Intellectual dishonesty is ignoring the edge cases.
The edge cases are why such a definition doesn't work.
Soo, how does it actually break down in your mind with intersex people. Say they are genetically male yet born and brought up physically female, which are they, female or male?
The mistake is trying to apply these cases to transsexualism (except in the case you mention below which I'll get to.) They are categorically different. This is an imperfect analogy because race is not an objectively essential category in the same sense that sex is an objectively essential category (not at all), but nobody would consider a Black albino to be White, even though the "Black vs. White" racial dichotomy at least in America is fairly binary. Albinism and intersex conditions are both birth defects of a sort. They do not impact social categories which they may have a passing resemblance to.
I am rather sure we have reached loggerheads here though.
What about children who were born male and reassigned to female at birth? We used to do that a lot with children born with ambiguous genitals. If they go on to identify as female? Are they female? If they go on to reject their reassigned sex, are they male? We're they male all along? Which? And on what basis do you say which.
Now
this is relevant to trans issues. In fact, a lot of the early work on "sex reassignment" surgeries actually had to do with this.
John Money was and remains highly influential in the whole way we think and speak about trans issues. He got his start in that arena working with intersex patients. The tragic case of
David Reimer resembles what you are talking about, although he was not intersex. Surgical errors during his circumcision lead to him having incomplete male genitalia. Dr. Money convinced his parents to allow him to surgically reconstruct a pseudo-vagina ("neovagina," which you can't really properly create in [if at all] a child let alone an infant--see the experience of Jazz Jennings) and also hormone therapy. (Perhaps of note, Reimer's parents were religious with conservative views of gender roles. This is not the same as the situation with homosexuals that I and
@Atelier3 have noted, but it is food for thought.) Dr. Money also engaged in highly suspect (to say the least) "rehersals" of sexual activities with Reimer in the receptive role, also having him pose for sexualized photographs. The supposed purpose of this (which may have been outright pedophilia) was to encourage "female" sexual development. Dr. Money highly publicized the case as evidence that "gender identity" was not correlated to natal sex. Unfortunately David realized he was not female and then lead a troubled life culminating in his suicide. This is one case (although there have been similar) but is definitely worth referring to in the current debate around imposing "transition" on children.
In cases where medical "transition" is performed upon intersex infants
successfully in intersex situations, which, n.b., will need repeated surgeries in life to be anything resembling success (and success of genital surgeries even on trans-identified adults doesn't look that great) there is still not a correlation with transsexualism. Even if you believe that children can form a stable trans-identity (while in fact they very often wish to "detransition" and revert to their natal sex after trans-identifying early) this is a different situation, but not ontologically: sex is still sex, even if "gender" is successfully performed starting at an early age. It's categorically different than transsexualism but does not change that fact. Some intersex individuals of ambiguous genitalia, whether intervened with or not at any early age,
do identify as a gender opposite the one that they were born into.
This is very interesting and I'll admit I do not have an easy answer for it, although cases in which the child or even just their parents were aware of the intersex issues are more easily explained as environmental. An interesting set of cases would be those in which a chromosomally intersex individual who was completely convincing as one sex but in terms of their chromosomes was another, and who wound up experiencing gender dysphoria and then
later it was discovered that they have an intersex condition, however, I'm not aware of any such cases. They are an interesting hypothetical though.
But once more, none of this is really the same as trans-identification which is based upon dysphoria or some nebulous concept of "gender identity." The intersex stuff is not evidence one way or another in the discussion, period. Sex is not a spectrum, it is a binary. "Gender identity," which is a term that I have issues with but is really the only one that is applicable to the situation of trans-identified persons, has been described as a spectrum. If you define gender as a spectrum between masculine and feminine "poles," then sure, but the category starts to lose it's utility quickly, and then starts to get into strange territory when people claim genders
other than male or female, or no gender at all.
"Gender non-conformity" and "gender dysphoria" are definitely useful terms, though, when speaking about trans-identified as well as normal individuals. Less so intersex conditions which are a medical issue unrelated to either. To bring intersex issues into the trans debate is to conflate "sex" and "gender" which is something that the trans activists are usually opposed to, and as such is hypocritical. So too trans activists deploring "gender roles" and then luxuriating in them when identifying with the opposite sex, or, worse, suggesting that (say) a boy who likes to play princess is actually trans and not just GNC.
Bottom line, the intersex stuff is interesting but it's a red herring when it comes to transsexualism in adults and even children.
I'll admit I'm concerned you're gonna avoid this question entirely and come back again with "oh well all those cases that break my definitions don't count and they can be uhh.. Iunno. Whatever I guess". In which case I'm just gonna point it out for the intellectual dishonesty it is. There's nothing scientific or intellectually honest about a model w ere you just happily ignore part of reality that doesn't confirm with it as edge cases you don't wanna have to think about. My point here is that what makes someone male or female is clearly complicated and on a spectrum and it makes SOOO much more sense along with being profoundly less arrogant and offensive to just adhere to their identification.
Given how much I've written about it, it seems insanely complicated, and I open myself up to your accusation that I'm throwing a bunch of qualifications onto the issue of biological sex, but I'm really not. I outright
like to discuss things, even tangentialities, in detail, but I can sum up what I'm saying simply: Biological sex is the presence or absence of a Y chromosome, period. Intersex conditions are just that, "conditions." GNC/GD issues are the ones at play in the trans debate, not biological sex issues.
You're probably right that some people identify as trans for reasons that can't truly be said to be that they just honestly feel they're the wrong sex. But pointing to their existence and acting like they make up the entire community of a large and diverse group of people is just doing what you've been doing above again, which is ignoring anything that doesn't fit into your model as an edge case.
If I am reading you right here, you're saying that the AGP/HSTS category is a problem because it excludes a category of trans-identified persons who express traits of neither and merely feel an essentialistic "gender identity" that is divergent to their natal sex, and you seem to be implying that this may be the majority. Based on my research, I disagree with that implication in particular.
I will admit that it is worth questioning, though, as you have repeatedly, whether it is right to question the
motives of people to undergo intervention to "transition" their gender, or whether their "gender identity" had ought to be simply taken as a given based upon what they say. This is pretty much what is going on now in "informed consent" gender clinics. You go in, state that you trans-identify, undergo a rather non-rigorous assessment to make sure that you are not totally crazy and are able to understand the ramifications of the decision, and then you are prescribed hormones and at some point later, if you so desire (many or even most don't or simply can't) you are referred for surgery.
This is a model which appeals to libertarian sentiments and patient-driven ideas about medicine. There is something to be said for that. However, there is something to be said for the old model too which delves more into motivation and involves significantly more assessment as to whether the patient is
compos mentis and prepared for what they are going to do. I am not necessarily in favor of returning to the days of standards as rigorous as those which Blanchard was working with in the 80s. But there has to be some kind of middle ground here. I'm not entirely sure what that is. This is not my area of expertise professionally, so I can't really comment there, something I'll readily admit. But regardless we do need some kind of standards and some kind of model by which we can better understand our patients and people who are in society at large.
However, given the transsexual/transgender phenomenon that is going on in society, we are very much in need of a descriptive model for what is going on. Blanchard's is good but it is not by any means holy writ set in stone. New research is very hard to do due to academic pressure. The research on ROGD which they are trying to shut down is very important stuff and has already contributed a lot to our ability to describe in at least somewhat objective terms what is going on with trans-identified individuals. Blanchard is quoted as saying that originally, and for a long time, he thought there was no such thing as "autoandrophilia" to correspond with "autogynephilia" but that now he might have been wrong about that.
THAT is what intellectual dishonesty is. Having a model you know can't actually describe everything and yet insisting, even to people's psychological harm, that it's true. It's.. Well I think that's actually pretty damn disgraceful. Not because it's intellectually dishonest, which it is, but because you bring harm to other people in doing it.
It is all a moving target. I guess you are saying that the only descriptive model we need is "gender identity," "women in men's bodies" and "TWAW/trans women are women." I disagree wholeheartedly. It's just not a model I believe in, because I don't accept the idea of an essentialist "gender identity." This I actually have in common (along with a number of things) with the "gender-critical feminists" (their term.) I
do believe that gender is to a
certain extent "performative" and "constructed." It is not an essential characteristic that boys play with a certain type of toys and girls play with another. It is not even essential that men are the leaders of a society: matriarchal societies exist, but they are rare (I believe there
are fairly obvious biological reasons for this, but still, this points to the "social construction" of "gender" itself.) You can't have your cake and eat it too: gender cannot be simultaneously socially constructed and essentialistic. The "TWAW" narrative falls short here. Effeminate men and masculine women exist, and the majority of them are not trans-identified (but in our society today, many of them are being
actively encouraged to be, especially the latter, cf. "
Where Have All The Butches Gone?") Trans identity is something
more than that. As to what it is, we are left with descriptive models as I have said.
If your belief will hurt other people, maybe I'm just a bleeding heart but I think you have a responsibility if you're gonna argue for it to really and properly think about it and make sure you're entirely confident about every element of your belief.
I'm quite confident. I also do not believe that any of this hurts anybody. I am not suggesting that anyone go out and beat or harass trans-identified individuals, something which has only recently begun to elicit sympathy and be considered a "hate crime." I'm not suggesting any kind of suppression of trans-identified people, either, although I
am suggesting more of what they would call "gate-keeping," but this is for the sake of the many troubled individuals who undertake "transition" without full understanding of what will happen, or with the false idea that it is a "magic bullet" for their difficulties in life (the latter is something about which I'll have significantly more to say when the conversation turns to TiFs and ROGD.) I am not suggesting that trans-identified individuals should have fewer rights in society in any way, although I
do believe that we cannot responsibly treat them as their self-identified gender in all situations in society or medicine. This should be obvious, but the current gender ideology sees it as a form of oppression.
In terms of mere
discussion being hurtful, I am sure that many will consider some of what I say to be so. It is not meant to be, and should not be. Critical discussion of the "transgender" phenomenon is something that is essential for our society to have, especially given what is going on everywhere today. Before all of this exploded, discussions of things like HSTS vs AGP were pretty esoteric and relevant only to the few clinicians who were involved in that work, and issues like the use of cross-identified bathrooms were pretty much irrelevant to society at large as well. Now this is no longer so. The transgender movement wishes to make all critical discussion taboo. It should not be necessary to state how illiberal and dangerous to a free society this is. The particular problem here is this: the transgender movement is often compared to the gay rights movement. By and large, the latter just wanted to be left alone and to have a minimal number of accomodations made for them. Even the redefinition of marriage does not really effect heterosexuals. The transgender movement, though, has much more in common with the bizarre saga of the cake-bakers: many if not most "trans rights" issues
do, inherently, effect other people and quite often rise to the extent of
imposing gender ideology on others, sometimes even on a very physical level.
Not just as a health professional, but as a human being. Of course doing it as a mental health professional isn't just irresponsible id say it borders on ethical negligence.
What
@alasdairm said about referring to people as they wish to be referred to comes in here. In a clinical setting, as well as a social one, it
is polite and costs nothing (or close to it) to refer to someone by a chosen name or even by chosen pronoun. It is a bit thornier when talking
about people in settings where accuracy is important, and--this always made me think--one rarely refers to another person by a third-person pronoun in that person's presence, which brings me to my next point regarding clinical situations. In psychiatry (and in medicine generally) clinicians deal with people who believe
all sorts of things, ranging from people with different religious beliefs to people who are outright delusional (which, n.b., is a different phenomenon to trans-identifying, although people
can have delusions of being the opposite sex while in a psychotic state which are
not the same as trans-identification.) One has to make do and make certain accomodations. Generally one does not outright argue with a delusional patient nor does one get into theology with a patient with different religious opinions. In no way shape or form does this mean that one has to agree with the patient. Only to show them respect and decency. And in psychiatry in particular but also in medicine generally there are times in which opinions contrary to the patient's will be discussed among providers or entered into the patient's medical record.
I have not dealt with many trans-identified patients in my career mainly due to the nature of the patients that I work with. I am not currently working although I plan to return in the nearish future. Due to social developments and the fact I will very likely be working with a different population I expect to see more trans-identified patients. I have every intention of treating them with the utmost decency. There is no reason to argue politics or the ontology of sex and gender with them nor to, really, express any opinion whatsoever, positive or negative, of their situation. I have no problem with referring to them as they wish to be referred to, which is also the standard of professional care nowadays anyway. None of this abrogates my right to have critical
personal and
political opinions regarding the gender ideology and of current situations going on in society. One just keeps that separate from patient care. I honestly take offense at the implication that any of this would impact my professional standards. I have rather regularly cared for individuals such as child molesters and murderers, and have always done so professionally and compassionately and without letting any opinion or feeling of mine get in the way. Relative to that pretty much anything is a walk in the park. You learn not to make, or take, things personal.
This is why I refuse to give an opinion about trans people in sport until I actually know that they have an advantage (in the case of transgender women). Because saying they shouldn't be allowed is obviously going to be hurtful and I feel a responsibility to be sure my opinions would actually be correct.
I am not going to get into this can of worms to any great extent at this point other than to say it should be
entirely obvious that a natal male has an advantage in sports due to things like bone density, etc. even in cases where free testosterone levels approach that of a natal female. The only reason you do not see TiMs dominating every category they are allowed to in female sport is because there simply are not enough TiMs to do it. I'm not saying that
any natal male could beat talented natal females, but if both are serious, there is no question whatsoever (the US National Women's Soccer Team, the very height of their sport, have routinely lost to high-level teams of adolescent boys. That Billie Jean King, at 29, beat Bobby Riggs, at 55, at tennis was an utter aberration and Riggs is even strongly suspected of losing on purpose.)
The idea that excluding them from sport is "hurtful" and that this is enough to cause a serious discussion of this topic would have been considered utterly outlandish not long ago, and that alone should be food for thought. Including TiMs in female sport simply for "affirmation" or "inclusiveness" takes "TWAW" beyond parody (although there are arguably even more surreal situations, like TiMs trying to see gynecologists.)
Love you though.
