstraction transforms and determines the body to
which it is attached — just as the real abstraction of value transforms
the material body of the commodity. Gender and sex combined give those
inscribed within them a natural semblance (“with a phantomlike
objectivity”), as if the social content of gender was “written upon the
skin” of the concrete individuals. |
Sorry for the Marxist
terminology, but it is apt and a well made analogy describing how I view
sex/gender. I am also a gender nihilist, but I don't want to get into
that because without a nuanced view it could easily slide into TERFy
territory. Also, as far as not being a parent goes, no I am not. But I do watch 3-4 kids every day for about 12 hours. :)
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Vompatti
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Posted: October 05 2016 at 15:15 |
A Person wrote:
Personally,
I don't view "biological sex" as a thing that exists. |
wtf, tl;dr -- so how do you explain penises and vaginas? Also, if sex didn't exist, why would gender be relevant?
Edited by Vompatti - October 05 2016 at 15:32
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Icarium
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Posted: October 05 2016 at 15:38 |
Quoted from standford philosophical encyclopedia
http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/feminism-epistemology/
"Gender as a mode of social situation. Most feminist theorists distinguish between sex and gender. Sex comprises the biological differences between males and females. Gender is what societies make of sexual differences: the different roles, norms, and meanings they assign to men and women and the things associated with them on account of their real or imagined sexual characteristics. Gender thus has several dimensions (Haslanger 2000).
Gender roles. Men and women are assigned to distinct social roles. For example, most societies reserve political and military offices mostly for men, and assign women most childrearing responsibilities.
Gender norms. Men and women are expected to comply with different norms of behavior and bodily comportment. For example, men are expected to be assertive and athletic; women, deferential and modest. Gender norms are tailored to gender roles: men and women are expected to conform to those norms that make them fit for their gender roles (whether or not they actually occupy those roles).
Gendered traits and virtues. Psychological traits are considered “masculine” and “feminine” if they dispose their bearers to comply with the gender norms assigned to men and women, respectively. “Masculine” traits are therefore regarded as virtues in men and (often) vices in women, while “feminine” traits are regarded as vices in men and virtues in women.
Gendered performance/behavior. Many feminist theorists, often influenced by postmodernism, stress the contextual and performative aspects of gender (West & Zimmerman 1987; Butler 1990). Rather than viewing masculinity and femininity as fixed traits, these theorists represent human beings as more flexible and disposed to enact both “masculine” and “feminine” behaviors in different contexts. The man who avoids tenderly comforting a crying baby in the presence of women may do so when alone. Masculinity and femininity can be seen as contrasting styles of performance in almost any role. Female body builders strive to show off their muscles in a “feminine” way.
Gender identity. A person's ascribed gender identity—how others identify him or her—may not match his or her subjective gender identity. Subjective gender identity includes all of the ways one might understand oneself to be a man, a woman, both, or neither. One could identify with any subset of gender norms, roles, and traits ascribed to the gender of which one sees oneself as a member, while repudiating others. One could even repudiate them all, but still identify oneself as a man or a woman in terms of what one sees as distinct roles men and women ought to play in bringing about a just future (one that may or may not include gender distinctions). One could, as many feminists do, understand one's gender identity as a predicament shared by all with the same ascribed identity, and thus as a basis for collective action to change the very basis of one's gender identity. One could embrace an “androgenous” identity, decline to view oneself in gender polarized terms at all, or play with gender identities in a postmodernist spirit".
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A Person
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Location: __
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Points: 65760
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Posted: October 05 2016 at 15:51 |
Vompatti wrote:
A Person wrote:
Personally,
I don't view "biological sex" as a thing that exists. |
wtf, tl;dr -- so how do you explain penises and vaginas?
Also, if sex didn't exist, why would gender be relevant? |
Penises
and vaginas are just penises and vaginas. When a body is "sexed", that
is, designated as male or female, it is a thing that is being done to
it, not an identification of some innate character of that body. Also, the sex/gender thing is relatively new in feminist theory k
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Vompatti
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Posted: October 05 2016 at 15:55 |
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A Person
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Posted: October 05 2016 at 16:01 |
Vompatti wrote:
A Person wrote:
Vompatti wrote:
A Person wrote:
Personally,
I don't view "biological sex" as a thing that exists. |
wtf, tl;dr -- so how do you explain penises and vaginas?
Also, if sex didn't exist, why would gender be relevant? |
Penises
and vaginas are just penises and vaginas. When a body is "sexed", that
is, designated as male or female, it is a thing that is being done to
it, not an identification of some innate character of that body.
Also, the sex/gender thing is relatively new in feminist theory k |
But isn't it most common to designate penis-flavoured bodies as male and vagina-flavoured ones as female?
|
It is, but why?
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Vompatti
Forum Senior Member
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Joined: October 22 2005
Location: elsewhere
Status: Offline
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Posted: October 05 2016 at 16:05 |
A Person wrote:
Vompatti wrote:
A Person wrote:
Vompatti wrote:
A Person wrote:
Personally,
I don't view "biological sex" as a thing that exists. |
wtf, tl;dr -- so how do you explain penises and vaginas?
Also, if sex didn't exist, why would gender be relevant? |
Penises
and vaginas are just penises and vaginas. When a body is "sexed", that
is, designated as male or female, it is a thing that is being done to
it, not an identification of some innate character of that body.
Also, the sex/gender thing is relatively new in feminist theory k |
But isn't it most common to designate penis-flavoured bodies as male and vagina-flavoured ones as female?
|
It is, but why?
|
I dunno butt could it be because that's what male and female essentially means? The point being, if gender, whatever it is, isn't tied to any biological features, why even borrow from biological concepts when attempting to define it? Why not just make up completely new words?
Edited by Vompatti - October 05 2016 at 16:20
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Magnum Vaeltaja
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: July 01 2015
Location: Out East
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Points: 6777
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Posted: October 05 2016 at 18:47 |
A Person wrote:
Personally,
I don't view "biological sex" as a thing that exists. I mostly am in
agreement with Judith Butler, who does not view the sex/gender dichotomy
to be real.
This
gives a good short explanation. I also think this quote from an
Endnotes article on the topic of
gender
is a short and simple way to put it: |
I can definitely accept that gender is a societal construct and that individuals should be free to choose which societal roles they wish to adhere to, but the idea that biological sex is arbitrary, or a social construct, is absurd.
I can kind of see what Butler is talking about, and I can accept that the concept of naming one set of biological characteristics one name (i.e. male) and a distinct set of biological characteristics by another (i.e. female) is a societal construct, but her argument doesn't seem very grounded in anything objective.
Objectively, the concept that we have named "sex" exists. When organisms reproduce, the resulting offspring will, by random chance, take on a certain set of characteristics depending on which chromosomes it receives. In humans, if you are randomly given two X chromosomes by your parents, you will bear a certain set of characteristics. You will have a vagina, clitoris and ovaries. You will produce egg cells as gametes. Whereas if nature randomly selects that you'll carry an X and Y chromosome, you will have a penis and testicles and you will produce sperm cells as gametes. Regardless of whether or not you consider these two individuals as different entities is irrelevant; there are inherent differences between them and one cannot reproduce with its own; it must look to the other in order to have its own offspring. Thus, a dichotomy does exist and that's that. And no "oppression" is at play because a doctor declares one offspring male and another female; random chance decided on the child's sex, not the individual doctor or the greater medical community.
Of course, there are some nuances. Biological systems are complex; more complex than any social scientist or gender studies researcher can simply reason out in their head with mental gymnastics. There are some conditions that arise where genes don't operate as they should during sexual differentiation, and intersex individuals definitely exist, but they are statistical anomalies. In that sense, sex is a bit of a "pseudo-spectrum", with some uncertainty arising. But in general, sex should, and can, be defined empirically. There should be something quantitative and tangible that sex describes, and there is. In humans, XX chromosome = female, XY chromosome = male. These genetic differences lead to very distinct structural differences that can be observed and form the basis for a very rigorous definition of sex.
As I said before, though, gender is a whole different bag of tricks, and actually does relate to the societal constructs associated with sex, and is certainly more of a continuum than gender is. So once Judith Butler gets an in-depth background in genetics, I'll be happy to hear more of her ideas.
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when i was a kid a doller was worth ten dollers - now a doller couldnt even buy you fifty cents
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rogerthat
Prog Reviewer
Joined: September 03 2006
Location: .
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Points: 9869
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Posted: October 05 2016 at 19:06 |
A Person wrote:
Penises
and vaginas are just penises and vaginas. When a body is "sexed", that
is, designated as male or female, it is a thing that is being done to
it, not an identification of some innate character of that body.
Also, the sex/gender thing is relatively new in feminist theory k |
Sorry to pop the question but did you not go through puberty? And on the off chance that you are indeed apathetic to sex, why not live and let live and let the rest of us experience it?
|
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A Person
Forum Senior Member
Joined: November 10 2008
Location: __
Status: Offline
Points: 65760
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Posted: October 05 2016 at 21:20 |
rogerthat wrote:
A Person wrote:
Penises
and vaginas are just penises and vaginas. When a body is "sexed", that
is, designated as male or female, it is a thing that is being done to
it, not an identification of some innate character of that body.
Also, the sex/gender thing is relatively new in feminist theory k |
Sorry to pop the question but did you not go through puberty? And on the off chance that you are indeed apathetic to sex, why not live and let live and let the rest of us experience it? |
Yes I did, and I am not apathetic to sex (I identify as bi/pan depending
on if the people i am talking to know what pansexuality is), but I am
not sure what that has to do with anything.
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A Person
Forum Senior Member
Joined: November 10 2008
Location: __
Status: Offline
Points: 65760
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Posted: October 05 2016 at 21:23 |
Vompatti wrote:
A Person wrote:
Vompatti wrote:
A Person wrote:
Vompatti wrote:
A Person wrote:
Personally,
I don't view "biological sex" as a thing that exists. |
wtf, tl;dr -- so how do you explain penises and vaginas?
Also, if sex didn't exist, why would gender be relevant? |
Penises
and vaginas are just penises and vaginas. When a body is "sexed", that
is, designated as male or female, it is a thing that is being done to
it, not an identification of some innate character of that body.
Also, the sex/gender thing is relatively new in feminist theory k |
But isn't it most common to designate penis-flavoured bodies as male and vagina-flavoured ones as female?
|
It is, but why?
|
I dunno butt could it be because that's what male and female essentially means?
The
point being, if gender, whatever it is, isn't tied to any biological
features, why even borrow from biological concepts when attempting to
define it? Why not just make up completely new words? |
If you hadn't chosen to not read anything you'd see that the things I quoted from don't bother to borrow from biological concepts. :)
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A Person
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Joined: November 10 2008
Location: __
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Posted: October 05 2016 at 21:26 |
Magnum Vaeltaja wrote:
A Person wrote:
Personally,
I don't view "biological sex" as a thing that exists. I mostly am in
agreement with Judith Butler, who does not view the sex/gender dichotomy
to be real.
This
gives a good short explanation. I also think this quote from an
Endnotes article on the topic of
gender
is a short and simple way to put it: |
I can definitely accept that gender is a societal
construct and that individuals should be free to choose which societal
roles they wish to adhere to, but the idea that biological sex is
arbitrary, or a social construct, is absurd.
I
can kind of see what Butler is talking about, and I can accept that the
concept of naming one set of biological characteristics one name (i.e.
male) and a distinct set of biological characteristics by another (i.e.
female) is a societal construct, but her argument doesn't seem very
grounded in anything objective.
Objectively,
the concept that we have named "sex" exists. When organisms reproduce,
the resulting offspring will, by random chance, take on a certain set of
characteristics depending on which chromosomes it receives. In humans,
if you are randomly given two X chromosomes by your parents, you will
bear a certain set of characteristics. You will have a vagina, clitoris
and ovaries. You will produce egg cells as gametes. Whereas if nature
randomly selects that you'll carry an X and Y chromosome, you will have a
penis and testicles and you will produce sperm cells as gametes.
Regardless of whether or not you consider these two individuals as
different entities is irrelevant; there are inherent differences between
them and one cannot reproduce with its own; it must look to the other
in order to have its own offspring. Thus, a dichotomy does exist and
that's that. And no "oppression" is at play because a doctor declares
one offspring male and another female; random chance decided on the
child's sex, not the individual doctor or the greater medical
community.
Of course, there are some nuances.
Biological systems are complex; more complex than any social scientist
or gender studies researcher can simply reason out in their head with
mental gymnastics. There are some conditions that arise where genes
don't operate as they should during sexual differentiation, and intersex
individuals definitely exist, but they are statistical anomalies. In
that sense, sex is a bit of a "pseudo-spectrum", with some uncertainty
arising. But in general, sex should, and can, be defined empirically.
There should be something quantitative and tangible that sex describes,
and there is. In humans, XX chromosome = female, XY chromosome = male.
These genetic differences lead to very distinct structural differences
that can be observed and form the basis for a very rigorous definition
of sex.
As I said before, though, gender is a
whole different bag of tricks, and actually does relate to the societal
constructs associated with sex, and is certainly more of a continuum
than gender is. So once Judith Butler gets an in-depth background in
genetics, I'll be happy to hear more of her ideas. |
If the
term sex just described a particular set of chromosomes you have, it is
utterly useless. No one argued that sexual dimorphism doesn't exist,
just that it doesn't really have any meaning in terms of defining
sex/gender.
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rogerthat
Prog Reviewer
Joined: September 03 2006
Location: .
Status: Offline
Points: 9869
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Posted: October 05 2016 at 21:46 |
A Person wrote:
rogerthat wrote:
A Person wrote:
Penises
and vaginas are just penises and vaginas. When a body is "sexed", that
is, designated as male or female, it is a thing that is being done to
it, not an identification of some innate character of that body.
Also, the sex/gender thing is relatively new in feminist theory k |
Sorry to pop the question but did you not go through puberty? And on the off chance that you are indeed apathetic to sex, why not live and let live and let the rest of us experience it? |
Yes I did, and I am not apathetic to sex (I identify as bi/pan depending
on if the people i am talking to know what pansexuality is), but I am
not sure what that has to do with anything.
|
Ahem it has everything to do with it if you aren't bisexual. As a heterosexual male I am ONLY attracted to women. It is biological and not a social construct. Even if I disobeyed Dawkins' advice and opened my mind until it fell right out, I still wouldn't be attracted to men. So the notion on opposite sexes is very relevant for heterosexuals; it's not something we were made to believe by society. Why do most lionesses mate only with male lions?
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A Person
Forum Senior Member
Joined: November 10 2008
Location: __
Status: Offline
Points: 65760
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Posted: October 05 2016 at 22:21 |
rogerthat wrote:
A Person wrote:
rogerthat wrote:
A Person wrote:
Penises
and vaginas are just penises and vaginas. When a body is "sexed", that
is, designated as male or female, it is a thing that is being done to
it, not an identification of some innate character of that body.
Also, the sex/gender thing is relatively new in feminist theory k |
Sorry to pop the question but did you not go through puberty? And on the off chance that you are indeed apathetic to sex, why not live and let live and let the rest of us experience it? |
Yes I did, and I am not apathetic to sex (I identify as bi/pan depending
on if the people i am talking to know what pansexuality is), but I am
not sure what that has to do with anything.
|
Ahem it has everything to do with it if you aren't bisexual. As a heterosexual male I am ONLY attracted to women. It is biological and not a social construct. Even if I disobeyed Dawkins' advice and opened my mind until it fell right out, I still wouldn't be attracted to men. So the notion on opposite sexes is very relevant for heterosexuals; it's not something we were made to believe by society. Why do most lionesses mate only with male lions? |
What does gender identity have to do with sexual/romantic attraction?
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Dean
Special Collaborator
Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout
Joined: May 13 2007
Location: Europe
Status: Offline
Points: 37575
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Posted: October 05 2016 at 22:23 |
A Person wrote:
Dean wrote:
A Person wrote:
I think, as far as kids go, that if they are old enough to have gender
and its roles and functions forced upon them, they are also capable of
responding to and learning that gender is socially constructed, is
something that is more done than something that is.
Obviously, I would not be able to teach them this. I do not have a
degree in sociology/gender studies or in education. But the fact that
kids are capable of implicitly understanding gender, are capable of
being able to say things like "those are girl's clothes", etc.
makes it seem entirely possible to me that this sort of topic could be
included in elementary social studies at a basic level.
|
You obviously aren't a parent either (Sorry, couldn't resist. )
Gender
is a sociological construct but sex isn't - no amount of education can
affect anyone's biological sex and when that biology kicks in there is
nothing you can do to stop it.
Educate the grown-ups first - once they "get it" the rest will follow. |
Personally,
I don't view "biological sex" as a thing that exists. I mostly am in
agreement with Judith Butler, who does not view the sex/gender dichotomy
to be real.
This
gives a good short explanation. I also think this quote from an
Endnotes article on the topic of
gender
is a short and simple way to put it:
Sex is the flip side of gender. Following Judith Butler, we criticise
the gender/sex binary as found in feminist literature before the 1990s.
Butler demonstrates, correctly, that both sex and gender are socially
constituted and furthermore, that it is the “socializing” or pairing of
“gender” with culture, that has relegated sex to the “natural” pole of
the binary nature/culture. We argue similarly that they are binary
social categories which simultaneously de-naturalise gender while
naturalising sex. For us, sex is the naturalisation of gender’s dual
projection upon bodies, aggregating biological differences into discrete
naturalised semblances.
While Butler came to this conclusion through a critique of the existentialist ontology of the body,22
we came to it through an analogy with another social form. Value, like
gender, necessitates its other, “natural” pole (i.e. its concrete
manifestation). Indeed, the dual relation between sex and gender as two
sides of the same coin is analogous to the dual aspects of the commodity
and the fetishism therein. As we explained above, every commodity,
including labour-power, is both a use-value and an exchange-value. The
relation between commodities is a social relation between things and a
material relation between people.
Following this analogy, sex is the material body, which, as use-value to (exchange) value, attaches itself to gender. The gender fetish
is a social relation which acts upon these bodies so that it appears as
a natural characteristic of the bodies themselves. While gender is the
abstraction of sexual difference from all of its concrete
characteristics, that abstraction transforms and determines the body to
which it is attached — just as the real abstraction of value transforms
the material body of the commodity. Gender and sex combined give those
inscribed within them a natural semblance (“with a phantomlike
objectivity”), as if the social content of gender was “written upon the
skin” of the concrete individuals. |
Sorry for the Marxist
terminology, but it is apt and a well made analogy describing how I view
sex/gender. I am also a gender nihilist, but I don't want to get into
that because without a nuanced view it could easily slide into TERFy
territory.
Also, as far as not being a parent goes, no I am not. But I do watch 3-4 kids every day for about 12 hours. :)
|
Judith Butler is not a biologist so quoting a philosopher at me is pretty much the same as quoting the bible, if you believe that then good for you, if you don't then good for you - and to be perfectly honest that is all you can say about philosophy.
Babysitting/childminding is nothing like being a parent, though there are obvious observations you make and maybe you do see the continuous growth and development cycle over a prolonged period but I'd be surprised if you had sufficient emotional connection to react to that development rather than just observe it or see the subtle changes that such a connection reveals.
|
What?
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rogerthat
Prog Reviewer
Joined: September 03 2006
Location: .
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Posted: October 05 2016 at 22:38 |
A Person wrote:
rogerthat wrote:
A Person wrote:
rogerthat wrote:
A Person wrote:
Penises
and vaginas are just penises and vaginas. When a body is "sexed", that
is, designated as male or female, it is a thing that is being done to
it, not an identification of some innate character of that body.
Also, the sex/gender thing is relatively new in feminist theory k |
Sorry to pop the question but did you not go through puberty? And on the off chance that you are indeed apathetic to sex, why not live and let live and let the rest of us experience it? |
Yes I did, and I am not apathetic to sex (I identify as bi/pan depending
on if the people i am talking to know what pansexuality is), but I am
not sure what that has to do with anything.
|
Ahem it has everything to do with it if you aren't bisexual. As a heterosexual male I am ONLY attracted to women. It is biological and not a social construct. Even if I disobeyed Dawkins' advice and opened my mind until it fell right out, I still wouldn't be attracted to men. So the notion on opposite sexes is very relevant for heterosexuals; it's not something we were made to believe by society. Why do most lionesses mate only with male lions? |
What does gender identity have to do with sexual/romantic attraction?
|
I repeat myself but if most of the human race, like many mammals, are heterosexuals and are only attracted to humans from the opposite sex, then sexual/gender identity has everything to do with it. You cannot project your personal experience on the rest of us. I respect your orientation and expect you to likewise respect mine. Saying there is no such thing as sex pretends that my experience is an artificial construct which it absolutely isn't.
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A Person
Forum Senior Member
Joined: November 10 2008
Location: __
Status: Offline
Points: 65760
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Posted: October 05 2016 at 22:43 |
Dean wrote:
Judith Butler is not a
biologist so quoting a philosopher at me is pretty much the same as
quoting the bible, if you believe that then good for you, if you don't
then good for you - and to be perfectly honest that is all you can say
about philosophy. |
Surely you also would have to
discard a biologist's work since it depends on the
philosophy of
biology.
|
|
Dean
Special Collaborator
Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout
Joined: May 13 2007
Location: Europe
Status: Offline
Points: 37575
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Posted: October 05 2016 at 23:01 |
A Person wrote:
Dean wrote:
Judith Butler is not a
biologist so quoting a philosopher at me is pretty much the same as
quoting the bible, if you believe that then good for you, if you don't
then good for you - and to be perfectly honest that is all you can say
about philosophy. |
Surely you also would have to
discard a biologist's work since it depends on the
philosophy of
biology. |
Really? The philosophy of science is not science. Philosophy does not affect physiology.
|
What?
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Magnum Vaeltaja
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: July 01 2015
Location: Out East
Status: Offline
Points: 6777
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Posted: October 05 2016 at 23:08 |
Exactly, even if biologists are being guided in their research by philosophical principles, they're still leaps and bounds more credible to speak about biology because they actually use empirical evidence and collect reproducible results experimentally.
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when i was a kid a doller was worth ten dollers - now a doller couldnt even buy you fifty cents
|
|