FlashDangerpants wrote: ↑Sat Nov 09, 2019 10:17 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Nov 09, 2019 9:49 pm
FlashDangerpants wrote: ↑Sat Nov 09, 2019 9:16 pm
So I have never offered you any reason whatsoever to suppose I can be goaded into doing what I obviously consider to be an impossible task.
Then you would also have to know that it is impossible that a "man" would ever need to "become" a "woman." Neither the categories involved, nor the idea of moving from one to the other, makes any sense, then.
No, for the reasons I have given you enough times now.
You mean "No, trans people can't move genders," or "No, they can"? You don't make it clear here. But giving you credit for being rational, it would have to be the former.
All you are doing is constantly making me have to repeat myself over and over again.
So long as your position continues to be impossible to articulate rationally, it's going to be questioned. That's what happens on a philosophy website.
If you want to see a circularity problem in action, try arguing that all categories are defined by essence because otherwise there would be no essence to define categories with .... whoops.
Nobody argued that, so I can't imagine what the "whoops" is. Classic straw-man tactic, that.
IF essentialism is nonsense, that does not mean categories all cease to make sense,
Actually, you might need a refresher course on the term "Gender Essentialism." It's a Feminist term, not merely an Aristotelian one, and it refers to the following, as per Oxford:
gender essentialism
1. The belief that males and females are born with distinctively different natures, determined biologically rather than culturally. This involves an equation of gender and sex. The term is often used pejoratively by constructionists (see constructionism), but strategic essentialism is a common activist strategy, and biological essentialism surfaces in the insistence of some feminists that the physical facts of sexual difference do have entailments. See also difference model; essentialism.
2. The belief that gay people are born gay (a form of biological determinism) and/or that there is a distinctive ‘gay sensibility’.
3. The attribution of a homogeneous identity to a labelled group (such as women or gay males), ignoring differences within it. This can be either a naïve essentialism (for instance, labelling people in widely-different cultures and historical periods simply as ‘gay’), or a politically-motivated strategic essentialism.
Definitions 2 and 3 aren't particularly relevant here. But #1 is. Please note: Gender Essentialism is
"a common activist strategy" which occurs "in the insistence of some
feminists that the physical facts of sexual difference do have entailments."
Indeed they do. And it's these "entailments" with which we are interested on this thread.
But let's let you deny Gender Essentialism, and reject the Feminists. Okay. You still get "entailments," such as that there is no logic to transgenderism. So really, Essentialism itself doesn't change the outcome one bit. So I wonder why you bother with it so much, since you lose the point anyway, even if you manage to discredit it.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Nov 09, 2019 9:49 pm
Are you willing to sacrifice the law of identity now?
Actually, if the Law of Identity is true, your position is false.
Why so?
Because the Law of Identity insists that things have a stable identity predicated on the essential nature of what they are: and that in logic, once you have identified a thing as what it is, you must remain consistent with that identification throughout any logical sequence of thought. That which is once predicated as "man" stays "man." That which is first predicated as "woman" remains "woman."
That's just untrue though. The categories are useful and used, no essence is required for this.
And my reply is still this:
Oh? So now you're an Essentialist? The categories are now real and stable, and refer to specific, real-world things that people can want to be, and to specific, real-world things they can want to stop being?
Then you (rather pointlessly) add,
Everybody is a unique example of personhood, this does not entail that no such as thing as personhood can be considered.
Personhood is not the issue. Nobody at all is arguing that men who imagine they can become women, or women who think they're men, are not "persons." They're clearly confused, suffering persons. That, we can clearly see. The issue is whether a man can become a woman, or a woman can become a man...whether it's a rationalizable position, or not.
The answer is clearly "Not."