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guruilla » 20 Nov 2015 16:00 wrote:Joao » Fri Nov 20, 2015 7:23 pm wrote:guruilla » Fri Nov 20, 2015 3:51 pm wrote:Then so must being human be seen as a constructed concept. Or the idea that you exist. It's relativism taken to the level of gobbledygook. Everything we have a word for is a constructed concept, if you want to go that route.
Quite a slippery slope. If some things are constructed, all things are beyond comprehension? Logos necessarily implies hard rules about what men and women are? The onus is on you to tease out that Rube Goldberg-reasoning.guruilla wrote:Nannyism is in the eye of the beholder.
As is "delusion." You're entitled to your opinion. Keep it out of the diagnosis criteria and we can agree to disagree. I prefer to err on the side of trusting people to make their own choices.
Where did I use "delusion"?
I may be wrong, but it seems like you've done the thing you suggest I'm doing, here, by saying the onus is on me to disprove your own wild statement that male and female is merely a constructed concept. I practiced benefit of doubt by extending it further outward rather than shutting it down, because, sure, all we know for certain is that we are awareness perceiving something. So if you want to go there, by all means, let's ohm together.
What's being lost at this thread IMO (or hasn't been found, or even acknowledged) is the deep context; the idea that all that's being explored here is whether people have the right to make decisions they think will make them happy (which itself is based on a very dodgy ideology called the Pursuit of Happiness) is nonsensical at a board which is professedly all about deep background. Personal is political. Trusting people is one thing; assuming that they, or any of us, are free to make our own choices is another. If it were the case, there'd be nothing much to discuss at this forum, would there? We'd all just go live the dream.
My point is that so far there's been little or no discussion about the ideological constructs behind transgenderism (or transhumanism), even while throwing out the idea that biology itself is a conceptual construct. Isn't that a species of doublethink?
Anyway, I've made a load of ignored points at this thread so it's likely that my POV isn't being appreciated. In which case, I better conserve my energy.
Martine Aliana Rothblatt
is an American lawyer, author, and entrepreneur. Rothblatt graduated from University of California, Los Angeles with a combined law and MBA degree in 1981, then began work in Washington, D.C., first in the field of communications satellite law, and eventually in life sciences projects like the Human Genome Project. She is the founder and Chief executive officer of United Therapeutics and the highest-paid female executive in the United States.[5] She is also the creator of GeoStar and Sirius Radio.[6]
...
In 1994, at age 40, she came out as transgender[18] and changed her name to Martine Aliana Rothblatt. She has since become a vocal a vocal advocate for transgender rights.
In 2004, Rothblatt launched the Terasem Movement, a transhumanist school of thought focused on promoting joy, diversity, and the prospect of technological immortality via mind uploading and geoethical nanotechnology. Through a charitable foundation, leaders of this school convene publicly accessible symposia, publish explanatory analyses, conduct demonstration projects, issue grants, and encourage public awareness and adherence to Terasem values and goals. The movement maintains a "Terasem Island" on the Internet-based virtual world Second Life, which is currently composed of two sims,[19] which was constructed by the E-Spaces company.
Through her blog Mindfiles, Mindware and Mindclones, she writes about “the coming age of our own cyberconsciousness and techno-immortality“ and started a vlog together with Ulrike Reinhard on the same topic.
Rothblatt contributed $258,000 to SpacePAC, a super PAC that supported her son, Gabriel, who was running as a Democrat in Florida's 8th congressional district[20] but lost.[21] Gabriel is a pastor for the Terasem Movement.
Joao » 20 Nov 2015 17:42 wrote:I'll seek to return to this thread when time permits.
In the meantime, it occurs to me that the discourse is likely hindered by a lack of clarity about terms. This often gets my goat in political discussion about right and left, liberals and conservatives, proletariat and bourgeoisie, etc., and it often seems that discussants have home-brewed definitions and end up talking past each other. While I'm reasonably versed in the jargon of that subject matter, I admit that the subtler nuances implicit in sex, gender, male and female vs. man and woman, etc. are not something I'm well-schooled in.
Perhaps someone could propose definitions or point to them. I'm not a believer in dictionaries or other documentation as the ultimate arbiters of truth, but it would surely be helpful for us to try and get on the same page.
Monash University wrote:What is the difference between sex and gender?
Sex = male and female
Gender = masculine and feminine
So in essence:
Sex refers to biological differences; chromosomes, hormonal profiles, internal and external sex organs.
Gender describes the characteristics that a society or culture delineates as masculine or feminine.
So while your sex as male or female is a biological fact that is the same in any culture, what that sex means in terms of your gender role as a 'man' or a 'woman' in society can be quite different cross culturally. These 'gender roles' have an impact on the health of the individual.
In sociological terms 'gender role' refers to the characteristics and behaviours that different cultures attribute to the sexes. What it means to be a 'real man' in any culture requires male sex plus what our various cultures define as masculine characteristics and behaviours, likewise a 'real woman' needs female sex and feminine characteristics. To summarise:
'man' = male sex+ masculine social role (a 'real man', 'masculine' or 'manly')
'woman' = female sex + feminine social role (a 'real woman', 'feminine' or 'womanly')
Luther Blissett » 20 Nov 2015 08:20 wrote:I would advise anyone who is against transgender people to talk to some of them.
We cannot compare Rachel Dolezal to Chelsea Manning. Transracialism and other deceptions are exploitative imposterism while transgenderism is an identity that permanently marks one as a non-binary person forever at risk of violence and persecution. This isn't a Romany Rye. You cannot cross the DNA floor, as Katharine Quarmby says.
I am fully anti-transhumanist but supportive of rights for trans people. I don't see or understand the connection.
tapitsbo » 20 Nov 2015 20:10 wrote:I think that part of the thread running through this thread is that the goalposts are being moved all the time.
Some might think Joao's neat distinction pasted above is either a betrayal of traditions or an erasure of biology, others might think a "sex" category of any kind is problematic and we should only think about "gender". There are other possibilities too.
I'm not so sure there is an outright, total hatred of masculinity among the "gentry" however you'd like to define it. There is however a lot very tense, volatile anxiety about sexuality and gender though, both among this group and certainly in other ones.
The fight for segregated spaces raises all kinds of questions - men's groups and trans exclusive women's groups both have received rather extreme sanctions lately. I can't say I have a lot invested in either personally but it is fascinating
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