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| what-is-gender [2024/12/24 11:26] – [The Answer and/or Response] pitt | what-is-gender [2025/03/11 10:34] (current) – [Logical Fallacies] pitt | ||
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| ====== What is Gender? ====== | ====== What is Gender? ====== | ||
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| ===== The argument and/or question ===== | ===== The argument and/or question ===== | ||
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| So what is gender, or rather, how can we define gender in a non-circular way? | So what is gender, or rather, how can we define gender in a non-circular way? | ||
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| ===== The Answer and/or Response ===== | ===== The Answer and/or Response ===== | ||
| - | **Gender** is the psychological and social experience of one's sex characteristics and reproductive attributes. It is how an individual perceives, makes sense of, and interfaces with the amalgamation of sexually dimorphic attributes they possess (biopsychosocial).[(#1)] [(#2)] | + | **Gender** is the psychological and social experience of one's sex characteristics and reproductive attributes. It is how an individual perceives, makes sense of, and interfaces with the amalgamation of sexually dimorphic attributes they possess (biopsychosocial). [(Sevelius)] [(Westbrook)] |
| - | Note what's missing from that definition - no mention of the word " | + | **Note what's missing from that definition** - no mention of the word " |
| - | This really shouldn' | + | This really shouldn' |
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| + | ===== Discussion ===== | ||
| From this experience we have within ourselves, socially, and with our bodies, we can then derive the three underpinnings of gender as a complex interplay of social, psychological, | From this experience we have within ourselves, socially, and with our bodies, we can then derive the three underpinnings of gender as a complex interplay of social, psychological, | ||
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| Thus we can state that gender encompasses our internal sense of being male, female, or another gender (gender identity), how we express that sense outwardly (gender expression), | Thus we can state that gender encompasses our internal sense of being male, female, or another gender (gender identity), how we express that sense outwardly (gender expression), | ||
| - | Gender is a fundamental part of one’s identity and an expression of human diversity that cannot be reduced to fixed categories. A part of that is how we psychologically relate to those physical characteristics. It's the internal sense of being male, female, or something else, based on how our brains interpret the sex-related attributes we have. | + | Gender is a fundamental part of one’s identity and an expression of human diversity that cannot be reduced to fixed categories. A part of that is how we **psychologically** relate to those **physical** characteristics. It's the internal sense of being male, female, or something else, based on how our brains interpret the sex-related attributes we have. |
| - | For most people, gender aligns with their physical sex traits and assigned sex. We call those people cisgender. But for a small percentage of the population, gender diverges from the sex they appeared to be at birth, causing gender dysphoria. Those people are transgender. It's not that complicated. | + | For most people, gender aligns with their physical sex traits and assigned sex. We call those people |
| - | What's crucial to understand is that gender identity is not the same as gender roles or stereotypes. It's not about what toys you played with as a kid, what clothes you like to wear, or your personality traits. It's much more fundamental than that. A trans woman is a woman regardless of whether she conforms to stereotypical ideas of femininity. A trans man is a man even if he likes glitter and unicorns. Non-binary people are valid in their gender regardless of presentation. ‘Gender’ is just a word you’re using to describe your personality. | + | What's crucial to understand is that **gender identity** is not the same as gender roles or stereotypes[(Olson)]. It's not about what toys you played with as a kid, what clothes you like to wear, or your personality traits. It's much more fundamental than that. A trans woman is a woman regardless of whether she conforms to stereotypical ideas of femininity. A trans man is a man even if he likes glitter and unicorns. Non-binary people are valid in their gender regardless of presentation. ‘Gender’ is just a word you’re using to describe your personality. |
| So there you have it - gender defined clearly and directly, without relying on the word itself or invoking sexist stereotypes. It's the internal, psychological experience of one's own sexual characteristics. Period. | So there you have it - gender defined clearly and directly, without relying on the word itself or invoking sexist stereotypes. It's the internal, psychological experience of one's own sexual characteristics. Period. | ||
| - | The real question is, why are anti-trans activists so obsessed with demanding we define gender to their arbitrary specifications? | + | The real question is, why are anti-trans activists so obsessed with demanding we define gender to their arbitrary specifications? |
| But here's the inconvenient truth: we don't need the approval of TERFs, “gender critical” anti-trans ideologues, and transmisic people to know ourselves. Trans people understand gender on a deep, visceral level through our own lived experiences. We define gender every day through our courageous choice to live authentically. Trans people are painfully aware of their gender and their sex - there is no denial involved; in fact, it is that very acceptance of both those facts is what brings trans people out and seeking the help, support, and care they need to thrive! No amount of semantic games from TERF keyboard warriors can take that away from us. | But here's the inconvenient truth: we don't need the approval of TERFs, “gender critical” anti-trans ideologues, and transmisic people to know ourselves. Trans people understand gender on a deep, visceral level through our own lived experiences. We define gender every day through our courageous choice to live authentically. Trans people are painfully aware of their gender and their sex - there is no denial involved; in fact, it is that very acceptance of both those facts is what brings trans people out and seeking the help, support, and care they need to thrive! No amount of semantic games from TERF keyboard warriors can take that away from us. | ||
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| + | ===== Logical Fallacies ===== | ||
| Now to deconstruct some fallacies of TERFs who try to use these arguments, such as: | Now to deconstruct some fallacies of TERFs who try to use these arguments, such as: | ||
| - | False dilemma/ | + | **False dilemma/ |
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| + | **Moving the goalposts: | ||
| + | |||
| + | **Equivocation: | ||
| - | Moving the goalposts: Demanding | + | **Appeal to definition:** Insisting |
| - | Equivocation: Exploiting | + | **Strawman:** Misrepresenting |
| - | Appeal to definition: Insisting that dictionary definitions trump the lived experiences and self-understanding of trans people. | + | ===== Conclusion ===== |
| - | Strawman: Misrepresenting | + | So watch out for these in the first ask of “what is gender” or in their follow up points. Often if just means moving the goalposts. Typically it is expected to be a “gotcha” |
| - | So watch out for these in the first ask of “what is gender” or in their follow up points. Often if just means moving the goalposts. Typically it is expected to be a “gotcha” of some sort, so when you come with a well reasoned and concise definition, they will either move the goal posts, ignore it to some entirely different point, or attempt to pick it apart. Call them out on the first directly, address the new point only after you point out “well, since we have a definition that is acceptable…” to point out they concede their arguments re: gender, and for the last one, it almost always includes a need to split hairs, ask questions that provide false dilemmas, or are constructed in a way that presents a comparison that is not valid, such as “biological sex” vs “gender”. A common rebuttal is “this doesn’t make sense at all, because gender is based on your sex, not anything else” which is an example of a false equivocation, | + | NB: In case you cannot access a specific article mentioned here let me know. Chances are I have a PDF I can email you. For books, please support the author(s). |
| - | [(#1> | + | [(Sevelius> |
| - | [(#2> | + | [(Westbrook> |
| - | Fausto-Sterling, | + | [(FaustoSterling> |
| - | Olson, K. R., Durwood, L., DeMeules, M., & McLaughlin, K. A. (2016). Mental | + | [(Olson>Olson, K. R., Durwood, L., DeMeules, M., & McLaughlin, K. A. (2016). Mental |
| - | Serano, J. (2016). Whipping girl: A transsexual woman on sexism and the scapegoating of femininity. Seal Press. | + | [(Serano> |
| - | Bettcher, T. M. (2007). Evil deceivers and make‐believers: | + | [(Bettcher> |