I don’t see how that contradicts my statement.
Comment on Eat garbage
balderdash9@lemmy.zip 11 months agoBut people who are transgender say they are born with their gender. And I’m inclined to believe them given their testimony.
ObviouslyNotBanana@lemmy.world 11 months ago
balderdash9@lemmy.zip 11 months ago
You’re saying gender is a social construct. People who are transgender say they are born with their gender. Being born with something is incompatible with it being a social construct. Since you don’t see a tension here, are you saying gender is a social construct for everyone except transgender folk? In other words, do you think transgender people are the only ones born with their gender?
That seems like an odd view to me, but perhaps that’s what you meant by “well for most of us”.
Tar_alcaran@sh.itjust.works 11 months ago
The feelings/emotions/sensations are legit and are a complex mix of nature and nurture that you can’t really change voluntarily. They exist in the body and mind.
The grouping of those feelings into a rather large container-terms that also includes social roles, looks, expressions and a host of other stuff IS a social construct.
Like, a gemstone can be red, triangular and opaque, and those are objective properties. But calling it pretty is a social thing. The big difference is that “this is red” is a whole lot simpler to put into words than anything gender related.
balderdash9@lemmy.zip 11 months ago
I basically agree with you except for one caveat. I would call the “grouping” that you describe as gender expression. Whether men where kilts or pants is mostly based on societal expectation. But the unchanging gender identity is not a social construct (in my view). But I am open to having my views changed as they have changed in the past.
NENathaniel@lemmy.ca 11 months ago
No one could possibly know they were “born” with a gender.
By the time they’re old enough to have memories and concious thought, they have already been socialized.
balderdash9@lemmy.zip 11 months ago
This response is initially persuasive but the line of reasoning doesn’t hold in other cases. For example, let’s replace gender with sexuality:
Now, we all agree that sexual identity is something you’re born with. Analogously, if we reject the idea that lack of knowledge of innate sexual identity implies sexuality is a social construct, then we should reject the argument that lack of knowledge of gender identity implies gender is a social construct.
NENathaniel@lemmy.ca 11 months ago
I’d make a couple points against that
I’m Bi and don’t inherently know I was born this way. I have tons of personality and character traits that are impossible to assign to nature vs nurture, including sexual orientation.