Murph said:
slab_happy said:
And stuff like calling trans women "males" or "men" and refusing to refer to them as trans women will be regarded by many people as deliberately offensive.
It's technically correct to refer to a trans woman as male though isn't it slab?
Except we don't have a precise technical definition of what "male" means, any more than we have a technical definition of "biological sex".
Most of the time, we all know what we mean because someone's gender and their genital arrangements and their reproductive organs and their chromosomes and their hormones and their phenotype will all line up tidily in the way we expect.
But sometimes life's more complicated.
Murph said:
Sure, various abnormalities and some people not fitting neatly into categories Male and Female (which is what i would assume was meant by "sex") doesn't mean it something you can just change - which is what sheavi was asking.
But what is it that you think people "can't just change"?
Because if it's chromosomes, then sure, absolutely, they can't change those! If it's hormones or genital arrangements, they absolutely can.
If you want to postulate that there's a single unitary unchangeable thing that "biological sex" refers to, then you have to be prepared to say what you think that single unitary thing
is.
And it doesn't help you to say that "sex" means "categories Male and Female" unless you're prepared to say what
those mean. What's the single unchangeable biological thing that defines being "male" or "female"?
Murph said:
Having your cock blown off or having PCOS doesn't (i think) change your sex and no-one is suggesting it does.
So, "sex" can't be defined by your genitals or your hormones then, can it?
Murph said:
If you're offering what is intended to be the logical definition of something, you don't get to go "everything abides by this definition, except for some things which don't but they're 'abnormalities' so they don't count."
I'm going to refer once more to one of my favourite scientific papers (because human biology is wild):
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2190741/
If you want, you can define "biologically male" as meaning "having XY chromosomes" (at least for humans; we'll put aside the species which have other chromosomal arrangements).
But that means you have to look at this ordinary woman who went through an ordinary menarche, gave birth to two children, and had an ordinary menopause, and say, "Yes, she is biologically male."
And, I mean, that's a philosophical position you can hold, if you want! You can fight it out with the people like Emma Hilton who'll be maintaining that she has produced "large gametes" and is therefore the very definition of "biologically female"!
opcorn:
Or you can do what some of us do and accept that it depends on how you define those terms, and it's all a bit messier and less clear-cut than maybe we once imagined. So if you want to say someone's "biologically male" or "biologically female" -- okay, in what sense? What are the specifics you're referring to?